Habsburgs on the Rio Grande : The Rise and Fall of the Second Mexican Empire - Raymond Jonas

Habsburgs on the Rio Grande

The Rise and Fall of the Second Mexican Empire

By: Raymond Jonas

Hardcover | 29 July 2024 | Edition Number 1

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The story of how nineteenth-century European rulers conspired with Mexican conservatives in an outlandish plan to contain the rising US colossus by establishing Old World empire on its doorstep.

The outbreak of the US Civil War provided an unexpected opportunity for political conservatives across continents. On one side were European monarchs. Mere decades after its founding, the United States had become a threat to European hegemony; instability in the United States could be exploited to lay a rival low. Meanwhile, Mexican antidemocrats needed a powerful backer to fend off the republicanism of Benito Juarez. When these two groups found each other, the Second Mexican Empire was born.

Raymond Jonas argues that the Second Mexican Empire, often dismissed as a historical sideshow, is critical to appreciating the globally destabilizing effect of growing US power in the nineteenth century. In 1862, at the behest of Mexican reactionaries and with the initial support of Spain and Britain, Napoleon III of France sent troops into Mexico and installed Austrian archduke Ferdinand Maximilian as an imperial ruler who could resist democracy in North America. But what was supposed to be an easy victory proved a disaster. The French army was routed at the Battle of Puebla, and for the next four years, republican guerrillas bled the would-be empire. When the US Civil War ended, African American troops were dispatched to Mexico to hasten the French withdrawal.

Based on research in five languages and in archives across the globe, Habsburgs on the Rio Grande fundamentally revises narratives of global history. Far more than a footnote, the Second Mexican Empire was at the center of world-historic great-power struggles-a point of inflection in a contest for supremacy that set the terms of twentieth-century rivalry.

Industry Reviews
Vividly reconstructs how Maximilian's power was forged and maintained by the sharp end of a French bayonet...Jonas is astute and judicious in navigating the kaleidoscope of contradictory political ideologies that came together in the Second Mexican Empire, before all too quickly coming apart again. -- Natasha Wheatley * New York Times Book Review *
Adds to our understanding of the Second Mexican Empire by giving us a fuller account of both its rise and dissolution, and...helps us to see anew the importance of an episode, so near the U.S., that is routinely overshadowed by the drama of the Civil War. -- Steven McGregor * Wall Street Journal *
Fascinating and full of insights. Building on extensive research across multiple countries and languages, Jonas casts new light on the French invasion of Mexico, from its racialized justifications to the almost tragicomic cluelessness of Maximilian and Carlota. -- Alice Baumgartner, author of South to Freedom: Runaway Slaves to Mexico and the Road to Civil War
Without a doubt the best work on the Second Mexican Empire ever produced in English. Jonas maintains narrative momentum even as he provides serious analysis, moving with equal dexterity through the complications of court politics in different European states, church-state relations in Mexico, and the battlefields in which men of different origins killed each other in pursuit of their personal ambitions and ideological passions. -- Peter Guardino, author of The Dead March: A History of the Mexican-American War
Rescuing Maximilian and Carlota's ill-fated effort to create an empire in Mexico from its undeserved obscurity, Jonas reveals it to be central to debates about the possibilities and perils of democracy not only in Mexico but in Europe and the US as well. Based on deep research on both sides of the Atlantic, Habsburgs on the Rio Grande is a masterpiece of transnational history. -- Karl Jacoby, author of The Strange Career of William Ellis: The Texas Slave Who Became a Mexican Millionaire

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