Tamazunchale is a town and municipality in the state of San Luis Potosí, central Mexico.[1]
Tamazunchale | |||
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— Town & Municipality — | |||
Tamazunchale | |||
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Tamazunchale
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Coordinates: | |||
Country | Mexico | ||
State | San Luis Potosí | ||
Government | |||
• Mayor | Prof. Baldemar Orta López | ||
Area | |||
• Metro | 349.58 km2 (135 sq mi) | ||
Elevation | 140 m (459 ft) | ||
Population (2010) | |||
• Municipality | 21,614 | ||
Time zone | CST (UTC-6) | ||
Postal code | 79960 | ||
Area code(s) | 483 | ||
Demonym | Tamazunchalenses | ||
Website | (Spanish) Official site |
Contents |
The name Tamazunchale (Tam-uxum-tzalle) comes from the Huastec language, and means "Place of the Government"; it was the Huastec capital around the 1400s.[2]
The area of the State of San Luis Potosí including: Tamazunchale, Jacala, Coxcatlan, Tamacuil, Xatxapala, Tacetuco and Huahuatla along the Moctezuma River, was the Huastec Indian territory. In 1454, Montezuma, the ruler of the city of Tenochtitlan, sent his troops to dominate the Huastec nation, and won the war. The Huastec had no choice but to give in and pay tribute to the Aztec capital. In 1485, the three chiefs of the Huastec nation, Chicontepec, Temapache, and Molango, led several rebellions and were free for a time from the Aztecs. In 1487, the new ruler of Tenochtitlan, Ahuizotl sent troops to end the rebellion and subjugate the Huastec nation. They did so, and to ensure they remained loyal, sent many Aztec families to live there, to the extent that 55% of the population of Tamazunchale were Aztecs. The Huastecs continued to pay tribute to the Aztec nation.[3]
In 1522 Hernán Cortés left from Coyoacán, where he lived after the Conquest of Tenochtitlan, and headed up the Moctezuma river to the Huastec nation and arrived with his troops and Indian allies headed by a nephew of Cuauhtémoc, the last ruler of the Aztecs. They attacked and conquered Tamazunchale. Then they went up river to Panuco and helped Fransico de Garay, who had been on an earlier expedition to that area; 100 of his men had been killed by the Huastecs there, and 200 more elsewhere. With the help of Cortez' 100 Spanish soldiers and 15 thousand Acolhua warriors under the leadership of Yoyotzin and the younger brother of Ixtlixochitl, and 15 thousand Aztec warriors under the command of a nephew of Cuauhtemoc, they conquered Panuco and Xatxapala. They then burned to death 400 Huastec noblemen, despite the protest from the nobles of Tamanzunchale, Tacetuco,and Huahutla, The Huastec culture dispersed and left Tamanzunchale for other areas.[4] Much later the Agustin Religious order came in 1539 under the leadership of Fr. Antonio de la Roa and Fr. Juan de Sevilla. Shortly after came Father and Gran Minister of the Huasteca, Juan Eustacio. The Agustin Order established the first Church in Xilitla.[5]
During the insurrections of Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, the leader for the Huastecan region was Francisco Pena.[6]
Tamazunchale is a sleepy town but tourists, many of them from the United States, go there in search of adventure and the occasional finds of gold.[7]
After torturing Cuauhtemoc for the location of hidden gold mines Cortez found one several years later at Real de Catorce, which became the Richest Gold and Silver mine in New Spain.[8]