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Veracruz

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About 1 pages (385 words)
Veracruz, Veracruz Summary

Main square with city hall, Veracruz, Mex. [Credit: Jane Latta]Main square with city hall, Veracruz, Mex. [Credit: Jane Latta]

City and port on the Gulf of Mexico, Veracruz estado (state), east-central Mexico.

The city is built on a hot, low, and barren sandy beach along the Gulf of Mexico only about 50 feet (15 metres) above sea level. Hernán Cortés founded La Villa Rica de la Vera Cruz (“The Rich Town of the True Cross”) in 1519, but the low-lying settlement was twice relocated because of a lack of fresh water, the danger from flooding, and other unhealthful conditions. Veracruz has occupied its present site since 1599, and it was designated a city in 1615.

As the chief link between colonial Mexico and Spain, Veracruz prospered as a port and became the most “Spanish” of Mexican cities, with an admixture of Caribbean creole influences. Because of its strategic location and direct overland connections to Puebla and Mexico City, it was attacked and captured many times. In the 16th century Francis Drake and other British pirates attacked the city several times, leading to the construction of a fort (Castillo de San Juan de Ulua) on Callega Island during the 1600s; it is now a tourist attraction. U.S. troops captured the port and marched inland from Veracruz during the Mexican-American War (1846–48). French troops also entered Mexico via Veracruz during their occupation under the emperor Maximilian in the 1860s. It was renamed Veracruz Llave in honour of Gen. Ignacio de la Llave, governor of Veracruz state (1857–60). Both the 1857 and 1917 Mexican constitutions were proclaimed there.

Veracruz is the chief seaport on the east coast of Mexico and is a communications centre for the gulf littoral and the tropical and highland hinterlands of Veracruz state. Despite its hot, humid climate, Veracruz is an important domestic tourist destination, particularly attractive to weekend visitors from Mexico City. It is noted for its colonial-era buildings, indigenous cultural influences, and regional cuisine. A major commercial fishing port, Veracruz also offers sportfishing, beaches, and water sports. Veracruzana University was founded in 1944 at Xalapa. The city is linked by highway, railroad, and air to other major population centres. Pop. (2000) city, 411,582; (2005) urban agglom., 702,394.

This is the complete article, containing 385 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page).

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    Veracruz from Encyclopedia Brittanica. ©2009 Encyclopedia Brittanica. All rights reserved.

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