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Tijuana
Mexico
Tijuana
is the largest city in the state of Baja California, Mexico.
Tijuana is also the most northerly city in Latin America. It
is known as the corner of Mexico and consequently of Latin
America. The city is bordered to the north by San Diego
County, California, United States; to the south, by the
municipalities of Playas de Rosarito and Ensenada; with the
municipality of Tecate to the east; and to the west, by the
Pacific Ocean. The municipality of Tijuana has an extension
of 1,727 square kilometers and includes part of the Coronado
Islands located off the coast of the municipality in the
Pacific Ocean.
Population
According
to the INEGI (Instituto Nacional de Estadística, Geografía
e Informática Eng: National Institute of Statistics,
Geography and Data Processing) the municipality of Tijuana
in 2000 included 1,210,820 inhabitants. More than 20
universities and centers for higher education give it a
dynamic student sector. The city ranks fifth in population
in Mexico, after Mexico City, Guadalajara, Monterrey and
Puebla.
Geography
This
border city just south of San Diego, California, USA, is
sometimes considered a mix of Mexico's good and bad: known
for its economic prosperity, popular discos, and shopping
areas, Tijuana is also considered to be Mexico's biggest
illicit drug and prostitution center. Many of the
prostitutes are women from Central America who hope to enter
the United States.
History
Traffic
traveling into Mexico through San Ysidro tends to be less
congested than traveling vice versa. The border entering
Mexico is also less guarded.The area in which the city of
Tijuana is situated in a region once inhabited by the
Kumeyaay Indians, a tribe of Yuman-speaking
hunter-gatherers. Europeans first arrived in 1542, when the
Spanish explorer Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo toured the
coastline of the area, which was later mapped in 1602 by
Sebastián Viscaíno. In 1769, Father Juan Crespí
documented more detailed information about the area that
would one day be called the Valley of Tijuana and Father
Junípero Serra founded the first mission of Alta California
in San Diego.
More
settlement of the area took place near the end of the
mission era when José María Echendía, governor of the
Baja California and Alta California, awarded a large land
grant to Santiago Argüello in 1829. This large cattle
ranch, Rancho Tía Juana ("Aunt Jane Ranch"),
covered 100 square kilometres.
In
1848, as a result of the Mexican-American war with the
United States, Mexico lost all of Alta California. Tijuana
acquired a new and distinct character and purpose on the
international border. The city began to shed its cattle
ranching origins and began to play in a new role, forming a
socio-economic structure for the city.
The
year 1889 marked the beginning of the urban settlement, when
descendants of Santiago Argüello and Agustín Olvera
entered an agreement to begin development of the city of
Tijuana. The agreement was dated July 11 of that year.
Decades later, during the second Symposium of History held
in 1975, this date was recognized as the date the city was
founded.
Tijuana
saw its future in tourism from its inception. From the end
of the 19th century to the first decades of the 20th, the
city attracted large numbers of Californians crossing over
the border, coming to Mexico for trade and
entertainment.
During
the Mexican Revolution, Tijuana was also a small stage for
revolutionaries loyal to Ricardo Flores Magón, who took
over the city in 1911. Shortly, thereafter, federal troops
arrived and routed the rebels. Being so close to the action,
San Diegans could watch the battle from the safety of the
international border.
In
1916, the Feria San Diego, California Panamá brought a
great number of visitors to the neighboring American city to
the north. Tijuana took the opportunity to attract these
tourists to the other side of the border with Feria Típica
Mexicana. The fair included curio shops, regional foods,
thermal baths, horse racing and boxing matches. With this
event, the city became universally known as a tourist
destination.
The
1920s changed Tijuana forever when the enactment of
prohibition in the U.S. sent droves of Americans across the
border to partake in legal drinking and gambling. Large and
impressive casinos opened, like Agua Caliente in Tijuana.
The Caesar Salad was invented there during this period.
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