Everything about Soconusco totally explained
Soconusco is a region of the
Mexican state of
Chiapas, located in the extreme south of the state and bounded by the Republic of
Guatemala on the southeast, the regions Costa, Sierra and Fraylesca of Chiapas on the east and north, and the shore of the
Pacific Ocean on the southwest. It is a region of rich lowlands and foothills. The economic center is
Tapachula.
The name comes from the
Nahuatl word
xoconostle, meaning the fruit of the
prickly pear cactus. It was, under the
Mexica culture, the furthest region of trade, providing
jaguar pelts,
cacao, and
quetzal feathers for the ruling classes in the
Aztec capital of
Tenochtitlan.
The Soconusco region is the main
coffee-producing region in Chiapas, with many plantations further inland in the foothills of the
Sierra Madre del Sur.
History
Archaeological evidence shows that somewhere around 1750 B.C. the inhabitants of the region had developed a hierarchical village society, with larger, more elaborate houses presumably reserved for chieftains. A few decades before the Spanish arrived, the Aztecs conquered Soconusco. The region had been relatively isolated before that, protected from the rest of Mesoamerica by the mountains of the continental divide (Sierra Madre del Sur). Inhabitants at the time of the Spanish conquest included the
Mames (Maya), with isolated
Nahuatl establishments, as at the ruins of
Rasario Izapa.
The Spanish under
Pedro de Alvarado conquered the region in February 1524, early on Alvarado's expedition to Guatemala. It formed part of the
Captaincy General of Guatemala, a dependency of the Viceroyalty of
New Spain (Mexico).
When Mexico and Central America obtained independence in 1821, Soconusco, together with the rest of the Captaincy General, joined to the
First Mexican Empire under
Agustín de Iturbide. When the empire was dissolved in 1823 (
Plan de Casa Mata), the Central American entities decided on independence from Mexico and the formation of a
Central American Federation. Nevertheless, a series of plebiscites were held to determine whether individual regions favored joining the federation, remaining in Mexico, or separately declaring independence. Chiapas, formerly part of Guatemala, was the only province to favor remaining in Mexico.
However, on
July 24,
1824 rebels in Soconusco proclaimed its separation from Chiapas and its annexation to Guatemala and the Central American Federation. On the following
August 18, the National Assembly of Central America accepted its annexation, and on
May 25,
1825 Central American troops occupied it. But on
August 15,
1841, Soconuscan authorities solicited its reincorporation into Mexico. On
September 11,
1842, Mexican President
Antonio López de Santa Anna proclaimed the "irrevocable union" of Soconusco with Chiapas. The issue between Mexico and Guatemala wasn't resolved until a boundary treaty was signed on
September 27,
1882, when Guatemala gave up its claims to Soconusco and Chiapas.
Other facts
- Capital: Tapachula, known as The Pearl of Soconusco
- Municipalities: Tapachula, Cacahoatán, Tuxtla Chico, Unión Juárez, Suchiate, Huehuetán, Huixtla, Escuintla, Acapetagua, Mapastepec, Mazatán and Villa Comaltitlán
- Principal agricultural products: coffee, cacao, plantain, sorghum, rice, maize, mango and papaya; also tamarind, cashews and sugar cane
- Infrastructure: Coastal highway, Pacific Railway, International Airport "Fray Matías de Córdova", the port of "Chiapas", the sugar refinery of Huixtla and customs house at Ciudad Hidalgo
- Principal regional symbols: Tacaná volcano, la Piedra de Huixtla (Huixtla Monolith), coffee flowers and the marimba
Further Information
Get more info on 'Soconusco'.
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