Juarista

Etymology
From, from + , after Mexican resistance leader and five times president  (1806–1872), known as Benito Juárez.

Noun

 * 1)  A follower of  during the period of resistance to the French occupation.
 * 2) * 2012 September, Patrick J. Kelly, The North American Crisis of the 1860s, William A. Blair (editor), The Journal of the Civil War Era, Volume 2, Issue 3, page 350,
 * At Puebla, Mexico, a forty-five-hundred-man Juarista army under the command of thirty-three-year old [sic] Gen. Ignacio Zaragoza trounced a force of six thousand French troops moving inland toward Mexico City.
 * 1) * 2012 September, Patrick J. Kelly, The North American Crisis of the 1860s, William A. Blair (editor), The Journal of the Civil War Era, Volume 2, Issue 3, page 350,
 * At Puebla, Mexico, a forty-five-hundred-man Juarista army under the command of thirty-three-year old [sic] Gen. Ignacio Zaragoza trounced a force of six thousand French troops moving inland toward Mexico City.
 * At Puebla, Mexico, a forty-five-hundred-man Juarista army under the command of thirty-three-year old [sic] Gen. Ignacio Zaragoza trounced a force of six thousand French troops moving inland toward Mexico City.