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  1. Máximo Gómez Máximo Gómez nació el 18 de noviembre de 1836 en Baní (República Dominicana). Padres Hijo de Andrés Gómez y Guerrero y Clemencia Báez y Pérez. Estudios Aprendió a leer y a escribir en su casa, más tarde lo sigue educando su padrino, el cura Andrés Rosón. Este quiso educar al niño para el sacerdocio, pero Máximo se ...

  2. Document #13: “Montecristi Manifesto,” by José Martí and Máximo Gómez (1895) Written by Cuban revolutionary and poet José Martí, the Manifesto of Montecristi outlines the issues that spurred Cuba to fight against the Spanish empire. Martí takes care to clarify that the war of independence is not against the nation of Spain, but ...

  3. Máximo Gómez y Báez was born in Baní, Santo Domingo, on November 18, 1836. (Santo Domingo occupied the eastern part of the island called Hispaniola, east of Cuba. Gómez's birthplace became the Dominican Republic in 1844.) Gómez grew up in a middle-class family and entered a religious seminary to study to become a priest.

  4. Máximo Gómez Báez ( Baní, República Dominicana, 18 de noviembre de 1836 - La Habana, Cuba, 17 de junio de 1905), también conocido como "El Generalísimo", fue un militar dominicano de la Guerra de los Diez Años y el general en jefe de las tropas revolucionarias cubanas durante la famosa Guerra de Independencia cubana.

  5. Máximo Gómez y Báez ( b. 18 November 1836; d. 17 June 1905), major military leader in the wars for Cuban independence (1868–1878, 1895–1898). Born in Baní, Santo Domingo, into a middle-class family, he attended a local elementary school and a religious seminary. He began his military career at age sixteen, in the war against the ...

  6. Máximo Gómez y Báez, who had commanded the rebel troops during the Ten Years’ War, was among those who joined Martí’s invasion force. Although Martí was killed (and martyred) in battle about one month after initiation of the invasion on April 11, 1895, Gómez and…. Read More. In Cuba: Filibustering and the struggle for independence.

  7. Rebel leader Maximo Gomez was controversial in his calls to burn sugar plantations to destroy the Spanish economy. As Afro-Cuban rebel leader Antonio Maceo gained popularity among Cuban blacks ...

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