Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Melchor Eca y Múzquiz de Arrieta (Santa Rosa, Coahuila, 5 de Janeiro de 1790 - Cidade do México, 14 de Dezembro de 1844) foi um político e militar mexicano. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Combateu na guerra da Independência do México no lado independentista e no final desta foi apoiante do Plano de Iguala e governador do Estado do México ( 1823 ...

  2. José Ventura Melchor Ciríaco de Eça-y-Múzquiz y Arrieta (Santa Rosa, Coahuila; 5 de enero de 1790-Ciudad de México, 14 de diciembre de 1844) fue un militar y político mexicano que se desempeñó como Presidente de México de manera interina en 1832 y anteriormente como gobernador del Estado de México, así como senador de la República ...

  3. José Ventura Melchor Ciriaco de Ecay-Múzquiz y Arrieta (6 April 1788 – 14 December 1844) was a Mexican soldier and politician who became the 5th President of Mexico after president Anastasio Bustamante stepped down to personally lead his armies against an 1832 insurgency known as the Plan of Veracruz .

  4. Melchor Múzquiz. Melchor Eca y Múzquiz de Arrieta foi um político e militar mexicano. Combateu na guerra da Independência do México no lado independentista e no final desta foi apoiante do Plano de Iguala e governador do Estado do México (1823-1827).

  5. José Ventura Melchor Ciriaco de Ecay-Múzquiz y Arrieta (5 January 1790 – 14 December 1844) was a Mexican soldier and politician. He was the 5th President of Mexico after president Anastasio Bustamante stepped down to lead his armies against an 1832 insurgency known as the Plan of Veracruz .

  6. José Ventura Melchor Ciriaco de Eca y Múzquiz de Arrieta, né le 5 janvier 1790 dans l'État de Coahuila et mort le 14 décembre 1844 à Mexico, est un homme d'État et général mexicain. Commandant en chef de l'armée républicaine dite de libération , il renverse le dictateur Anastasio Bustamante en août 1832 et rétablit la ...

  7. Melchor Múzquiz (usually known as Múzquiz) is a town in the Northern Mexico state of Coahuila. It is an interesting town with an indigenous population of Kickapoo and Seminole Indians who fled the United States in the mid 19th century. The area has also been the site of paleontological digs that discovered that the first residents of Múzquiz ...