Want this question answered?
Law of April 6, 1830
The Law of April 6, 1830 was enacted on April 6, 1830 by the Mexican government. It aimed to curtail further U.S. immigration into Texas and imposed several restrictions on American colonists in the region.
The law of April 6, 1830 was written by the Mexican government, specifically by President Anastasio Bustamante. It aimed to restrict immigration from the United States into Mexico in an effort to protect Mexican territory and sovereignty.
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna did not make the law of april 6 1830. The Texans had a big fight or debate against the Mexicans of freedom rights. Then the Mexicans then decided to make a few laws they had to follow.
The major goal of the Law of April 6, 1830 was to prohibit further immigration of U.S. settlers into Mexican Texas, in an effort to strengthen Mexican control over the region. The law also aimed to encourage European immigration, specifically from Spain and Mexico, to populate the area.
LAW OF APRIL 6, 1830. The Law of April 6, 1830, said to be the same type of stimulus to the Texas Revolutionqv that the Stamp Act was to the American Revolution, was initiated by Lucas Alamán y Escalada,qv Mexican minister of foreign relations, and was designed to stop the flood of immigration from the United States to Texas. The law came as a result of the warning and communications of Manuel de Mier y Terán,qv who made fourteen
Mier y teran
to stop slavery
The law of April 6, 1830, was passed in Mexico and aimed to restrict further U.S. immigration to Texas. It also prohibited slavery in the region and required foreigners to convert to Catholicism. These measures were intended to strengthen Mexican control over the territory.
It banned U.S. immigration to Texas and made it illegal for settlers to bring more slaves into Texas.
hey man if u look for dis i CANT find it
Slavery is a nasty thing. Mexico's father of independence Miguel Hidalgo abolished it at the beginning of the struggle for Mexican independence (1810) but it was never officially put in any legal document until 1829; on 1830 it was approved by the Mexican congress and became a law throughout Mexico and its territories.