Miacatlán


Miacatlán is a city and municipality in the Mexican state of Morelos. It stands at.
To the north is the State of Mexico and the municipality of Temixco, to the south Puente de Ixtla, Mazatepec and Tetecala, to the east Xochitepec, and to the west Coatlán del Río and the State of Mexico. The city serves as the municipal seat for the surrounding municipality of the same name. The municipality reported 26,713 inhabitants in the 2015 census.
The altitude of Miacatlan is 1,054 meters above sea level and it covers 233,644.30 km2 of territory, and it is 40 km from Cuernavaca.
The toponym Miacatlán comes from a Nahuatl name Mitl, and Acatl, and Tlan, and means "place of abundant reeds for arrows". This is probably in reference to the two lakes in the municipality, Coatetelco and El Rodeo.
The archaeological site of Coatetelco is also in Miacatlan.

History

The history of the municipality of Miacatlán goes back to the pre-Hispanic era, it was part of a political and religious center, tributary to Xochicalco, but later it belonged to the Cuauháhuac manor. Miacatlán was conquered by the Aztecs, which made it belong to Tenochtitlán. During the colonial period, it was called San Francisco Miacatlán and became part of the Marquesado del Valle de Oaxaca.
In 1823 Miacatlan was part of the municipality of Mazatepec, State of Mexico. When Morelos became a state in 1869, Miacatlán acquired the category of municipality, including the towns of Coatetelco and Palpan de Barandas, the ranches of Nexapa and Ojo de Agua, as well as the Haciendas of Acatzingo, La Nigua, and Miacatlán.
During the Mexican Revolution, General Pedro Ojeda fled to the Hacienda de Miacatlán after the Siege of Cuernavaca. Also General Francisco V. Pacheco was shot on orders of General Emiliano Zapata at El Zapote in 1917.
Abel Espin Garcia of Juntos por Morelos was elected Presidente Municipal in the election of July 1, 2018.
The community of Coatetelco became a separate municipality on January 1, 2019.
As of May 4, 2020, there were 505 infections and 59 deaths in the state of Morelos and four confirmed infections from the COVID-19 pandemic in Miacatlan. Schools and many businesses were closed from mid March until June 1. On June 2, Miacatlán reported 14 confirmed cases and two deaths from the virus; the reopening of the state was pushed back until at least June 13.

Communities

is a pre-Hispanic archaeological site located next to the Laguna de Coatetelco two km from Alpuyeca. Evidence of nomadic groups goes back 25,000 years, with small farming communities settled in during the Early and Mid-Preclassic Periods. The Coatetelco apogee was in the Late Preclassical period with communities of 250 to 500 inhabitants. Excavations demonstrate human occupation influenced by Teotihuacan.
Xochicalco dominated the area during the Epiclassic Period, after which Coatetelco once again became the leading community in the area. Nearly all the standing architecture at the site was built during the Late Postclassical Period.
Most of the excavation was carried out by Raúl Arana. There is a small pyramid, a ball court, and a circular platform dedicated to the god of wind, Ehécatl. The tallest structure is the Cuauhtlitzin temple, which has a staircase with lateral arches. There was also a female stone figure that was called Cuauhtlitzin.
There is a museum on the site.

Culture

Fiestas, Dances, Traditions
Music There are four brass bands that play at the fiestas of Santo Tomás, Molina, La Sumaya, and Santa Cecilia.
Handicrafts. Miacatlan produces ceramics and Palpan produces embroidery.
Food. Regional foods include goat and mutton barbacoa and pork cochinitas. Tamales de Mojarra in Coatetelco. Cheese and mezcal-based drinks in Palpan.