Human settlement in Mexico
For the state now spelt "Jalisco", see
Jalisco.
Municipality in Nayarit, Mexico
Xalisco (Spanish pronunciation: [xaˈlisko]) is a city and its surrounding municipality of the same name in the Mexican state of Nayarit. The city had a population of 21,899 in the 2005 census while the municipality has an area of 290.6 km2 (112.2 sq mi) and a population of 42,893.[1] The municipality lies adjacent to the south side of Tepic, the state capital, and is part of the Tepic metropolitan area.[2]
Geography
Formerly known as Jalisco, this municipality is located 6.4 km. southwest of Tepic. In the north it bounds the municipality of Tepic, in the south the municipality of Compostela; in the east the municipality of Santiago Ixcuintla and in the west the municipality of San Blas.[3] The total area is 290.60 square kilometers, which makes it the smallest of the 20 municipalities that make up the state.
Over half of the municipal territory is mountainous with one peak, Cerro Alto, reaching 2,240 meters. There are several small rivers and streams of short length.
In the upper elevations there are still conifers and oaks, but over-forestry and long years of wood gathering for cooking have seriously depleted the natural cover. There are still deer, badgers, armadillos, and javelinas in more remote locations.
Economy
Due to the proximity to Tepic the economy is less agriculturally based than many municipalities in the state.
Among the most important crops were: rice, corn, avocados, lemons, oranges, bananas, coffee, cherries, and sugarcane.
Tourism and festivals
In the town there are the ruins of a colonial hacienda and a museum with pre-Columbian artifacts. The most important festival is that of Asunción de la Virgen María, celebrated on 15 August, at the beginning of the corn harvest. It is also known as the “La Feria del Elote”, or Corn Fair.
Opium and black tar heroin
The area produces opium poppies which are tapped for gum which is processed into black tar heroin and smuggled into the United States. Several hundred immigrants from Xalisco, part of a larger number still involved in retail heroin distribution, are incarcerated in the United States.[4]
Toponymy
The origin of the name Xalisco comes from the Nahuatl Xalixko: "xal-li" (sand), "ix-telotl" (eye) and ko (place); Place of the sandy eye.
Sister cities
Xalisco has one sister city, as designated by Sister Cities International:
Government
Municipal presidents
Municipal president
|
Term
|
Political party
|
Notes
|
Ambrosio Robles[5]
|
1917
|
|
|
Arcadio García Munguía
|
1918
|
|
|
Santos Rentería
|
1920
|
|
|
Ambrosio Robles
|
1921
|
|
|
J. Jesús G. Inda
|
1922
|
|
|
Higinio Pérez
|
1924
|
|
|
Margarito Romero
|
1925–1927
|
|
|
Luis López R.
|
1927–1929
|
|
|
Antonio Magaña Audelo
|
1930
|
PNR
|
|
Hilario Casanova
|
1931
|
PNR
|
|
Santos Rentería
|
1932
|
PNR
|
|
Nemesio Coronado
|
1933
|
PNR
|
|
Cándido López Ordaz
|
1934
|
PNR
|
|
Genaro Pérez
|
1935
|
PNR
|
|
Sebastián Robles
|
1936
|
PNR
|
|
Juan Casillas
|
1937–1939
|
PNR
|
|
Ramón Gutiérrez Páez
|
1939–1941
|
PRM
|
|
Porfirio Flores R.
|
1941–1943
|
PRM
|
|
Ramón Gutiérrez Páez
|
1943–1945
|
PRM
|
|
Leandro Ocampo C.
|
1945
|
PRM
|
|
Bonifacio Inda
|
1946–1949
|
PRI
|
|
Leandro Ocampo C.
|
1949–1951
|
PRI
|
|
J. Trinidad Ramírez
|
1951
|
PRI
|
Acting municipal president
|
Ramón Gutiérrez
|
1952–1955
|
PRI
|
|
Juan Nepomuceno Guillén
|
1955–1958
|
PRI
|
|
Catarino Bautista Gutiérrez
|
1958–1961
|
PRI
|
|
Santiago Ocampo Castillo
|
1961–1963
|
PRI
|
|
Juan Francisco Lerma Martínez
|
1964–1969
|
PRI
|
|
Antonio Gutiérrez Montaño
|
1970–1973
|
PRI
|
|
Rafael Montes Isiorda
|
1973–1976
|
PRI
|
|
José de Jesús Pérez Casillas
|
1976–1979
|
PRI
|
|
Pedro Rico Dueñas
|
1979–1981
|
PRI
|
|
J. Trinidad Hernández A.
|
1981–1984
|
PRI
|
|
Ramón Peraza Camarena
|
1984–1985
|
PRI
|
|
Raúl Guillén Íñiguez
|
1985–1987
|
PRI
|
|
Eutimio Isiordia Mojica
|
1987–1990
|
PRI
|
|
J. Jesús García Nolasco
|
1990–1993
|
PRI
|
|
Rafael Rivera Monroy
|
1993–1996
|
PRI
|
|
Armando García Jiménez[6]
|
17-09-1996–16-09-1999
|
PRI
|
|
Óscar Sánchez Almada[7]
|
17-09-1999–16-09-2002
|
PAN PRD PT PRS
|
Alliance for Change
|
Isabel Isiordia Aquino[8]
|
17-09-2002–16-09-2005
|
PRI
|
|
Juan Fernando Carrillo Noyola[9]
|
17-09-2005–16-09-2008
|
PRI
|
|
Gilberto López Ruelas[10]
|
17-09-2008–16-09-2011
|
PRI Panal
|
|
Heriberto Castañeda Ulloa[11]
|
17-09-2011–16-09-2014
|
PAN
|
|
José Luis Lerma Mercado[12]
|
17-09-2014–16-09-2017
|
PAN
|
|
Nadia Alejandra Ramírez López[13]
|
17-09-2017–16-09-2021
|
PAN PRD PT PRS
|
Coalition "Together for You"
|
Heriberto Castañeda Ulloa[14]
|
17-09-2021–16-09-2024
|
PT PVEM Panal Morena
|
|
Anabel Margarita Guerrero Benítez[15]
|
17-09-2024–
|
Morena PVEM PT Fuerza por México
|
|
References
Sources
External links
21°26′53″N 104°54′00″W / 21.4480555656°N 104.90000001°W / 21.4480555656; -104.90000001