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{{For|rock-climbing area near Monterrey|La Huasteca Climbing Area}}
{{For|rock-climbing area near Monterrey|La Huasteca Climbing Area}}
'''La Huasteca''' is a cultural region located in the northeast of [[Mexico]], including parts of the states of [[Tamaulipas]], [[Veracruz]], [[Puebla]], [[San Luis Potosí]], [[Querétaro]] and [[Guanajuato]]. It is roughly defined as the area in which the [[Huastec people]] had influence when their civilization was at its height in the [[Mesoamerica]]n period. Today, the Huastecs occupy only a fraction of this region with the [[Nahua peoples|Nahuas]] now the most numerous indigenous group. However, those who live in the region share a number of cultural traits such as a style of music and dance along with religious festivals such as [[Xantolo]].
'''La Huasteca''' is a region in the northeastern part of [[Mexico]], comprising mountains, hill country and lowlands, centered on the [[drainage basin]] of the [[Pánuco River]], inland from the city of [[Tampico]]. It includes parts of the states of [[Hidalgo (state)|Hidalgo]], [[Veracruz]], [[Tamaulipas]], [[San Luis Potosí]], and a little part of [[Querétaro]] ([[Sierra Gorda]]) and [[Puebla]]. It is home to some 80,000 speakers of the [[Wastek language|Huastec (or Wastek)]] language (the [[Huastec people]]) and around a million speakers of Huasteca [[Nahuatl dialects]].
==Geography and environment==
Historically and ethnically, the La Huasteca region is defined by the area dominated by the Huastecs at their height.<ref name="unesco"> {{cite web |url= http://www.unesco.org.uy/phi/aguaycultura/es/paises/mexico/pueblo-nahuas-de-la-huasteca.html |title= México - Pueblo Nahuas de la Huasteca |work=Agua Cultura |publisher= UNESCO |language=Spanish |trans_title=Mexico – Nahua People of the La Huasteca |accessdate=March 28, 2012 }} </ref> The actual extension of the region is somewhat disputed as well as how it should be sub-divided. Geographically it has been defined as from the [[Sierra Madre Oriental]] to the [[Gulf of Mexico]] with the [[Sierra de Tamaulipas]] as the north border and the [[Cazones River]] as the south. It extends over the south of Tamaulipas, the southeast of San Luis Potosí, the northeast of Querétaro and Hidalgo and the extreme north of Veracruz and Puebla and a very small portion of Guanajuato over an area of about 32,000km2.<ref name="unesco"/> .<ref name="dondese"> {{cite web |url= http://www.mexicodesconocido.com.mx/la-huasteca-donde-se-canta-el-huapango-hidalgo.html |title= La Huasteca, donde se canta el huapango (Hidalgo) |autor= Georgina Luna Parra |publisher= Mexico Desconocido magazine |location=Mexico City |language=Spanish |trans_title=La Huatesca, where Huapango is sung (Hidalgo) |accessdate=March 28, 2012 }} </ref> <ref name="meten"> {{cite news |title= Meten a la Huasteca dentro de un museo |author= Omar Garcia |newspaper= Reforma |location=Mexico City |date=June 2, 2004 |page=3 |language=Spanish |trans_title=Fit La Huasteca inside a museum }} </ref>
To the north and east there are relative flatlands. To the south there are hills of calcified sand. [[Basalt]] from old lava flows penetrate the primarily sedimentary rock from the west and appear with wind and water erosion. The higher mountain areas to the west often have tall peaks in capricious forms with steep slopes and eight fast running rivers.<ref name="arqueomex"> {{cite web |url= http://www.arqueomex.com/S2N3nHuasteca79.html |title= La Huasteca: historia y cultura |author= Guy Stresser-Péan |publisher=Arqueomex magazine |language=Spanish |trans_title=La Huasteca: History and culture |accessdate=March 28, 2012 }} </ref><ref name="ligero"> {{cite news |title= Viajando Ligero / Aventura en la Huasteca |author= Jim Budd |newspaper= Mural |location=Guadalajara, Mexico |page=2 |language=Spanish |trans_title= Traveling light/Adventure in La Huasteca }} </ref> Highways in the region tend to be small and winding, especially in the higher elevations in San Luis Potosi and Hidalgo.<ref name="ligero"/> Most of these river eventually empty into either the [[Panuco River|Pánuco or the Cazones River with the zone belonging to the Pánuco, Tuxpan and Cazones River basins, all of which empty into the Gulf of Mexico.(unesco) As much of the rock is easily eroded, the mountain areas are filled with caves and other underground openings. The best known of this is the [[Sótano de las Golandrinas (Cave of Swallows) just north of [[Xilitla]]. It is famous for the large number of birds (swifts and green parrots, not swallows) what emerges from the opening in the morning. It is also a site for base-jumping down the sink’s 372-meter depth. The birds return en masse again at nightfall.<ref name="visitjungle"> {{cite news |title= Visit the Jungles of La Huasteca |author= Alexis Okeowo |newspaper=Time |date=October 15, 2009 |url= http://www.time.com/time/travel/article/0,31542,1930353,00.html |accessdate=March 28, 2012 }} </ref><ref name="ligero"/> Many of the rivers run clear or turquoise blue in deep ravines or canyons and form waterfalls. The tallest of these is the Tamil, which is 300 meters wide and 105 meters tall. It joins the waters of the Gallinas River with those of the Santa Maria to form the Tampaon River.<ref name="secretos"> {{cite news |title= Secretos de la Huasteca Potosina |author=Alfredo Martinez |newspaper= El Norte |location=Monterrey , Mexico |date=March 11, 2001 |page=6 |language=Spanish |trans_title=Secrets of the La Huasteca in San Luis Potosí }} </ref> Another important waterfall is the Tamasopo and at the Nacimiento del Río Huichihuayán (Source of the Huichihuayán River) near the village of the same name, the water comes out of the mountains, forming pools large enough for swimming.<ref name="visitjungle"/>


It is one of the most bio-diverse regions in Mexico, with over 2,000 species of plants.<ref name="unesco"/><ref name="visitjungle"/> This diversity also extends into agricultural crops with local corn varieties resistant to drought.<ref name="unesco"/> This area is mostly dominated by tropical [[rainforest]], some of which is still semi-virgin with a hot humid climate with some areas of pine-[[holm oak]] forest in the highest elevations and arid bush and grassland in a few isolated areas.<ref name="unesco"/><ref name="visitjungle"/> Tropical forests have species such as [[kapok]], cedar, ebony and more with palms more common on the coastline.<ref name="dondese"/> Tall growth perennial rainforest dominates in the states of Hidalgo and Veracruz with medium grown semi deciduous rainforest in San Luis Potosí. It also has a large number of species of algae, more diverse and of different types than those found in other parts of Mexico.<ref name="unesco"/> It is also rich in wildlife such as parrots, [[macaw]]s, [[spider monkey]]s, owls, eagles, [[toucan]]s, deer, [[jaguar]], [[wild boar]] and [[raccoon]]s with various species of reptiles and insects.<ref name="dondese"/><ref name="visitjungle"/>
The name is often spelled "Huaxteca", and presumably derives from the [[Nahuatl]] word ''huaxi'' {{IPA-nah|ˈwaʃi|}} (Guaje tree, ''[[Leucaena leucocephala]]''), though [[Bernardino de Sahagún]] relates that the name was derived from the name of ''Cuextécatl'', a Nahuatl-speaker who served as guide to the Spanish explorers.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}


The main city in the SLP section is [[Ciudad Valles]], founded by [[Nuño Beltran de Guzmán]] in 1533.<ref name="ligero"/><ref name="secretos"/> The most important city in the Hidalgo portion is [[Huejutla]] .<ref name="dondese"/> Other important population centers include Tantoyuca, Tamazunchale and Chicontepec.<ref name="huasnahuas"/>
The Huasteca's distinctive cultural features include [[Huapango]] music and dance.


Unlike most of the rest of Mexico, this area does not have a [[Rainy season|rainy]] and [[dry season]] because it rains all year round in the mountain areas. Therefore, this region is covered in [[Veracruz moist forests|rainforest]] and has the highest concentration of rivers and [[floodplain]]s in the country.<ref name="MexDes">{{cite journal |last= Podestá |first=Florencia |year=2008 |month= February |title=La cueva del agua y la cascada de Tamul|journal= México Desconocido |volume= 372 |pages=18–23 |url=http://www.mexicodesconocido.com.mx/notas/8253-La-Cueva-del-Agua-y-la-cascada-de-Tamul}}</ref>


One section of the La Huasteca is called the [[Sierra Gorda]], which is centered on northern Querétaro, but extends into Hidalgo and Guanajuato.<ref name="mexdespot"> {{cite web |url= http://www.mexicodesconocido.com.mx/la-huasteca-potosina-todo-un-universo-cultural.html |title= La Huasteca potosina, todo un universo cultural |autor=Jaime Bali |publisher= Mexico Desconocido magazine |location=Mexico City |language=Spanish |trans_title=La Huatesca Potosina, an entire cultural universe |accessdate=March 28, 2012 }} </ref>
Cities in San Luis Potosí that are within the Huasteca area include: [[Ciudad Valles]], [[Xilitla]], [[El Pozo de las Golondrinas]], [[Tamúl]], [[Tamasopo]], [[Consuelo]] and [[Taninul]].<ref name="planeta">{{cite web |url=http://www.planeta.com/planeta/99/0799slp.html|title=planetadotcom: journal of practical ecotourism|accessdate= 2008-02-29}}</ref> The main city of Hidalgo is [[Huejutla de Reyes]].
==History==
Huastec is derived from the Spanish Huasteca which is derived from the [[Nahuatl]] word for the ethnicity Kuextlan.<ref name="unesco"/> The Huastecs were the most northern Mesoamerican group on the Gulf coast and Their contact with the [[Chichimeca]] led to [[Aridoamerica]]n influences in their culture.<ref name="lochoa42"> Ochoa, L. p. 42 </ref><ref name="ligero"/> The pre Hispanic sculpture of the region is distinct with well known pieces such as the “Adolescente de Tamuín” and the goddess of life and health Tlazoltéotl.<ref name="dondese"/> Traditionally crops here have been corn, beans, squash, various chili peppers and tubular such as [[yucca]], camotes and [[jicama]]s. However, gathering of wild foods played a more important role here in the Mesoamerican period, especially roots, small chili peppers and a fruit ([[Brosimum alicastrum]]) as well as fish from lakes, rivers and ocean. The production of salt was important at Chila Lake.<ref name="arqueomex"/>


The Huastecs are what probably remain of Mayan expansion northward up the Veracruz coast but were “left behind” after other Mayan groups retreated south and east.<ref name="arqueomex"/> The Huastecs began to be culturally dominant in their region between 750 and 800 CE after [[El Tajín]] waned. From then to the 15th century, they expanded their territory and influence from the [[Tuxpan River]] to the Pánuco with most settlements along the banks of the Huayalejo-Tamesí River, along the northern Veracruz and southern Tamaulipas coast and west into the Sierra Madre Oriental. The culture was influential even farther west into northern Querétaro, and there may have been Huastec settlements into what is now northern Puebla.<ref name="lochoa2930"> Ochoa, L. p. 29-30 </ref> .<ref name="lochoa168169"> Ochoa, L. p. 168-169 </ref> Notable settlements include [[El Tamuín]] in San Luis Potosí, [[Yahualica]] and Huejutla in Hidalgo, Tzicóaxc on the Veracruz/Puebla border as well as Tuxpan, Temapache, Pánuca and Tanhuijo in Veracruz.<ref name="lochoa33"> Ochoa, L. p. 33 </ref>
Touristically, the area is not well known or visited by either Mexican or international tourists. For this reason, many areas are still “virgin” for any number of activities, including [[rafting]], [[kayaking]], [[abseiling]] and [[spelunking]] in its caverns such as the [[Cave of Swallows|Sótano de las Golondrinas]], in San Luis Potosí.<ref name="MexDes"/>


Although the Huastecs built small cities and ceremonial centers, they never reached the size and complexity of others in Mesoamerica.<ref name="lochoa3132"> Ochoa, L. p. 31-32 </ref>The northern areas were constantly threatened by the Chichimeca, which may be the origin for the traditional “Comanche” dance found in the region.<ref name="lochoa33"/><ref name="unesco"/> In the Post classic, Huastec territory began to shrink.<ref name="lochoa32"> Ochoa, L. p. 32 </ref> In the west and south of their territory, there were enclaves of Nahuas, [[Tepehua people|Tepehuas]], [[Totonac people|Totonacs]] and [[Otomi people|Otomis]] .<ref name="lochoa42"/> The Totonacs and Tepehuas in the region probably arrived around the same time as the Huastecs. The Otomis and Nahuas arrived later but the time line for these migrations is disputed. One Nahua incursion occurs in 800 CE related to [[Tula, Hidalgo|Tula]] and the other due to the expansion of the [[Aztec Empire]] .<ref name="unesco"/> The [[Aztec]]s conquered from the south and west to an area they called Chicoaque or Tzicoac in 1458, which was probably the area which is now Mesa de Cacahuatengo in the municipality of [[Ixhuatlán de Madero]] .<ref name="unesco"/> .<ref name="lochoa190"> Ochoa, L. p. 190 </ref>
Associated with the [[Río Gallinas]] area, located southwest of [[Ciudad Valles]], near the border of [[Querétaro]] state, are a number of attractions. The Gallinas river is a wide, fast-flowing river. Its waters run green within narrow, deep canyon walls of a reddish color, and at its height can run 300 meters wide. The river merges with the [[Río Santa María]] to give rise to a third called the [[Río Tampaón]]. Here the waters run turquoise and is suitable for rafting. The two most interesting attractions associated with these rivers are the [[Cascada de Tamul]] (Tamul Waterfall) and the [[Cueva del Agua]] (water cave). The Cascada is a wide waterfall with so much water running over it that it should not be approached too closely. [[Jaguar]]s, [[Collared Peccary|Collared Peccaries]], [[Cougar]]s and [[toucan]]s still roam freely in this area as well.<ref name="MexDes"/> It is the largest fall in San Luis Potosí at 105 meters high. <ref name="Journal">{{cite web |url=http://www.jornada.unam.mx/viajera/?destino=san+luis+potosi&seccion=04|title=La Journal Viajera San Luis Potosí Cascada de Tamul|accessdate= 2008-02-29}}</ref> The Cueva del Agua is an enormous cavern with a [[cupola]]-shaped roof and gray walls. It is filled with sapphire-blue water deep enough for swimming.<ref name="MexDes"/>


The first Spanish contact with the Huasteca region was in 1518, when ships explored the Pánuco River area.<ref name="unesco"/> After the [[Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire|Conquest]], [[Gonzalo de Sandoval]] burned alive about 460 nobles and chiefs in the region and captured about 20,000 indigenous to sell as slaves in the Antilles.<ref name="unesco"/> The first evangelizers in the area were the [[Franciscan order|Franciscans]] around 1530, with the [[Augustinian order|Augustinians]] arriving in 1533, with the first large efforts in [[Pahuatlán]], Puebla and Chicontepec. The area initially was under the [[Diocese of Puebla|Bisphoric of Tlaxcala]]. But evangelization was slow with period documents indicating that most pagan beliefs had not been extinguished well into the colonial period. One hundred and thirty [[encomienda]]s were created in the region which lasted most of the 16th century and in cases into the 17th.<ref name="unesco"/> Spanish dominance in the coastal areas depopulated it of most indigenous, with the Huastecs retreating south from Tamaulipas to Panúco and Tamaulipas and with many dying from war and disease.<ref name="lochoa42"/>.<ref name="lochoa191193"> Ochoa, L. p. 191-193 </ref> The introduction of cattle into the flat areas prompted the Spanish to force the relocation of many indigenous groups in the area, sometimes with violence.<ref name="huasnahuas"> {{cite web |url= http://www.cdi.gob.mx/dmdocuments/nahuas_huasteca.pdf |title= Nahuas de Huasteca |author= Julieta Valle Esquivel |publisher= Comisión Nacional para el Desarrollo de los Pueblos Indígena |year=2003 |isbn=970-753-008-1 |language=Spanish |trans_title=Nahuas of La Huasteca |accessdate=March 28, 2012 }} </ref> Not all attempts to relocate indigenous groups were successful. There were notable failures in Hidalgo. However, its overall success managed to divide the region into new political units. Spanish policies and economic conditions forced many of the indigenous here to crowd together in certain areas, with Huastecs and Nahuas together in Ozuluama, Tantoyuca, Tamiahua and Tuxpan and Nahuas and Otomis in Chicontepec and Huejutla. The new political units brought in other indigenous groups not normally part of the Huasteco, such as the [[Pame people|Pames]] in the Sierra Gorda of Queretaro.<ref name="unesco"/>
Another water-based attraction is called the Puente de Dios (Bridge of God) which is located in the same area southwest of Ciudad Valles, near the town of [[Tamasopo]]. It is a natural rock formation that looks like a bridge that spans a natural well surrounded by lush vegetation. There are small waterfalls here as well as a cave with [[stalagmite]] and [[stalactite]] formations.


The Spanish then introduced African slaves into the area. While the indigenous populations made something of a comeback in Hidalgo and San Luis Potosí, this did not happen in Veracruz.<ref name="huasnahuas"/> In the later colonial period, most Huastec communities were populated by [[mestizo]]s, especially along the Veracruz and Tamaulipas coast.<ref name="lochoa191193"/> Today, the Huastec ethnicity is found only along a narrow strip extending from far northern Queretaro to far north of Veracruz near Tamiahua.<ref name="lochoa188"> Ochoa, L. p. 188 </ref>

During the colonial period, the region was divided into five provinces called “alcaldías mayores”: [[Huauchinango]], Huayacocotla-Chichontepec, Pánuco-Tampico, Huejutla and Yahualica.<ref name="unesco"/> In the 19th century, most of the local leaders were chosen by charisma and political skill, rather than by lineage, although elder councils were still important in most indigenous communities. By the beginning of the 19th century, the use of elections to choose leaders began to be used, but with candidates chosen by the elite. The first municipal elections in the region were held in Chicontepec and Ixhuatlan in 1813.<ref name="unesco"/>

From the first taking of land for cattle in the colonial period to the present, land struggles have been an important part of the region’s history. In the 18th century, there were various uprisings in the region such as in Ilamatlán in 1750 and Huayacocotla in 1784 in response to higher taxes and takings of land.<ref name="unesco"/> In the mid 17th century, a system of serfdom by debt began that would reach its height in the 19th, involving indigenous, mestizo and negro peoples. During the 17th century however, some peoples were able to take possession of land under a communal scheme, declaring it the property of the Virgin Mary or of a saint to keep landholders and political chiefs from taking it. From the second half of the 17th century to the first half of the 18th, there was a consolidation of haciendas with between 21 and 25 by 1790, about eighty cattle ranches and twenty three indigenous communities. At the end of the 18th century, records indicate that ninety percent of the population was Spanish, mestizo or mixed African descent, mostly in Chicontepec, Huayacocotla, Ixhuatlan and Xochioloco.<ref name="unesco"/> Coffee was introduced to the mountain areas in the 19th century.<ref name="huasnahuas"/> Land and other agrarian conflicts have continued to the present day with local elections based on land use issues.(focus) The discovery of oil in northern Veracruz has led to an area called the Faja de Oro (Gold belt) extending from Chicontepec to the Gulf coast. It has also caused environmental damage and made subsistence farming difficult to impossible in many areas.<ref name="huasnahuas"/> Conflicts have even led to the formation of armed groups such as the Ejercito Popular Revolucionario in the latter 20th century.<ref name="cienaños"> {{cite news |title= Cien anos de soledad en la Huasteca |author=Claudia Ramos |newspaper=Reforma |location=Mexico City |date=August 11, 1996 |page=4 |language=Spanish |trans_title=One hundred years of solitude in La Huasteca }} </ref> Despite brokered talks and disarming, the region is conflictive, especially along the Hidalgo/Veracruz border.<ref name="enfoque"> {{cite news |title= Enfoque/ La Huasteca: Veinte anos de violencia |author=Arturo Cano |newspaper= El Norte |location=Monterrey , Mexico |date=August 25, 1996 |page=12 |language=Spanish |trans_title=Focus/La Huasteca: Twenty years of violence }} </ref>

The major development of the 20th century in the La Huasteca was the development of roadways and other infrastructure to connect it with the rest of the country.<ref name="lochoa195"> Ochoa, L. p. 195 </ref> Until the latter 20th century, many of the municipalities of the region did not have paved roads, with a few still in this situation to this day. The highways and other roads in this area have allowed for seasonal and permanent emigration out of the area by younger generations looking for work.<ref name="huasnahuas"/> In the 20th century, preschool and primary school were widely introduced into the area. They have included various models of instruction including bilingual and bicultural education. At higher levels, it has included distance education for middle and high school. More recently, there has been a push for especially technical education such as the [[Tecnológico de Huejutla]] and the [[Universidad Comunitaria de la Huasteca Norte]]. This has raised literacy rates as well as the ability to speak Spanish among the indigenous. It has also caused cultural changes as younger generations have access to information about the outside world.<ref name="huasnahuas"/>
==Indigenous peoples==
La Huasteca is home to six indigenous ethnic groups with over 250,000 speakers of various indigenous languages.<ref name="meten"/><ref name="mexdespot"/> About 70% speak Nahuatl; 20% speak [[Huastec language|Huastec]]; six percent speak [[Otomi language|Otomi]] and about three percent speak [[Pame language|Pame]], [[Tepehua language|Tepehua]] and [[Totonac language|Totonac]]. The Nahuatl speakers of La Huasteca comprise over 27% of all Nahuatl speakers in Mexico.<ref name="unesco"/> Indigenous communities continue to be mostly agricultural with the growing of corn being most important. Other important aspects include cattle, the processing of sugar cane and the growing of citrus as a cash crop although most of this is under the control of mestizos. While subject to municipal authorities, usually mestizo dominated, they have their own internal political and economic systems as well.<ref name="unesco"/><ref name="huasnahuas"/> The indigenous of the area face discrimination from the dominant mestizos, who call themselves “gente de razón” (people of reason) and the indigenous “compadritos” or “cuitoles” which is similar to calling them children.<ref name="huasnahuas"/> Catholic influence in the region has been limited since the colonial period, mostly restricted to major towns and flat areas and less in the more rugged terrain. This has allowed the indigenous of La Huasteca to maintain more of their traditions than those in other regions of Mexico.<ref name="huasnahuas"/>

Despite the fact that the large region is named after them, the Huastec people today only occupy a fraction of it in a strip from northwest Querétaro east towards the north of Veracruz.<ref name="lochoa188"/> The largest Huastec communities are found in the mountain areas of Otontepec and Tantoyuca in Veracruz, Tancanhuitz, Tanlajas and Aquismón in San Luis Potosí. Huastecs are a Mayan people, whose language probably separated about 3,000 years ago. Their presence is here is most likely due to Mayan expansion north along the Veracruz coast until sometime between 1000 and 1500 CE, when they were forced back south, leaving the Huastec group in the far north isolated.<ref name="arqueomex"/>

The name Huastec comes from Nahuatl; the Huastec call themselves Teenek.<ref name="huasnahuas"/> While the Huastec were the most northern Mesoamerican culture, their culture is distinct from those in the Mexican Plateau, which whom they had contact and from other Mayan groups. One reason for this was their contact with the Chichimecas to the north, and their isolation from other Mayan cultures.<ref name="arqueomex"/> While the Huastecs managed to spread their influence over a large territory, they never built cities and ceremonial centers as large as in other parts of Mesoamerica. One reason for this was that the Chichimeca were a constant threat.<ref name="lochoa29-32"> Ochoa, L. p. 29-32 </ref> In the Post Classic period, Huastec territory shrank due to incursions by Nahuas and Otomi in the south and west, culminating into Aztec conquest of much of the territory by the early 16th century.<ref name="lochoa32"/> This loss of land would continue into the Spanish colonial period with mestizos coming to dominate the region, especially in the Veracruz and Tamaulipas coast areas.<ref name="lochoa191193"/>

Nahua communities and the Nahuatl language are now the most dominant indigenous influence in La Huasteca, especially in the south and west of the region. The Nahuas dominate the southern part of La Huasteca in over fifty municipalities in San Luis Potosí, Hidalgo and Veracruz, such as Jaltocán and Calnali in Hidalgo, Ixhuatlán de Madero and Benito Juárez in Veracruz.<ref name="huasnahuas"/>.<ref name="lochoa190"> Ochoa, L. p. 190 </ref> It is likely that many of the Nahuas in the south of La Huastecs are ethnic Huastecs whose language changed as the area was dominated by the Nahuas.<ref name="unesco"/> There are two main dialects of Nahuatl spoken in the region. The Nahuas in the north of the region share a number of cultural traits with the Huastec and those in the south share traits with the Otomis and Tepehuas but all are considered to be part of the same Nahua subgroup. The Huasteca Nahuas in Hidalgo and San Luis Potosí have put effort into developing a shared identity in the face of land and political struggles.<ref name="huasnahuas"/>

The Otomis were the first to conquer the southern part of La Huastecas as they fled Nahua domination in their original home of the [[Toluca Valley]].<ref name="huasnahuas"/>

It is thought that the Totonacs and Tepahuas in the region date back as far as the Huastecs. These people are found in the very far south of the region and both were conquered by the incoming Otomi as well as the Nahuas in the Mesoamerican period.<ref name="huasnahuas"/><ref name="unesco"/>
==Climate==
The region is relative lowlands with a hot climate at the extreme north of the Mexico’s tropical Gulf coast.<ref name="arqueomex"/> Most of the region is hot and humid with annual temperatures generally varying between 22 and 26C. The three most common Koppen classifications that appear here are Am(f), Am and Am(w). Rainfall is generally abundant due to moisture from the Gulf of Mexico. Rainfall amounts vary between 800 and 1600mm per year, depending on altitude and location from the coast. However, the area is subject to drought three out of every ten years, causing problems for local agriculture. Localized hail and hurricanes are an annual occurrence.<ref name="unesco"/><ref name="cienaños"/>
==Culture==
Despite the lack of ethnic Huastecs, the region still maintains a cultural identity, which is celebrated at various festivals such as the Encuentro de las Huastecas (Huastec Encounter) in Amatlán in November,<ref name="preparan"> {{cite news |title= Preparan encuentro para preservar cultura de la Huasteca |author=Rafael Robledo |url= http://www.eluniversalveracruz.com.mx/13746.html |date=November 19, 2011 |publisher= El Universal |location=Mexico City |language=Spanish |trans_title=Prepare encounter to preserve the culture of La Huasteca |accessdate=March 28, 2012 }} </ref> and the Festival de la Huasteca in Ahuacatlán de Guadalupe, Purísimas de Arista and Agua Zarca in Querétaro.<ref name="queretaro"> {{cite news |title= Querétaro, sede del XVI Festival de la Huasteca |url= http://eleconomista.com.mx/entretenimiento/2011/10/12/queretaro-sede-xvi-festival-huasteca |date=October 12, 2011 |publisher= El Economista |location=Mexico City |language=Spanish |trans_title=Queretaro, site of the XVI Festival de la Huasteca |accessdate=March 28, 2012 }} </ref> Much of the region’s culture has remained distinct because of the lack of communication with the outside world. This region is not been extensively studied by academics.<ref name="francesa"> {{cite news |title= Arqueóloga francesa presenta investigación sobre la Huasteca |newspaper= Diario San Diego |location=Chula Vista, CA |date=August 10, 2009 |page= |language=Spanish |trans_title=French archeologist presents research about La Huasteca }} </ref>

The most traditional dance and music of the region is called the [[Huapango]] or Son Huasteco. It is played by a trio of musicians: one playing a small, five-string rhythm guitar called a jarana huasteca, one on an eight-string bass guitar called a quinta huapanguera and another playing a violin. The two guitarists sing coplas, or short poetry stanzas, alternating verses between them. Son huasteco has two unique trademarks: improvised violin ornamentations based on a melody, and the use of a high falsetto voice. The style has spread beyond Veracruz and San Luis Potosi to other states including Hidalgo, which is now another center for the music.<ref name="fading"> {{cite web |url= http://www.npr.org/2012/03/11/148380040/new-collection-brings-back-the-pleasure-of-son-huesteco |title= Far From Fading, Mexico's Son Huasteco Style Flares |author= Betto Arcos |publisher= National Public Radio |location=New York |accessdate=March 28, 2012 }} </ref><ref name="mexdespot"/> Unlike other folk music in Mexico, it is not in danger of disappearing and remains in high demand for major celebrations in La Huasteca. The music has been researched and cataloged for over forty years which has resulted in a two CD compilation called El Gusto. It was also the focus of a documentary called “A Mexican Sound” by Roy Germano.<ref name="fading"/>

The dance is performed on an elevated platform called a zapatea. The music and dance in its several varieties is shared by all the ethnicities of the region. It is most often performed in rural social events called “fandangos.” .<ref name="mexdespot"/> It is also performed at the various Huastec cultural events such as the Festival de la Huasteca in Querétaro.<ref name="identidad"> {{cite news |title= La huasteca, identidad cultural en movimiento |url= http://impreso.milenio.com/node/9051878 |date=October 28, 2011 |publisher= Milenio |location=Mexico City |language=Spanish |trans_title=La Huasteca, cultural identity on the move |accessdate=March 28, 2012 }} </ref>

Traditional dishes include [[mixote]]s, [[enchilada]]s, [[barbacoa]] and especially a corn pudding called zacahuil.<ref name="dondese"/>

The end of wet season farming ends with Xantolo. It is similar to [[Day of the Dead]] and celebrated at the same time, but it has important differences. Xantolo brings people to cemeteries as well but it is to celebrate the living and the dead, as it marks the harvest of this growing season.<ref name="huasnahuas"/> Preparations for Xantolo last a week with altars remaining through November. Gifts of food are prepared to exchange with god parents, friends, family and neighbors. Altars consist of arches over a rectangular table. Each corner of the table has a pole to represent the four stages of human life (childhood, adolescence, adult and old age. The poles are bent towards the center above the table to form arches, and covered with branches of local flora.<ref name="azteca21"> {{cite news |title= "Xantolo", "Sancta Sanctorum" o "Día de Muertos" en la Huasteca Potosina, una tradición bien arraigada |url= http://azteca21.com/n/index.php/mexico-lindo/fiestas-populares/13362-qxantoloq-qsancta-sanctorumq-o-qdia-de-muertosq-en-la-huasteca-potosina-una-tradicion-bien-arraigada |date=October 11, 2010 |publisher= Azteca 21 Noticias |language=Spanish |trans_title=”Xantolo” “Sancta Sanctorum”or Day of the Dead in the Potosí Huasteca, a well established tradition |accessdate=March 28, 2012 }} </ref> It shares certain elements with Day of the Dead such as cempasúchil flowers, papel picado and the creation of altars to the dead adorned with local fruit, candles and copal incense. It lasts from 29 October with the slaughter of pigs and turkeys. October 30 and 31 are for the remembrance of children and adults respectively and November 1 is not only for saints but also to honor godparents. A traditional dance for the event has groups of dancers who ridicule the powerful of the local society then are chained by a devil. These dancers perform with cloth masks, with the aim that Death does not recognize them and take them away.<ref name="tradpopu"> {{cite web |url= http://www.uv.mx/popularte/esp/scriptphp.php?sid=559 |title= La Tradición en La Huasteca |publisher= Universidad Veracruzana |language=Spanish |trans_title=Tradition in La Huasteca |accessdate=March 28, 2012 }} </ref>

The [[Danza de los Voladores|Volador rite]] is performed by the Huastecs in the east of San Luis Potosí although they wear normal clothes adorned with feathers. The exception is the captain who wears a red or blue tunic.<ref name="lochoa84"> Ochoa, L. p. 84 </ref>

[[Carnival]] is important in the Veracruz part of the Huasteca, but each as a very local and religious character.<ref name="lochoa100101"> Ochoa, L. p. 100-101 </ref> For the Nahuas, Carnival is considered to be a “ritual of inversion” where social norms are relaxed. This is done to “placate the Devil” and keep him happy as well. Activities include men dressing as women and local authorities are made powerless temporarily. Offerings are also made by burial, perhaps an offering to the underworld. In many communities, many birds are slaughtered and alcohol is drunk in abundance. Carnival marks the end of dry season farming before rains begin in earnest in April. Ceremonies to ask for abundant rain begin after the end of [[Lent]] .<ref name="huasnahuas"/>
==Economy==
It is one of the poorest regions of the country,<ref name="focos"> {{cite news |title= Ven focos rojos en la huasteca |author=Miguel Dominguez |author2=Ruth Berrones |newspaper= Mural |location=Guadalajara, Mexico |date=July 2, 2003 |page=8 |language=Spanish |trans_title=See red lights in La Huastecas }} </ref> with the federal government categorizing it as a “critical region” in terms of combating poverty.<ref name="enfoque"/> The most pressing economic and political problems are in the Veracruz section with high socioeconomic marginalization due to isolation, disputes over land and political repression.<ref name="enfoque"/> Since the mid 20th century, there has been seasonal and permanent migration out of the area and into other areas of Mexico and to the United States to work. In Mexico, most go to Mexico City, [[Tampico]] and [[Monterrey]] to work as household help but they also go to work in mines in [[Pachuca]] and farms in San Luis Potosí, coffee plantations in Huauchinango and the United States.<ref name="unesco"/>

Like most rural indigenous, the economy is based on agriculture, especially the growing of corn. Other important aspects include cattle, the processing of sugar cane, coffee and the growing of citrus as a cash crop although most of this is under the control of mestizos. [[Piloncillo]] from sugar cane is an important processed product, most of which is shipped to Jalisco for the tequila industry.<ref name="huasnahuas"/>

Handcrafts of the area include ceramics in Huejutla, [[ixtle]] items, quezqumitels, cross stitch decorated garments in the region on the Hidalgo-Veracruz border, musical instruments and furniture, especially chairs made of cedar and other tropical hardwoods.<ref name="dondese"/><ref name="huasnahuas"/> In the area around Tantoyuca, Veracruz, handcrafts from a fiber called zapupe and palm is used to make hats, carrying bags and other objects.<ref name="huasnahuas"/>

Main regional markets include Tantoyuca, Huejutla, Tamazunchale and Chicontepec.<ref name="huasnahuas"/>

Most of the region is not visited by foreign tourists as the preference is for the beaches.<ref name="visitjungle"/> Ecotourism attractions include [[rappelling]] alongside waterfalls, rafting on rivers such as the Santa Maria, most of which are located in the state of San Luis Potosí.<ref name="secretos"/><ref name="visitjungle"/> Englishman [[Edward James]] built Las Pozas (The Wells) in an area of coffee and banana plantations near Xilitla. The poet lived here from 1949 until his death in 1984. The gardens contains giant sculptures, pagodas, and staircases to nowhere over a property of 32 hectares. The poet’s former home is a mansion of turrets and Gothic windows in the middle of the jungle. Today it is a hotel with the name of La Posada El Castillo.<ref name="ligero"/><ref name="visitjungle"/>
==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
<references/>
==Bibliography==
*{{cite book |title= Huaxtecos y totonacos |author=Lorenzo Ochoa |publisher=CONACULTA |location=Mexico City |year=1990 |isbn=968 29 2466 9 |language=Spanish |trans_title=Huastecs and Totonacs }}


{{coord missing|Mexico}}
{{coord missing|Mexico}}

Revision as of 21:29, 6 April 2012

La Huasteca is a cultural region located in the northeast of Mexico, including parts of the states of Tamaulipas, Veracruz, Puebla, San Luis Potosí, Querétaro and Guanajuato. It is roughly defined as the area in which the Huastec people had influence when their civilization was at its height in the Mesoamerican period. Today, the Huastecs occupy only a fraction of this region with the Nahuas now the most numerous indigenous group. However, those who live in the region share a number of cultural traits such as a style of music and dance along with religious festivals such as Xantolo.

Geography and environment

Historically and ethnically, the La Huasteca region is defined by the area dominated by the Huastecs at their height.[1] The actual extension of the region is somewhat disputed as well as how it should be sub-divided. Geographically it has been defined as from the Sierra Madre Oriental to the Gulf of Mexico with the Sierra de Tamaulipas as the north border and the Cazones River as the south. It extends over the south of Tamaulipas, the southeast of San Luis Potosí, the northeast of Querétaro and Hidalgo and the extreme north of Veracruz and Puebla and a very small portion of Guanajuato over an area of about 32,000km2.[1] .[2] [3]

To the north and east there are relative flatlands. To the south there are hills of calcified sand. Basalt from old lava flows penetrate the primarily sedimentary rock from the west and appear with wind and water erosion. The higher mountain areas to the west often have tall peaks in capricious forms with steep slopes and eight fast running rivers.[4][5] Highways in the region tend to be small and winding, especially in the higher elevations in San Luis Potosi and Hidalgo.[5] Most of these river eventually empty into either the [[Panuco River|Pánuco or the Cazones River with the zone belonging to the Pánuco, Tuxpan and Cazones River basins, all of which empty into the Gulf of Mexico.(unesco) As much of the rock is easily eroded, the mountain areas are filled with caves and other underground openings. The best known of this is the [[Sótano de las Golandrinas (Cave of Swallows) just north of Xilitla. It is famous for the large number of birds (swifts and green parrots, not swallows) what emerges from the opening in the morning. It is also a site for base-jumping down the sink’s 372-meter depth. The birds return en masse again at nightfall.[6][5] Many of the rivers run clear or turquoise blue in deep ravines or canyons and form waterfalls. The tallest of these is the Tamil, which is 300 meters wide and 105 meters tall. It joins the waters of the Gallinas River with those of the Santa Maria to form the Tampaon River.[7] Another important waterfall is the Tamasopo and at the Nacimiento del Río Huichihuayán (Source of the Huichihuayán River) near the village of the same name, the water comes out of the mountains, forming pools large enough for swimming.[6]

It is one of the most bio-diverse regions in Mexico, with over 2,000 species of plants.[1][6] This diversity also extends into agricultural crops with local corn varieties resistant to drought.[1] This area is mostly dominated by tropical rainforest, some of which is still semi-virgin with a hot humid climate with some areas of pine-holm oak forest in the highest elevations and arid bush and grassland in a few isolated areas.[1][6] Tropical forests have species such as kapok, cedar, ebony and more with palms more common on the coastline.[2] Tall growth perennial rainforest dominates in the states of Hidalgo and Veracruz with medium grown semi deciduous rainforest in San Luis Potosí. It also has a large number of species of algae, more diverse and of different types than those found in other parts of Mexico.[1] It is also rich in wildlife such as parrots, macaws, spider monkeys, owls, eagles, toucans, deer, jaguar, wild boar and raccoons with various species of reptiles and insects.[2][6]

The main city in the SLP section is Ciudad Valles, founded by Nuño Beltran de Guzmán in 1533.[5][7] The most important city in the Hidalgo portion is Huejutla .[2] Other important population centers include Tantoyuca, Tamazunchale and Chicontepec.[8]


One section of the La Huasteca is called the Sierra Gorda, which is centered on northern Querétaro, but extends into Hidalgo and Guanajuato.[9]

History

Huastec is derived from the Spanish Huasteca which is derived from the Nahuatl word for the ethnicity Kuextlan.[1] The Huastecs were the most northern Mesoamerican group on the Gulf coast and Their contact with the Chichimeca led to Aridoamerican influences in their culture.[10][5] The pre Hispanic sculpture of the region is distinct with well known pieces such as the “Adolescente de Tamuín” and the goddess of life and health Tlazoltéotl.[2] Traditionally crops here have been corn, beans, squash, various chili peppers and tubular such as yucca, camotes and jicamas. However, gathering of wild foods played a more important role here in the Mesoamerican period, especially roots, small chili peppers and a fruit (Brosimum alicastrum) as well as fish from lakes, rivers and ocean. The production of salt was important at Chila Lake.[4]

The Huastecs are what probably remain of Mayan expansion northward up the Veracruz coast but were “left behind” after other Mayan groups retreated south and east.[4] The Huastecs began to be culturally dominant in their region between 750 and 800 CE after El Tajín waned. From then to the 15th century, they expanded their territory and influence from the Tuxpan River to the Pánuco with most settlements along the banks of the Huayalejo-Tamesí River, along the northern Veracruz and southern Tamaulipas coast and west into the Sierra Madre Oriental. The culture was influential even farther west into northern Querétaro, and there may have been Huastec settlements into what is now northern Puebla.[11] .[12] Notable settlements include El Tamuín in San Luis Potosí, Yahualica and Huejutla in Hidalgo, Tzicóaxc on the Veracruz/Puebla border as well as Tuxpan, Temapache, Pánuca and Tanhuijo in Veracruz.[13]

Although the Huastecs built small cities and ceremonial centers, they never reached the size and complexity of others in Mesoamerica.[14]The northern areas were constantly threatened by the Chichimeca, which may be the origin for the traditional “Comanche” dance found in the region.[13][1] In the Post classic, Huastec territory began to shrink.[15] In the west and south of their territory, there were enclaves of Nahuas, Tepehuas, Totonacs and Otomis .[10] The Totonacs and Tepehuas in the region probably arrived around the same time as the Huastecs. The Otomis and Nahuas arrived later but the time line for these migrations is disputed. One Nahua incursion occurs in 800 CE related to Tula and the other due to the expansion of the Aztec Empire .[1] The Aztecs conquered from the south and west to an area they called Chicoaque or Tzicoac in 1458, which was probably the area which is now Mesa de Cacahuatengo in the municipality of Ixhuatlán de Madero .[1] .[16]

The first Spanish contact with the Huasteca region was in 1518, when ships explored the Pánuco River area.[1] After the Conquest, Gonzalo de Sandoval burned alive about 460 nobles and chiefs in the region and captured about 20,000 indigenous to sell as slaves in the Antilles.[1] The first evangelizers in the area were the Franciscans around 1530, with the Augustinians arriving in 1533, with the first large efforts in Pahuatlán, Puebla and Chicontepec. The area initially was under the Bisphoric of Tlaxcala. But evangelization was slow with period documents indicating that most pagan beliefs had not been extinguished well into the colonial period. One hundred and thirty encomiendas were created in the region which lasted most of the 16th century and in cases into the 17th.[1] Spanish dominance in the coastal areas depopulated it of most indigenous, with the Huastecs retreating south from Tamaulipas to Panúco and Tamaulipas and with many dying from war and disease.[10].[17] The introduction of cattle into the flat areas prompted the Spanish to force the relocation of many indigenous groups in the area, sometimes with violence.[8] Not all attempts to relocate indigenous groups were successful. There were notable failures in Hidalgo. However, its overall success managed to divide the region into new political units. Spanish policies and economic conditions forced many of the indigenous here to crowd together in certain areas, with Huastecs and Nahuas together in Ozuluama, Tantoyuca, Tamiahua and Tuxpan and Nahuas and Otomis in Chicontepec and Huejutla. The new political units brought in other indigenous groups not normally part of the Huasteco, such as the Pames in the Sierra Gorda of Queretaro.[1]

The Spanish then introduced African slaves into the area. While the indigenous populations made something of a comeback in Hidalgo and San Luis Potosí, this did not happen in Veracruz.[8] In the later colonial period, most Huastec communities were populated by mestizos, especially along the Veracruz and Tamaulipas coast.[17] Today, the Huastec ethnicity is found only along a narrow strip extending from far northern Queretaro to far north of Veracruz near Tamiahua.[18]

During the colonial period, the region was divided into five provinces called “alcaldías mayores”: Huauchinango, Huayacocotla-Chichontepec, Pánuco-Tampico, Huejutla and Yahualica.[1] In the 19th century, most of the local leaders were chosen by charisma and political skill, rather than by lineage, although elder councils were still important in most indigenous communities. By the beginning of the 19th century, the use of elections to choose leaders began to be used, but with candidates chosen by the elite. The first municipal elections in the region were held in Chicontepec and Ixhuatlan in 1813.[1]

From the first taking of land for cattle in the colonial period to the present, land struggles have been an important part of the region’s history. In the 18th century, there were various uprisings in the region such as in Ilamatlán in 1750 and Huayacocotla in 1784 in response to higher taxes and takings of land.[1] In the mid 17th century, a system of serfdom by debt began that would reach its height in the 19th, involving indigenous, mestizo and negro peoples. During the 17th century however, some peoples were able to take possession of land under a communal scheme, declaring it the property of the Virgin Mary or of a saint to keep landholders and political chiefs from taking it. From the second half of the 17th century to the first half of the 18th, there was a consolidation of haciendas with between 21 and 25 by 1790, about eighty cattle ranches and twenty three indigenous communities. At the end of the 18th century, records indicate that ninety percent of the population was Spanish, mestizo or mixed African descent, mostly in Chicontepec, Huayacocotla, Ixhuatlan and Xochioloco.[1] Coffee was introduced to the mountain areas in the 19th century.[8] Land and other agrarian conflicts have continued to the present day with local elections based on land use issues.(focus) The discovery of oil in northern Veracruz has led to an area called the Faja de Oro (Gold belt) extending from Chicontepec to the Gulf coast. It has also caused environmental damage and made subsistence farming difficult to impossible in many areas.[8] Conflicts have even led to the formation of armed groups such as the Ejercito Popular Revolucionario in the latter 20th century.[19] Despite brokered talks and disarming, the region is conflictive, especially along the Hidalgo/Veracruz border.[20]

The major development of the 20th century in the La Huasteca was the development of roadways and other infrastructure to connect it with the rest of the country.[21] Until the latter 20th century, many of the municipalities of the region did not have paved roads, with a few still in this situation to this day. The highways and other roads in this area have allowed for seasonal and permanent emigration out of the area by younger generations looking for work.[8] In the 20th century, preschool and primary school were widely introduced into the area. They have included various models of instruction including bilingual and bicultural education. At higher levels, it has included distance education for middle and high school. More recently, there has been a push for especially technical education such as the Tecnológico de Huejutla and the Universidad Comunitaria de la Huasteca Norte. This has raised literacy rates as well as the ability to speak Spanish among the indigenous. It has also caused cultural changes as younger generations have access to information about the outside world.[8]

Indigenous peoples

La Huasteca is home to six indigenous ethnic groups with over 250,000 speakers of various indigenous languages.[3][9] About 70% speak Nahuatl; 20% speak Huastec; six percent speak Otomi and about three percent speak Pame, Tepehua and Totonac. The Nahuatl speakers of La Huasteca comprise over 27% of all Nahuatl speakers in Mexico.[1] Indigenous communities continue to be mostly agricultural with the growing of corn being most important. Other important aspects include cattle, the processing of sugar cane and the growing of citrus as a cash crop although most of this is under the control of mestizos. While subject to municipal authorities, usually mestizo dominated, they have their own internal political and economic systems as well.[1][8] The indigenous of the area face discrimination from the dominant mestizos, who call themselves “gente de razón” (people of reason) and the indigenous “compadritos” or “cuitoles” which is similar to calling them children.[8] Catholic influence in the region has been limited since the colonial period, mostly restricted to major towns and flat areas and less in the more rugged terrain. This has allowed the indigenous of La Huasteca to maintain more of their traditions than those in other regions of Mexico.[8]

Despite the fact that the large region is named after them, the Huastec people today only occupy a fraction of it in a strip from northwest Querétaro east towards the north of Veracruz.[18] The largest Huastec communities are found in the mountain areas of Otontepec and Tantoyuca in Veracruz, Tancanhuitz, Tanlajas and Aquismón in San Luis Potosí. Huastecs are a Mayan people, whose language probably separated about 3,000 years ago. Their presence is here is most likely due to Mayan expansion north along the Veracruz coast until sometime between 1000 and 1500 CE, when they were forced back south, leaving the Huastec group in the far north isolated.[4]

The name Huastec comes from Nahuatl; the Huastec call themselves Teenek.[8] While the Huastec were the most northern Mesoamerican culture, their culture is distinct from those in the Mexican Plateau, which whom they had contact and from other Mayan groups. One reason for this was their contact with the Chichimecas to the north, and their isolation from other Mayan cultures.[4] While the Huastecs managed to spread their influence over a large territory, they never built cities and ceremonial centers as large as in other parts of Mesoamerica. One reason for this was that the Chichimeca were a constant threat.[22] In the Post Classic period, Huastec territory shrank due to incursions by Nahuas and Otomi in the south and west, culminating into Aztec conquest of much of the territory by the early 16th century.[15] This loss of land would continue into the Spanish colonial period with mestizos coming to dominate the region, especially in the Veracruz and Tamaulipas coast areas.[17]

Nahua communities and the Nahuatl language are now the most dominant indigenous influence in La Huasteca, especially in the south and west of the region. The Nahuas dominate the southern part of La Huasteca in over fifty municipalities in San Luis Potosí, Hidalgo and Veracruz, such as Jaltocán and Calnali in Hidalgo, Ixhuatlán de Madero and Benito Juárez in Veracruz.[8].[16] It is likely that many of the Nahuas in the south of La Huastecs are ethnic Huastecs whose language changed as the area was dominated by the Nahuas.[1] There are two main dialects of Nahuatl spoken in the region. The Nahuas in the north of the region share a number of cultural traits with the Huastec and those in the south share traits with the Otomis and Tepehuas but all are considered to be part of the same Nahua subgroup. The Huasteca Nahuas in Hidalgo and San Luis Potosí have put effort into developing a shared identity in the face of land and political struggles.[8]

The Otomis were the first to conquer the southern part of La Huastecas as they fled Nahua domination in their original home of the Toluca Valley.[8]

It is thought that the Totonacs and Tepahuas in the region date back as far as the Huastecs. These people are found in the very far south of the region and both were conquered by the incoming Otomi as well as the Nahuas in the Mesoamerican period.[8][1]

Climate

The region is relative lowlands with a hot climate at the extreme north of the Mexico’s tropical Gulf coast.[4] Most of the region is hot and humid with annual temperatures generally varying between 22 and 26C. The three most common Koppen classifications that appear here are Am(f), Am and Am(w). Rainfall is generally abundant due to moisture from the Gulf of Mexico. Rainfall amounts vary between 800 and 1600mm per year, depending on altitude and location from the coast. However, the area is subject to drought three out of every ten years, causing problems for local agriculture. Localized hail and hurricanes are an annual occurrence.[1][19]

Culture

Despite the lack of ethnic Huastecs, the region still maintains a cultural identity, which is celebrated at various festivals such as the Encuentro de las Huastecas (Huastec Encounter) in Amatlán in November,[23] and the Festival de la Huasteca in Ahuacatlán de Guadalupe, Purísimas de Arista and Agua Zarca in Querétaro.[24] Much of the region’s culture has remained distinct because of the lack of communication with the outside world. This region is not been extensively studied by academics.[25]

The most traditional dance and music of the region is called the Huapango or Son Huasteco. It is played by a trio of musicians: one playing a small, five-string rhythm guitar called a jarana huasteca, one on an eight-string bass guitar called a quinta huapanguera and another playing a violin. The two guitarists sing coplas, or short poetry stanzas, alternating verses between them. Son huasteco has two unique trademarks: improvised violin ornamentations based on a melody, and the use of a high falsetto voice. The style has spread beyond Veracruz and San Luis Potosi to other states including Hidalgo, which is now another center for the music.[26][9] Unlike other folk music in Mexico, it is not in danger of disappearing and remains in high demand for major celebrations in La Huasteca. The music has been researched and cataloged for over forty years which has resulted in a two CD compilation called El Gusto. It was also the focus of a documentary called “A Mexican Sound” by Roy Germano.[26]

The dance is performed on an elevated platform called a zapatea. The music and dance in its several varieties is shared by all the ethnicities of the region. It is most often performed in rural social events called “fandangos.” .[9] It is also performed at the various Huastec cultural events such as the Festival de la Huasteca in Querétaro.[27]

Traditional dishes include mixotes, enchiladas, barbacoa and especially a corn pudding called zacahuil.[2]

The end of wet season farming ends with Xantolo. It is similar to Day of the Dead and celebrated at the same time, but it has important differences. Xantolo brings people to cemeteries as well but it is to celebrate the living and the dead, as it marks the harvest of this growing season.[8] Preparations for Xantolo last a week with altars remaining through November. Gifts of food are prepared to exchange with god parents, friends, family and neighbors. Altars consist of arches over a rectangular table. Each corner of the table has a pole to represent the four stages of human life (childhood, adolescence, adult and old age. The poles are bent towards the center above the table to form arches, and covered with branches of local flora.[28] It shares certain elements with Day of the Dead such as cempasúchil flowers, papel picado and the creation of altars to the dead adorned with local fruit, candles and copal incense. It lasts from 29 October with the slaughter of pigs and turkeys. October 30 and 31 are for the remembrance of children and adults respectively and November 1 is not only for saints but also to honor godparents. A traditional dance for the event has groups of dancers who ridicule the powerful of the local society then are chained by a devil. These dancers perform with cloth masks, with the aim that Death does not recognize them and take them away.[29]

The Volador rite is performed by the Huastecs in the east of San Luis Potosí although they wear normal clothes adorned with feathers. The exception is the captain who wears a red or blue tunic.[30]

Carnival is important in the Veracruz part of the Huasteca, but each as a very local and religious character.[31] For the Nahuas, Carnival is considered to be a “ritual of inversion” where social norms are relaxed. This is done to “placate the Devil” and keep him happy as well. Activities include men dressing as women and local authorities are made powerless temporarily. Offerings are also made by burial, perhaps an offering to the underworld. In many communities, many birds are slaughtered and alcohol is drunk in abundance. Carnival marks the end of dry season farming before rains begin in earnest in April. Ceremonies to ask for abundant rain begin after the end of Lent .[8]

Economy

It is one of the poorest regions of the country,[32] with the federal government categorizing it as a “critical region” in terms of combating poverty.[20] The most pressing economic and political problems are in the Veracruz section with high socioeconomic marginalization due to isolation, disputes over land and political repression.[20] Since the mid 20th century, there has been seasonal and permanent migration out of the area and into other areas of Mexico and to the United States to work. In Mexico, most go to Mexico City, Tampico and Monterrey to work as household help but they also go to work in mines in Pachuca and farms in San Luis Potosí, coffee plantations in Huauchinango and the United States.[1]

Like most rural indigenous, the economy is based on agriculture, especially the growing of corn. Other important aspects include cattle, the processing of sugar cane, coffee and the growing of citrus as a cash crop although most of this is under the control of mestizos. Piloncillo from sugar cane is an important processed product, most of which is shipped to Jalisco for the tequila industry.[8]

Handcrafts of the area include ceramics in Huejutla, ixtle items, quezqumitels, cross stitch decorated garments in the region on the Hidalgo-Veracruz border, musical instruments and furniture, especially chairs made of cedar and other tropical hardwoods.[2][8] In the area around Tantoyuca, Veracruz, handcrafts from a fiber called zapupe and palm is used to make hats, carrying bags and other objects.[8]

Main regional markets include Tantoyuca, Huejutla, Tamazunchale and Chicontepec.[8]

Most of the region is not visited by foreign tourists as the preference is for the beaches.[6] Ecotourism attractions include rappelling alongside waterfalls, rafting on rivers such as the Santa Maria, most of which are located in the state of San Luis Potosí.[7][6] Englishman Edward James built Las Pozas (The Wells) in an area of coffee and banana plantations near Xilitla. The poet lived here from 1949 until his death in 1984. The gardens contains giant sculptures, pagodas, and staircases to nowhere over a property of 32 hectares. The poet’s former home is a mansion of turrets and Gothic windows in the middle of the jungle. Today it is a hotel with the name of La Posada El Castillo.[5][6]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x "México - Pueblo Nahuas de la Huasteca". Agua Cultura (in Spanish). UNESCO. Retrieved March 28, 2012. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "La Huasteca, donde se canta el huapango (Hidalgo)" (in Spanish). Mexico City: Mexico Desconocido magazine. Retrieved March 28, 2012. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |autor= ignored (|author= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ a b Omar Garcia (June 2, 2004). "Meten a la Huasteca dentro de un museo". Reforma (in Spanish). Mexico City. p. 3. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ a b c d e f Guy Stresser-Péan. "La Huasteca: historia y cultura" (in Spanish). Arqueomex magazine. Retrieved March 28, 2012. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ a b c d e f Jim Budd. "Viajando Ligero / Aventura en la Huasteca". Mural (in Spanish). Guadalajara, Mexico. p. 2. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Alexis Okeowo (October 15, 2009). "Visit the Jungles of La Huasteca". Time. Retrieved March 28, 2012.
  7. ^ a b c Alfredo Martinez (March 11, 2001). "Secretos de la Huasteca Potosina". El Norte (in Spanish). Monterrey , Mexico. p. 6. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Julieta Valle Esquivel (2003). "Nahuas de Huasteca" (PDF) (in Spanish). Comisión Nacional para el Desarrollo de los Pueblos Indígena. ISBN 970-753-008-1. Retrieved March 28, 2012. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ a b c d "La Huasteca potosina, todo un universo cultural" (in Spanish). Mexico City: Mexico Desconocido magazine. Retrieved March 28, 2012. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |autor= ignored (|author= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  10. ^ a b c Ochoa, L. p. 42
  11. ^ Ochoa, L. p. 29-30
  12. ^ Ochoa, L. p. 168-169
  13. ^ a b Ochoa, L. p. 33
  14. ^ Ochoa, L. p. 31-32
  15. ^ a b Ochoa, L. p. 32
  16. ^ a b Ochoa, L. p. 190
  17. ^ a b c Ochoa, L. p. 191-193
  18. ^ a b Ochoa, L. p. 188
  19. ^ a b Claudia Ramos (August 11, 1996). "Cien anos de soledad en la Huasteca". Reforma (in Spanish). Mexico City. p. 4. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  20. ^ a b c Arturo Cano (August 25, 1996). "Enfoque/ La Huasteca: Veinte anos de violencia". El Norte (in Spanish). Monterrey , Mexico. p. 12. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  21. ^ Ochoa, L. p. 195
  22. ^ Ochoa, L. p. 29-32
  23. ^ Rafael Robledo (November 19, 2011). "Preparan encuentro para preservar cultura de la Huasteca" (in Spanish). Mexico City: El Universal. Retrieved March 28, 2012. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  24. ^ "Querétaro, sede del XVI Festival de la Huasteca" (in Spanish). Mexico City: El Economista. October 12, 2011. Retrieved March 28, 2012. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  25. ^ "Arqueóloga francesa presenta investigación sobre la Huasteca". Diario San Diego (in Spanish). Chula Vista, CA. August 10, 2009. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  26. ^ a b Betto Arcos. "Far From Fading, Mexico's Son Huasteco Style Flares". New York: National Public Radio. Retrieved March 28, 2012.
  27. ^ "La huasteca, identidad cultural en movimiento" (in Spanish). Mexico City: Milenio. October 28, 2011. Retrieved March 28, 2012. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  28. ^ ""Xantolo", "Sancta Sanctorum" o "Día de Muertos" en la Huasteca Potosina, una tradición bien arraigada" (in Spanish). Azteca 21 Noticias. October 11, 2010. Retrieved March 28, 2012. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  29. ^ "La Tradición en La Huasteca" (in Spanish). Universidad Veracruzana. Retrieved March 28, 2012. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  30. ^ Ochoa, L. p. 84
  31. ^ Ochoa, L. p. 100-101
  32. ^ Miguel Dominguez; Ruth Berrones (July 2, 2003). "Ven focos rojos en la huasteca". Mural (in Spanish). Guadalajara, Mexico. p. 8. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)

Bibliography

  • Lorenzo Ochoa (1990). Huaxtecos y totonacos (in Spanish). Mexico City: CONACULTA. ISBN 968 29 2466 9. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)