Namiquipa was refounded and given town (villa) status in 1778.[2] The Spanish colonial state established the town and surrounding region as a military colony, and its settlers received land grants in return for fighting Apache during the Apache Wars.[4]
Namiquipa was a stronghold of Pancho Villa’s popular movement during much of the Mexican Revolution of 1910–1920.[5] However, in 1916 locals switched sides and formed local militia that collaborated with the United States.[6] In 1917 Namiquipa was attacked by Villa and his men, who reportedly raped many townswomen after setting the town ablaze.[7] Villa's commander Nicolas Fernandez managed to take some of the townswomen under his protection, and ordered his soldiers to shoot any one who tried to attack them.[8] After news of the atrocity spread, Villa lost the goodwill of many villagers across Chihuahua.[8]
^Nugent, Daniel. (1993). Spent cartridges of revolution : an anthropological history of Namiquipa, Chihuahua. University of Chicago Press. p. 40. ISBN0-226-60741-0. OCLC807248816.
^ abNugent, Daniel. (1998). Rural revolt in Mexico : U.S. intervention and the domain of subaltern politics. Duke University Press. p. 208. ISBN0-8223-2113-0. OCLC37560883.
^Alonso, Ana María (2009-12-31), Hansen, Thomas Blom; Stepputat, Finn (eds.), "Territorializing the Nation and "Integrating the Indian": "Mestizaje" in Mexican Official Discourses and Public Culture", Sovereign Bodies, Princeton University Press, pp. 39–60, doi:10.1515/9781400826698.39, ISBN978-1-4008-2669-8
^Rubin, Jeffrey W. (1996). "Decentering the Regime: Culture and Regional Politics in Mexico". 31. 3: 85–126 – via JSTOR.
^Ana Maria Alonso (1995). Thread of Blood: Colonialism, Revolution, and Gender on Mexico's Northern Frontier. University of Arizona Press. pp. 1–6.