The Battle of San Julián was a military engagement fought on 15 March 1927 between forces of the Mexican federal government and Cristero rebels as a part of the Cristero War.[1] The battle is considered to be the greatest military defeat of the Mexican government in the entire war.[1][2]
Mexican federal forces of the 78th Regiment under General Espiridión Rodríguez Escobar arrived at San Julián on 15 March 1927.[1][5][6] Cristero forces under Victoriano Ramírez and José Reyes Vega put up a defense of San Julián, but the federal forces were superior and were overwhelming the Cristeros inflicting heavy casualties.[1][2][5][7] During the battle, federal forces looted homes, raped women, and tortured two Cristero prisoners to death.[5][7]
More federal forces arrived to support Rodríguez Escobar at around four in the afternoon, but around the same time, the federal forces saw Cristero reinforcements under General Miguel Hernández arriving but misidentified them as Joaquín Amaro Domínguez, the Mexican War and Navy Secretariat.[1][7] Hernández had his men attack the federal forces in three columns, one from the south and west, one from the east and north, and the last from the southeast which he personally commanded.[1] With Hernández's advance, most of the federal soldiers fled while some remained and tried to disguise themselves as locals and the battle ended in a Cristero victory.[1][7]
Aftermath
The Cristeros executed an unspecified number of federal prisoners on 19 March 1927 under the orders of Hernández.[1] Exact casualty figures are unknown, but civilian and Cristero casualties were high.[1] The battle was the greatest military defeat of the Mexican federal government during the entire war and was an embarrassment to Rodríguez Escobar and Calles' government.[1][2]
The defeat made Calles recognize the Cristeros as a genuine threat to his government.[7] On 26 March 1927, Amaro Domínguez marched soldiers to San Julián and had Julio Álvarez Mendoza, a Catholic priest, arrested and later executed on 30 March 1927 in retaliation for the defeat at San Julián.[6][7][8] Álvarez Mendoza was later canonized as a saint by Pope John Paul II on 21 May 2000.[6][7][9]
In popular culture
A corrido, a Mexican form of narrative song, called "Corrido de los combates de San Julián" ("Corrido of the Combatants of San Julián") was written about the battle in 2002 by singers Evaristo Soto Cruz and Alfredo Soto Alcalá.[1]
Castillo, Agustín (11 April 2017). "La Cristiada, los niños de la guerra" [The Cristiada, the Children of the War]. Milenio.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 19 December 2020.
Garcia, Gerardo P. (31 October 2017). "Victoriano Ramírez "El Catorce" Comandante Cristero" [Victoriano Ramírez "The Fourteen" Cristero Commander]. TravelLeon.net (in Spanish). León, Guanajuato. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
Young, Julia G. (2012). "Cristero Diaspora: Mexican Immigrants, the U.S. Catholic Church, and Mexico's Cristero War, 1926–29". The Catholic Historical Review. 98 (2). Catholic University of America Press: 271–300. doi:10.1353/cat.2012.0149. JSTOR23240138. S2CID154431224.