Eufemio Zapata

Summary

Eufemio Zapata Salazar (1873, Ciudad Ayala - June 18, 1917, Cuautla, Morelos) was a participant in the Mexican Revolution and the brother of Mexican revolutionary Emiliano Zapata.[1] He was known as a womanizer, a macho man, and a very heavy drinker.[2][3]

Eufemio Zapata
Eufemio Zapata, c. 1910
Born
Eufemio Zapata Salazar

1873
Ciudad Ayala
DiedJune 18, 1917
Cuautla, Morelos
NationalityMexican
Occupationparticipant of the Mexican Revolution

Eufemio Zapata was assassinated by General Sidronio Camacho on June 18, 1917, in Cuautla. This happened after, allegedly, Camacho argued that Eufemio had beaten his father - which would be illogical since Don Gabriel died around 1895. Historian Édgar Castro Zapata has made some statements about the death of General Eufemio to remove the legend that overshadows the murder and makes him look like an angry and alcoholic man who beat elderly merchants for pleasure.

In this way, Castro Zapata affirms that a fact that marked the death of Eufemio Zapata was the knowledge of a telegram in which Colonel Sidronio Camacho and General Napoleón Caballero were invited to join the Carrancista ranks and betray the Zapatista movement. "Eufemio intercepted that telegram, but in his eagerness to intimidate Sidronius and Napoleon, he was killed on June 18, 1917, as a result of a bullet impact. His inert body was abandoned five kilometers from the city of Cuautla, and later taken to the Anenecuilco cemetery, in Villa de Ayala, Morelos. The betrayals in the Zapatista ranks continued and in that crossfire a general who also served as leader of Mexican agrarianism lost his life: Eufemio Zapata.

In popular culture edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Emiliano and Eufemio Zapata with their Wives". The Art Institute of Chicago. Retrieved 2019-11-18.
  2. ^ "Eufemio Zapata 1873-1917". www.emersonkent.com. Retrieved 2019-11-18.
  3. ^ Brunk, Samuel (1995). Emiliano Zapata: Revolution & Betrayal in Mexico. UNM Press. ISBN 9780826316202.

Sources edit

  • Villa and Zapata: A History of the Mexican Revolution by Frank Mclynn
  • Viva Zapata! (novel), John Steinbeck
  • Mexican Revolution of 1910 at www.latinoartcommunity.org
  • Biography in Spanish

Eufemio Zapata, more than the older brother of the Leader of the South