A total of more than one hundred plans were declared. One compendium, Planes políticos, proclamas, manifiestos y otros documentos de la Independencia al México moderno, 1812–1940, compiled by Román Iglesias González (Mexico City: UNAM, 1998), contains the full texts of 105 plans. About a dozen of these are widely considered to be of great importance in discussions of Mexican history.
Plan of Tuxtepec (10 January 1876): Porfirio Díaz's proclamation of the "No Re-election" principle as well as a call to overthrow the current president,
Sebastián Lerdo de Tejada.
Plan Orozquista (25 March 1912): "Chihuahua Headquarters" of
Pascual Orozco. Declaration of rebellion against
Francisco I. Madero. Orozco's Plan included important articles addressing socio-economic issues of land reform and workers' rights.
Pact of Torreón (4 July 1914): The agreement was nominally an updating of Carranza's Plan of Guadalupe drawn up by two division commanders of the
Constitutionalist Army,
Pancho Villa of the Division of the North and
Pablo González Garza of the Division of the Northeast. It pressed for socio-economic reforms that were not part of the Plan of Guadalupe and designed to push Carranza to act.
^Geographical references are to modern-day
federal entities, some of which did not exist, or existed in another form, at the time of the plans' enactment.
References
Fowler, Will, ed. (2012). Malcontents, Rebels, & Pronunciados: The Politics of Insurrection in Nineteenth-Century Mexico. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
ISBN9780803225428.
A total of more than one hundred plans were declared. One compendium, Planes políticos, proclamas, manifiestos y otros documentos de la Independencia al México moderno, 1812–1940, compiled by Román Iglesias González (Mexico City: UNAM, 1998), contains the full texts of 105 plans. About a dozen of these are widely considered to be of great importance in discussions of Mexican history.
Plan of Tuxtepec (10 January 1876): Porfirio Díaz's proclamation of the "No Re-election" principle as well as a call to overthrow the current president,
Sebastián Lerdo de Tejada.
Plan Orozquista (25 March 1912): "Chihuahua Headquarters" of
Pascual Orozco. Declaration of rebellion against
Francisco I. Madero. Orozco's Plan included important articles addressing socio-economic issues of land reform and workers' rights.
Pact of Torreón (4 July 1914): The agreement was nominally an updating of Carranza's Plan of Guadalupe drawn up by two division commanders of the
Constitutionalist Army,
Pancho Villa of the Division of the North and
Pablo González Garza of the Division of the Northeast. It pressed for socio-economic reforms that were not part of the Plan of Guadalupe and designed to push Carranza to act.
^Geographical references are to modern-day
federal entities, some of which did not exist, or existed in another form, at the time of the plans' enactment.
References
Fowler, Will, ed. (2012). Malcontents, Rebels, & Pronunciados: The Politics of Insurrection in Nineteenth-Century Mexico. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
ISBN9780803225428.