Tlalnepantla, Morelos

From Vero - Wikipedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Infobox settlement

Tlalnepantla is the name of a city and a municipality in the Mexican state of Morelos.

The city reported a population of 3,872 inhabitants, while its municipality reported 7,166 inhabitants in the 2015 census.<ref name=pop>Template:Cite web</ref> It is the least populous of the 17 municipalities that border Mexico City, bordering the capital city's southeastern Milpa Alta borough. Tlalnepantla is located 57 kilometers (35 miles) northeast of Cuernavaca.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Name

The name Tlalnepantla means "In the middle of the lands" in Nahuatl,<ref name="enciclopedia">Template:Cite web</ref> which may be interpreted as "In the middle of the mountains". According to Reyes and Robelo this town was originally called Tlalnepantla Kuauhtenko; this second place name means "On the shore of the eagles"; its etymology from Kuauh-tli, "eagle"; ten-tli, "shore or lip", and ko, adverb of "place"; however, in the hieroglyph the sign of the tree is clearly seen between two parts of the earth. It is supposed to be related to the terrestrial meridian, nearly the same as the Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral.<ref name="mor_gob">Template:Cite web</ref>

The municipality

Towns and villages

The largest localities (cities, towns, and villages) are:<ref>2010 census tables: INEGI Template:Webarchive</ref>

Name 2010 Census Population Altitude
Tlalnepantla 3,872 2050 meters<ref name=towns>Tlalnepantla retrieved May 10, 2020</ref>
Felipe Neri (Cuatepec) 1,338 2540 meters<ref name=felipe>Felipe Neri (Cuatepec) retrieved May 10, 2020</ref>
El Vigía (San Nicolás del Monte) 832 2,140 meters<ref name=vigia>El Vigía (San Nicolás del Monte) - Morelos retrieved May 10, 2020</ref>
El Pedregal 507 1,965 meters<ref>El Pedregal retrieved May 10, 2020</ref>
Total Municipality 6,636 2,060

Other communities include Fraccionamiento Calmil, Campo Aguacomulco, Bosques de Morelos, Campo Jazmín, and Fraccionamiento los Robles.<ref name=towns />

History

Ruins of settlements of Nahuas and Nahuatl-speaking Tlahuicas have been found since before the founding of Tlalnepantla.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

By the 1590s a town called Teocaltitla was established northwest about seven kilometers from the present municipal seat. Ruins of its church, including plaster, can still be seen. The ruins of the town of San Bartolomé ("Cohamilpa") are located about four kilometers west of Tlalnepantla. Ruins of the San Nicolás Tolentino neighborhood ("Teopancasholtitla"), founded in 1600, are located six kilometers from Tlalnepantla. San Felipe, also founded in the 1600s, is located five kilometers away.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

Tlalnepantla-Cuahutenco was formed by Fray Toribio and Fray Juan de Zumárraga between 1680 and 1690 by grouping the people into five "barrios"—San Pedro, San Felipe, San Nicolás, San Bartolo, Santiagoof—with about 800 people each.<ref name="enciclopedia" /> It took the simpler name Tlalnepantla in 1869.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

Construction of the convent and the parish of the Purification was begun by the Augustinians in the 16th century and completed in 1791.<ref name="enciclopedia" /> The former monastery of the Precious Blood of Christ also dates from the same time. The church was burned during the Mexican War of Independence and was renovated in 1933.<ref name="mor_gob" />

Tlalnepantla became a municipal seat in the State of Mexico on October 11, 1848.<ref name="mor_gob" /> It became part of Morelos on April 17, 1869.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

A telephone line was established between 1880 and 1910 near Tenecuilco where President Porfirio Díaz had a hunting lodge. On one occasion, the president got lost, only to be saved by a local resident named Bonifacio Rodríguez. In gratitude for saving his life, the president gave Rodríguez his telephone number, which was quite useful later when Rodríguez was arrested in a drunken brawl. Ciriaco Espíndola, also from Tenecuilco, became Díaz's secretary from 1880-1900 and his brother Dolores Espíndola worked as administrator of the Mexican Railway.

The ex-hacienda of Cuatepec or Coatepec was built during colonial times.<ref name="mor_gob" /> During the Mexican Revolution the hacienda was looted and burned, then abandoned by its owner. The peasants divided the land and the community adopted the name of General Felipe Neri, a Zapatista who was killed by rival general Antonio Barona Rojas. The town's foundation is celebrated on February 8.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

The first carnaval in Tlalnepantla was organized by Pablo Lima in 1905; carnaval was suspended during the Revolution and started again in 1929.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

El Vigía, also called San Nicolás del Monte, was formed by uniting the barrios of San Miguel, San Francisco, San Pedro, and San Lucas.<ref name="enciclopedia" /> San Nicolás del Monte was isolated until Mexican Federal Highway 113 was built in 1973. The town changed its name to El Vigía in 1973 because during the Revolution it was used to warn people when enemy armies were approaching.<ref name="enciclopedia" /> El Pedregal was founded by Teofilo Pacheco in 1975.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

At least 340 homes were damaged during the 2017 Puebla earthquake, but no deaths or injuries were reported in the municipality.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Rigoberto Espindola Gonzalez of the Panal was elected Presidente Municipal on July 1, 2018.<ref name=mayor>Template:Cite web</ref>

The state of Morelos reported 209 cases and 28 deaths due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Mexico as of April 27, 2020; one case was reported in Tlatnapantla. Schools and many businesses were closed from mid-March until June 1.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> On July 2, Tlalnepantla reported 33 infections and four deaths from the virus; the reopening of the state was pushed back until at least June 13.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Tlalnepantla reported 19 cases, 18 recuperations, and two deaths from the virus as of August 31.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Twenty-one cases were reported on December 27, 2020.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Notable people

  • Fray Toribio and Fray Juan de Zumárraga – Founders of Tlalnepantla, about 1690
  • Teofilo Pacheco – Founder of El Pedregal in 1975
  • Ciriaco Espíndola – Secretary to President Porfirio Díaz, 1880-1900
  • Pablo Lima – Organized the first carnaval, 1905
  • Inés Chávez – Built the Deposito de Cuatizec, 1906-1908
  • Benjamín Medina – Built 500 meters of highway from Tlalnepantla to Tierra Grande, 1931-1933

Municipal presidents (1958–present)

Name Term of Office Party
Adelaido Pérez López 1958-1961
Brigido Elizalde Espinoza 1961-1964
Eufemio Hernández Gómez 1964-1967
Adolfo Rubio Huerta 1967-1970
Romualdo Pérez López 1970-1973
Guillermo Osorio Torres 1973-1976
Sergio Mercado Marín 1976-1979
Arnulfo Medina Estrada 1979-1982
Benito Juárez Ávila 1982-1985
Celestino González Flores 1985-1988
Victorino Cervantes Reyes 1988-1991
Meliton Lagos González 1991-1994 PRI
Elías Osorio Torres 1994-1997 PRI
Gumaro Osorio Ramos 1997-2000 PRI
Donato González Flores 2000-2003 PRI
Jose Luis Gonzalez Barrera 2003-2006 PRI
Rolando Alvarado Colin 2006-2009 PAN
Lauro Barba Elizalde 2009-2012 PAN
Fausto Rubio Pillado 2013-2015 PRD-PT-MC
Germán Barrera Pérez 2016-2018 PT
Rigoberto Espindola Gonzalez 2019–present PRI-Panal-PVEM<ref name=mayor />

Geography

Location

Tlalnepantla is located in northern Morelos state, with Milpa Alta, Mexico City and Juchitepec, State of Mexico to the north; Tepoztlán to the west, Tlayacapan to the east, and Totolapan to the east. It is located at 18°57'N and 98°14'W of Greenwich. With an average altitude of 2,060 meters above sea level, it is the third highest municipality in the state, exceeded only by Huitzilac (2,500 m) and Tetela del Volcán (2,200 m).<ref name="enciclopedia" />

Distance (by highway)

Area

Template:Convert, which is 2.2% of the total territory of Morelos.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

Relief

Most of the municipality is in the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt. The highest peaks are: Template:Div col

Template:Div col end

Approximately 16% of the total surface is rugged, 78% is semi-flat, and 0.5% is flat (mostly in the north, west, and southeast).<ref name="enciclopedia" />

Water resources

There are no rivers or streams in Tlalnepantla. Rainwater is caught in the canyons and gullies of Cuatizec, Tlatenchi, Teshohuaca, and Tepeclapa. There is an average of Template:Convert of annual precipitation.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

Climate

The climate in the municipality is temperate sub-humid, with an average annual temperature of Template:Cvt and an average annual rainfall of Template:Cvt. Tlalnepantla is one of the municipalities with the highest annual precipitation.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

At a height of Template:Convert, San Felipe Neri merits special attention. The climate is temperate sub-humid, with rainfall in summer, average annual temperature between Template:Cvt, with a cool and long summer.<ref name="sn_felipe">Template:Cite journal</ref>

Flora

Flora consists mainly of Temperate coniferous forest: pine, oak, fir, ash, elm, tejocote (a fruit tree), and ocotillo (a shrub). There is a wide variety of medicinal plants such as squaw mint (for stomach pain), lemon balm (taken as tea), tochete (mint), tabaquillo,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> mullein (used to heal wounds), and Valerian (herb) (for rheumatism).<ref name="enciclopedia" />

Fauna

Fauna includes white-tailed deer, skunk, Mexican volcano mouse, mountain lions, quail, coyote, wolf, wildcat, cacomistle (raccoon), opossum, ocelot, ferret, rabbit, iguana, snakes, scorpion, chameleon, roadrunner, and woodpecker. Hunting is prohibited in the forest.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

Natural resources

Agricultural land and forests are the most important natural resources.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

Soil

Most soils consist of humus and clay.<ref name="enciclopedia" /> Of the Template:Convert, Template:Convert (38%) are used for farming. Forest consists of Template:Convert or 61% of the land, while the rest is used for buildings.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

Economy

The main economic activity of this municipality is agriculture, of which 89% is the cultivation of prickly pears or nopales. Both the fruit and the leaves are sold in Mexico City, Monterrey, Tijuana, and even the United States. Corn and tomatoes, which were once staple crops, now take second place to this cactus.<ref name="nopal">Template:Cite web</ref> Fruit trees were introduced by Spanish missionaries, and some fruit, particularly avocados, peaches, and pears are still gown today.<ref name="enciclopedia" /> Livestock are also raised.<ref name="sn_felipe" />

There is controlled logging of the forests and a significant amount of wood is exploited. There are some fields for growing Christmas trees.

Culture

Historical monuments

  • Tlalnepantla
    • Churches and chapels: Ex-convent and Parish of Pentecost, Chapel of San Pedro, Chapel of San Felipe, Chapel of San Nicolás, Chapel of San Bartolo, Chapel of Santiago, La Candelaria Church<ref name="enciclopedia" />
    • Civil buildings
      • Municipal Auditorium. This building has a mural representing the 33 municipalities of Morelos. It was painted in 1998, by students of the Quetzalcoatl junior high school.<ref name="enciclopedia" />
      • City Hall Building.
  • El Vigía: Church of San Nicolás<ref name="enciclopedia" />
  • Felipe Neri
    • Church of La Concepción
    • Ex-Hacienda de Coatepec. This building is in ruins and is not used.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

Holidays

  • July 25: Santiago Apóstol
  • August 24: San Bartolo
  • May 1: San Felipe
  • May 31, 2020, and May 23, 2021: Pentecost (fifty days after Easter, celebrated in Tlalnepantla with a fair including games, bands, amusement rides, bull riding, fireworks, and traditional food.
  • September 10: San Nicolás
  • September 15: Precious Blood of Christ, celebrated in barrio San Miguel

Music and dance

Music

There are four brass bands that regularly play at fairs in Tlalnepantla. Tropical music, cumbias, and Norteño music are also popular.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

Dance

Chinelos began in Tlayacapan but are now popular at carnivals and fairs throughout the region. The Chinelos costume consists of four main items: a long flowing robe made of velvet which usually has a rectangular shape tunic, a mask, a large plumed hat, and gloves. The masks are made of mesh and feature an upturned beard and European features.

Food

Nopales were introduced to Tlalnepantla about forty years ago, and today they can form the basis of many local dishes: sandwiches of nopal, nopales with cecina, tamales of nopal, and eggs with nopales, to name a few.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Mole Verde, mole with chicken or pumpkin seed, and cecina with cheese are also traditional foods.<ref name="enciclopedia" />

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Template:Morelos Template:Authority control