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Tamazula de Victoria

Coordinates: 24°58′12″N 106°57′56″W / 24.97000°N 106.96556°W / 24.97000; -106.96556
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Tamazula de Victoria
Municipal seat and city
Official seal of Tamazula de Victoria
Tamazula de Victoria is located in Durango
Tamazula de Victoria
Tamazula de Victoria
Location in Mexico
Tamazula de Victoria is located in Mexico
Tamazula de Victoria
Tamazula de Victoria
Tamazula de Victoria (Mexico)
Coordinates: 24°58′12″N 106°57′56″W / 24.97000°N 106.96556°W / 24.97000; -106.96556
Country Mexico
StateDurango
MunicipalityTamazula
Government
 • Municipal PresidentRicardo Ochoa Beltran
Elevation
245 m (804 ft)
Population
 (2010)
 • Total
2,337
Time zoneUTC-6 (CST)
Postalcode
34580
Websitehttp://www.tamazuladgo.gob.mx/index.html

Tamazula de Victoria is a small town and seat of the municipality of Tamazula in the Mexican state of Durango. The town is located approximately 53 mi (85 km) east of the city center of Culiacán, Sinaloa, in the Sierra Madre Occidental mountains. The Tamazula River crescents directly north of the city.

Colloquially known as Tamazula, its official name is Tamazula de Victoria after the first president of Mexico's adopted last name was added. General Guadalupe Victoria, the first president of Mexico, and his brother Francisco Victoria were born in Tamazula. As of 2010, the town had a population of 2,337[1]

History

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In the seventeenth century, Jesuit missionaries founded Mission San Ignacio de Tamazula.[2]

Villages

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The municipal subdivisions of Tamazula are:

  • Amaculi
  • Los Remedios
  • El Chicural
  • El Cocoyole
  • Chacala
  • El Llano
  • El Comedero
  • Las Juntas
  • Las Quebradas
  • El Río
  • Pueblo Viejo
  • El Carrizo
  • Otatitlán
  • Las Coloradas
  • Santa Elena
  • El Cajón
  • La Mesa del Rodeo
  • El Durazno
  • La Alameda
  • Santa Gertrudis
  • El Tecuán
  • Santa Barbara
  • Cuesta Blanca
[edit]

References

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  1. ^ "Tamazula". Catálogo de Localidades. Secretaría de Desarrollo Social (SEDESOL). Retrieved 23 April 2014.
  2. ^ Deeds, Susan M. (1 August 2003). Defiance and Deference in Mexico's Colonial North: Indians Under Spanish Rule in Nueva Vizcaya. University of Texas Press. pp. 57–58, 161. ISBN 978-0-292-70551-7.

24°58′12″N 106°57′56″W / 24.97000°N 106.96556°W / 24.97000; -106.96556