Juarista
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Spanish juarista, from Juárez (“a surname”) + -ista, after Mexican resistance leader and five times president Benito Pablo Juárez García (1806–1872), known as Benito Juárez.
Noun
[edit]Juarista (plural Juaristas)
- (historical) A follower of Benito Juárez during the period of resistance to the French occupation.
- 1992, Richard Slotkin, Gunfighter Nation: The Myth of the Frontier in Twentieth-century America, published 1998, page 436:
- The forces of Maximilian, represented by the aristocratic Marquis (Cesar Romero), can pay well and in gold; the Juaristas led by General Ramirez can offer little pay and appeal to the love of freedom and independence which Americans are supposed to share.
- 2000, John Truett, Curse of the Emperor's Gold[1], page 107:
- "I'll have to leave you here for a while," he told Agnes. “The emperor and his allies have decided to protect Querétaro from being taken by the Juaristas."
- 2008, David R. Stevens, editor, Sin Perdón: Acquiescence with Murder[2], volume 1, page 255:
- To weed out Juarista sympathizers, French forces traveled the two hundred miles to San Luis Potosi and captured that city on 22 December 1863.
- 2012 September, Patrick J. Kelly, The North American Crisis of the 1860s, William A. Blair (editor), The Journal of the Civil War Era, Volume 2, Issue 3, page 350,
- At Puebla, Mexico, a forty-five-hundred-man Juarista army under the command of thirty-three-year old[sic] Gen. Ignacio Zaragoza trounced a force of six thousand French troops moving inland toward Mexico City.
- 2014, Tony Williams, Larry Cohen: The Radical Allegories of an Independent Filmmaker, Revised edition, page 72:
- Jaroo kills Santana when he discovers the gold. Chavez and his men decide to join the Juaristas, while the Apaches leave the fort after finding Santana's body.