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Ciudad Victoria

Ciudad Victoria (Spanish pronunciation: [sjuˈðað βikˈtoɾja] (listen)) is the seat of the Municipality of Victoria, and the capital of the Mexican state of Tamaulipas. It is located in the northeast of Mexico at the foot of the Sierra Madre Oriental. It borders the municipality of Güémez to the north, Llera to the south, Casas Municipality to the east, and the municipality of Jaumave to the west.[1] The city is located 246 km (153 mi) from Monterrey[2] and 319 km (198 mi) from the US - Mexico border.[3] Ciudad Victoria is named after the first president of Mexico, Guadalupe Victoria.[4]

Ciudad Victoria
City
Ciudad Victoria
Night view of Ciudad Victoria City Centre
Ciudad Victoria
Ciudad Victoria
Coordinates: 23°44′20″N 99°08′35″W / 23.73889°N 99.14306°W / 23.73889; -99.14306Coordinates: 23°44′20″N 99°08′35″W / 23.73889°N 99.14306°W / 23.73889; -99.14306
CountryMexico
StateTamaulipas
FoundationOctober 6, 1750
Founded asVilla de Santa María de Aguayo
Founded byJosé de Escandón y Helguera
Government
 • Municipal President
(2021- 2024)
Eduardo Abraham Gattas Báez
(2021–present) MRN
Area
 • City188 km2 (73 sq mi)
Elevation
316 m (1,037 ft)
Population
 (2022)
 • City332,100
 • Density1,800/km2 (4,600/sq mi)
 • Metro
349,688
DemonymVictorense
Time zoneUTC−6 (CST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−5 (CDT)
Websitewww.ciudadvictoria.gob.mx

In 1825 Ciudad Victoria became the state capital.[5] It is home to higher education institutions such as the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas[6] and the Technological Institute of Ciudad Victoria.[7] General Pedro José Méndez International Airport is located on the outskirts of the city. As a state bureaucratic centre, it is the seat of the three political powers and has sites of tourist and cultural interest.

Pre-foundation

The Viceroy of New Spain, Juan Francisco Güémez and Horcasitas on Saturday, September 3, 1746, founded a colony in the Seno Mexicano (West coast of the Gulf of Mexico), dismembering the New Kingdom of León. Two years later, on Wednesday December 25, 1748, José de Escandon and Helguera founded Villa de Llera, part of the Late Colonization of New Santander, named after Santander, the capital of Cantabria, Spain.[4] Villa de Santa María del Agua de Agüayo was founded on October 6, 1750.[4]

History

 
Places of Ciudad Victoria

Villa de Santa María de Aguayo was named after the wife of the first Count of Revillagigedo Don Juan Francisco de Güémez y Horcasitas, named Doña Antonia Cepherina Pacheco de Padilla, a native of Aguayo, Province of Santander, Spain.[4][clarification needed]

The settlement was founded by José de Escandon and Helguera, Count of Sierra Gorda, during his second campaign of the Pacification and Colonization Plan of the coast of the Mexican Seno, later called New Santander, today Tamaulipas.[4] The Spanish settlement open to the plain to the East and surrounded to the west by the Sierra Madre Oriental, a strategic location that also received breezes from the north and east.[4] The town was administered by Captain D. Juan de Astigárraga, who drew up and carried out the first irrigation works. His work led to an increase in agriculture and, subsequently, a rapid rise in population.[4]

In religious matters, the settlement was under the command of a Franciscan named Antonio Javier de Aréchaga, who was also in charge of the mission of San Felipe, which was founded with 150 indigenous people. That Catholic mission progressed more than those previously founded, because in the lands that were designated, they were opened by local Native Americans.[4]

Captain Astigárraga died three years after the Villa de Agüayo was founded, and Escandon then conferred the appointment of captain to replace him in the command, Don Miguel de Córdoba.[4]

Under the administration of the new captain, the Villa de Agüayo continued to progress, and when its statistics were formed in 1757, the settlement had in its farmhouse and estates located in its demarcation more than 1000 inhabitants who had 8600 heads of cattle and horses, and 4100 of smaller cattle.[4]

The noble and military of Belgian descent, José de Craywinckel, when he visited the settlement, proposed to the Viceroy the reactivation of the Olazarán mine, which was abandoned in the Boca de Caballeros, since this measure would tend to give the settlement greater impetus in its prosperity, creating new interests and attracting new neighbours by this means, it being possible to expect that Villa de Aguayo would soon become one of the main populations of the new colony.[4]

The nobleman also proposed to the Viceroy at that time, to undertake a campaign against rebellious Native Americans of the Síghue, who had their rancherías by the ravines and valleys of the Sierra Madre and in defines of their land harassed the shepherds and estates of the demarcation of Aguayo, arriving in his raids to join with the Janambre people in the attacks they undertook against the nearby Spanish settlements of Jaumave and Llera.[4]

By this date some masonry houses were begun to be built in Aguayo, the materials for the construction of a Catholic church were gathered and large sugarcane plantations were established in the surrounding lands. The neighbourhood of this town also carried out the salt trade that was going to be collected from the saltworks of San Fernando and la Marina, with the villages of the interior of Charcas and the southern part of the New Kingdom of León.[4]

The Spanish settlement of Villa de Aguayo was distributed in perfect grid form, and in its second settlement a few leagues east of its foundation, changing by the constant claim of the Native American tribes of Janambres and Pisones. The settlement was from the beginning the geographical central node communicating with all the settlements of New Santander.[4]

As was the Spanish provision, land was designated for the construction of the Catholic Church, the Public Square, the seat of the Captaincy of the Civil - Military and Trade Authority, spaces that over time are known as the Historical Centre, formerly known as Plaza "Hidalgo", "Plaza de Armas" or "Plaza de Catedral". The settlement was dispersed and composed of 58 families with 409 people.[4]

The river that crossed the settlement is the so-called San Marcos, which has an irrigation ditch, whose abundance of water gave the population all the irrigation it needs for the subsistence of its inhabitants, irrigation of plots and other sowing of corn, fostering also the cultivation of the cane. The quality of the land was adequate for all fruits typical of the region and facilitated the breeding and conservation of livestock.[4]

Its location was one of the most advantageous in favour of the Royal Treasury, both for being the first transit of the colony, and because its crops and livestock promise great movement, evidencing its growth at the beginning of its founding, which was 11 families.[4]

Colonial period

 
José de Escandón y Helguera, 1st Count of Sierra Gorda

Unlike the modes of settlement that were commonly raised during the vice-regal period in New Spain, which followed a missionary and presidial structure, the new populations designed by José de Escandon had marked differences in the cultural, social, political and economic spheres.[4]

The new populations that Escandon developed in the territory that is now known as Tamaulipas, called in the eighteenth-century New Santander, are based on ideas that have as a reference a way of exercising control over the development of the city and the territory, through its economic production. The direct consequences of this form of urban design marked in New Spain the opening to a new way of consolidating a border territory.[4]

José de Escandon y Helguera, developed cattle ranching extensively and in a limited way agriculture, since for the most part "temporary" was practiced, and commerce also developed. The colonized territory was integrated and populated up to the Rio Grande, configuring the map of what is now Tamaulipas.[4]

In addition, Escandon proposed the strategic location arrangements between each new population, a day away, which would facilitate that in cases of reoccurrence of attacks by the natives, could support each other. These are the characteristics that made the colonization of the New Santander transcendent; Although the reality did not always reflect the initial spirit of colonization, the model developed by José de Escandon proposed a new form of territorial occupation that had not been seen until the 18th century in New Spain.[4]

 
Casa de los Hermanos Filizola, restored to inhabit the Pinacoteca Tamaulipas, Ciudad Victoria, Mexico

Post-colonial period

After the Mexican Independence New Santander was renamed "Tamaulipas[4]", and the State Congress decrees on April 20, 1825, to elevate the Villa de Aguayo to the category of "City",[8] seat of the Three Powers and Capital of the State, approving the name of Victoria, in honour of the first President of Mexico, Guadalupe Victoria. "The Capitality Decree, Title of City and Name" is published by mandate of the First Congress, signed and sealed by Enrique Camilo Suárez, Vice Governor of Tamaulipas.[4]

In this Capital, the Governor of the State, Lucas Fernández, on May 4 issued a decree to reject the invasion by order of the Spanish monarchy. The attempt of reconquest by the Spanish vanguard army commanded by General Brigadier Isidro Barradas, was frustrated on September 11, 1829, in Tampico, Tamaulipas; At the head of the national forces were the Generals: Felipe de la Garza Cisneros, Manuel Mier and Terán and Antonio López de Santa Anna. Battle of Tampico (1863) was one of the few battles against a foreign intervention in Mexico where the invaders have surrendered against the Mexican forces.[4]

 
Sale of flags in the month of September in the Plaza Juarez of Ciudad Victoria

In 1846, in the Mexican–American War, Ciudad Victoria was occupied on December 25 by troops from the United States and was liberated at the end of the war.[9] In 1898, President Porfirio Díaz sponsored the operation of the urban animal-drawn railroad that ran down Hidalgo Street to the Train Station, and a branch to the Hacienda de Tamatán, properties of Colonel Manuel González Jr. and that same year the Paseo Méndez was founded, inspired by Parisian street Champs-Élysées.

20th century

 
Government complex built at the end of the 20th century

The city began its industrial transformation in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, with the administration of Guadalupe Mainero Juárez which attracted investments and improvements to the city.[10]

On September 15, 1910, the monument to the Heroes of Independence was inaugurated, in the "Plaza Colón" in front of the railway station "La Recoletta". In 1917 he was shot in the wall of the Municipal Pantheon, General Alberto Carrera Torres, having been tried by an illegal War Council and buried in the French Pantheon, and in 1923 General César López de Lara took the governorship of the state of Tamaulipas.[11]

The Victorense Casino AC, formerly known as the social and mutualist centre of the city, was founded in 1929.[12] The urban and architectural structure of the city is defined in its buildings, buildings of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The creation of the Federal Highway 85 and other road works connect the capital with the Mexico–U.S. border and the centre of the country.[13] In 1939 Eng. Marte R. Gómez inaugurated the Olympic-type Stadium that nowadays bears his name and where the team plays Correcaminos Football Club.[14] In 1941 the "El Petaqueño" Airport, now called the "General Pedro José Méndez" International Airport, began operations.[15]

In 1951 the new Government Palace was inaugurated, built in the building where the Old Theatre "Casino" or "Juárez" was, the new "Juárez" theatre was inaugurated in 1957; The government tower known as "Crystal Tower" exists in the capital since 1980.[16]

21st century

 
Government complex built in 2010

The early morning of July 1, 2010, the city was hit by Hurricane Alex whose eye passed only a few kilometres between Ciudad Victoria, causing destruction in public lighting, billboards, traffic lights and an infinity of trees, as well as suspension of energy services electricity and drinking water for more than 24 hours.[17]

In 2010, the Governmental Complex "Bicentennial Park" came into operation, which today concentrates most of the government apparatus of the state of Tamaulipas. In 2016, the restoration of the old Casa Filizola, now the Pinacoteca Tamaulipas[18] and the main railway station of the capital, began.[14]

Coat of arms

The coat of arms was created on December 18, 1971, at the initiative of Professor Vidal Martínez.[19] The coat of arms has the following characteristics: On the side the map of the state that represents that Victoria is the capital, the balance, the sword and the parchment represent the three powers; the book symbolizes education and the torch the light of freedom, the date is the historical antecedent of the foundation, the landscape symbolizes the geographic environment of the region upon the arrival of the founders, henequen plants represent agricultural production.[19]

Politics

 
Ciudad Victoria Coat of Arms

The municipality was recognized as the official capital of the state of Tamaulipas, and named Ciudad Victoria in 1825, and the head of the municipality of Victoria is finally assigned the seat of the Legislative, Executive and Judicial powers.[4]

In state matter, the seat of the organisms and dependencies of the government of the state and the official residence of the governor of the state are in Ciudad Victoria.[20] The current governor is Francisco Javier García Cabeza de Vaca, of the National Action Party, for the 2016-2022 administration.[21]

 
Building of the City Council of Ciudad Victoria

The municipality is administered by the Ciudad Victoria City Council, comprised by the Municipal President, being the holder María del Pilar Gómez Leal, of the National Action Party as Substitute Municipal President of Victoria for the administration 2018-2021 since October 2, 2020.[22][23]

It consists of two syndics, fourteen council members and delegates. Among the tasks of the municipal administration are: The Municipal Statistical Register, civil protection, health, alcoholic beverages regulations, drinking water services, drainage and sewerage, as well as public safety, traffic and roads.[20]

According to the National Electoral Institute (INE) and the State Electoral Institute of Tamaulipas (IEETAM), the voter registry is: 252,852 inhabitants,[24] belongs to the 15th electoral district of the state[25] and fifth federally of the state of Tamaulipas.[24]

Demography

Population

 
Cathedral of Our Lady of Refuge, Ciudad Victoria

According to the National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI), in the Population and Housing Count conducted in 2010, Ciudad Victoria had until that year a population of 346,029 inhabitants of which: 164,801 are women and 157,152 are men.[26] The municipality of Victoria concentrates 94.7% of the population in its municipal seat, the rest is considered rural[27] and has experienced a growth rate of 2.04%.[27]

In 2010, CONAPO estimated, based on INEGI, a level of marginalization of 36.7% as very low, 25% low level and from 1.3% to 0.3% with levels between high and very high marginalization.[28]

 
Marginalized area of Ciudad Victoria

According to the INEGI intercensal survey, in 2015, 52% of the population of Ciudad Victoria were women and the population density was 211 people per square kilometre.[27]

Ciudad Victoria has one of the highest per capita murder rates in the world.[29]

Religion

As for religion, 90% of its population declares itself Christian Catholic, while 5% Christian Protestants, 2% Jews, and 3% other religion or none being the most Catholic city of State. On December 12, various parties and events are held in the Sanctuary in honour of the Virgin of Guadalupe, the celebration includes dances of matachines, folk verbena and pyrotechnic games.[30][26]

Education

Ciudad Victoria has a wide range of educational institutions, from preschool to graduate level. The level of illiteracy has dropped and the level of education at the top level is 3.7% of the population.[27]

In the city there are 57 special education schools; basic education includes 46 pre-school schools, 168 pre-schools, 175 primary schools, 55 secondary schools; the upper middle level has 46 baccalaureates and 3 middle level professionals. There are 37 higher education institutions, including educational training centres such as ITACE and several special education schools.[31]

 
Gymnasium of La Salle University

The BPCE library "Marte R. Gómez" is the most well-known library in the centre of the city. The state capital has several libraries, among which are: The Adaberto J. Arguelles Municipal Public Library and Ernesto Higuera, the Public Library Tamaulipas Municipal Cultural Centre, the Municipal Public Library Youth Coexistence Centre 2, the Municipal Public Library of Ciudad Victoria, the Municipal Public Library FOVISSSTE-SEP, in addition to the Municipal Public Library Tamaulipas Regional History Museum and the Paul Harris Municipal Public Library.[32][33]

Higher education

The city is the main headquarters of the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas (UAT), founded in 1950, a public institution with more than 40,000 students in upper secondary, higher and postgraduate levels.[6]

The Technological Institute of Ciudad Victoria (ITCV) was the first technological institution in the centre of the state, began its activities in 1975. It has more than 3,113 students, offers undergraduate, engineering and postgraduate careers.[7]

La Salle Victoria University (ULSA) is a private Catholic institution with students in the upper and upper secondary levels; It covers fields of engineering, science and humanities, has a health campus and learning hospital.[34]

In 2007, the Polytechnic University of Victoria (UPV) was inaugurated, part of the Technological and Polytechnic Universities of Mexico, located within the TECNOTAM Scientific and Technological Park. It offers engineering, postgraduate and distance education.[35][36]

The Centre for Research and Advanced Studies (CINVESTAV) of the National Polytechnic Institute has an Information Technology laboratory in its Tamaulipas unit, within the TECNOTAM Park.[37]

Among the schools of teacher training has: The Benemérita Normalized Federalized School of Tamaulipas (BENFT), the Normal School of Tamaulipas (ESNT) and the Normal School of Educators (ENFE).[38]

Other institutions of higher education are: The University of the Valley of Mexico (UVM), the Vizacaya University of the Americas, are universities in the private sector. There are also the Institute of Sciences and Higher Studies of Tamaulipas (ICEST), the National Pedagogical University (Mexico) (UPN), the University of North Tamaulipas (UNT), the Centre for University Studies (CEU).[39]

The Miguel Aleman University is a private institution of superior and middle level that was established in the state capital in September 2005 after twenty-five years since its founding in 1981, of philanthropic and humanitarian principles offering university studies in accounting, economic areas, social, and educational.[31]

Infrastructure and transport

 
Avenue in Ciudad Victoria

There are 32 urban routes that circulate in the city and nearby ejidos in the surroundings, being mini-buses and buses the most used public transport, a taxi service, and school transport of the main universities, and The Pedro J. Méndez Airport, located at the outskirts of the city. Almost 59% of the urban roads have some type of paving, where the downtown sector of the city covers 95% of the roads.[27]

The city has a bus station and terminals of several companies. The usual destinations of the bus station are Monterrey, Tampico, Altamira, North of Veracruz, Tamazunchale, Valles, Reynosa, Saltillo, Matamoros, Mante and Soto la Marina.[40]

The main avenues and most of the traffic are Av. Alberto Carrera Torres, Francisco I. Madero Ave., Emilio Portes Gil Boulevard, Blvr. Adolfo López Mateos, Av. Rotaria, Av. Carlos Adrián Aviles, Calzada Gral. Luis Caballero, Práxedis Balboa Boulevard, as well as the road to Soto la Marina. The federal highways Mexico 81 and Mexico 80 connect with Altamira, Tampico and Madero. The city also has pedestrian bridges, six bridges for cars that cross the San Marcos River and a road hump to the west of the city.[27][41]

There is an airport serving the city, Ciudad Victoria International Airport, which, as of 2021, was being served by Aeromar on the passenger airline side and Aeronaves TSM on the cargo airline side.

Local media

The city has telegraph offices (which provide banking services, collection of third parties, telegram services, money transfer services) and post offices to send and receive parcels, letters and postcards, these are operated by the Mexican Post Office.[42]

In Ciudad Victoria, the analogue blackout was made on December 31, 2015. The open digital terrestrial television signals offered are: XHCTVI-TDT Imagen Television, XHCVT-TDT Azteca Uno and ADN 40, XHCVI-TDT Nueve, XHCDT-TDT Azteca 7, XHTK-TDT Las Estrellas, XHUT-TDT Canal 5 and XHVTU-TDT that includes the signals of Multimedios Television, Milenio Televisión, TeleRitmo and 52MX.[43]

The AM and FM radio stations in the city include: XEVIC-AM and XHVIC-FM Radio Tamaulipas, owned by the State Government; XHUNI-FM Radio UAT, operated by the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas; XHLRS-FM La Caliente; XETAM-AM and FM KeBuena, XHHP-FM the hottest, XHGW-FM Imagen Radio, XHVIR-FM The Cotorra, XHRPV-FM The Victoria V, XHBJ-FM Exa FM.

The written or printed press is covered by some local and regional media such as: The Journal of Ciudad Victoria, which registered an average circulation of 14,270 daily copies in 2014. The “Mercurio” of Tamaulipas, a newspaper that sold an average circulation in 2014 of 19,615 daily copies and 21,286 copies.[44][45]

Culture

Ciudad Victoria has several tourist spots such as museums, zoological parks, green and natural areas.

"Tamatán" Zoo

 
Recreative zone inside Sporting Unit Siglo XXI in Ciudad Victoria

A zoo that has areas dedicated to the species of the animal world. With a variety of species and even educational talks, it is an important part of tourism in the capital, a zoo designed to encourage conservation and respect for nature. Organized in 5 regions, it presents the different species in open spaces. Surrounded by a naturalistic environment, with vegetation, rocks and waterfalls.[9]

21st Century Cultural and Recreational Park

It has an area dedicated to games for children, a football field, several swimming pools. In this space is the Planetarium and the Tamux Museum, as well as the Botanical Garden and a green area known as the Urban Forest for walking and jogging.[9]

Tamatán Recreational Park

The park offers various outdoor activities. A space of green areas and bodies of water, playgrounds and restaurant; located in lands of the ex-hacienda Tamatán.[9]

 
Regional History Museum

Los Troncones Ecological Park

Located in the foothills of the Sierra Madre Oriental, in the Ejido La Libertad, it is a tourist and ecological centre. It is a recreational park surrounded by vegetation with a stream, waterfalls and flora and fauna. It is equipped with grills, gardens and children's games.[9]

Dr. Ramiro Iglesias Leal Planetarium

In 1992, the Planetarium of Ciudad Victoria was inaugurated, one of the scientific and technological spreading centres in the North and Northeast of the Federal Republic; projects documentaries and scientific talks to the public. He was assigned the name "Dr. Ramiro Iglesias Leal ", Tamaulipas scientist, from January 30, 1998.[9]

Tamaulipas Cultural Centre

It is a cultural space that houses a public library, the Amalia G. de Castillo Ledon theatre, a cinema and several auditoriums for exhibitions and presentations of cultural and artistic activities such as dance, music presentations, sculpture, painting, literature and theatre.[9]

Museum of Natural History of Tamaulipas TAMUX

 
TAMUX

The Museum of Natural History of Tamaulipas, also known as "TAMUX", began activities in February 2004, dedicated to scientific dissemination, nature, space and promoting culture in favour of biodiversity. When the museum was founded, the planetarium of Ciudad Victoria "Dr. Ramiro Iglesias Leal ", in operation since 1992, became part of it. The name of the museum, "TAMUX", is a Huastec word that means "meeting point". In addition to the thematic rooms, it has been the venue for the presentation of scientific conferences and videos; room for temporary exhibitions, for plastic and scientific exhibitions; and an open-air theatre (acoustic shell).[9]

Regional Museum of History of Tamaulipas

The construction of the Former Vicentino Asylum, today Tamaulipas Regional Museum of History, was initiated at the end of the 19th century when Governor of the State of Tamaulipas Lic. Guadalupe Mainero, at the request of Mr. Filemón Fierro Terán, Third Bishop of the Diocese of Tamaulipas. As of February 12, 2003, this museum began operations offering visitors a sample of the state's cultural heritage. It has hosted many national and international exhibitions.[9]

House of Art

 
House of Art

The House of Art began its construction in 1911, where it was installed what was the Normal School for Teachers attached and kindergarten. In 1962 the Institute of Youth and Women was created, in 1974 it was called the Tamaulipas Institute of Fine Arts.

In 1980 it takes the name of Tamaulipas Institute for Culture and the Arts. In 2011, it became an administrative unit under the ITCA, providing courses and workshops for various cultural disciplines that allow students to develop artistic skills, promote and disseminate cultural activities in the community. Now the disciplines of music, dance, plastic arts and literature and theatre are taught.[9]

Juarez Theatre

A theatre that houses the Institute of Historical Research under the administration of the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas. It was inaugurated on January 5, 1957, by President Adolfo Ruiz Cortines as Governor Horacio Terán Zumaya. The building encloses a mural by the Tampico painter Alfonso Xavier Peña.[9]

Tamaulipas International Festival

During the month of October, the state of Tamaulipas celebrates the Tamaulipas International Festival in each of its municipalities. In this festival musical and cultural events are held, such as concerts by artists such as: opera, plays, etc.[9]

Cultural events

The city has a family and cultural space called Libre 17, which corresponds to the closing on Sundays of Avenida Francisco I. Madero street in the centre of the city, where local families and tourists can walk on foot, bicycle, and witness musical and cultural events.[9]

Bicentennial Park

 
Bicentennial Park

The park is an area that concentrates the offices of the government of the state, the fairground that consists of the land of the fair, the centre of spectacles and the Polyforum.[9]

Tamaulipas Fair

It is a cultural event held annually in the capital, where in addition to the classic mechanical games, it has the presence of stands of all municipalities of the state of Tamaulipas, exhibiting their culture and cuisine and usually have a state of the federation guest; It has events such as concerts held by national artists.

The centre of spectacles that is inside the fairground of the Bicentennial Park, was inaugurated on November 14, 2008. And there have been several artists, bands and national groups.[9]

Polyforum Dr Rodolfo Torre Cantu

It is a convention centre that was originally called "Polyforum Victoria", and it is in the Bicentennial Park and was inaugurated in December 2009; its interior can be divided into several independent rooms and has the capacity to comfortably accommodate 5,000 people with 12 250m² of construction with a main hall of 5000m².[9]

Public services

Drinking water and drainage

The Municipal Commission for Drinking Water and Sewerage of Ciudad Victoria (COMAPA), is a public body of the Municipal Administration that provides services to the city; among its attributions are those of: planning, programming, studying, projecting, budgeting, constructing, rehabilitating, expanding, operating, managing, conserving and improving potable water and sewage systems, as well as the treatment of wastewater and the rejection of According to COMAPA, there is 90.90% of domestic use (residential houses and residential areas), 7.32% of commercial use (businesses and self-service stores), 1.38% of public use (green areas, plazas, etc.) and a 0.40% for industrial use, with an installed treatment capacity of 1,100 litres per second, and an annual treatment volume of 25, 179, 604 cubic meters.[46]

Electric infrastructure

The state capital has 97.50% of its population with access to electricity, being almost on par with the national average in the area. The street lighting network comprises a total of 29, 100 luminaries (as of October 2016) of which only 10, 800 are in operation, the rest are out of service. The service oversees the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) Gulf Centre Division.[46]

Hygiene

The collection of garbage in the capital is covered by several routes that cover the city, it is a service provided by the municipality, there are no concession services, it is estimated that the total average garbage generated per day is 370 tons (to October 2016), despite this, the daily collection capacity is 200 tons.[47]

Health

Health coverage is covered by state institutions, Popular Insurance and Mexican Social Security Institute. It is the second city in the state in medical care by inhabitants, and the population that does not have immediate access to health services is 11.8%. The state of Tamaulipas has health services, both public and private, among which are:

 
Dr. Norberto Treviño Zapata General Hospital

General Victoria Hospital. Provides health services in the downtown area of Tamaulipas and medical care around Sanitary Jurisdiction No. 1; Children's Hospital of Ciudad Victoria; Victoria Civil Hospital; High Specialty Regional Hospital of Ciudad Victoria; which provides professional, surgical and nursing services in several specialties; La Salle Hospital Ciudad Victoria, which is an educational internship hospital of the La Salle Victoria University; North Medical Clinic; Clinic Hospital of the Institute of Security and Social Services of State Workers; General Hospital of Zone No. 1 (IMSS) Medical Educational Unit of "Adolfo López Mateos"; Family Medicine Unit No. 67 (IMSS) San Luisito.[48][49]

Sports

In Ciudad Victoria there is a varied sporting activity; In the field of professional football, the team of the Correcaminos of the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas stands out and carries out its official matches at the Marte R. Gómez Stadium, located in the city centre, with a capacity to house 13,500 people and the University Stadium Eugenio Alvizo Porras, located in the Victoria University Centre of the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas.

In the sports unit Adolfo Ruiz Cortinez there are facilities for practicing football, volleyball and indoor gymnasium for basketball. This sports complex also houses a baseball stadium.

The Sports Centre of Ciudad Victoria, with the name of "Américo Villareal Guerra", is a sports centre that has spaces for gymnastics, fencing, weightlifting, diving, swimming, athletics, boxing, judo, archery and basketball, and It is focused to be used mainly by high performance athletes with the intention of representing the state of Tamaulipas in national sporting events.[50][51][52][15]

Gastronomy

The gastronomy of Ciudad Victoria is composed of three main elements: meat, corn and seafood; In addition to grilled meat, dried meat and chorizo. One of the most typical foods of the city are the gorditas, these consist of small thick corn tortillas stuffed with shredded meat, nopales, scrambled eggs, beans, among other ingredients. It also has many restaurants focused on typical Mexican food, the well-known "taquito."

Desserts of the region are made with walnut, sweet potato, cocadas with pineapple and walnut, among others. Also crystallized fruits and gorditas sweetened with piloncillo.[9][53]

Geography

 
Panoramic from a viewpoint on a hill of the Sierra Madre Oriental in the Military Field of the 77th Infantry Battalion in Ciudad Victoria

Victoria is located 316 metres (1,037 ft) above sea level and at coordinates 23°44′N 99°8′W / 23.733°N 99.133°W / 23.733; -99.133 just north of the Tropic of Cancer. The city is in a valley between two mountain ranges: the Sierra Madre Oriental to the west and the Sierra de Tamaulipas to the east.

Climate

Ciudad Victoria has a climate on the border of humid subtropical (Köppen Cfa/Cwa) and hot semi-arid (BSh). Its weather is characterised by short warm winters and long hot to sweltering summers. Temperatures rarely drop below 0 °C (32 °F) — the lowest recorded temperature was −6 °C (21.2 °F) and the hottest was 48.5 °C (119.3 °F), one of the highest temperatures ever recorded in Mexico. The average annual rainfall is 740 millimetres or 29 inches, of which five-sixths (617 millimetres or 24.3 inches) falls between May and October, although there is a drying trend in the months of July and August. The moderate elevation adds to overall rainfall pattern, which is also influenced by exceptionally heavy rains brought by occasional North Atlantic tropical cyclones.

Climate data for Ciudad Victoria
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 37.1
(98.8)
39.0
(102.2)
42.5
(108.5)
45.5
(113.9)
47.5
(117.5)
48.5
(119.3)
42.0
(107.6)
42.0
(107.6)
41.0
(105.8)
40.0
(104.0)
38.0
(100.4)
39.0
(102.2)
48.5
(119.3)
Average high °C (°F) 22.7
(72.9)
25.2
(77.4)
29.0
(84.2)
32.2
(90.0)
34.0
(93.2)
35.2
(95.4)
35.0
(95.0)
35.2
(95.4)
32.7
(90.9)
29.8
(85.6)
26.4
(79.5)
23.4
(74.1)
30.1
(86.2)
Daily mean °C (°F) 16.4
(61.5)
18.2
(64.8)
21.8
(71.2)
25.0
(77.0)
27.0
(80.6)
28.3
(82.9)
28.2
(82.8)
28.3
(82.9)
26.5
(79.7)
23.7
(74.7)
20.3
(68.5)
17.2
(63.0)
23.4
(74.1)
Average low °C (°F) 10.0
(50.0)
11.3
(52.3)
14.5
(58.1)
17.8
(64.0)
20.1
(68.2)
21.5
(70.7)
21.5
(70.7)
21.4
(70.5)
20.3
(68.5)
17.6
(63.7)
14.1
(57.4)
10.9
(51.6)
16.8
(62.2)
Record low °C (°F) −1.0
(30.2)
−3.0
(26.6)
1.0
(33.8)
4.0
(39.2)
10.5
(50.9)
12.5
(54.5)
8.0
(46.4)
10.5
(50.9)
6.0
(42.8)
6.7
(44.1)
1.0
(33.8)
−6.0
(21.2)
−6.0
(21.2)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 18.9
(0.74)
13.9
(0.55)
22.3
(0.88)
26.8
(1.06)
78.5
(3.09)
125.1
(4.93)
74.3
(2.93)
95.5
(3.76)
173.1
(6.81)
70.9
(2.79)
20.5
(0.81)
18.3
(0.72)
738.1
(29.06)
Average rainy days (≥ 0.1 mm) 2.8 2.7 2.7 3.5 6.0 6.7 4.2 5.4 8.1 4.8 2.7 2.8 52.4
Average relative humidity (%) 73 69 67 68 72 70 67 68 73 75 76 75 71
Mean monthly sunshine hours 203 185 226 226 218 216 244 256 243 230 216 220 2,683
Source: Servicio Meteorológico Nacional[54][55][56]

Sister cities

The strategic alliances that are built with cities in the country and the United States contribute to the economic development of the capital, including twinning of the following:

Notable residents

References

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  2. ^ "Victoria, Tamaulipas, México - Ciudades y pueblos del mundo". es.db-city.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  3. ^ "Como llegar de Frontera a Ciudad Victoria - Calcular Ruta". www.calcularruta.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-01-25.
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  6. ^ a b "La UAT". www.uat.edu.mx (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  7. ^ a b ".:: Instituto Tecnológico de Cd. Victoria ::". www.itvictoria.edu.mx. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  8. ^ "NUEVO SANTANDER". www.raullongoria.net. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "Gobierno del Estado de Tamaulipas". www.tamaulipas.gob.mx (in European Spanish). 28 September 2016. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  10. ^ Calendario Cívico de Ciudad Victoria. Gobierno Local de Ciudad Victoria.
  11. ^ Lopez Anaya, Miguel (1987). Gral. Alberto Carrera Torres (in Spanish). Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas: Gobierno del Estado de Tamaulipas, Dirección General de Educación y Cultura. ISBN 9684230559. OCLC 22334339.
  12. ^ . Casino Victorense A.C. Archived from the original on 2015-07-28.
  13. ^ (PDF) (in Spanish). 2012-03-16. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-16. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  14. ^ a b "Estaciones Mexicanas de Ferrocarril - Cd. Victoria TAMPS". www.mexlist.com. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  15. ^ a b "Remodelación del Estadio "MRG" - CF Correcaminos Oficial". www.cfcorrecaminos.com. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
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  20. ^ a b "Local Laws of Ciudad Victoria" (PDF).
  21. ^ "Gobierno del Estado de Tamaulipas". www.tamaulipas.gob.mx (in European Spanish). October 2016. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  22. ^ "H. Congreso del Estado de Tamaulipas". www.congresotamaulipas.gob.mx. Retrieved 2020-10-03.
  23. ^ "Invita Xico a que todos los victorenses a tomen protesta - El Mercurio de Tamaulipas". El Mercurio de Tamaulipas (in Mexican Spanish). 2018-09-30. Retrieved 2018-10-01.
  24. ^ a b . listanominal.ife.org.mx. Archived from the original on 2018-03-29. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
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  26. ^ a b . 2013-12-14. Archived from the original on 2013-12-14. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
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  28. ^ "CONAPO" (PDF). CONAPO.
  29. ^ "50 of the most dangerous cities in the world: Tijuana, Caracas, Cape Town". www.usatoday.com.
  30. ^ Expreso (7 December 2015). "En los 30's..una odisea ir al Santuario a ver la Virgen | Expreso - Expreso". expreso.press (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  31. ^ a b "Sistema de Reconocimientos de Validez Oficial de Estudios". www.sirvoes.sep.gob.mx. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  32. ^ "ITACE VICTORIA - Wikimapia". wikimapia.org. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  33. ^ . 2016-11-14. Archived from the original on 2016-11-14. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  34. ^ "Historia - ULSA – Universidad La Salle Victoria". www.ulsavictoria.edu.mx (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  35. ^ "Universidad Politécnica". www.upvictoria.edu.mx. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  36. ^ "Información Pública del Estado de Tamaulipas | Gobierno del Estado de Tamaulipas". transparencia.tamaulipas.gob.mx (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  37. ^ "Maestría en computación, doctorado en computación e investigación". www.tamps.cinvestav.mx (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  38. ^ ":: DGESPE :: Escuelas Normales :: Directorio Escuelas Normales ::Benemérita Escuela Normal Federalizada De Tamaulipas Directorio". www.dgespe.sep.gob.mx. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  39. ^ . 2016-09-05. Archived from the original on 2016-09-05. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  40. ^ "Central de Autobuses de Ciudad Victoria Camionera en Tamaulipas". Autobuses y Camioneras. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  41. ^ . Cd Victoria (in European Spanish). 2015-06-14. Archived from the original on 2016-11-14. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
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  43. ^ "Registro Público de Concesiones" (PDF). 2016-10-22. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  44. ^ "El Mercurio de Tamaulipas". Secretaría de Cultura/Sistema de Información Cultural (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  45. ^ "El Diario de Ciudad Victoria". Secretaría de Cultura/Sistema de Información Cultural (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  46. ^ a b "COMAPA Victoria Portal - Comapa". COMAPA Victoria Portal. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  47. ^ "VICTORIA : CIUDAD VIVA". conoceturuta.com (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  48. ^ "Inauguran Hospital Victoria La Salle - El Diario de Ciudad Victoria". El Diario de Ciudad Victoria (in European Spanish). 2016-09-10. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  49. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-08-12.
  50. ^ "Finaliza la disciplina de Atletismo en el Polideportivo Victoria - Reporte Tamaulipas". Reporte Tamaulipas (in Mexican Spanish). 2015-03-01. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  51. ^ "Recorren el Polideportivo de Ciudad Victoria". www.hoytamaulipas.net (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  52. ^ . POSTA (in Spanish). 2016-08-04. Archived from the original on 2018-01-25. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  53. ^ "Gobierno del Estado de Tamaulipas". www.tamaulipas.gob.mx (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2018-01-25.
  54. ^ "NORMALES CLIMATOLÓGICAS 1951-2010" (in Spanish). Servicio Meteorológico National. Retrieved April 18, 2013.
  55. ^ "Extreme Temperatures and Precipitation for Ciudad Victoria (SMN) 1942–1960" (in Spanish). Servicio Meteorológico National. Retrieved December 3, 2013.
  56. ^ "NORMALES CLIMATOLÓGICAS 1981-2000" (PDF) (in Spanish). Comision Nacional Del Agua. Retrieved April 18, 2013.

Further reading

    External links

    • (in Spanish) Dirección de Tecnología
    • (in Spanish) Instituto Tecnológico de Ciudad Victoria
    • (in Spanish)

    ciudad, victoria, development, bulacan, philippines, ciudad, victoria, spanish, pronunciation, sjuˈðað, βikˈtoɾja, listen, seat, municipality, victoria, capital, mexican, state, tamaulipas, located, northeast, mexico, foot, sierra, madre, oriental, borders, mu. For the development in Bulacan Philippines see Ciudad de Victoria Ciudad Victoria Spanish pronunciation sjuˈdad bikˈtoɾja listen is the seat of the Municipality of Victoria and the capital of the Mexican state of Tamaulipas It is located in the northeast of Mexico at the foot of the Sierra Madre Oriental It borders the municipality of Guemez to the north Llera to the south Casas Municipality to the east and the municipality of Jaumave to the west 1 The city is located 246 km 153 mi from Monterrey 2 and 319 km 198 mi from the US Mexico border 3 Ciudad Victoria is named after the first president of Mexico Guadalupe Victoria 4 Ciudad VictoriaCityCiudad VictoriaNight view of Ciudad Victoria City CentreCoat of armsCiudad VictoriaShow map of TamaulipasCiudad VictoriaShow map of MexicoCoordinates 23 44 20 N 99 08 35 W 23 73889 N 99 14306 W 23 73889 99 14306 Coordinates 23 44 20 N 99 08 35 W 23 73889 N 99 14306 W 23 73889 99 14306CountryMexicoStateTamaulipasFoundationOctober 6 1750Founded asVilla de Santa Maria de AguayoFounded byJose de Escandon y HelgueraGovernment Municipal President 2021 2024 Eduardo Abraham Gattas Baez 2021 present MRNArea City188 km2 73 sq mi Elevation316 m 1 037 ft Population 2022 City332 100 Density1 800 km2 4 600 sq mi Metro349 688DemonymVictorenseTime zoneUTC 6 CST Summer DST UTC 5 CDT Websitewww wbr ciudadvictoria wbr gob wbr mxIn 1825 Ciudad Victoria became the state capital 5 It is home to higher education institutions such as the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas 6 and the Technological Institute of Ciudad Victoria 7 General Pedro Jose Mendez International Airport is located on the outskirts of the city As a state bureaucratic centre it is the seat of the three political powers and has sites of tourist and cultural interest Contents 1 Pre foundation 2 History 2 1 Colonial period 2 2 Post colonial period 2 3 20th century 2 4 21st century 3 Coat of arms 4 Politics 5 Demography 5 1 Population 5 2 Religion 6 Education 6 1 Higher education 7 Infrastructure and transport 8 Local media 9 Culture 9 1 Tamatan Zoo 9 2 21st Century Cultural and Recreational Park 9 3 Tamatan Recreational Park 9 4 Los Troncones Ecological Park 9 5 Dr Ramiro Iglesias Leal Planetarium 9 6 Tamaulipas Cultural Centre 9 7 Museum of Natural History of Tamaulipas TAMUX 9 8 Regional Museum of History of Tamaulipas 9 9 House of Art 9 10 Juarez Theatre 9 11 Tamaulipas International Festival 9 12 Cultural events 9 13 Bicentennial Park 9 14 Tamaulipas Fair 9 15 Polyforum Dr Rodolfo Torre Cantu 10 Public services 10 1 Drinking water and drainage 10 2 Electric infrastructure 10 3 Hygiene 10 4 Health 10 5 Sports 10 6 Gastronomy 11 Geography 11 1 Climate 12 Sister cities 13 Notable residents 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksPre foundation Edit Viceroyalty of New Spain The Viceroy of New Spain Juan Francisco Guemez and Horcasitas on Saturday September 3 1746 founded a colony in the Seno Mexicano West coast of the Gulf of Mexico dismembering the New Kingdom of Leon Two years later on Wednesday December 25 1748 Jose de Escandon and Helguera founded Villa de Llera part of the Late Colonization of New Santander named after Santander the capital of Cantabria Spain 4 Villa de Santa Maria del Agua de Aguayo was founded on October 6 1750 4 History Edit Places of Ciudad Victoria Villa de Santa Maria de Aguayo was named after the wife of the first Count of Revillagigedo Don Juan Francisco de Guemez y Horcasitas named Dona Antonia Cepherina Pacheco de Padilla a native of Aguayo Province of Santander Spain 4 clarification needed The settlement was founded by Jose de Escandon and Helguera Count of Sierra Gorda during his second campaign of the Pacification and Colonization Plan of the coast of the Mexican Seno later called New Santander today Tamaulipas 4 The Spanish settlement open to the plain to the East and surrounded to the west by the Sierra Madre Oriental a strategic location that also received breezes from the north and east 4 The town was administered by Captain D Juan de Astigarraga who drew up and carried out the first irrigation works His work led to an increase in agriculture and subsequently a rapid rise in population 4 In religious matters the settlement was under the command of a Franciscan named Antonio Javier de Arechaga who was also in charge of the mission of San Felipe which was founded with 150 indigenous people That Catholic mission progressed more than those previously founded because in the lands that were designated they were opened by local Native Americans 4 Captain Astigarraga died three years after the Villa de Aguayo was founded and Escandon then conferred the appointment of captain to replace him in the command Don Miguel de Cordoba 4 Under the administration of the new captain the Villa de Aguayo continued to progress and when its statistics were formed in 1757 the settlement had in its farmhouse and estates located in its demarcation more than 1000 inhabitants who had 8600 heads of cattle and horses and 4100 of smaller cattle 4 The noble and military of Belgian descent Jose de Craywinckel when he visited the settlement proposed to the Viceroy the reactivation of the Olazaran mine which was abandoned in the Boca de Caballeros since this measure would tend to give the settlement greater impetus in its prosperity creating new interests and attracting new neighbours by this means it being possible to expect that Villa de Aguayo would soon become one of the main populations of the new colony 4 The nobleman also proposed to the Viceroy at that time to undertake a campaign against rebellious Native Americans of the Sighue who had their rancherias by the ravines and valleys of the Sierra Madre and in defines of their land harassed the shepherds and estates of the demarcation of Aguayo arriving in his raids to join with the Janambre people in the attacks they undertook against the nearby Spanish settlements of Jaumave and Llera 4 By this date some masonry houses were begun to be built in Aguayo the materials for the construction of a Catholic church were gathered and large sugarcane plantations were established in the surrounding lands The neighbourhood of this town also carried out the salt trade that was going to be collected from the saltworks of San Fernando and la Marina with the villages of the interior of Charcas and the southern part of the New Kingdom of Leon 4 The Spanish settlement of Villa de Aguayo was distributed in perfect grid form and in its second settlement a few leagues east of its foundation changing by the constant claim of the Native American tribes of Janambres and Pisones The settlement was from the beginning the geographical central node communicating with all the settlements of New Santander 4 As was the Spanish provision land was designated for the construction of the Catholic Church the Public Square the seat of the Captaincy of the Civil Military and Trade Authority spaces that over time are known as the Historical Centre formerly known as Plaza Hidalgo Plaza de Armas or Plaza de Catedral The settlement was dispersed and composed of 58 families with 409 people 4 The river that crossed the settlement is the so called San Marcos which has an irrigation ditch whose abundance of water gave the population all the irrigation it needs for the subsistence of its inhabitants irrigation of plots and other sowing of corn fostering also the cultivation of the cane The quality of the land was adequate for all fruits typical of the region and facilitated the breeding and conservation of livestock 4 Its location was one of the most advantageous in favour of the Royal Treasury both for being the first transit of the colony and because its crops and livestock promise great movement evidencing its growth at the beginning of its founding which was 11 families 4 Colonial period Edit Jose de Escandon y Helguera 1st Count of Sierra Gorda Unlike the modes of settlement that were commonly raised during the vice regal period in New Spain which followed a missionary and presidial structure the new populations designed by Jose de Escandon had marked differences in the cultural social political and economic spheres 4 The new populations that Escandon developed in the territory that is now known as Tamaulipas called in the eighteenth century New Santander are based on ideas that have as a reference a way of exercising control over the development of the city and the territory through its economic production The direct consequences of this form of urban design marked in New Spain the opening to a new way of consolidating a border territory 4 Jose de Escandon y Helguera developed cattle ranching extensively and in a limited way agriculture since for the most part temporary was practiced and commerce also developed The colonized territory was integrated and populated up to the Rio Grande configuring the map of what is now Tamaulipas 4 In addition Escandon proposed the strategic location arrangements between each new population a day away which would facilitate that in cases of reoccurrence of attacks by the natives could support each other These are the characteristics that made the colonization of the New Santander transcendent Although the reality did not always reflect the initial spirit of colonization the model developed by Jose de Escandon proposed a new form of territorial occupation that had not been seen until the 18th century in New Spain 4 Casa de los Hermanos Filizola restored to inhabit the Pinacoteca Tamaulipas Ciudad Victoria Mexico Post colonial period Edit After the Mexican Independence New Santander was renamed Tamaulipas 4 and the State Congress decrees on April 20 1825 to elevate the Villa de Aguayo to the category of City 8 seat of the Three Powers and Capital of the State approving the name of Victoria in honour of the first President of Mexico Guadalupe Victoria The Capitality Decree Title of City and Name is published by mandate of the First Congress signed and sealed by Enrique Camilo Suarez Vice Governor of Tamaulipas 4 In this Capital the Governor of the State Lucas Fernandez on May 4 issued a decree to reject the invasion by order of the Spanish monarchy The attempt of reconquest by the Spanish vanguard army commanded by General Brigadier Isidro Barradas was frustrated on September 11 1829 in Tampico Tamaulipas At the head of the national forces were the Generals Felipe de la Garza Cisneros Manuel Mier and Teran and Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna Battle of Tampico 1863 was one of the few battles against a foreign intervention in Mexico where the invaders have surrendered against the Mexican forces 4 Sale of flags in the month of September in the Plaza Juarez of Ciudad Victoria In 1846 in the Mexican American War Ciudad Victoria was occupied on December 25 by troops from the United States and was liberated at the end of the war 9 In 1898 President Porfirio Diaz sponsored the operation of the urban animal drawn railroad that ran down Hidalgo Street to the Train Station and a branch to the Hacienda de Tamatan properties of Colonel Manuel Gonzalez Jr and that same year the Paseo Mendez was founded inspired by Parisian street Champs Elysees 20th century Edit Government complex built at the end of the 20th century The city began its industrial transformation in the late 19th and early 20th centuries with the administration of Guadalupe Mainero Juarez which attracted investments and improvements to the city 10 On September 15 1910 the monument to the Heroes of Independence was inaugurated in the Plaza Colon in front of the railway station La Recoletta In 1917 he was shot in the wall of the Municipal Pantheon General Alberto Carrera Torres having been tried by an illegal War Council and buried in the French Pantheon and in 1923 General Cesar Lopez de Lara took the governorship of the state of Tamaulipas 11 The Victorense Casino AC formerly known as the social and mutualist centre of the city was founded in 1929 12 The urban and architectural structure of the city is defined in its buildings buildings of the late 19th and early 20th centuries The creation of the Federal Highway 85 and other road works connect the capital with the Mexico U S border and the centre of the country 13 In 1939 Eng Marte R Gomez inaugurated the Olympic type Stadium that nowadays bears his name and where the team plays Correcaminos Football Club 14 In 1941 the El Petaqueno Airport now called the General Pedro Jose Mendez International Airport began operations 15 In 1951 the new Government Palace was inaugurated built in the building where the Old Theatre Casino or Juarez was the new Juarez theatre was inaugurated in 1957 The government tower known as Crystal Tower exists in the capital since 1980 16 21st century Edit Government complex built in 2010 The early morning of July 1 2010 the city was hit by Hurricane Alex whose eye passed only a few kilometres between Ciudad Victoria causing destruction in public lighting billboards traffic lights and an infinity of trees as well as suspension of energy services electricity and drinking water for more than 24 hours 17 In 2010 the Governmental Complex Bicentennial Park came into operation which today concentrates most of the government apparatus of the state of Tamaulipas In 2016 the restoration of the old Casa Filizola now the Pinacoteca Tamaulipas 18 and the main railway station of the capital began 14 Coat of arms EditThe coat of arms was created on December 18 1971 at the initiative of Professor Vidal Martinez 19 The coat of arms has the following characteristics On the side the map of the state that represents that Victoria is the capital the balance the sword and the parchment represent the three powers the book symbolizes education and the torch the light of freedom the date is the historical antecedent of the foundation the landscape symbolizes the geographic environment of the region upon the arrival of the founders henequen plants represent agricultural production 19 Politics Edit Ciudad Victoria Coat of Arms The municipality was recognized as the official capital of the state of Tamaulipas and named Ciudad Victoria in 1825 and the head of the municipality of Victoria is finally assigned the seat of the Legislative Executive and Judicial powers 4 In state matter the seat of the organisms and dependencies of the government of the state and the official residence of the governor of the state are in Ciudad Victoria 20 The current governor is Francisco Javier Garcia Cabeza de Vaca of the National Action Party for the 2016 2022 administration 21 Building of the City Council of Ciudad Victoria The municipality is administered by the Ciudad Victoria City Council comprised by the Municipal President being the holder Maria del Pilar Gomez Leal of the National Action Party as Substitute Municipal President of Victoria for the administration 2018 2021 since October 2 2020 22 23 It consists of two syndics fourteen council members and delegates Among the tasks of the municipal administration are The Municipal Statistical Register civil protection health alcoholic beverages regulations drinking water services drainage and sewerage as well as public safety traffic and roads 20 According to the National Electoral Institute INE and the State Electoral Institute of Tamaulipas IEETAM the voter registry is 252 852 inhabitants 24 belongs to the 15th electoral district of the state 25 and fifth federally of the state of Tamaulipas 24 Demography EditPopulation Edit Cathedral of Our Lady of Refuge Ciudad Victoria According to the National Institute of Statistics and Geography INEGI in the Population and Housing Count conducted in 2010 Ciudad Victoria had until that year a population of 346 029 inhabitants of which 164 801 are women and 157 152 are men 26 The municipality of Victoria concentrates 94 7 of the population in its municipal seat the rest is considered rural 27 and has experienced a growth rate of 2 04 27 In 2010 CONAPO estimated based on INEGI a level of marginalization of 36 7 as very low 25 low level and from 1 3 to 0 3 with levels between high and very high marginalization 28 Marginalized area of Ciudad Victoria According to the INEGI intercensal survey in 2015 52 of the population of Ciudad Victoria were women and the population density was 211 people per square kilometre 27 Ciudad Victoria has one of the highest per capita murder rates in the world 29 Religion Edit As for religion 90 of its population declares itself Christian Catholic while 5 Christian Protestants 2 Jews and 3 other religion or none being the most Catholic city of State On December 12 various parties and events are held in the Sanctuary in honour of the Virgin of Guadalupe the celebration includes dances of matachines folk verbena and pyrotechnic games 30 26 Education EditCiudad Victoria has a wide range of educational institutions from preschool to graduate level The level of illiteracy has dropped and the level of education at the top level is 3 7 of the population 27 In the city there are 57 special education schools basic education includes 46 pre school schools 168 pre schools 175 primary schools 55 secondary schools the upper middle level has 46 baccalaureates and 3 middle level professionals There are 37 higher education institutions including educational training centres such as ITACE and several special education schools 31 Gymnasium of La Salle University The BPCE library Marte R Gomez is the most well known library in the centre of the city The state capital has several libraries among which are The Adaberto J Arguelles Municipal Public Library and Ernesto Higuera the Public Library Tamaulipas Municipal Cultural Centre the Municipal Public Library Youth Coexistence Centre 2 the Municipal Public Library of Ciudad Victoria the Municipal Public Library FOVISSSTE SEP in addition to the Municipal Public Library Tamaulipas Regional History Museum and the Paul Harris Municipal Public Library 32 33 Higher education Edit The city is the main headquarters of the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas UAT founded in 1950 a public institution with more than 40 000 students in upper secondary higher and postgraduate levels 6 The Technological Institute of Ciudad Victoria ITCV was the first technological institution in the centre of the state began its activities in 1975 It has more than 3 113 students offers undergraduate engineering and postgraduate careers 7 La Salle Victoria University ULSA is a private Catholic institution with students in the upper and upper secondary levels It covers fields of engineering science and humanities has a health campus and learning hospital 34 In 2007 the Polytechnic University of Victoria UPV was inaugurated part of the Technological and Polytechnic Universities of Mexico located within the TECNOTAM Scientific and Technological Park It offers engineering postgraduate and distance education 35 36 The Centre for Research and Advanced Studies CINVESTAV of the National Polytechnic Institute has an Information Technology laboratory in its Tamaulipas unit within the TECNOTAM Park 37 Among the schools of teacher training has The Benemerita Normalized Federalized School of Tamaulipas BENFT the Normal School of Tamaulipas ESNT and the Normal School of Educators ENFE 38 Other institutions of higher education are The University of the Valley of Mexico UVM the Vizacaya University of the Americas are universities in the private sector There are also the Institute of Sciences and Higher Studies of Tamaulipas ICEST the National Pedagogical University Mexico UPN the University of North Tamaulipas UNT the Centre for University Studies CEU 39 The Miguel Aleman University is a private institution of superior and middle level that was established in the state capital in September 2005 after twenty five years since its founding in 1981 of philanthropic and humanitarian principles offering university studies in accounting economic areas social and educational 31 Infrastructure and transport Edit Avenue in Ciudad Victoria There are 32 urban routes that circulate in the city and nearby ejidos in the surroundings being mini buses and buses the most used public transport a taxi service and school transport of the main universities and The Pedro J Mendez Airport located at the outskirts of the city Almost 59 of the urban roads have some type of paving where the downtown sector of the city covers 95 of the roads 27 The city has a bus station and terminals of several companies The usual destinations of the bus station are Monterrey Tampico Altamira North of Veracruz Tamazunchale Valles Reynosa Saltillo Matamoros Mante and Soto la Marina 40 The main avenues and most of the traffic are Av Alberto Carrera Torres Francisco I Madero Ave Emilio Portes Gil Boulevard Blvr Adolfo Lopez Mateos Av Rotaria Av Carlos Adrian Aviles Calzada Gral Luis Caballero Praxedis Balboa Boulevard as well as the road to Soto la Marina The federal highways Mexico 81 and Mexico 80 connect with Altamira Tampico and Madero The city also has pedestrian bridges six bridges for cars that cross the San Marcos River and a road hump to the west of the city 27 41 There is an airport serving the city Ciudad Victoria International Airport which as of 2021 was being served by Aeromar on the passenger airline side and Aeronaves TSM on the cargo airline side Local media EditThe city has telegraph offices which provide banking services collection of third parties telegram services money transfer services and post offices to send and receive parcels letters and postcards these are operated by the Mexican Post Office 42 In Ciudad Victoria the analogue blackout was made on December 31 2015 The open digital terrestrial television signals offered are XHCTVI TDT Imagen Television XHCVT TDT Azteca Uno and ADN 40 XHCVI TDT Nueve XHCDT TDT Azteca 7 XHTK TDT Las Estrellas XHUT TDT Canal 5 and XHVTU TDT that includes the signals of Multimedios Television Milenio Television TeleRitmo and 52MX 43 The AM and FM radio stations in the city include XEVIC AM and XHVIC FM Radio Tamaulipas owned by the State Government XHUNI FM Radio UAT operated by the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas XHLRS FM La Caliente XETAM AM and FM KeBuena XHHP FM the hottest XHGW FM Imagen Radio XHVIR FM The Cotorra XHRPV FM The Victoria V XHBJ FM Exa FM The written or printed press is covered by some local and regional media such as The Journal of Ciudad Victoria which registered an average circulation of 14 270 daily copies in 2014 The Mercurio of Tamaulipas a newspaper that sold an average circulation in 2014 of 19 615 daily copies and 21 286 copies 44 45 Culture EditCiudad Victoria has several tourist spots such as museums zoological parks green and natural areas Tamatan Zoo Edit Recreative zone inside Sporting Unit Siglo XXI in Ciudad Victoria A zoo that has areas dedicated to the species of the animal world With a variety of species and even educational talks it is an important part of tourism in the capital a zoo designed to encourage conservation and respect for nature Organized in 5 regions it presents the different species in open spaces Surrounded by a naturalistic environment with vegetation rocks and waterfalls 9 21st Century Cultural and Recreational Park Edit It has an area dedicated to games for children a football field several swimming pools In this space is the Planetarium and the Tamux Museum as well as the Botanical Garden and a green area known as the Urban Forest for walking and jogging 9 Tamatan Recreational Park Edit The park offers various outdoor activities A space of green areas and bodies of water playgrounds and restaurant located in lands of the ex hacienda Tamatan 9 Regional History Museum Los Troncones Ecological Park Edit Located in the foothills of the Sierra Madre Oriental in the Ejido La Libertad it is a tourist and ecological centre It is a recreational park surrounded by vegetation with a stream waterfalls and flora and fauna It is equipped with grills gardens and children s games 9 Dr Ramiro Iglesias Leal Planetarium Edit In 1992 the Planetarium of Ciudad Victoria was inaugurated one of the scientific and technological spreading centres in the North and Northeast of the Federal Republic projects documentaries and scientific talks to the public He was assigned the name Dr Ramiro Iglesias Leal Tamaulipas scientist from January 30 1998 9 Tamaulipas Cultural Centre Edit It is a cultural space that houses a public library the Amalia G de Castillo Ledon theatre a cinema and several auditoriums for exhibitions and presentations of cultural and artistic activities such as dance music presentations sculpture painting literature and theatre 9 Museum of Natural History of Tamaulipas TAMUX Edit TAMUX The Museum of Natural History of Tamaulipas also known as TAMUX began activities in February 2004 dedicated to scientific dissemination nature space and promoting culture in favour of biodiversity When the museum was founded the planetarium of Ciudad Victoria Dr Ramiro Iglesias Leal in operation since 1992 became part of it The name of the museum TAMUX is a Huastec word that means meeting point In addition to the thematic rooms it has been the venue for the presentation of scientific conferences and videos room for temporary exhibitions for plastic and scientific exhibitions and an open air theatre acoustic shell 9 Regional Museum of History of Tamaulipas Edit The construction of the Former Vicentino Asylum today Tamaulipas Regional Museum of History was initiated at the end of the 19th century when Governor of the State of Tamaulipas Lic Guadalupe Mainero at the request of Mr Filemon Fierro Teran Third Bishop of the Diocese of Tamaulipas As of February 12 2003 this museum began operations offering visitors a sample of the state s cultural heritage It has hosted many national and international exhibitions 9 House of Art Edit House of Art The House of Art began its construction in 1911 where it was installed what was the Normal School for Teachers attached and kindergarten In 1962 the Institute of Youth and Women was created in 1974 it was called the Tamaulipas Institute of Fine Arts In 1980 it takes the name of Tamaulipas Institute for Culture and the Arts In 2011 it became an administrative unit under the ITCA providing courses and workshops for various cultural disciplines that allow students to develop artistic skills promote and disseminate cultural activities in the community Now the disciplines of music dance plastic arts and literature and theatre are taught 9 Juarez Theatre Edit A theatre that houses the Institute of Historical Research under the administration of the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas It was inaugurated on January 5 1957 by President Adolfo Ruiz Cortines as Governor Horacio Teran Zumaya The building encloses a mural by the Tampico painter Alfonso Xavier Pena 9 Tamaulipas International Festival Edit During the month of October the state of Tamaulipas celebrates the Tamaulipas International Festival in each of its municipalities In this festival musical and cultural events are held such as concerts by artists such as opera plays etc 9 Cultural events Edit The city has a family and cultural space called Libre 17 which corresponds to the closing on Sundays of Avenida Francisco I Madero street in the centre of the city where local families and tourists can walk on foot bicycle and witness musical and cultural events 9 Bicentennial Park Edit Bicentennial Park The park is an area that concentrates the offices of the government of the state the fairground that consists of the land of the fair the centre of spectacles and the Polyforum 9 Tamaulipas Fair Edit It is a cultural event held annually in the capital where in addition to the classic mechanical games it has the presence of stands of all municipalities of the state of Tamaulipas exhibiting their culture and cuisine and usually have a state of the federation guest It has events such as concerts held by national artists The centre of spectacles that is inside the fairground of the Bicentennial Park was inaugurated on November 14 2008 And there have been several artists bands and national groups 9 Polyforum Dr Rodolfo Torre Cantu Edit Polyforum Dr Rodolfo Torre Cantu It is a convention centre that was originally called Polyforum Victoria and it is in the Bicentennial Park and was inaugurated in December 2009 its interior can be divided into several independent rooms and has the capacity to comfortably accommodate 5 000 people with 12 250m of construction with a main hall of 5000m 9 Public services EditDrinking water and drainage Edit The Municipal Commission for Drinking Water and Sewerage of Ciudad Victoria COMAPA is a public body of the Municipal Administration that provides services to the city among its attributions are those of planning programming studying projecting budgeting constructing rehabilitating expanding operating managing conserving and improving potable water and sewage systems as well as the treatment of wastewater and the rejection of According to COMAPA there is 90 90 of domestic use residential houses and residential areas 7 32 of commercial use businesses and self service stores 1 38 of public use green areas plazas etc and a 0 40 for industrial use with an installed treatment capacity of 1 100 litres per second and an annual treatment volume of 25 179 604 cubic meters 46 Electric infrastructure Edit The state capital has 97 50 of its population with access to electricity being almost on par with the national average in the area The street lighting network comprises a total of 29 100 luminaries as of October 2016 of which only 10 800 are in operation the rest are out of service The service oversees the Federal Electricity Commission CFE Gulf Centre Division 46 Hygiene Edit The collection of garbage in the capital is covered by several routes that cover the city it is a service provided by the municipality there are no concession services it is estimated that the total average garbage generated per day is 370 tons to October 2016 despite this the daily collection capacity is 200 tons 47 Health Edit Health coverage is covered by state institutions Popular Insurance and Mexican Social Security Institute It is the second city in the state in medical care by inhabitants and the population that does not have immediate access to health services is 11 8 The state of Tamaulipas has health services both public and private among which are Dr Norberto Trevino Zapata General Hospital General Victoria Hospital Provides health services in the downtown area of Tamaulipas and medical care around Sanitary Jurisdiction No 1 Children s Hospital of Ciudad Victoria Victoria Civil Hospital High Specialty Regional Hospital of Ciudad Victoria which provides professional surgical and nursing services in several specialties La Salle Hospital Ciudad Victoria which is an educational internship hospital of the La Salle Victoria University North Medical Clinic Clinic Hospital of the Institute of Security and Social Services of State Workers General Hospital of Zone No 1 IMSS Medical Educational Unit of Adolfo Lopez Mateos Family Medicine Unit No 67 IMSS San Luisito 48 49 Sports Edit Marte R Gomez Stadium In Ciudad Victoria there is a varied sporting activity In the field of professional football the team of the Correcaminos of the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas stands out and carries out its official matches at the Marte R Gomez Stadium located in the city centre with a capacity to house 13 500 people and the University Stadium Eugenio Alvizo Porras located in the Victoria University Centre of the Autonomous University of Tamaulipas In the sports unit Adolfo Ruiz Cortinez there are facilities for practicing football volleyball and indoor gymnasium for basketball This sports complex also houses a baseball stadium The Sports Centre of Ciudad Victoria with the name of Americo Villareal Guerra is a sports centre that has spaces for gymnastics fencing weightlifting diving swimming athletics boxing judo archery and basketball and It is focused to be used mainly by high performance athletes with the intention of representing the state of Tamaulipas in national sporting events 50 51 52 15 Gastronomy Edit Gordita The gastronomy of Ciudad Victoria is composed of three main elements meat corn and seafood In addition to grilled meat dried meat and chorizo One of the most typical foods of the city are the gorditas these consist of small thick corn tortillas stuffed with shredded meat nopales scrambled eggs beans among other ingredients It also has many restaurants focused on typical Mexican food the well known taquito Desserts of the region are made with walnut sweet potato cocadas with pineapple and walnut among others Also crystallized fruits and gorditas sweetened with piloncillo 9 53 Geography Edit Panoramic from a viewpoint on a hill of the Sierra Madre Oriental in the Military Field of the 77th Infantry Battalion in Ciudad Victoria Victoria is located 316 metres 1 037 ft above sea level and at coordinates 23 44 N 99 8 W 23 733 N 99 133 W 23 733 99 133 just north of the Tropic of Cancer The city is in a valley between two mountain ranges the Sierra Madre Oriental to the west and the Sierra de Tamaulipas to the east Climate Edit Ciudad Victoria has a climate on the border of humid subtropical Koppen Cfa Cwa and hot semi arid BSh Its weather is characterised by short warm winters and long hot to sweltering summers Temperatures rarely drop below 0 C 32 F the lowest recorded temperature was 6 C 21 2 F and the hottest was 48 5 C 119 3 F one of the highest temperatures ever recorded in Mexico The average annual rainfall is 740 millimetres or 29 inches of which five sixths 617 millimetres or 24 3 inches falls between May and October although there is a drying trend in the months of July and August The moderate elevation adds to overall rainfall pattern which is also influenced by exceptionally heavy rains brought by occasional North Atlantic tropical cyclones Climate data for Ciudad VictoriaMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 37 1 98 8 39 0 102 2 42 5 108 5 45 5 113 9 47 5 117 5 48 5 119 3 42 0 107 6 42 0 107 6 41 0 105 8 40 0 104 0 38 0 100 4 39 0 102 2 48 5 119 3 Average high C F 22 7 72 9 25 2 77 4 29 0 84 2 32 2 90 0 34 0 93 2 35 2 95 4 35 0 95 0 35 2 95 4 32 7 90 9 29 8 85 6 26 4 79 5 23 4 74 1 30 1 86 2 Daily mean C F 16 4 61 5 18 2 64 8 21 8 71 2 25 0 77 0 27 0 80 6 28 3 82 9 28 2 82 8 28 3 82 9 26 5 79 7 23 7 74 7 20 3 68 5 17 2 63 0 23 4 74 1 Average low C F 10 0 50 0 11 3 52 3 14 5 58 1 17 8 64 0 20 1 68 2 21 5 70 7 21 5 70 7 21 4 70 5 20 3 68 5 17 6 63 7 14 1 57 4 10 9 51 6 16 8 62 2 Record low C F 1 0 30 2 3 0 26 6 1 0 33 8 4 0 39 2 10 5 50 9 12 5 54 5 8 0 46 4 10 5 50 9 6 0 42 8 6 7 44 1 1 0 33 8 6 0 21 2 6 0 21 2 Average rainfall mm inches 18 9 0 74 13 9 0 55 22 3 0 88 26 8 1 06 78 5 3 09 125 1 4 93 74 3 2 93 95 5 3 76 173 1 6 81 70 9 2 79 20 5 0 81 18 3 0 72 738 1 29 06 Average rainy days 0 1 mm 2 8 2 7 2 7 3 5 6 0 6 7 4 2 5 4 8 1 4 8 2 7 2 8 52 4Average relative humidity 73 69 67 68 72 70 67 68 73 75 76 75 71Mean monthly sunshine hours 203 185 226 226 218 216 244 256 243 230 216 220 2 683Source Servicio Meteorologico Nacional 54 55 56 Sister cities EditThe strategic alliances that are built with cities in the country and the United States contribute to the economic development of the capital including twinning of the following Matamoros Mexico Reynosa Mexico Tampico Mexico Nuevo Laredo Mexico Ciudad Mante Mexico Monterrey New Leon Chilpancingo Guerrero McAllen Texas 2008 San Luis Potosi San Luis Potosi 2010 Mazatlan Sinaloa 2014 Notable residents EditEmilio Portes Gil former governor of the state of Tamaulipas and former president of Mexico Emilio Martinez Manatou doctor and politician former governor of the State of Tamaulipas Arleth Teran Mexican television actress Carlos Pena Rodriguez professional football player for Rangers F C Alan Pulido Izaguirre professional football player Oscar Mascorro professional footballer Jose Sulaiman businessman and boxer Rosemary Barkett Federal Judge of the United States of America Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit Rodolfo Torre Cantu doctor and Mexican politician former candidate for Governor of Tamaulipas Ismael Valdez Major League Baseball player TV Personality and local entrepreneur References Edit Secretaria de Desarrollo Urbano y Medio Ambiente de Tamaulipas Seduma Programa Maestro Imagen Urbana de Ciudad Victoria PDF in Spanish 2014 08 22 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 08 22 Retrieved 2018 01 25 Victoria Tamaulipas Mexico Ciudades y pueblos del mundo es db city com in Spanish Retrieved 2018 01 25 Como llegar de Frontera a Ciudad Victoria Calcular Ruta www calcularruta com in Spanish Retrieved 2018 01 25 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Ciudad Victoria Government Ciudad Victoria Government Archived from the original on 2018 08 15 Retrieved 2018 01 25 Ciudad Victoria La antigua Villa de Santa Maria de Aguayo Mexico Desconocido Mexico Desconocido in European Spanish 2010 08 31 Retrieved 2018 01 25 a b La UAT www uat edu mx in European Spanish Retrieved 2018 01 25 a b Instituto Tecnologico de Cd Victoria www itvictoria edu mx Retrieved 2018 01 25 NUEVO SANTANDER www raullongoria net Retrieved 2018 01 25 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Gobierno del Estado de Tamaulipas www tamaulipas gob mx in European Spanish 28 September 2016 Retrieved 2018 01 25 Calendario Civico de Ciudad Victoria Gobierno Local de Ciudad Victoria Lopez Anaya Miguel 1987 Gral Alberto Carrera Torres in Spanish Ciudad Victoria Tamaulipas Gobierno del Estado de Tamaulipas Direccion General de Educacion y Cultura ISBN 9684230559 OCLC 22334339 Casino Victorense Casino Victorense A C Archived from the original on 2015 07 28 Tamaulipas Red Federal Libre PDF in Spanish 2012 03 16 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 16 Retrieved 2018 01 25 a b Estaciones Mexicanas de Ferrocarril Cd Victoria TAMPS www mexlist com Retrieved 2018 01 25 a b Remodelacion del Estadio MRG CF Correcaminos Oficial www cfcorrecaminos com Retrieved 2018 01 25 Archivos de Gobierno de Tamaulipas PDF Archivos de Gobierno de Tamaulipas Archived from the original PDF on 2012 11 30 Retrieved 2018 01 25 Tamaulipas rural devastado por huracan y negligencia Contralinea Contralinea in European Spanish 2011 06 03 Retrieved 2018 01 25 Pinacoteca Tamaulipas Antigua Casa Filizola www mexicoescultura com Retrieved 2018 01 25 a b Tamaulipas Victoria inafed gob mx Retrieved 2018 01 25 a b Local Laws of Ciudad Victoria PDF Gobierno del Estado de Tamaulipas www tamaulipas gob mx in European Spanish October 2016 Retrieved 2018 01 25 H Congreso del Estado de Tamaulipas www congresotamaulipas gob mx Retrieved 2020 10 03 Invita Xico a que todos los victorenses a tomen protesta El Mercurio de Tamaulipas El Mercurio de Tamaulipas in Mexican Spanish 2018 09 30 Retrieved 2018 10 01 a b Estadisticas listanominal ife org mx Archived from the original on 2018 03 29 Retrieved 2018 01 25 Instituto Electoral de Tamaulipas a b Consulta interactiva de datos 2013 12 14 Archived from the original on 2013 12 14 Retrieved 2018 01 25 a b c d e f Ciudad Victoria Government Demography PDF CONAPO PDF CONAPO 50 of the most dangerous cities in the world Tijuana Caracas Cape Town www usatoday com Expreso 7 December 2015 En los 30 s una odisea ir al Santuario a ver la Virgen Expreso Expreso expreso press in Spanish Retrieved 2018 01 25 a b Sistema de Reconocimientos de Validez Oficial de Estudios www sirvoes sep gob mx Retrieved 2018 01 25 ITACE VICTORIA Wikimapia wikimapia org Retrieved 2018 01 25 Secretaria de Educacion 2016 11 14 Archived from the original on 2016 11 14 Retrieved 2018 01 25 Historia ULSA Universidad La Salle Victoria www ulsavictoria edu mx in Spanish Retrieved 2018 01 25 Universidad Politecnica www upvictoria edu mx Retrieved 2018 01 25 Informacion Publica del Estado de Tamaulipas Gobierno del Estado de Tamaulipas transparencia tamaulipas gob mx in European Spanish Retrieved 2018 01 25 Maestria en computacion doctorado en computacion e investigacion www tamps cinvestav mx in Spanish Retrieved 2018 01 25 DGESPE Escuelas Normales Directorio Escuelas Normales Benemerita Escuela Normal Federalizada De Tamaulipas Directorio www dgespe sep gob mx Retrieved 2018 01 25 Campus Victoria UVM 2016 09 05 Archived from the original on 2016 09 05 Retrieved 2018 01 25 Central de Autobuses de Ciudad Victoria Camionera en Tamaulipas Autobuses y Camioneras Retrieved 2018 01 25 Inauguraron puente de la moderna Cd Victoria Cd Victoria in European Spanish 2015 06 14 Archived from the original on 2016 11 14 Retrieved 2018 01 25 Operaciones Ciudad Victoria www telecomm net mx Retrieved 2018 01 25 Registro Publico de Concesiones PDF 2016 10 22 Retrieved 2018 01 25 El Mercurio de Tamaulipas Secretaria de Cultura Sistema de Informacion Cultural in European Spanish Retrieved 2018 01 25 El Diario de Ciudad Victoria Secretaria de Cultura Sistema de Informacion Cultural in European Spanish Retrieved 2018 01 25 a b COMAPA Victoria Portal Comapa COMAPA Victoria Portal Retrieved 2018 01 25 VICTORIA CIUDAD VIVA conoceturuta com in Mexican Spanish Retrieved 2018 01 25 Inauguran Hospital Victoria La Salle El Diario de Ciudad Victoria El Diario de Ciudad Victoria in European Spanish 2016 09 10 Retrieved 2018 01 25 General Victoria Hospital Archived from the original on 2016 08 12 Finaliza la disciplina de Atletismo en el Polideportivo Victoria Reporte Tamaulipas Reporte Tamaulipas in Mexican Spanish 2015 03 01 Retrieved 2018 01 25 Recorren el Polideportivo de Ciudad Victoria www hoytamaulipas net in Spanish Retrieved 2018 01 25 Inauguran parque de beisbol en Tamaulipas POSTA in Spanish 2016 08 04 Archived from the original on 2018 01 25 Retrieved 2018 01 25 Gobierno del Estado de Tamaulipas www tamaulipas gob mx in European Spanish Retrieved 2018 01 25 NORMALES CLIMATOLoGICAS 1951 2010 in Spanish Servicio Meteorologico National Retrieved April 18 2013 Extreme Temperatures and Precipitation for Ciudad Victoria SMN 1942 1960 in Spanish Servicio Meteorologico National Retrieved December 3 2013 NORMALES CLIMATOLoGICAS 1981 2000 PDF in Spanish Comision Nacional Del Agua Retrieved April 18 2013 Further reading EditTamaulipas Enciclopedia de los Municipios de MexicoExternal links Edit Mexico portal in Spanish Direccion de Tecnologia in Spanish Instituto Tecnologico de Ciudad Victoria in Spanish Universidad Autonoma de Tamaulipas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ciudad Victoria amp oldid 1108093941, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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