Coahuila
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coahuila | ||
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Location | ||
Statistics | ||
Capital | Saltillo | |
Area | 149,982 km² Ranked 3rd |
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Population (2005 census) |
2,495,200 Ranked 17th |
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HDI (2004) | 0.8284 - high Ranked 3rd |
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Governor | Humberto Moreira Valdés (PRI) | |
Federal Deputies | PAN: 5 PRI: 2 |
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Federal Senators | PAN: 2 PRI: 1 |
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ISO 3166-2 Postal abbr. |
MX-COA Coah. |
Coahuila (formal name: Coahuila de Zaragoza) is one of Mexico's 31 component states. It is located in the north of the country.
To the north Coahuila accounts for a 512 km stretch of the U.S.-Mexico border, adjacent to the U.S. state of Texas along the course of the Rio Grande (Río Bravo del Norte). Coahuila also borders on the Mexican states of Nuevo León to the east; San Luis Potosí and Zacatecas to the south; and Durango and Chihuahua to the west. With an area of 151,571 km², it is the nation's third biggest state. It comprises 38 municipalities (municipios). In 2000 Coahuila had an estimated population of some 2,300,000 inhabitants.
The capital of Coahuila is the city of Saltillo. Coahuila also includes the cities of Monclova (a former state capital), Piedras Negras, and Torreón (the biggest metro of the state).
Contents |
[edit] History
The Spanish explored the north of Mexico some decades after their victory in the capital of the Aztecs. Such exploration was delayed because in the north climate was harsher, because there was no gold. In the 16th century, Mexico and Guatemala were included in the vice-royalty of New Spain which included Nueva Extremadura. Coahuila was part of Nueva Extremadura. Francisco Cano was one of the earliest Europeans to explore Nueva Extremadura.
Coahuila y Tejas ("Coahuila and Texas") was one of the constituent states of the newly independent United Mexican States under its 1824 Constitution. Much of the territory of Texas seceded in 1836, to form the Republic of Texas.
On February 19, 1856, Santiago Vidaurri annexed Coahuila to his state, Nuevo León.
During the Mexican Revolution, Francisco Villa attacked the city of Torreón.
On April 5, 2004, the border city of Piedras Negras was flooded. More than 30 people died and more than 4000 lost their homes.
[edit] Economy
About 95% of Mexico's coal reserve is found in Coahuila, which is the country's top mining state. Saltillo also has a growing automobile industry, hosting General Motors and Daimler-Chrysler assembly plants.
[edit] Municipalities
Coahuila is subdivided into five regions and 38 municipalities (municipios). For a full list with municipal seats, see: municipalities of Coahuila
[edit] Demographics
With an estimated 2005 population of about 2,300,000 three main ethnic groups are 54% Mestizo (mixed European and Amerindian), Europeans which make up about 45% of the population, are mostly Spanish, and 1% Others
[edit] List of governors
This list is incomplete
- José María Garza Galán (?-1893)
- José María Múzquiz (1894)
- Miguel Cárdenas (1894-1909)
- Jesús de Valle (1909-1911)
- Venustiano Carranza (1911-1913)
- Gustavo Espinoza Mireles (1917-1920)
- Luis Gutiérrez Ortiz (1920-1921)
- Arnulfo González (1921-1923)
- Carlos Garza Castro (1923-1925)
- Manuel Pérez Treviño (1925-1929)
- Bruno Neira González (1929-1929)
- Nazario Ortiz Garza (1929-1933)
- Jesús Valdez Sánchez (1933-1937)
- Pedro Rodríguez Triana (1937-1941)
- Gabriel Cervera Riza (1941-1941)
- Benecio López Padilla (1941-1945)
- Ignacio Cepeda Dávila (1945-1947)
- Ricardo Ainslie Rivera (1947-1948)
- Paz Faz Risa (1948-1948)
- Raúl López Sánchez (1948-1951)
- Roman Cepeda Flores (1951-1957)
- Raúl Madero González (1957-1963)
- Braulio Fernández Aguirre (1963-1969)
- Eulalio Gutiérrez Treviño (1969-1975)
- Oscar Flores Tapia (1975-1981)
- Francisco José Madero González (1981-1981)
- José de las Fuentes Rodríguez (1981-1987)
- Eliseo Mendoza Berrueto (1987-1993)
- Rogelio Montemayor Seguy (1993-1999)
- Enrique Martínez y Martínez (1999-2005)
- Humberto Moreira Valdés (2005–)
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- (Spanish) Coahuila State Government
- (English) Coahuila State Government
- (Spanish) Towns, cities, and postal codes in Coahuila
States of Mexico | |
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Aguascalientes • Baja California • Baja California Sur • Campeche • Chiapas • Chihuahua • Coahuila • Colima • Durango • Guanajuato • Guerrero • Hidalgo • Jalisco • México • Michoacán • Morelos • Nayarit • Nuevo León • Oaxaca • Puebla • Querétaro • Quintana Roo • San Luis Potosí • Sinaloa • Sonora • Tabasco • Tamaulipas • Tlaxcala • Veracruz • Yucatán • Zacatecas Federal District: Mexican Federal District |