Online Encyclopedia

CHIAPAS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 118 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHIAPAS  , a Pacific

coast state of
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southern Mexico on the Guatemalan frontier, bounded by the states of
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Tabasco on the N. and Vera Cruz and Oaxaca on the W . Pop . (1895) 318,730; (1900) 360,799, a large proportion of which are Indians;
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area, 27,222 sq. m. largely forested . The Sierra Madre crosses the southern
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part of the state parallel with the coast, separating the low, humid, forested districts on the frontier of Tabasco from the hot, drier, coastal plain on the Pacific . The mountain region includes a plateau of
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great fertility and temperate
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climate, which is one of the best parts of Mexico and contains the larger part of the population of the state . But
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isolation and lack of transportation facilities have retarded its development . The extension of the Pan-
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American railway across the state, from
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San Geronimo, on the Tehuantepec
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National
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line, to the Guatemalan frontier, is calculated to improve the
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industrial and social conditions of the
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people . The
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principal
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industries are agriculture, which is very backward, stock-raising,
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timber-cutting, fruit-farming and salt-making . Coffee-planting is a new industry on the Pacific slope of the Sierra Madre at elevations of 2000 to 4000 ft., and has met with considerable success . Rubber plantations have also been laid out, principally by American companies, the Castilloa elastica doing well . The exports include cattle, hides, coffee, rubber, fruit and salt . The
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mineral resources include gold,
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silver, copper and petroleum, but no mines were in operation in '906 .

The

capital, Tuxtla Gutierrez (pop . 9395 in 1900), is on the plateau, 3z M. from the Rio Sabinas, and '38 m . N.E. of the Pacific
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port of Tonala . The former capital, San Cristobal (pop. about 5000 in 1895), about 40 M . E. of Tuxtla, is an interesting old
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town and the seat of the bishopric of Chiapas, founded in 1525 and made famous through its associations with
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Las Casas . Tapachula (pop. in 1895, 6775), the capital of the department of Soconusco; m. from the Guatemalan frontier, is a rising commercial town of the new coffee
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district . It is 24 M. inland from the small port of San Benito, is 559 ft. above sea-level, and has a healthy climate . Other prominent towns with their populations in 1895, are Comitan, or Comitlan (93'6), on the Rio Grijalva about 40 M . S.E. of San Cristobal, and chiefly distinguished for its
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fine church and convent dedicated to San Domingo; Pichucalco (8549), Tenejapa (7936), San Antonio (6715), Cintalape (6455), La Concordia (6291), San Carlos (5977), and Ococingo (5667) .

End of Article: CHIAPAS
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