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Zinacantepec

Zinacantepec
Town & Municipality
Main Plaza of Zinacantepec
Main Plaza of Zinacantepec
Official seal of Zinacantepec
Seal
Zinacantepec is located in Mexico
Zinacantepec
Zinacantepec
Location in Mexico
Coordinates: 19°17′00″N 99°44′00″W / 19.28333°N 99.73333°W / 19.28333; -99.73333Coordinates: 19°17′00″N 99°44′00″W / 19.28333°N 99.73333°W / 19.28333; -99.73333
Country  Mexico
State State of Mexico
Founded 18th century
Municipal Status 1826
Government
 • Municipal President Olga Hernández Martínez
Area
 • Municipality 308.68 km2 (119.18 sq mi)
Elevation (of seat) 2,740 m (8,990 ft)
Population (2005) Municipality
 • Municipality 136,167
 • Seat 46,569
Time zone CST (UTC-6)
Postal code (of seat) 51350
Area code(s) 722
Website (Spanish) /Official site

Zinacantepec is a town and municipality located just west of the city of Toluca in Mexico State, Mexico. The community is named after a small mountain which contained two caves which used to be filled with thousands of bats. Zinacantepec is Nahuatl for Bat Mountain. Its Aztec glyph is a bat on a mountain. In the 18th century, the population of this mountain moved to settle alongside the Franciscan monastery established here in the 16th century. This monastery is the best preserved of a network of missionaries established in the Toluca Valley in the mid 16th century. Today, the complex functions as the parish church, with the cloister dedicated as the colonial era museum of the state of Mexico.

The history of the town and municipality begins about 1500 years ago at an elevation now named “Cerro de Murciélago” or Bat Mountain. The hill contained two caves that used to be filled with thousands of bats. The presence of these animals was considered a sign of fertility. The hill remained populated until the 18th century, when a plague pushed the population toward the Franciscan monastery, which functioned as a hospital. A deity named Zinacan was associated with the mountain. Shortly after the Spanish Conquest, this deity would be believed to be an incarnation of the Devil. Today, the bat population of the area is limited to a few caves in the Nevado de Toluca National Park. The mountain is mined for gravel and alongside it is the Hacienda de Santa Cruz de los Patos, which is now part of the Mexiquense College, as a research center and library.

The earliest known ethnicity in the area is the Otomi, who still are present, especially in smaller communities in the municipality such as San Luis Mextepec and Acahulaco. In the south of the municipality, there are Matlatzincas; however, there are very few. The area was conquered by the Aztecs in the latter 15th century by Axayacatl. Zinacantepec was then ruled from Tlacopan as a tributary province.


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Wikipedia

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