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Nayarit

State of Mexico

Nayarit

Summary

State of Mexico

FieldValue
nameNayarit
official_name
Estado Libre y Soberano de Nayarit (Spanish)
native_name_langes
settlement_typeState
image_skylineAguamilpa_Taxi_(131575813).jpeg
image_captionThe Aguamilpa Dam
image_flag
image_shieldCoat of arms of Nayarit.svg
shield_size90px
image_mapNayarit in Mexico (location map scheme).svg
map_captionState of Nayarit within Mexico
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type1Capital
and largest city
subdivision_name1Tepic
subdivision_type2Municipalities
subdivision_name220
established_titleAdmission
established_date26 January 1917
established_title2Order
established_date228th
leader_titleGovernor
leader_name[[File:Morena logo (Mexico).svglink=Morena (political party)23px]] Miguel Ángel Navarro Quintero
leader_title1Senators
leader_name1[File:PT_Party_(Mexico).svg
leader_title2[Deputies
leader_name2{{Collapsible list
framestyleborder:none;padding:0;titlestyle =
titleFederal Deputies
liststyletext-align:left;display:none;
1• [File:Morena logo (Mexico).svg
2• [[File:Logo Partido Verde (México).svg
3• [[File:PT_Party_(Mexico).svg
unit_prefMetric
area_total_km227857
area_note[Ranked 23rd
area_footnotes
elevation_max_m2760
elevation_max_footnotes
population_total1,235,456
population_as_of2020
population_rank29th
population_density_km2auto
population_density_rank23rd
population_demonymNayarita
population_footnotes
demographics_type2GDP
demographics2_footnotes
demographics2_title1Total
demographics2_info1MXN 205 billion
(US$10.2 billion) (2022)
demographics2_title2Per capita
demographics2_info2(US$8,171) (2022)
timezone1MST
utc_offset1−7
timezone2CST
utc_offset2−6
postal_code_typePostal code
postal_code63
area_code_typeArea code
area_code{{Collapsible list
framestyleborder:none;padding:0;titlestyle =
titleArea codes
liststyletext-align:left;display:none;
1• 3112 = • 3193 = • 3224 = • 3235 = • 3246 = • 3257 = • 3278 = • 3299 = • 389
iso_codeMX-NAY
blank_name_sec1HDI
blank_info_sec10.789 high Ranked 16th of 32
website

Estado Libre y Soberano de Nayarit (Spanish) and largest city (US$10.2 billion) (2022)

Nayarit, officially the Free and Sovereign State of Nayarit, is one of the 31 states that, along with Mexico City, comprise the Federal Entities of Mexico. It is divided in 20 municipalities and its capital city is Tepic.

It is bordered by the states of Sinaloa to the northwest, Durango to the north, Zacatecas to the northeast and Jalisco to the south. To the west, Nayarit has a significant share of coastline on the Pacific Ocean, including the islands of Marías and Marietas. The beaches of San Blas and the so-called "Riviera Nayarit" are popular with tourists and snowbirds. Besides tourism, the economy of the state is based mainly on agriculture and fishing. It is also one of two states where the tarantula species Brachypelma klaasi is found, the other being Jalisco.

Home to Uto-Aztecan indigenous peoples such as the Huichol and Cora, the region was exposed to the conquistadores Hernán Cortés and Nuño de Guzmán in the 16th century. Spanish governance was made difficult by indigenous rebellions and by the inhospitable terrain of the Sierra del Nayar. The last independent Cora communities were subjugated in 1722. The state's name recalls the Cora people's label for themselves: Náayerite, commemorating Nayar, a resistance leader.

History

Map of Nayarit before the [[Spanish Conquest of the Aztec Empire
San Blas

Radiocarbon dating estimate Aztatlán colonization of the western Mexican coast – including parts of Sinaloa, Nayarit and Jalisco – as occurring as early as 900 AD, with some evidence suggesting it might have been as early as 520 AD. Encountered on the western coast by the Spanish invaders in 1500, the cultures were descended from these original Aztatlán settlements and other Classic-stage cultures who had merged with them.

Hernán Cortés was the first known European to enter into the area now known as Nayarit, which he claimed for Spain as part of Nueva Galicia. Under Nuño de Guzmán, Spaniards took the region with considerable brutality, causing the indigenous inhabitants to revolt, in what was later referred to as the Mixtón War. After almost two centuries of resistance, the last independent Cora communities were incorporated into Spanish administration by force in 1722. Then followed intense missionary efforts by Jesuits to convert the indigenous.

In the colonial period, the port of San Blas was one of the most important trade ports on the American Pacific coast. Galleons transporting goods from Manila, the Philippines arrived here before the rise of the port of Acapulco. Today, the town still boasts colonial architecture from its heyday, such as the aduana (customs office), the contaduría (accounting offices) and the fortress that protected the port against pirates.

In Nayarit, the struggle for independence from Spain was initiated by the priest José María Mercado, who conquered Tepic and San Blas before being defeated and executed by Spanish royalists. In 1824, in the first constitution of the Mexican Republic, Nayarit was a part of Jalisco. In the mid-1800s Comanche Indians, from Texas and Oklahoma, attacked Tepic causing widespread destruction. During the second half of the 19th century, Nayarit was one of the most turbulent territories in Mexico. The population was in open revolt, demanding access to land.

Nayarit was one of the last territories admitted as a state of the Mexican federation, which occurred on 1 May 1917.

Geography

[[Sayulita]] on Nayarit's Pacific coast, a former fishing village now mostly given over to tourism, part of the area now marketed as "La [[Riviera Nayarit]]"

Nayarit covers 27815 km2, making it one of the smaller states in Mexico. Nayarit is located between latitude lines 23°05' north and 20°36' south and longitude lines 103°43' east and 105°46' west. Its terrain is broken up by the western ends of the Sierra Madre Occidental mountains. Its highest mountains are: San Juan, Sanguangüey, El Ceboruco, Cumbre de Pajaritos and Picachos. Nayarit has two volcanoes, Ceboruco and Sangangüey. In the northeast are broad, tropical plains watered by the Río Grande de Santiago, a continuation of the Lerma River. The main state rivers are the Río Grande de Santiago, San Pedro Mezquital, Acaponeta, Ameca, and Las Cañas. The Río Grande de Santiago is the largest river in Nayarit. The Santiago and its tributaries are of major importance for agricultural irrigation. The Ameca and the Las Cañas lie on the border between Nayarit and the states of Jalisco and Sinaloa, respectively. Notable lagoons in Nayarit include Santa María del Oro, San Pedro Lagunillas and Agua Brava.

Municipalities

Nayarit – as with all states of Mexico – is geographically divided into municipalities (municipios), creating twenty municipalities in Nayarit:

  • Acaponeta
  • Ahuacatlán
  • Amatlán de Cañas
  • Bahía de Banderas
  • Compostela
  • El Nayar
  • Huajicori
  • Ixtlán del Río
  • Jala
  • La Yesca
  • Rosamorada
  • Ruíz
  • San Blas
  • San Pedro Lagunillas
  • Santa María del Oro
  • Santiago Ixcuintla
  • Tecuala
  • Tepic
  • Tuxpan
  • Xalisco

Environment

Nayarit's natural vegetation varies with altitude; coastal lowlands and river valleys were, historically, covered with tropical dry forest, containing many native deciduous trees that lost their leaves during the dry seasons. The Sinaloan dry forests now cover the northern coastal lowlands, and extend up the valleys of the San Pedro Mezquital River and the Río Grande de Santiago and its tributaries. The Jalisco dry forests ecoregion covers coastal Nayarit south of San Blas and the Islas Marías.

The Marismas Nacionales–San Blas mangroves, a network of coastal Pacific lagoons and tidal mangrove forests, extend along the state's northern coast and into adjacent Sinaloa state. The mangroves are home to abundant wildlife, including migratory and resident waterbirds.

The mountains are home to pine–oak forests, which vary in density with elevation. Oak forests and woodlands tend to grow at lower elevations, interspersed with smaller areas of humid cloud forest in areas of higher rainfall. The highest elevations contain forests of conifers, pines and oak.

Nayarit also contains hundreds of miles of rainforest in the Sierra. Its wildlife includes hundreds of bird species, both resident and breeding/migratory populations, including parrots, like the lilac-crowned amazon (Amazona finschi) and numerous hummingbirds, such as the Mexican woodnymph (Thalurania ridgwayi). There are also 119 registered species of mammals, including white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), collared peccary (Dicotyles tajacu), brocket deer (Mazama americana), several types of armadillo, coyote, wild felines such as puma (Felis concolor), jaguarundi (Puma yagouarundi), bobcat or lince rojo, ocelot (Felis pardalis) and many more species. Historically, the Mexican wolf, Mexican grizzly bear and jaguar would have been present in the region, as well, though the bears are now extinct; the Mexican wolf and jaguar survive today only in a few fragmented locations, due to decades of hunting and human encroachment on their habitats. Most of the rain forest has been exploited, especially around the region of Santa María del Oro. The conservation and protection of the rain forest and wildlife of Nayarit is an issue of crucial importance.

The Islas Marías were designated as the Islas Marías Biosphere Reserve by UNESCO in 2010.

Flora and fauna

Education

Archeological zone of Los Toriles
  • Instituto Tecnológico de Tepic
  • Universidad Autónoma de Nayarit
  • Universidad Tecnólogica de Nayarit
  • Universidad Tecnólogica de la Costa
  • Escuela Normal Superior de Nayarit: a normal school (for teachers)
  • Universidad Vizcaya de Las Americas
  • Escuela Secundaria Técnica No. 51 (Emilio M. Gonzalez)

Demographics

Largest cities

The state capital, [[Tepic]], seen from the ''Cerro de la Cruz''. Tepic is home to some 340,000 people.

|1895 | 149807 |1900 | 150098 |1910 | 171173 |1921 | 163183 |1930 | 167724 |1940 | 216698 |1950 | 290124 |1960 | 389929 |1970 | 544031 |1980 | 726120 |1990 | 824643 |1995 | 896702 |2000 | 920185 |2005 | 949684 |2010 | 1084979 |2015 | 1181050 |2020 | 1235456

Nayarit is Mexico's twenty-ninth most populous state. According to the census of 2020, the state had a population of 1,235,456 and its population density was 39/km2.

Indigenous groups

Nayarit is the home to four indigenous groups: the Wixaritari (Huichol), the Naayeri (Cora), the Odam (Tepehuan) and the Nahuatl-speaking Mexicaneros. The indigenous groups mostly inhabit the Nayar highlands, but are also frequently encountered in Tepic and on the Pacific coast, where they have also established colonies. They are known for their crafts and artwork which they sell. About five percent of the state population speaks an indigenous language.

Economy

[[Punta Mita]] is a major tourist destination on the [[Riviera Nayarit
Shrimp fisherman on the coast of Nayarit

Nayarit is predominantly an agricultural state, and produces a large variety of crops such as beans, sorghum, sugar cane, maize, tobacco, rice, chiles, peanuts, melons, tomatoes, coffee, mangoes, bananas, and avocados. In addition to these crops, livestock and fishing are also central to the local economy. Approximately six percent of the land in Nayarit is pasture land, with the most common livestock being cattle, horses, pigs, goats, and sheep. Nayarit has 289 kilometers of coastline, which provides an abundance of fish and shellfish, including bass, snapper, sharks, and oysters. There are over 75 cooperatives related to the fishing industry alone in Nayarit. Much of the food produced in Nayarit is exported to the larger urban areas surrounding Mexico City and Guadalajara, and much of the agricultural labor is performed by migrant laborers. Although mining exists in Nayarit, it is mostly of non-metallic substances such as limestone or kaolin.

Beginning in the late 90's, Nayarit has become known as a producer of specialty Arabica coffee, regarded for its fine taste and high density beans grown in the volcanic soils of the Sierra Madre Occidental. Nayarit coffee is exported all over the world, including to the UK and Australia via the Grupo Terruño Nayarita farmers cooperative.

In recent years, Nayarit has worked to build its tourism sector, marketing the "Riviera Nayarit" as a safe, beautiful destination served by Puerto Vallarta International Airport. Popular resort towns include Bucerías, Punta de Mita, La Cruz de Huanacaxtle, San Blas, Santiago Ixcuintla, Sayulita and Tecuala. However, some residents in these and other towns are concerned that the growth in the tourism industry might have harmful impacts on the community. Timeshare scams with links to the local Nayarit Mafia are quite common.

Media

Newspapers of Nayarit include: El Periódico en que Nayarit Opina Día a Día, El Semanario que refleja qué hay en Nayarit, Matutino Gráfico, Meridiano de Nayarit, and Realidades.

Notes

References

References

  1. "Diciembre en la Historia de Nayarit". nayaritas.net.
  2. "Nayarit". Senado de la República.
  3. "Listado de Diputados por Grupo Parlamentario del Estado de Nayarit". Camara de Diputados.
  4. "Resumen". Cuentame INEGI.
  5. "Relieve". Cuentame INEGI.
  6. (January 2016). "México en cifras".
  7. Citibanamex. (June 13, 2023). "Indicadores Regionales de Actividad Económica 2023".
  8. "El Nayar". Enciclopedia de los Municipios de México.
  9. Mountjoy, Joseph B.. (2013). "Archaeology of Ancient Mexico and Central America: An Encyclopedia". Routledge.
  10. Gorenstein, Shirley. (2000). "The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas". Cambridge University Press.
  11. Pasztor, Suzanne B.. (2004). "Mexico: An Encyclopedia of Contemporary Culture and History". ABC-CLIO.
  12. Patch, Robert W.. (2010). "The Oxford History of Mexico". Oxford University Press.
  13. Coyle, Philip E. "The Customs of our Ancestros: Cora Religious Conversion and Millennailism, 2000-1722. ''Ethnohistory'' 45:3 (summer 1998), pp. 509-42.
  14. Morales, Leopoldo R.. (2001). "El Nayarit de los años del general Romano: la historia documental de un gobernante". Universidad Autónoma de Nayarit.
  15. "Nayarit y Su History ("Nayarit and Its History")". H. Congreso del Estado de Nayarit.
  16. "Gov Mx".
  17. "Map Gov Mx".
  18. [http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/world/A0835046.html "Nayarit"] {{Webarchive. link. (17 February 2007 in ''The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia'', 6th ed. 2012, Columbia University Press)
  19. Pasztor, Suzanne B.. (2012). "Mexico Today: An Encyclopedia of Life in the Republic, Volume 1". ABC-CLIO.
  20. Fernández, Marina Anguiano. (1992). "Nayarit: costa y altiplanicie en el momento del contacto". Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM).
  21. {{WWF ecoregion
  22. {{WWF ecoregion
  23. {{WWF ecoregion
  24. {{WWF ecoregion
  25. "Archived copy".
  26. (2011). "Fodor's Puerto Vallarta with the Riviera Nayarit, Costalegre, and Inland Jalisco". Random House.
  27. "Islas María". UNESCO.
  28. "Censo Nayarit 2020".
  29. "Página no encontrada".
  30. Standish, Peter. (2009). "The States of Mexico: A Reference Guide to History and Culture". Greenwood Publishing.
  31. "San Cristobal Coffee Importers".
  32. ""Nayarit Vacation Rentals"".
  33. "Publicaciones periódicas en Nayarit". Gobierno de Mexico.
  34. "Latin American & Mexican Online News". [[University of Texas at San Antonio Libraries]].
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