Temixco Explained

Official Name:Temixco
Settlement Type:City and Municipality
Pushpin Map:Mexico Morelos#Mexico
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Mexico
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:Morelos
Established Title2:Municipal Status
Established Date2:March 5, 1933[1]
Established Title3:City
Established Date3:March 7, 1990
Government Type:Council-manager
Leader Title:Municipal President
Leader Name:Jazmín Solano[2]
Leader Title1:City Manager
Area Total Km2:102.89
Population Footnotes:[3]
Population Total:116,143
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone:CST
Utc Offset:−6
Timezone Dst:CDT
Utc Offset Dst:−5
Postal Code Type:Postal Code
Postal Code:62580 (Temixco Center)[4]
Area Code:777
Coordinates:18.85°N -113°W
Website:Official site
Blank Name:FIPS code

Temixco is the fourth-largest city in the Mexican state of Morelos. It stands at 18.85°N -113°W in the west-northwest part of the state.

The city serves as the municipal seat for the surrounding municipality, with which it shares a name. The municipality reported 116,143 inhabitants in 2010, a growth rate of 1.5% for each of the previous ten years.[5] The municipality has an area of .

Temixco is 6km (04miles) from Cuernavaca and 85km (53miles) from Mexico City.[6]

History

Prehispanic History

The area around Xochicalco (In the place of the House of Flowers) was settled in about 200 BCE, although the city reached its apex between AD 650 and 900.[7] Xochicalco was mentioned by Fray Bernardino de Sahagún in the 16th century, and it may have been settled by refugees from Teotihuacan.[8] The city traded with populations in Oaxaca, the Yucatán Peninsula, and the Gulf of Mexico. According to petrographs found in the Templo de las Serpientes Emplumadas, (Temple of the Feathered Serpents) Xochicalco hosted a meeting with representatives from the Maya area, the Gulf Coast, and Oaxaca to adjust the calendar during a solar eclipse while Xochicalco was at its splendor.

In about A.D. 830, the Nahuatl-speaking emigrated to the area south of the mountains of Ajusco, in what is the state of Morelos today. At the time of the formation of the Triple Alliance (1428), the only communities in the modern-day municipality of Temixco were Acatlipa and Cuentepec.[9]

Colonial Era

After the Spanish conquest of 1521, Hernán Cortés was granted the title Marqués del Valle de Oaxaca including almost all of modern Morelos. The villages of Temixco were Acatlipa, San Agustín Tetlama, and San Sebastián Cuentepec.

Martín Cortés, 2nd Marquis of the Valley of Oaxaca granted lands to religious orders and wealthy Spanish were able to establish the first sugar-cane plantations or haciendas. On July 29. 1617, Don Francisco Barbero of Copaltepeque established the Hacienda of Temixco on 1,755 hectares of land. Later, additional land was purchased from the native peoples. The first installation was the sugar press (trapiche), and at the beginning of the 18th century, it became an ingenio for production of sugar, rum, alcohol and other products. Other small presses were established at Rivas, Tomalaca, and San José. The hacienda took the name Nuestra Señora de la Concepción (Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception).

The owner of the hacienda, Miguel de Zia, seized land in Xochitepec and Alpuyeca in 1715 with the support of Fray Simón Roa of the Holy Inquisition. In 1719 the people of these communities complained, but Xochitepec never recovered its land. Indigenous of Alpuyeca rose against the hacienda in 1747, only to be arrested by Fray Miguel de Nava of Cuernavaca.

19th Century

In 1808, don Gabriel Joaquín de Yermo celebrated his wife's birthday by freeing 200 slaves from his hacienda in Temixco. This is why so few Black people participated in the Independence movement of 1810 but took the side of the Spanish.

Yermo led the September 15, 1808 golpe de estado (French & English: Coup d'état) against Viceroy José de Iturrigaray, who was replaced the following day by Viceroy Pedro de Garibay, ending the criollos' "Patriotas de Fernando VII" attempt to legally achieve independence. When the Mexican War of Independence broke out in 1810, Gabriel Joaquín de Yermo converted the hacienda into a supply center for the Royalists.

The State of Mexico was created in 1824, and the District of Cuernavaca was formed. The hacienda of Temixco was included in the municipality of Xochitepec within the District of Cuernavaca. Temixco became part of the State of Morelos when it was formed on April 17, 1869.

20th Century

There were two battles in the hacienda of Temixco in 1914. The first was on May 26, when the Zapatistas was able to take the hacienda, and the second was in early June when the Zapatistas used the hacienda as a staging ground for the Siege of Cuernavaca. In 1915, once the Zapatistas took control of Mexico City, they confiscated all the ruined alcohol distilleries. Gral. Genovevo de la O was assigned to get Temixco running again.

In 1921 Temixco was elevated to the category of "Congregación" and the town took the name Real de Temixco. It was part of the municipality of Cuernavaca. The Ejido de Temixco was formed in 1924.[10]

The Municipality of Temixco was created on March 5, 1933, including the towns of Tetlama, Cuentepec, Acatlipa, and Temixco.

On December 8, 1935, the Pueblo Nuevo del Puente (Alta Palmira) was established in Cuernavaca. In 1956 it was transferred to Temixco.

In the 1940s the Comité Japonés de Ayuda Mutua (CJAM; "Japanese Committee of Mutual Aid"), a Japanese-Mexican organization based in Mexico City, obtained a hacienda on 200ha of land in Temixco from Alejandro Lacy so it could house newly-arriving Japanese coming from other parts of Mexico.[6] In 1942, during World War II, the hacienda of Temixco became a concentration camp. The Japanese had moved in by 1943.[11] A school for Japanese students was established in Temixco to serve those on the hacienda.[12] Eventually, Mexican parents began asking for their children to attend the Temixco Japanese school.[13]

The Hacienda of Temixco continued to cultivate sugar cane until 1968 when it became a water park. Today it includes swimming pools, a wave pool, a river, and athletic fields.

Due to migration from other states, the population of Temixco grew quickly in the 1970s, and new colonies such as Rubén Jaramillo, Lomas de Guadalupe, 10 de Abril, and La Azteca were added. The town of Pueblo Viejo which previously belonged to Cuernavaca, became a part of Temixco in 1990.

The General Mariano Matamoros Airport opened on April 15, 1988 under control of the State of Morelos and came under federal control in 1992.[14]

Temixco was elevated to the status of ciudad (city) on March 7, 1990.

21st Century

Construction on a bridge to connect Mexican Federal Highway 95D in Apatlaco, Ayala and the Cuernavaca Airport in Temixco was begun in 2012 and the project ended in November 2012. As of this writing (April 2019), the bridge is incomplete and there is no connection to Temixco.

Temixco has been plagued by violence during much of the 21st century. Mayor Gisela Mota Ocampo was shot outside her home on January 2, 2016.[15] She died a few months later and was replaced by Irma Camacho García from 2016 to 2018. Camacho García had a tumultuous rule, becoming ill and dying six months later from cardiorespiratory arrest in July 2017.[16] Then, a battle between rival drug gangs on November 30, 2017, left six dead, including a baby. In 2020, Gambia Lozano, who worked for the presidency of Enrique Peña Nieto, and four members of his family were murdered by the Colombian drug cartel El Señorón in May 2020.[17]

Jazmin Juana Solano Lopez of Juntos Haremos Historia (Together we will make history coalition) was elected Presidente Municipal (municipal president) in the 2018 Mexican general election.[18]

The Canadian firm Alamos Gold proposed an open-pit gold mine in Tetlama in 2020.[19]

Morelos had its first case of infection during the COVID-19 pandemic in Mexico in mid-March, about the same time that Mexico entered Phase 2 of the pandemic and schools were closed.[20] [21] The National Guard was called for its help in closing swimming pools in condominiums.[22] Three hundred eighty-three cases were reported on December 27, 2020.[23] After health workers were vaccinated, on February 17 Temixco became the first municipality in Morelos to vaccinate senior citizens (60+) with 15,170 doses of AstraZeneca vaccine.[24]

Communities

There are 36 communities in the municipality of Temixco and a population of 108,126; 92.6% urban and 7.4% rural. The population density is 1,052.1 persons/km2[25]

Temixco is the capital of the municipality. It is located at 18.8544°N -99.2272°W at a height of 1,290 meters (4,232 feet). It has a population of 89,915 including 36,185 minors and 7,613 adults over 60. 1,189 people live in Indigenous homes and 530 people speak an Indigenous language. 31,651 people have Social Security. There are 22,089 homes; 1,413 have a dirt floor; 2,242 consist of a single room; 20,744 have water and sewage; 21,011 have electricity; 2,560 have a computer, and 20,338 have television. The average education level is 8 years.[26] Temixco is 14 kilometers (8.7 miles) from Cuernavaca and 101 km (62.8 miles) from Mexico City.[27]

Cuentepec is located at 18.8603°N -99.3264°W, 1,390 meters (4,560 feet) above sea level. It has a population of 3,549, of whom 3,514 speak an Indigenous language.[28] It is 33 km (20.5 miles) from the municipal capital and three km (two miles) from the archaeological zone of Xochicalco. The adventure park Cuentepec Extremo is found within the community.[29]

San Agustín Tetlama is located at 18.8297°N -99.2839°W, 1,285 meters (4216 feet) above sea level. It has a population of 1,388.[30]

Campo Sotelo is located at 18.8336°N -99.2136°W and is located at 1,230 meters (4,035 feet) above sea level. It has a population of 560 people.[31] It is located 2.7 km (1.7 miles) from the City of Temixco.

Solidaridad is located at 18.8528°N -99.2669°W and is located at 1,320 meters (4,331 feet) above sea level. It has a population of 501 people.[32] It is located 7 km (4.3 miles) from the City of Temixco.[33]

Acatlipa (from Nahuatl, meaning Sanctuary of the god of wind) is south of the city of Temixco bordering Xochitepec. It consists of fifteen neighborhoods and includes the "Ojo de Agua" water park. Its three most important festivals are April 2 (the town anniversary), November 30 (San Andrés Apostol), and January 20 (Immaculate Conception).[34]

Economy

Agriculture and ranching

Agriculture accounts for about one-third of the employment in the municipality, although there is little land available for it. The major agricultural communities are Temixco, Acatlipa, Cuentepec, Tetlama, and Pueblo Viejo. The principal crops are corn, beans, sorghum, and peanuts. Flowers, particularly roses, also make up an important crop, with a value of MXN $23,000,000 in 2010.

Ranching is of minor importance, with pigs and chickens being the most important.

Industry and mining

Ceramics are important in Colonia Tres de Mayo, and there are a number of small-scale clothing factories. Pottery is made in Cuentepec. Bricks and other materials for construction are manufactured.

Sand is mined in Lomas del Carril and Alta Palmira, principally for construction. There are unexploited lime resources in Tetlama.

Tourism

Tourism mostly centers around the two water parks and the Xochicalco archaeological site, which includes a museum. There are hotels, restaurants, and night clubs.[35] There are movie theaters in Temixco and Acatlipa.

Cuentepec Extremo is an adventure park in Cuentepec. The main attraction is a cave that offers four rappel lines that lead to the Tembembe River. The park offers eight zip lines, camping, and hiking, and there are prehistoric cave paintings.[36]

Water Parks

Ex-Hacienda de Temixco is located in the center of the city. Located on the grounds of a 16th-century sugar cane hacienda, the park has 20 pools, a wave pool, a wild river, four water slides, restaurants, picnic area, soccer field, and parking area.[37]

Parque Acuático Ojo de Agua in Acatlipa has an Olympic pool, water slide, picnic area, hanging bridge, and mini zoo.[38]

Historical Monuments

Commerce

There are a variety of stores with clothing, shoes, construction materials, food and groceries, and hardware in the larger communities. There is a supermarket owned by a major chain in Temixco.

Transportation and communications

Public transportation

Local transportation within the Greater Cuernavaca area is provided by vans called rutas. Rutas 1, 3, 16, and 20 serve Temixco with connections to Cuernavaca and Xochitepec.

Two bus lines serve the Temixco-Mexico City route: Pullman de Morelos[40] and Mi Bus.[41]

Taxis and shared-ride services (Uber) also serve the community.

Highways

Mexican Federal Highway 95D, also called Autopista del Sol crosses the municipality from north to south (Mexico City — Cuernavaca — Xochitepec — Acapulco) with several exits in Temixco. There is also bridge from 95D at Apatlaco that leads nowhere.

Mexican Federal Highway 95 parallels 95D but passes through the center of Temixco and Acatlipa. State highways connect Temixco — Emiliano Zapata and Acatlipa — Tezoyuca, (Emiliano Zapata municipality). There are local highways connecting other communities, the Xochicalco archaeological site, and the Cuernavaca Airport.

General Mariano Matamoros Airport

The Cuernavaca Airport is located in Tetlama. The airport opened on April 15, 1988; due to its short runway of only 2772m (9,094feet), it has offered on-again / off-again service since then.[42] The airport currently hosts a school of aviation[43] and there are plans to extend the runway and open the airport to commercial traffic soon (written April 13, 2019).

Radio, television, and Internet service

Radiologico, XHTIX 100.1 FM, broadcasts from Temixco.[44]

Of the 24,045 homes in the municipality, 21,884 (91%) have a television and 11,423 (47.5%) have computers. Axtel, Telmex, and Izzi Telecom provide Internet connections.

Education

There are 33 public and 4 private elementary schools in the municipality.[45] There are two public general middle schools and five private ones. There are also three public technical middle schools, and five "telescundarias." There are one public high school and seven private high schools.[46]

There are four private universities:[47]

Private elementary and middle schools include:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Morelos - Temixco . www.inafed.gob.mx . May 17, 2020.
  2. Web site: AYUNTAMIENTO DE TEMIXCO – temixco.gob.mx . May 17, 2020 . es-MX.
  3. Web site: Número de habitantes. Morelos . cuentame.inegi.org.mx . May 17, 2020.
  4. Web site: Listado de todos los Códigos Postales de Temixco, Morelos . micodigopostal.org . May 17, 2020.
  5. Web site: Mexico: Administrative Division (States and Municipalites) - Population Statistics, Charts and Map.
  6. García, Jerry. . University of Arizona Press, February 27, 2014., 9780816598861. p. 174.
  7. News: Píramides de Xochicalco. Turismo en Morelos . Morelos Turistico. April 13, 2019. Spanish. Pyramids of Xochicalco. Mexicoxp .
  8. Web site: Xochicalco. INAH. April 13, 2019. Spanish.
  9. Web site: Historia Temixco Morelos. Mi Municipio. April 13, 2019. Spanish. History of Temixco, Morelos.
  10. Web site: Morelos — Temixco. Enciclopedia de los Municipios y Delegaciones de Mexico. April 13, 2019. Spanish.
  11. García, Jerry. Looking Like the Enemy: Japanese Mexicans, the Mexican State, and US Hegemony, 1897-1945. University of Arizona Press, February 27, 2014., 9780816598861. p. 183.
  12. García, Jerry. Looking Like the Enemy: Japanese Mexicans, the Mexican State, and US Hegemony, 1897-1945. University of Arizona Press, February 27, 2014., 9780816598861. p. 181.
  13. García, Jerry. Looking Like the Enemy: Japanese Mexicans, the Mexican State, and US Hegemony, 1897-1945. University of Arizona Press, February 27, 2014., 9780816598861. p. 182.
  14. Web site: Aeropuerto Internacional de Cuernavaca: Antecedentes. April 12, 2019. Aeropuerto de Cuernavaca. es.
  15. Web site: Muere alcaldesa de Temixco, suplía a la anterior asesinada. El Debate. April 13, 2019. July 18, 2017. Spanish. Mayor of Temixco dies, will be replaced.
  16. Web site: Proceso. July 18, 2017. Oct 13, 2019. Fallece la alcaldesa suplente de Temixco, Irma Camacho García . es.
  17. Web site: Masacre en Temixco: asesinaron a ex funcionario de Peña Nieto y a otras cuatro personas . infobae . May 22, 2020 . es-ES.
  18. Web site: GOBERNADOR ELECTO PROCESO ELECTORAL LOCAL ORDINARIO 2017-2018 . impepac.mx . Dec 14, 2018.
  19. News: Denuncian proyecto minero a cielo abierto en Temixco, Morelos . March 3, 2021 . Observatorio de Conflictos Mineros de América Latina . 27 January 2020 . es.
  20. https://www.elsoldecuernavaca.com.mx/local/comienzan-a-escasear-productos-por-covid-19-4971890.html Products start to be scarce due to COVID-19
  21. Web site: Preciado . Tlaulli . En Morelos, autoridades reportan 95 casos confirmados de Covid-19 y 12 decesos . www.launion.com.mx . Apr 21, 2020 . es-es. In Morelos, authorities report 95 confirmed cases of Covid-19 and 12 deaths.
  22. Web site: Usa Temixco a Guardia Nacional para cerrar albercas en fraccionamientos y condominios – Nodo Noticias . 23 Apr 2020 . es.
  23. News: Llega Morelos a 1 mil 600 muertes por COVID19 . December 28, 2020 . diariodemorelos.com . Diario de Morelos . December 27, 2020 . es.
  24. News: Morelos Cruz . Rubicela . Lenta y con desorden, la vacunación contra Covid-19 en Morelos . March 8, 2021 . jornada.com.mx . La Jornada . March 8, 2021 . es.
  25. Web site: Temixco. Gobierno del Estado de Morelos 2009-2012 — Secretaría de Desarrollo Agropecuario. Spanish. April 13, 2019.
  26. Web site: Temixco, Temixco. Nuestro Mexico. April 12, 2019.
  27. Web site: Distancia de Temixco a Ciudad de México. Spanish. Las Distancias.net.
  28. Web site: Cuentepec - Morelos. Nuestro Mexico. April 12, 2019.
  29. Web site: Cuentepec Extremo. Morelos Turistico. Spanish. April 13, 2019.
  30. Web site: San Agustín Tetlama - Morelos. Nuestro Mexico. April 12, 2019.
  31. Web site: Campo Sotelo - Morelos. Nuestro Mexico. April 12, 2019.
  32. Web site: Solidaridad — Morelos. Spanish. Nuestro Mexico. April 12, 2019.
  33. Web site: Distancia de Temixco a Temixco. Spanish. Las Distancias.net.
  34. Web site: Acatlipa Centro, Temixco Morelos. Vive MX. April 13, 2019. Spanish.
  35. Web site: Temixco: Economia y Cultura. Morelos Turistico. Spanish. April 13, 2019. Temixco: Economics and Culture.
  36. Web site: Cuentepec Extremo. Morelos Turistico. Spanish. April 13, 2019.
  37. Web site: Exhacienda de Temixco. Balnerios Morelos. April 13, 2019. Spanish.
  38. Web site: Parque Acuático Ojo de Agua. Balnerios Morelos. Spanish. April 13, 2019.
  39. Web site: Zona Arqueológica de Xochicalco.
  40. Web site: Pullman de Morelos. Gropo Pullman de Morelos. April 13, 2019.
  41. Web site: hHorarios de autobuses de Temixco . April 13, 2019. Mexico Autobuses.
  42. Web site: Aeropuerto Internacional de Cuernavaca. Aeropuerto de Cuernavaca. April 13, 2019. Spanish. Cuernavaca International Airport.
  43. Web site: Escuela de Aviación - México. Educaweb. April 13, 2019.
  44. Web site: Radiologico 100.1 FM. Tune In.com. April 13, 2019.
  45. Web site: PRIMARIAS en TEMIXCO, MORELOS. PAGINA 3.
  46. Web site: BACHILLERES TÉCNICOS en TEMIXCO, MORELOS.
  47. Web site: LICENCIATURAS en MÉXICO.
  48. Web site: Cuernavaca.
  49. "Inicio." Colegio Nuevo Continente. Retrieved on April 20, 2016. "Av. Junto al Río No. 28, Fracc. Junto al Río, Temixco, Morelos. CP. 62589"