José María Morelos
José María Morelos y Pavón (30 September 1765 – 22 December 1815) was a Roman Catholic priest and military commander who led the southern phase of the Mexican War of Independence against Spanish colonial rule.[1] Born to a modest family of mixed ancestry in Valladolid (present-day Morelia), New Spain, he was ordained in 1796 and initially pursued a quiet clerical career until inspired by Miguel Hidalgo's 1810 revolt, prompting him to join the insurgent cause.[1] Assuming leadership after Hidalgo's execution in 1811, Morelos reorganized disparate rebel forces into a disciplined army, emphasizing tactical discipline, supply lines, and guerrilla warfare alongside conventional sieges, which enabled captures of key southern towns and prolonged resistance against superior royalist forces.[2] In September 1813, Morelos convened the National Constituent Congress at Chilpancingo, presenting the Sentimientos de la Nación, a seminal decree asserting popular sovereignty, formal independence from Spain, abolition of slavery and indigenous tribute, elimination of racial castes, redistribution of ecclesiastical and communal lands for agrarian reform, and establishment of a representative republic with strict separation of powers.[3][4] These principles marked a shift from Hidalgo's unstructured uprising to a coherent ideological and institutional framework, though Morelos's later enforcement of unity through executions of dissenting insurgents revealed authoritarian tendencies amid the war's exigencies.[5] Morelos's campaigns, including the prolonged siege of Acapulco, demonstrated strategic acumen but faltered against reinforced Spanish troops; betrayed and captured in November 1815, he endured a ecclesiastical degradation and secular trial for treason before execution by firing squad in Mexico City.[1] His efforts sustained the independence movement through its darkest phase, providing blueprints for governance and social restructuring that informed later successes under leaders like Vicente Guerrero, despite the insurgency's temporary collapse.[6]