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Oaxaca
Mexico
The
Mexican state of Oaxaca is in the south west of the Isthmus
of Tehuantepec. Oaxaca borders the states of Guerrero to the
west, Puebla to the north west, Veracruz to the north, and
Chiapas to the east. To the south Oaxaca fronts the Pacific
Ocean.
Oaxaca
has an area of 95,364 km²; it is the fifth largest state in
the Republic. In 2003 it had an estimated population of
3,597,700 people.
The
state is located in the mountains and valleys of the Sierra
Madre del Sur range.
Oaxaca
is the historic home of the Zapotec and Mixtec peoples.
Mexico's most famous leader, President Benito Juárez, came
from the Oaxacan village of San Pablo Guelatao. Other famous
oaxacans include Francisco Toledo, María Sabina, J. Alberto
Canseco Díaz and many other writers, artists and
politicians.
History
During
the three millennia prior to the arrival of the Aztecs in
1436, the most powerful and influential groups in what is
today Oaxaca were the Zapotec, the Mixtec and the Mixe. The
civilizations achieved by these groups are reflected in
important archeological sites including Monte Albán, Mitla,
Cerro de Minas, Guiengola and Huijatzoo.
The
influences changed when the Aztecs settled around the Cerro
del Fortín and down to the present Church of Carmen Alto
where their temple was located. The name of the state comes
from the Nahuatl designation they gave to the Central Valley
around the capital – "Huaxyácac" or place of
the guaje trees because of the great number of this species
(Leucaena leucocephala).
As
the Spanish who arrived less than a century later found this
difficult to pronounce it evolved into the present name of
Oaxaca, for the city and for the state. The settlement
founded by the Spanish in 1521 as Segura de la Frontera,
later known as Nueva Antequera, was officially raised to the
category of a royal city in 1532 by decree of Emperor Carlos
V with the name of Antequera de Guaxaca.
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