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Two short crowns that shaped a big country.
Psst—imagine your country tried having a king… twice! That really happened in Mexico. The story is fast, wild, and full of big choices. Ready? Let’s open the treasure chest of history before it snaps shut again.
Short answer: The Mexican Empire was when Mexico tried a monarchy two times—first from 1821–1823 under Agustín de Iturbide, and again from 1864–1867 under Maximilian of Habsburg. Both ended quickly, and Mexico chose to stay a republic.
Mexico had just won independence from Spain. People wanted peace and unity. A leader named Agustín de Iturbide helped make a plan to bring the country together. Soon, he became Emperor Agustín I.
Running a new country is hard. Money was tight. Leaders argued. Many people wanted voting and a congress, not a crown. Iturbide left the throne in 1823. Mexico moved toward a republic.
Years later, some leaders asked a European prince, Maximilian of Habsburg, to be emperor. France sent soldiers to help him. He arrived in 1864 with big ideas to fix roads, schools, and laws.
Many Mexicans said, “No kings.” President Benito Juárez led the fight for the republic. When the French army left, Maximilian lost support. In 1867, the empire ended, and Mexico stayed a republic for good.
Mexico learned that its heart beats for a republic—laws, votes, and leaders chosen by the people. The crown did not fit. The lessons did.
These quick empires shaped big choices about freedom, government, and identity. They also left symbols people still know, like the bold colors of the flag and the proud eagle. Short stories, long impact.
No crown could guide Mexico for long. The people could. That is the true power of the story.
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