Zapatismo
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Zapatismo is the armed movement identified with the ideas of Emiliano Zapata, leader of the Mexican Revolution, reflected mainly in the Plan of Ayala term 1911. The members of the Liberation Army of the South led by Zapata were known as "Zapatistas".
One of the most symbolic phrases of Zapatismo was that the land belongs to the tiller, reflecting a kind of agrarian socialism, originally coined by Zapata himself while trying to remove the chieftaincy in Mexico and restore possession of the land to the peasant classes in the south. The phrase and what it represents became the symbols of Mexican agrarianism.[1][2] Libertarian socialist ideas were also present. Decades after Zapata's death the Zapatista Army of National Liberation adopted a radicalized form of this philosophy known as Neozapatismo.
See also[]
References[]
- ^ "El caso del zapatismo: agrarismo y comunalismo" [The case of Zapatismo: agrarianism and communalism]. Espora.org (in Spanish). 22 April 2020. Archived from the original on 9 September 2007. Retrieved 12 January 2021.
- ^ "Emiliano Zapata". Biography. Archived from the original on 6 November 2021.
- Mexican Revolution
- Zapatista Army of National Liberation
- Zapatistas
- Eponymous political ideologies
- Mexican politics stubs