# Francisco I. Madero

> Mexican revolutionary leader and president (1873-1913)

**Wikidata**: [Q216766](https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q216766)  
**Wikipedia**: [English](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francisco_I._Madero)  
**Source**: https://4ort.xyz/entity/francisco-i-madero

## Summary
Francisco I. Madero was a Mexican politician and revolutionary leader who served as President of Mexico. He is principally known for his leadership in the events of the Mexican Revolution and for his role as Mexico’s president during his lifetime (1873–1913).

## Biography
- Born: 1873 (year provided); died 1913 (year provided)
- Nationality: Mexico
- Education: Lycée Hoche; HEC Paris; Mount St. Mary's University; University of California, Berkeley
- Known for: Mexican revolutionary leader and President of Mexico (1873–1913)
- Employer(s): Affiliated with HEC Paris; Lycée Hoche; Mount St. Mary's University; University of California, Berkeley
- Field(s): Politics; revolutionary leadership; writing (as indicated in related dataset items)

## Contributions
- Leadership of revolutionary activity in Mexico, associated with the Mexican Revolution (nationwide armed struggle 1910–1920). The dataset identifies him as a Mexican revolutionary leader and president, linking him to the Mexican Revolution (1910–1920).
- Presidential role in Mexico during his lifetime (identified as president in the dataset).
- Presence in public memory and place-names: related dataset entries include Madero Avenue, a pedestrian street in the Historic Center of Mexico City, listed among items connected to Francisco I. Madero.
- Institutional affiliations and educational connections: listed associations with Lycée Hoche, HEC Paris, Mount St. Mary's University, and the University of California, Berkeley are recorded in the provided material.

(The source material does not list specific publications, patents, companies founded, or named works by year beyond the roles and affiliations above.)

## FAQs
Q: Who was Francisco I. Madero?
A: He was a Mexican revolutionary leader and politician who served as President of Mexico and is identified in the dataset with the lifespan 1873–1913.

Q: What major historical movement is he associated with?
A: He is associated with the Mexican Revolution, identified in the dataset as a nationwide armed struggle dated 1910–1920.

Q: Where did Francisco I. Madero receive education or have affiliations?
A: The dataset lists Lycée Hoche, HEC Paris, Mount St. Mary's University, and the University of California, Berkeley as institutions affiliated with him.

Q: What are other names or aliases for Francisco I. Madero?
A: The documented aliases include Francisco Ignacio Madero Gonzáles; Francisco Ignacio Madero; presidente de mexico; Madero González francisco ignacio.

Q: Are there public places or memorials linked to him in the dataset?
A: Yes. The dataset includes Madero Avenue, a pedestrian street in the Historic Center of Mexico City, as a related item.

Q: How is he indexed in linked data and encyclopedic resources?
A: The entry appears with the wikipedia_title "Francisco I. Madero", has a sitelink_count of 63 in the provided material, and is described in the dataset as "Mexican revolutionary leader and president (1873-1913)."

## Why They Matter
Francisco I. Madero matters because he is recorded in the dataset as a central figure in the Mexican Revolution and as a President of Mexico during the key historical period connected to the revolution. His documented role as a revolutionary leader links him directly to the nationwide armed struggle labeled the Mexican Revolution (1910–1920), indicating he was part of the political and social transformations of Mexico in the early 20th century. The continued presence of his name in related items (for example, an urban landmark such as Madero Avenue) and the multiple institutional affiliations in the dataset (schools and universities) show that his life and career are archived across educational, geographic, and reference resources. Without his recorded leadership and presidency, the dataset shows that an important node of Mexico’s revolutionary history and its commemoration would be missing from these linked records.

## Notable For
- Being described in the dataset as a Mexican revolutionary leader and President of Mexico (1873–1913).
- Association with the Mexican Revolution, the nationwide armed struggle dated 1910–1920 in the provided material.
- Multiple institutional affiliations listed: Lycée Hoche; HEC Paris; Mount St. Mary's University; University of California, Berkeley.
- Documented aliases: Francisco Ignacio Madero Gonzáles; Francisco Ignacio Madero; presidente de mexico; Madero González francisco ignacio.
- Presence in linked-data/encyclopedic indexing: wikipedia_title "Francisco I. Madero" and a sitelink_count of 63 in the provided dataset.
- Related geographic entry in the dataset: Madero Avenue, a pedestrian street in the Historic Center of Mexico City.

## Body

### Identity and Core Description
- The dataset identifies the subject under the label "Francisco I. Madero" with the wikidata_description: "Mexican revolutionary leader and president (1873-1913)."
- The wikipedia_title associated with the subject is "Francisco I. Madero."
- Aliases recorded in the structured properties include: Francisco Ignacio Madero Gonzáles; Francisco Ignacio Madero; presidente de mexico; Madero González francisco ignacio.
- The entry has a sitelink_count recorded as 63 in the provided material.

### Lifespan
- Years recorded: born 1873 and died 1913 as given in the dataset’s descriptive label. The source material supplies the years but does not provide a specific birthdate, birthplace, or death date beyond the years.

### Political and Historical Role
- The dataset classifies him primarily as a Mexican revolutionary leader and as President of Mexico during his lifetime (1873–1913).
- He is connected to the Mexican Revolution entry in the dataset, which is characterized as a nationwide armed struggle dated 1910–1920 and associated with the country Mexico.

### Affiliations and Education
- The provided material lists the following institutions under "Affiliated with" or education-related connections:
  - HEC Paris — business school in Paris, France. (Inception in the dataset: +1881-12-04T00:00:00Z; country: ; headquarters: ; industry identifiers present in the source.)
  - Lycée Hoche — public secondary school located in Versailles. (Inception in the dataset: +1807-00-00T00:00:00Z.)
  - Mount St. Mary's University — American private, liberal arts, Catholic university near Emmitsburg, Maryland. (Inception in the dataset: +1808-01-01T00:00:00Z; country: Q30; employees: 609.0.)
  - University of California, Berkeley — public university in Berkeley, California, USA. (Inception in the dataset: +1868-03-23T00:00:00Z; country: Q30; employees: 12122.0.)
- The dataset also includes an item "HEC Alumni" in related items, indicating the broader alumni association context for HEC Paris (inception +1883-06-20T00:00:00Z; country: ; headquarters: Q90).

### Related Entities and Contextual Items
- The dataset includes a range of related "things" that provide context around the subject and the classification system. Items listed include:
  - human — general class (member of Homo sapiens).
  - Mexico — country in North America (dataset provides multiple inception/independence-related dates and references).
  - politician — category for persons who hold or seek government positions.
  - writer — category for persons producing written works.
  - musician; military personnel; businessperson — categories present in the related list of dataset items.
  - Mexican Revolution — listed as the nationwide armed struggle (1910–1920) connected to the subject.
  - Madero Avenue — pedestrian street in the Historic Center of Mexico City, present among related items.
- These related items are part of the dataset’s broader graph of connections to the Francisco I. Madero node.

### Public Memory and Commemoration
- The dataset lists Madero Avenue as a related entity. The avenue is described as a pedestrian street in Mexico City’s Historic Center. This indicates the presence of place-name associations in the provided material.

### Indexing and Metadata
- The provided structured properties include:
  - aliases as noted above.
  - sitelink_count: 63 (indicating a level of linkage in the source dataset).
  - wikipedia_title: Francisco I. Madero.
  - wikidata_description: "Mexican revolutionary leader and president (1873-1913)."
- The subject is categorized under country: Mexico in the dataset entries.

### Scope Limits in the Source Material
- The source material records roles, affiliations, aliases, and connections to the Mexican Revolution and public place-name (Madero Avenue). It does not provide specific dates of office, policy actions, publications’ titles and dates, founding of organizations, patents, or detailed biographical events beyond the years 1873–1913 and the listed institutional affiliations.

### Legacy and Influence (as recorded)
- The dataset’s inclusion of multiple institutional affiliations, a dedicated wikipedia title, a relatively high sitelink_count, and related urban geography suggests a documented legacy in educational, historical, and geographic records. The link to the Mexican Revolution entry frames his historical significance in that nationwide conflict.

### Data Provenance and Cross-References
- The provided dataset items include cross-references and metadata for related institutions and the country Mexico. Institutional inception dates and country associations are supplied for HEC Paris, Lycée Hoche, Mount St. Mary's University, and the University of California, Berkeley. The Mexican Revolution entry is associated with country Q96. These metadata points establish the nodes connected to the Francisco I. Madero entry in the source material.

(End of entry)

## References

1. BnF authorities
2. International Standard Name Identifier
3. Encyclopædia Britannica Online
4. SNAC
5. Encyclopædia Universalis
6. Brockhaus Enzyklopädie
7. Croatian Encyclopedia
8. Freebase Data Dumps. 2013
9. Virtual International Authority File
10. authority file of the National Library of Uruguay