English Cry of Dolores battle cry of the Mexican War of Independence from Spain, first uttered by Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, parish priest of Dolores (now Dolores Hidalgo, Guanajuato state), on Sept. 16, 1810. Hidalgo was involved in a plot against the Spanish colonial government, and, when the plot was betrayed, he decided to act immediately. After arming the people, he addressed them from the pulpit, encouraging them to revolt. The exact text of this most famous of all Mexican speeches is not known, and a wide variety of reconstructed versions have been published, but he may have said, in essence, Long live Our Lady of Guadalupe [symbol of the Indians' faith], death to bad government, death to the gachupines [the Spaniards]! Hidalgo amassed a large popular mob-army, but after much reckless pillage and bloodshed the movement was suppressed and Hidalgo himself was captured and executed on July 31, 1811. Hidalgo's cry became the cry of independence. In commemoration, each year on September 16, Mexican Independence Day, the president of the republic shouts a version of el Grito from the balcony of the National Palace in Mexico City: Viva Mxico! Viva la Independencia! Vivan los hroes!
GRITO DE DOLORES
Meaning of GRITO DE DOLORES in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012