fbpx
Wikipedia

Guadalajara

Guadalajara (/ˌɡwɑːdələˈhɑːrə/ GWAH-də-lə-HAR,[5] Spanish: [ɡwaðalaˈxaɾa] (listen)) is a metropolis in western Mexico and the capital of the state of Jalisco. According to the 2020 census, the city has a population of 1,385,629 people, making it the 7th most populous city in Mexico, while the Guadalajara metropolitan area has a population of 5,268,642 people,[6][7] making it the third-largest metropolitan area in the country and the twentieth largest metropolitan area in the Americas[8] Guadalajara has the second-highest population density in Mexico, with over 10,361 people per square kilometer.[9] Within Mexico, Guadalajara is a center of business, arts and culture, technology and tourism; as well as the economic center of the Bajío region.[10][11][12] It usually ranks among the 100 most productive and globally competitive cities in the world.[13] It is home to numerous landmarks, including Guadalajara Cathedral, the Teatro Degollado, the Templo Expiatorio, the UNESCO World Heritage site Hospicio Cabañas, and the San Juan de Dios Market—the largest indoor market in Latin America.[14][15]

Guadalajara
From top, left to right: skyline of the city, Expiatorio church, Hospicio Cabañas, Guadalajara Cathedral, Arcos de Guadalajara, La Minerva, and Degollado theatre.
Nicknames: 
Pearl of the West
The City of Roses
Tapatian pearl
Guadalajara
Location of Guadalajara within Jalisco
Guadalajara
Guadalajara (Mexico)
Guadalajara
Guadalajara (North America)
Coordinates: 20°40′36″N 103°20′51″W / 20.67667°N 103.34750°W / 20.67667; -103.34750Coordinates: 20°40′36″N 103°20′51″W / 20.67667°N 103.34750°W / 20.67667; -103.34750
Country Mexico
State Jalisco
RegionCentro
MunicipalityGuadalajara
FoundationFebruary 14, 1542
Founded byCristóbal de Oñate
Named forGuadalajara, Spain
Government
 • MayorPablo Lemus Navarro[2] (MC)
Area
 • City & municipality151 km2 (58 sq mi)
 • Metro
2,734 km2 (1,056 sq mi)
Elevation
1,566 m (5,138 ft)
Population
 (2020)
 • City & municipality1,385,629 [1]
 • Rank7th in Mexico
 • Density1,491.57/km2 (3,863.1/sq mi)
 • Metro
5,286,642 (3rd)[1]
 • Metro density1,897/km2 (4,910/sq mi)
 • Demonym
Tapatío Guadalajarense (archaic)[3][4]
Time zoneUTC−6 (CST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−5 (CDT)
ClimateCwa
Websitewww.guadalajara.gob.mx

A settlement was established in the region of Guadalajara in early 1532 by Cristóbal de Oñate, a Basque conquistador in the expedition of Nuño Beltrán de Guzmán. The settlement was renamed and [16]moved several times before assuming the name Guadalajara after the birthplace of Guzmán and in 1542, ending up at its current location in the Atemajac Valley. On November 8, 1539 the Emperor Charles V had granted a coat of arms and the title of city to the new town and established it as the capital of the Kingdom of Nueva Galicia, part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain. After 1572, the Royal Audiencia of Guadalajara, previously subordinate to Mexico City, became the only authority in New Spain with autonomy over Nueva Galicia, owing to rapidly growing wealth in the kingdom following the discovery of silver. By the 18th century, Guadalajara had taken its place as Mexico's second largest city, following mass colonial migrations in the 1720s and 1760s. During the Mexican War of Independence, independence leader Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla established Mexico's first revolutionary government in Guadalajara in 1810. The city flourished during the Porfiriato, with the advent of the industrial revolution, but its growth was hampered significantly during the Mexican Revolution. In 1929, the Cristero War ended within the confines of the city, when President Plutarco Elías Calles proclaimed the Grito de Guadalajara. The city saw continuous growth throughout the rest of the 20th century, attaining a metro population of 1 million in the 1960s and surpassing 3 million in the 1990s.

Guadalajara is a Gamma+ global city,[17] and one of Mexico's most important cultural centers. It is home to numerous mainstays of Mexican culture, including Mariachi, Tequila, and Birria and hosts numerous notable events, including the Guadalajara International Film Festival, the most important film festival in Latin America, and the Guadalajara International Book Fair, the largest book fair in the Americas. The city was the American Capital of Culture in 2005 and has hosted numerous global events, including the 1970 FIFA World Cup, the 1986 FIFA World Cup, the 1st Ibero-American Summit in 1991, and the 2011 Pan American Games. The city is home to numerous universities and research institutions, including the University of Guadalajara and the Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara, two of the highest-ranked universities in Mexico.[18][19]

Etymology

The conquistador Cristóbal de Oñate named the city in honor of the conqueror of western Mexico, Nuño de Guzmán, who was born in Guadalajara, Spain. The name comes from the Arabic وادي الحجارة (wādī al-ḥajārah), which means 'Valley of the Stone', or 'Fortress Valley'.

History

Pre-Hispanic era

Unlike the surrounding areas, the central Atemajac Valley, where Guadalajara is located, contained no human settlements.[citation needed] To the east of the Atemajac Valley were the Tonallan and Tetlán peoples. At the extremes were the Zapopan, Atemajac, Zoquipan, Tesistan, Coyula, and Huentitán.

The historic city center encompasses what was once four population centers, as the villages of the Mezquitán, Analco, and Mexicaltzingo were annexed to the Atemajac site in 1669.[20]

Foundation

 
Monument to Beatriz Hernández, one of the founders of Guadalajara

Guadalajara was originally founded at three other sites before moving to its current location. The first colonial settlement in 1532 was in Mesa del Cerro, now known as Nochistlán, Zacatecas. This site was colonized by Cristóbal de Oñate as commissioned by Nuño de Guzmán, with the purpose of securing recent conquests and "defending" them from the "still-hostile natives". This colonized settlement did not last long due to its lack of usable water sources. In 1533 it was moved to a site near Tonalá. Four years later, Guzmán ordered that the village be moved to Tlacotán. During this time, the Spanish king Charles I granted the city the coat of arms which it retains to this day.[20]

During the Mixtón War, the Caxcan, Portecuex, and Zacateco peoples, fought back against colonizers under the command of Tenamaxtli.[20] The war was initiated in response to the heinous treatment of indigenous peoples by Nuño de Guzmán, in particular the enslavement of captured natives. After multiple defeats, Viceroy Antonio de Mendoza took control of the Spanish campaign to suppress the revolt. The conflict ended after Mendoza made concessions such as freeing enslaved indigenous peoples and granting amnesty.[21] The village of Guadalajara barely survived the war, and the villagers attributed their survival to the Archangel Michael, who remains the patron of the city to this day.

After the war, the city was moved once again—this time to a more defensible location. This final relocation would prove permanent. In 1542, records indicate that 126 people were living in Guadalajara. That same year, it was granted cityhood by the king of Spain. Guadalajara was officially founded on February 14, 1542, in the Atemajac Valley. The colonized settlement was named for Nuño de Guzmán's Spanish hometown.[20]

In 1559, royal and bishopric offices for the province of Nueva Galicia were moved from Compostela to Guadalajara and, in 1560, Guadalajara became the province's new capital. Construction of the cathedral began in 1563. In 1575, religious orders such as the Augustinians and Dominicans arrived, eventually making the city a center for evangelization efforts.[20]

While capital of the Kingdom of Nueva Galicia, the city's inhabitants achieved a high standard of living, due to flourishing industry, agriculture, commerce, mining, and trade. The Guadalajara of the sixteenth century was a rather small and often overlooked community. It was mainly frequented by traveling merchants. Several epidemics drastically reduced the city's indigenous population, leading to the construction of its first hospital in 1557.[citation needed]

Guadalajara's economy during the 18th century was based on agriculture and the production of non-durable goods such as textiles, shoes and food products.[22]

Despite epidemics, plagues, and earthquakes, Guadalajara would become one of the most important population centers in New Spain. The city's heyday attracted numerous architects, philosophers, lawyers, scientists, poets, writers, and speakers; Francisco Xavier Clavijero and Matías de la Mota Padilla were among the most prominent. In 1771, Bishop Fray Antonio Alcalde arrived in the city and founded the Civil Hospital and the University of Guadalajara. In 1791, the University of Guadalajara was established. The dedication was held in 1792 at the site of the old Santo Tomas College. While the institution was founded during the 18th century, it would not be fully developed until the 20th century, starting in 1925. In 1794, the Hospital Real de San Miguel de Belén, or simply the Hospital de Belén, was opened.[20]

In 1793, Mariano Valdés Téllez ran the city's first printing press, whose first publication was a funeral eulogy for Fray Antonio Alcalde.

Independence

 
Guadalajara, c. 1836

Guadalajara remained the capital of Nueva Galicia with some modifications until the Mexican War of Independence.[20] Miguel Hidalgo entered San Pedro (now Tlaquepaque) on November 25, 1810, and the next day he was greeted effusively in Guadalajara. The city's workers had experienced poor living conditions and were swayed by promises of lower taxes and the abolition of slavery. Despite a soured welcome, due to the rebel army's violence toward city residents, especially royalists, Hidalgo kept his promise and, on December 6, 1810, slavery was abolished in Guadalajara, a proclamation which has been honored since the end of the war.[23] During this time, he founded the newspaper El Despertador Americano, dedicated to the insurgent cause.[20]

Royalist forces marched to Guadalajara, arriving in January 1811 with nearly 6,000 men.[24] Insurgents Ignacio Allende and Mariano Abasolo wanted to concentrate their forces in the city and plan an escape route should they be defeated, but Hidalgo rejected this idea. Their second choice was to make a stand at the Puente de Calderon just outside the city. Hidalgo had between 80,000 and 100,000 men and 95 cannons, but the better-trained royalists won, decimating the insurgent army and forcing Hidalgo to flee toward Aguascalientes. Guadalajara remained in royalist hands until near the end of the war.[24][25]'

 
Centennial Monument to Mexican Independence

On January 17, 1817, the insurgent army was again defeated on the outskirts of Guadalajara in the Battle of Calderón Bridge. New Galicia, now Jalisco, adhered to the Plan de Iguala on June 13, 1821.

In 1823, Guadalajara became the capital of the newly founded state of Jalisco.[20] In 1844, General Mariano Paredes y Arrillaga initiated a revolt against the government of President Antonio López de Santa Anna. Santa Anna personally ensured that the revolt was quelled. However, while Santa Anna was in Guadalajara, a revolt called the Three Hour Revolution brought José Joaquín Herrera to the presidency and put Santa Anna into exile.[26]

President Benito Juárez made Guadalajara the seat of his government in 1856, during the Reform War. French troops entered the city during the French Intervention in 1864, and it was retaken by Mexican troops in 1866.[20]

Despite the violence, the 19th century was a period of economic, technological and social growth for the city.[27] After Independence, small-scale industries developed, many of which were owned by European immigrants. Rail lines connecting the city to the Pacific coast and north to the United States intensified trade and allowed the shipment of products from rural areas of Jalisco. Ranch Culture became a very important aspect of Jalisco and Guadalajara's identities during this time.[22] From 1884 to 1890, electrical and railroad services, as well as the Guadalajara Observatory were established.[20]

20th century

Throughout the twentieth century, seeing growth in its industrial, tourist, and service industries, Guadalajara began a period of rapid transformation into the metropolis it is today. The city would gain the second largest economy in Mexico, following only by Mexico City. After the Mexican Revolution of 1910, Guadalajara became the second most populous city in the country. However, the decades that followed brought a number of regional wars in the states of Jalisco, Michoacán, and Guanajuato. The aftermath of the Great Depression took a further toll on the city. Fortunately, by the 1940s the city would experience industrial, demographic, and trade growth.

In 1910, the Mexican Revolution began, bringing an end to the Porfiriato. With conflict concentrated in the capital, Guadalajara experienced relative calm. After the Cristero Conflict, peace returned to Guadalajara and the city flourished, outgrowing its colonial roots. This period saw the birth of new schools of architecture that would decorate the city from the 1920s to the 1980s.

Guadalajara again experienced substantial growth after the 1930s,[28] and the first industrial park was established in 1947.[20] Its population surpassed one million in 1964,[20] and by the 1970s it was Mexico's second-largest city[28] and the largest in western Mexico.[22] Most of the modern city's urbanization took place between the 1940s and the 1980s, with the population doubling every ten years until it stood at 2.5 million in 1980.[29] The population of the municipality has stagnated, and even declined, slowly but steadily, since the early 1990s.[30]

The increase in population brought with it an increase in the size of what is now called Greater Guadalajara, rather than an increase in the population density of the city. Migrants coming into Guadalajara from the 1940s to the 1980s were mostly from rural areas and lived in the city center until they had enough money to buy property. This property was generally bought in the edges of the city, which were urbanizing into fraccionamientos, or residential areas.[31] In the 1980s, it was described as a "divided city" east to west based on socioeconomic class. Since then, the city has evolved into four sectors, which are still more or less class-centered. The upper classes tend to live in Hidalgo and Juárez in the northwest and southwest, while the lower classes tend to live in the city center, Libertad in the northeast, and southeast in Reforma. However, lower class development has expanded on the city's periphery and upper and middle classes are migrating toward Zapopan, making the situation less neatly divided.[32]

 
Central Guadalajara, c. 1905

Since 1996, the activity of multinational corporations has had a significant effect on the economic and social development of the city. The presence of companies such as Kodak, Hewlett-Packard, Motorola and IBM has been based on production facilities built outside the city proper, bringing in foreign labor and capital. This was made possible in the 1980s by surplus labor, infrastructure improvements, and government incentives. These companies focus on electrical and electronic items, which is now one of Guadalajara's two main products (the other being beer). This has internationalized the economy, steering it away from manufacturing and toward services, dependent on technology and foreign investment. This has not been favorable for the unskilled working class and traditional labor sectors.[33]

The 1992 Guadalajara explosions occurred on April 22, 1992, when gasoline explosions in the sewer system over four hours destroyed 8 km (5 mi) of streets in the downtown district of Analco.[34] Gante Street was the most damaged. Officially, 206 people were killed, nearly 500 injured and 15,000 were left homeless. The estimated monetary damage ranges between $300 million and $1 billion. The affected areas can be recognized by their more modern architecture.[35]

Three days before the explosion, residents started complaining of a strong gasoline-like smell coming from the sewers. City workers were dispatched to check the sewers and found dangerously high levels of gasoline fumes. However, no evacuations were ordered. An investigation into the disaster found that there were two precipitating causes. The first was new water pipes that were built too close to an existing gasoline pipeline. Chemical reactions between the pipes caused erosion. The second was a flaw in the sewer design that did not allow accumulated gases to escape.[36]

Arrests were made to indict those responsible for the blasts.[37] Four officials of Pemex (the state oil company) were indicted and charged on the basis of negligence. Ultimately, however, these people were cleared of all charges.[38] Calls for the restructuring of PEMEX were made but they were successfully resisted.[39]

The 1990s were marked by events such as the explosions of April 22, 1992, the Mexican peso crisis of 1994, and the murder of the Cardinal Juan Jesús Posadas Ocampo in 1993.[40] The 1992 explosions caused massive infrastructure damage to hundreds of houses, avenues, streets, and businesses in the Analco colony, "without a clear delineator of information and responsibilities to date,"[41] in one of the most tragic events in the history of Guadalajara. The investigation of the facts lasted more than 11 years in which insufficient evidence was found to appoint a manager,[42] investigations are now closed attributing the events to an accident.[42] This event, in addition to Mexico's 1994 economic crisis, resulted in the loss of Guadalajara's industrial power.[42]

Modern era

 
Guadalajara and its metropolitan area have grown significantly in the 21st century, surpassing 5 million people in 2018.
 
Americas Avenue

The city has hosted numerous important international events, such as the first Cumbre Iberoamericana in 1991; the Third Summit of Heads of State and Governments of Latin America, the Caribbean, and the European Union in 2004; the Encuentro Internacional de Promotores y Gestores Culturales in 2005; and the 2011 Pan American Games. It was named the American Capital of Culture in 2005 and the Ciudad Educadora (Educator City). in 2006. It was recognized as Mexico's first Smart City due to its use of developing technology.[43] During each government period, the city went through structural plans with which new areas and commercial hubs were born and with which transnational corporations and international industries arrived in the city. The city housed the first shopping malls in Mexico.

The city expanded rapidly before merging with the Zapopan municipality. Among the developments created during this period were the Guadalajara Expo, the light rail, shopping centers, the expansion of streets and avenues, and the birth and development of road infrastructure, services, tourism, industrial, etc. The first shopping center in Latin America emerged in the city,[44] the first urban electric-train system in Latin America,[45] and the first private university in Mexico.[46]

A 2007 survey entitled "Cities of the Future," FDi magazine ranked Guadalajara first among major Mexican cities and second among major North American cities in terms of economic potential, behind Chicago. The magazine also rated it as the most business-friendly Latin American city in 2007.[47]

Geography

Climate

 
Parque de los Jalicienses Ilustres

Under the Köppen climate classification, Guadalajara has a humid subtropical climate (Cwa) that is quite close to a tropical climate, featuring dry, warm winters and hot, wet summers. Guadalajara's climate is influenced by its high altitude and the general seasonality of precipitation patterns in western North America.

Although the temperature is warm year-round, Guadalajara has strong seasonal variation in precipitation. The northward movement of the Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone brings a great deal of rain in the summer months, whereas, for the rest of the year, the climate is rather dry. The extra moisture during the wet months moderates the temperatures, resulting in cooler days and nights during this period. The highest temperatures are usually reached in May averaging 33 °C (91 °F), but can reach up to 37 °C (99 °F) just before the onset of monsoon season. March tends to be the driest month and July the wettest, with an average of 273 millimeters (10.7 in) of rain, over a quarter of the annual average of about 1,002 millimeters (39.4 in).

During the summer, afternoon storms are very common and can sometimes bring hail flurries to the city, especially toward late August or September. Winters are relatively warm despite the city's altitude, with January daytime temperatures reaching about 25 °C (77 °F) and nighttime temperatures about 10 °C (50 °F). However, the outskirts of the city (generally those close to the Primavera Forest) experience on average cooler temperatures than the city itself. There, temperatures around 0 °C (32 °F) can be recorded during the coldest nights. Frost may also occur during the coldest nights, but temperatures rarely fall below 0 °C (32 °F) in the city, making it an uncommon phenomenon. Cold fronts in winter can sometimes bring light rain to the city for several days in a row. Snowfall is extraordinarily rare, with the last recorded one occurring in December 1997, which was the first time in 116 years, as it had previously last fallen in 1881.[48]

Climate data for Guadalajara, Mexico (1951–2010)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 35.0
(95.0)
38.0
(100.4)
39.0
(102.2)
41.0
(105.8)
39.0
(102.2)
38.5
(101.3)
37.0
(98.6)
36.5
(97.7)
36.0
(96.8)
35.0
(95.0)
32.0
(89.6)
33.0
(91.4)
41.0
(105.8)
Average high °C (°F) 24.7
(76.5)
26.5
(79.7)
29.0
(84.2)
31.2
(88.2)
32.5
(90.5)
30.5
(86.9)
27.5
(81.5)
27.3
(81.1)
27.1
(80.8)
27.1
(80.8)
26.4
(79.5)
24.7
(76.5)
27.9
(82.2)
Daily mean °C (°F) 17.1
(62.8)
18.4
(65.1)
20.7
(69.3)
22.8
(73.0)
24.5
(76.1)
23.9
(75.0)
22.0
(71.6)
21.9
(71.4)
21.8
(71.2)
21.0
(69.8)
19.2
(66.6)
17.5
(63.5)
20.9
(69.6)
Average low °C (°F) 9.5
(49.1)
10.3
(50.5)
12.3
(54.1)
14.3
(57.7)
16.4
(61.5)
17.3
(63.1)
16.5
(61.7)
16.4
(61.5)
16.5
(61.7)
14.9
(58.8)
12.1
(53.8)
10.3
(50.5)
13.9
(57.0)
Record low °C (°F) −1.5
(29.3)
0.0
(32.0)
1.0
(33.8)
0.0
(32.0)
1.0
(33.8)
10.0
(50.0)
9.0
(48.2)
11.0
(51.8)
10.0
(50.0)
8.0
(46.4)
3.0
(37.4)
−1.0
(30.2)
−1.5
(29.3)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 15.6
(0.61)
6.6
(0.26)
4.7
(0.19)
6.2
(0.24)
24.9
(0.98)
191.2
(7.53)
272.5
(10.73)
226.1
(8.90)
169.5
(6.67)
61.4
(2.42)
13.7
(0.54)
10.0
(0.39)
1,002.4
(39.46)
Average rainy days (≥ 0.1 mm) 2.1 1.2 0.7 1.1 3.5 15.2 21.6 20.0 15.5 6.4 1.8 1.8 90.9
Average relative humidity (%) 60 57 50 46 48 63 71 72 71 68 63 64 61
Mean monthly sunshine hours 204.6 226.0 263.5 261.0 279.0 213.0 195.3 210.8 186.0 220.1 225.0 189.1 2,673.4
Mean daily sunshine hours 6.6 8.0 8.5 8.7 9.0 7.1 6.3 6.8 6.2 7.1 7.5 6.1 7.3
Source 1: Servicio Meteorológico Nacional (humidity, 1981–2000)[49][50][51]
Source 2: Deutscher Wetterdienst (sun, 1941–1990)[52]

Topography

Guadalajara's natural wealth is represented by the La Primavera Forest, Los Colomos, and the Barranca de Huentitán. The flora in these areas includes michoacan pines, several species of oak, sweetgum, ash, willow, and introduced trees such as poincianas, jacarandas, and ficus. It also includes orchids, roses, and various species of fungi. The fauna includes typical urban fauna in addition to 106 species of mammals, 19 species of reptiles, and six species of fish.[citation needed]

La Barranca de Huentitán (the Huentitán Forest) (also known as Barranca de Oblatos and Barranca de Oblatos-Huentitán) is a National Park located just north of the municipality of Guadalajara. The barranca (canyon) borders two colonias (neighborhoods) of the city, Oblatos and Huentitan. It covers approximately 1,136 hectares (2,810 acres), and varies 600 meters (2,000 ft) in altitude. The funicular railway in the park starts at 1,000 meters (3,300 ft) above sea level and rises to 1,520 meters (4,990 ft) above sea level. In the 16th century, during the Spanish Conquest, the Huentitán area including the canyon was the site of battles between local Indian populations and the Spanish. Later, it was the site of battles between different factions during the Mexican Revolution and the Cristero Rebellion.

 
Parque 20 de Noviembre, Zapopan

The canyon is a biogeographic corridor that is home to four types of vegetation: deciduous tropical forest, gallery forest, heath vegetation, and secondary vegetation. In addition to introduced species, there are many native species of flora and fauna. The canyon is studied by national and international researchers as it contains great biological diversity due to its geographical location. On June 5, 1997, it was declared a Protected Natural Area, as an Area Subject to Ecological Conservation (Zona Sujeta a Conservación Ecológica).

La Cascada Cola de Caballo (The Horse Tail Waterfall) is located on the Guadalajara to Zacatecas road (Highway 54, km 15) a few kilometers from the Northern Peripheral, just after passing the village of San Esteban. The waterfall is fed by a stream from the Atemajac Valley. It is close to Guadalajara and a town with very little development, and as a result of poor ecological practices, it is very polluted.

El Bosque los Colomos, the Colomos Forest, is located in the northwestern part of Guadalajara along the Rio Atemajac. It is in a wealthy part of the metropolitan area, and has been developed for recreation rather than being preserved in its wild state. The river was once one of the main sources of water supply to the city, and today continues to provide water to some surrounding colonias (neighborhoods). Currently, this forest covers an area of 92 hectares (230 acres) in which pine trees, eucalyptus trees, and cedars predominate. The park has jogging tracks, gardens (including a Japanese garden), ponds, a bird lake, instructional areas for school field days, playgrounds, camping areas, and horses to ride.

Other places of interest around Guadalajara include Camachos Aquatic Natural Park, a commercial water park, and Barranca Colimilla, a beautiful canyon with hiking trails near Tonala, east of Guadalajara.

Urbanism

 
Radial urban planning in central Guadalajara
 
Map of the city's zones
 
Street in the historic center

Guadalajara's street plan has evolved over time into a radial urban plan, with five major routes into and out of the city. It is surrounded by ring roads.

The original city of Guadalajara was planned on a grid, with north–south and east–west intersecting streets. Over time, villages surrounding Guadalajara were incorporated into the city - first Analco to the southeast, then Mexicaltzingo to the south, Mezquitan to the north, and San Juan de Dios to the east, all of which introduced more variety to the plan. As it grew towards the west, it kept the original north–south orientation. As it grew towards the east, this grid was tilted towards the south-east to match up with the grids of the former towns Analco and San Juan de Dios, across the river from central Guadalajara on the eastern side of Rio San Juan de Dios (Rio San Juan de Dios is now underground; it runs beneath Calzada Independencia).

When the railway was introduced to Guadalajara in 1888, the southern part of the city began development, and its streets aligned with the grid to the east of the old Rio San Juan de Dios. Additional 20th-century expansion of the city introduced even more variety, as developers introduced different kinds of non-grid street plans in new areas. During the government of José de Jesús González Gallo, between 1947 and 1953, major public works changed the urban landscape of the historic center of the city.

Major controversial projects included the widening of Avenida 16 de Septiembre and Avenida Juárez, which were no longer adequate to handle car traffic in the center of the city. In the process, many buildings of architectural and historical value were demolished. Historical buildings around Guadalajara Cathedral were also demolished to leave large open spaces on the four sides of the Cathedral in the form of a large Latin cross, in which the cathedral is now centered. There were other, somewhat less controversial, projects to improve the flow of traffic and increase commerce in other parts of the city.

Districts

 
Western Guadalajara business district skyline

Guadalajara is made up of more than 2,300 colonias (neighborhoods) in the Metropolitan Area. The oldest parts of the city include Centro (the oldest in the city), Santuario, Mexicaltzingo, Mezquitan, Analco, and San Juan de Dios. Private houses in the oldest sector of the city are mostly made up of one- and two-level houses, with architectural styles ranging from simple colonial architecture to the Churrigueresco, Baroque, and early nineteenth century European styles.

Just west of the oldest part of the city are upper-class colonias built in the nineteenth and early twentieth century, containing the neoclassical structures and houses of the Porfiriato. In the 1920s, 1930s, 1940s and 1950s well-to-do Tapatios expanded into colonias Lafayette, Americana, Moderna, and Arcos Vallarta. New architectural trends of the 1960s and 1970s also left their mark in colonias such as Colonia Americana, Vallarta Poniente, Moderna, Providencia, Vallarta San Jorge, Forest Gardens, and Chapalita.

The Metropolitan Area has more wealthy neighborhoods than any other part of western Mexico. These colonias are located both inside and outside the municipality of Guadalajara, including some in its neighboring municipalities of Zapopan and Tlajomulco, in the west and south. Some of these colonias are: Colinas de San Javier, Puerta de Hierro, Providencia, Chapalita, Jardines de San Ignacio, Ciudad del Sol, Valle Real, Lomas del Valle, Santa Rita, Monraz, Santa Anita Golf Club, El Cielo, Santa Isabel, Virreyes, Ciudad Bugambilias, Las Cañadas, and The Stay.

In general, residents in the west of the city are the wealthiest, while residents in the east are the poorest.

New development to accommodate the growing population is made up of a mix of middle-class colonias and housing complexes developed as part of government plans, and colonias developed less formally for working-class people. The Metropolitan Area extends to the west in colonias such as Pinar de la Calma, Las Fuentes, Paseos del Sol, El Colli Urbano, and La Estancia and extends to the east in colonias such as St. John Bosco, St. Andrew, Oblates, St. Onofre, Insurgents, Gardens of Peace, and Garden of Poets.

The expansion of the population creates a constant demand for more colonias and more government infrastructure services.

Parks

 
Parque de la Revolución
 
Parque Rehilete Alcalde

Parks and forests are important in Guadalajara; while many of the oldest neighborhoods of the municipality of Guadalajara do not have sufficient green spaces, of the three most important metropolitan areas in Mexico, the Guadalajara Metropolitan Area (ZMG) has the greenest areas and plants.

The most important parks are:

Gardens (Jardínes)
  • Jardín Dr. Atl
  • Jardín Francisco Zarco
  • El Jardín Botánico (Botanical Garden)
  • Jardín del Santuario
  • Glorieta Chapalita Zapopan
  • Jardín de San Francisco de Asís
  • Jardín de San Sebastián de Analco
  • Jardín del Carmen
  • Jardín del Museo Arqueológico (Garden of the Archaeological Museum)
  • Jardín José Clemente Orozco
Parks (Parques)
  • Parque Ávila Camacho
  • Parque de la Revolución (Parque Rojo to locals)
  • Parque Mirador Independencia o Barranca de Huentitán
  • Parque Mirador Dr. Atl Zapopan
  • Parque Oblatos
  • Parque Amarillo (Colonia Jardines Alcalde)
  • Parque Talpita
  • Parque Tucson (Colonia Jardines Alcalde)
  • Parque Los Colomos
  • Parque Morelos
  • Parque de la Jabonera
  • Parque Metropolitano Zapopan
  • Parque Alcalde
  • Parque Agua Azul
  • Parque González Gallo
  • Parque de la Solidaridad Tonalá
  • Parque de la Liberación
  • Parque de la Expenal (Explanada 18 de Marz)
  • Parque Roberto Montenegro El Salto
  • Parque San Rafael
  • Parque San Jacinto
Forests (Bosques)
Zoos (Zoológicos)
  • Zoológico Villa Fantasía Zapopan
  • Zoológico Guadalajara

Demographics

Facade of the Roman Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral of Guadaljara

The most current figures by the National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI), confirmed in 2010, the municipality of Guadalajara has a population of approximately 1,495,189, with a population in the metropolitan area of 4,334,878, the most populous city in the state of Jalisco, the most conurbation-highest-population within the province of Jalisco of the Guadalajara metropolitan area, and the second-most populous city in Mexico; the first being Mexico City.

In 2007, the United Nations listed the world's 100 most populous urban agglomerations. Mexico excelled with three cities on the list: Mexico City, Guadalajara, and Monterrey. Guadalajara ranked 66th in these cities, followed by Sydney and Washington, D.C. On the Latin American list, Guadalajara ranked 10th.

The municipality of Guadalajara is located in the center of the State, a little to the east, at coordinates 20-&36' 40" to 20- 45' 00" north latitude and 103- 16' 00" to 103- 24' 00" west-latitude and 103-&16' 00" to 103- 24' 00" west-west longitude, at a height of 1700 meters above sea level.

The municipality of Guadalajara is bounded to the north by Zapopan and Ixtlahuacán del Río, to the east by Tonalá and Zapotlanejo, to the south with Tlaquepaque and to the west with Zapopan.

Guadalajara Metropolitan Area

 

The Guadalajara metropolitan area is the second most populous metropolitan area in the country and has six central and three exterior municipalities. The central municipalities are Guadalajara, Zapopan, Tlaquepaque, Tonalá, Tlajomulco de Zúñiga, and El Salto, Jalisco. The exterior municipalities are Ixtlahuacán de los Membrillos, Juanacatlán, and Zapotlanejo.

Year 1738 1865 1960 1970 1980 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2018
Total population 24,560 69,670 740,394 1,199,391 1,626,152 1,650,205 2,633,216 3,646,319 4,374,370 4,654,134 5,002,466

The growth of the city is due to Guadalajara absorbing the closest communities. This was the case with the former communities Atemajac, Huentitán, Tetlán, Analco, Mexicaltzingo, Mezquitan, and San Andrés, among others.

Some of the closest communities to Guadalajara:

Economy

 
Riu Plaza Hotel, the tallest skyscraper in the city

Guadalajara has the third-largest economy and industrial infrastructure in Mexico[53] and contributes 37% of the state of Jalisco's total gross production. Its economic base is strong and well-diversified, mainly based on commerce and services, although the manufacturing sector plays a defining role.[54] It is ranked in the top ten in Latin America in gross domestic product and the third-highest ranking in Mexico.

In its 2007 survey entitled "Cities of the Future," FDi magazine ranked Guadalajara highest among major Mexican cities and designated Guadalajara as having the second strongest economic potential of any major North American city behind Chicago. FDI ranked it as the most business-friendly Latin American city in 2007.[55] The same research noted Guadalajara as a "city of the future" due to its youthful population, low unemployment and large number of recent foreign investment deals; it was found to be the third most business-friendly city in North America.[55]

In 2009 Moody's Investors Service assigned ratings of Ba1 (Global Scale, local currency) and A1.mx (Mexican national scale). During the prior five years, the municipality's financial performance had been mixed but had begun to stabilize in the latter two years. Guadalajara manages one of the largest budgets among Mexican municipalities and its revenue per capita indicator (Ps. $2,265) places it above the average for Moody's-rated municipalities in Mexico.[54]

The city's economy has two main sectors. Commerce and tourism employ most: about 60% of the population. The other is industry, which has been the engine of economic growth and the basis of Guadalajara's economic importance nationally even though it employs only about a third of the population.[20][54][56] Industries here produce products such as food and beverages, toys, textiles, auto parts, electronic equipment, pharmaceuticals, footwear, furniture and steel products.[20][56]

Two of the major industries have been textiles and shoes, which are still dynamic and growing.[57] Sixty percent of manufactured products are sold domestically, while forty percent are exported, mostly to the United States.[58] This makes Guadalajara's economic fortunes dependent on those of the U.S., both as a source of investment and as a market for its goods.[59]

The city has to compete with China, especially for electronics industries which rely on high volume and low wages. This has caused it to move toward high-mix, mid-volume, and value-added services, such as automotive. However, its traditional advantage of proximity to the U.S. market is one reason Guadalajara stays competitive.[59] Mexico ranked third in 2009 in Latin America for the export of information technology services, behind Brazil and Argentina. This kind of service is mostly related to online and telephone technical support. The major challenge this sector has is the lack of university graduates who speak English.[60]

Technology

The electronics and information technology sectors that have nicknamed the city the "Silicon Valley of Mexico."[58] Guadalajara is the main producer of software, electronic and digital components in Mexico. Telecom and computer equipment from Guadalajara accounts for about a quarter of Mexico's electronics exports.[59] Companies such as General Electric, IBM, SANMINA, Intel Corporation, HCL Technologies, Hitachi Ltd., Hewlett Packard Enterprise, HP Inc, Siemens, Flextronics, Oracle, Wipro, TCS, Cognizant Technology Solutions, and Jabil Circuit have facilities in the city or its suburbs.[58] This phenomenon began after the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). International firms started building facilities in Mexico, especially Guadalajara, displacing Mexican firms, especially in information technology. One of the problems this has created is that when there are economic downturns, these international firms scale back.[61]

Guadalajara was selected as "Smart City" in 2013 by IEEE, the world's largest professional association for the advancement of technology.

Several cities invest in the areas of research to design pilot projects and as an example, in early March in 2013 was the first "Cluster Smart Cities" in the world, composed of Dublin, Ireland; San Jose, California; Cardiff, Wales, and Guadalajara, Jalisco, whose objective is the exchange of information and experiences that can be applied in principle to issues of agribusiness and health sciences.

The Secretariat of Communications and Transportation also reported that Guadalajara, Jalisco was chosen as the official venue for the first "Digital Creative City of Mexico and Latin America," which will be the spearhead for Mexico to consolidate the potential in this area.

The "Cluster Smart Cities" unprecedented in the world, will focus on what each of these cities is making in innovation and the creation of an alliance to attract technology. The Ministry of Innovation, Science, and Technology (SICyT ) of Jalisco, said the combination of talent development investments allows Jalisco to enter the "knowledge economy."

From 25 to 28 October 2015, the city was the venue for the first conference of the Smart Cities Initiative.[62][63]

Industries

 
Hyatt Andares Hotel

Most of the economy revolves around commerce, employing 60% of the population.[20] This activity has mainly focused on the purchase and sale of the following products: food and beverages, textiles, electronic appliances, tobacco, cosmetics, sports articles, construction materials, and others. Guadalajara's commercial activity is second only to Mexico City.[56]

The city is the national leader in the development and investment of shopping malls. Many shopping centers have been built, such as Plaza Galerias, one of the largest shopping centers in Latin America, and Andares. Galerías Guadalajara covers 160,000 m2 (1,722,225.67 sq ft) and has 220 stores. It contains the two largest movie theaters in Latin America, both with IMAX screens. It hosts art exhibits and fashion shows and has an area for cultural workshops. Anchor stores includes Liverpool and Sears and specialty stores such as Hugo Boss, Max Mara, Lacoste, Tesla Motors, Costco.[64] Best Buy opened its first Guadalajara store here. It has an additional private entrance on the top floor of the adjacent parking lot. Another Best Buy store was inaugurated in Ciudadela Lifestyle Center mall, which was the chain's third-largest in the world, according to the company.

 
Andares shopping mall in the Puerta de Hierro (Zapopan) district

Andares is another important commercial center in Zapopan. This $530 million mixed-use complex opened in 2008, designed by renowned Mexican Sordo Madaleno architecture firm features luxury residences and a high-level mall anchored by two large department stores, Liverpool and El Palacio de Hierro. The 133,000 m2 (1,400,000+ sq ft) mall offers hundreds of stores, a big food court located on the second floor, and several restaurants at the Paseo Andares.

A large segment of the commercial sector caters to tourists and other visitors. Recreational tourism is mainly concentrated in the historic downtown.[20] In addition to being a cultural and recreational attraction and thanks to its privileged geographical location, the city serves as an axis to nearby popular beach destinations such as Puerto Vallarta, Manzanillo and Mazatlán.[56] Other types of visitors include those who travel to attend seminars, conventions and other events in fields such as academic, entertainment, sports, and business. The best-known venue for this purpose is the Expo Guadalajara, a large convention center surrounded by several hotels. It was built in 1987, and it is considered the most important convention center in Mexico.[by whom?]

Foreign trade

Most of Guadalajara's economic growth since 1990 has been tied with foreign investment. International firms have invested here to take advantage of the relatively cheap but educated and highly productive labor, establishing manufacturing plants that re-export their products to the United States, as well as provide goods for the domestic Mexican market.[65]

A media report in early October 2013 stated that five major Indian IT (information technology) companies have established offices in Guadalajara, while several other Indian IT companies continue to explore the option of expanding to Mexico. Due to the competitiveness in the Indian IT sector, companies are expanding internationally and Mexico offers an affordable opportunity for Indian companies to better position themselves to enter the United States market. The trend emerged after 2006 and the Mexican government offers incentives to foreign companies.[66]

Exports from the city went from US$3.92 billion in 1995 to 14.3 billion in 2003.[56] From 1990 to 2000, socio-economic indicators show that quality of life improved overall; however, there is still a large gap between the rich and the poor, and the rich have benefited from the globalization and privatization of the economy more than the poor.[67]

International investment has affected the labor market in the metro area and that of the rural towns and villages that surround it. Guadalajara is the distribution center for the region and its demands have led to a shifting of employment, from traditional agriculture and crafts to manufacturing and commerce in urban centers. This has led to mass migration from the rural areas to the metropolitan area.[65]

Culture

The Teatro Degollado, named after its builder, Santos Degollado, was built in 1855.

Guadalajara has a lively cultural life. The city exhibits works by international artists and is a must-see for international cultural events whose radius of influence reaches most of the countries of Latin America, including the southwestern United States.

Its historic center houses colonial buildings of a religious and civil character, which stand out for their architectural and historical significance, and constitute a rich mixture of styles whose root is found in indigenous cultural contributions (mainly of incorporated into the Mozarabic and the castilian), and later in modern European influences (mainly French and Italian). The historic center also has museums, theaters, galleries, libraries, auditoriums, and concert halls. Some of these buildings date from the sixteenth and seventeenth century, such as the Cathedral of the Archdiocese of Guadalajara, among others.

The city has several radio stations focused on culture, one of them being Red Radio University of Guadalajara (XHUG-F), which is transmitted to the rest of the state and neighboring states and internationally through the Internet; it is also the first broadcaster via podcast in the country.[68] The city produces a fully cultural television channel, XHGJG-TV; Guadalajara is the only city to produce a cultural cutting channel in the country in addition to the Mexico, D.F.A. in Mexico City.[citation needed]

 
Street in the historic center

This city has been the cradle and dwelling of distinguished poets, writers, painters, actors, film directors and representatives of the arts, etc., such as José Clemente Orozco, Dr. Atl, Roberto Montenegro, Alejandro Zohn, Luis Barragán, Carlos Orozco Romero, Federico Fabregat, Raul Anguiano, Juan Soriano, Javier Campos Cabello, Martha Pacheco, Alejandro Colunga, José Fors, Juan Kraeppellin, Davis Birks, Carlos Vargas Pons, Jis, Trino, Erandini, Enrique Oroz, Rubén Méndez, Mauricio Toussaint, Scott Neri, Paula Santiago, Edgar Cobian, L. Felipe Manzano, and (the artist formerly known as Mevna); the freeplay guitarist and music composer for the movies El Mariachi and The Legend of Zorro, Paco Rentería; important exponents of literature such as Juan Rulfo, Francisco Rojas, Agustín Yáñez, Elías Nandino, Idella Purnell, Jorge Souza, among others; classic repertoire composers such as Gonzalo Curiel, José Pablo Moncayo, Antonio Navarro, Ricardo Zohn, Carlos Sánchez-Gutiérrez and Gabriel Pareyon; film directors such as Felipe Cazals, Jaime Humberto Hermosillo, Erik Stahl, Guillermo del Toro; and actors such as Katy Jurado, Enrique Alvarez Felix, and Gael García Bernal.

Guadalajara was the first Mexican city to be accepted as a member of the International Association of Educational Cities[69][70] due to its strong character and identity, potential for economic development through culture.

Guadalajara was designated as the World Book Capital for 2022 by UNESCO.[71]

Despite the Guadalajara area historically being an ethnically Caxcan region, the Nahua peoples form the majority of Guadalajara's indigenous population.[72] There are several thousand indigenous language speakers in Guadalajara although the majority of the indigenous population is integrated within the general population and can speak Spanish.[72]

Museums

 
Guadalajara Regional Museum

The museums in Guadalajara are an extension of the cultural infrastructure of this city. Many of them stand out for their architectural and historical significance. There are more than 189 forums of art exhibition among cultural centers, museums, private galleries, and cultural spaces of the town hall, several of them with centuries of existence and some others in the process of being built. The museums in Guadalajara belong to the cultural framework of the city, among which are in all its genres exhibiting history, paleontology, archeology, ethnography, paintings, crafts, plastic, photography, sculpture, works of circuits international art, etc.

Guadalajara has twenty two museums, which include the Regional Museum of Jalisco, the Wax Museum, the Trompo Mágico children's museum and the Museum of Anthropology.[73] The Hospicio Cabañas in the historic center is a World Heritage Site.[74] For these attributes and others, the city was named an American Capital of Culture in 2005.[75]

Guadalajara and the surrounding metropolitan area have numerous public, private, and digital libraries for the search and consultation of information. The promotion of culture and the enrichment of reading have made it easier for the citizen to require several facilities in the city. Some of the libraries also have a physical enclosure—among them the historic Octavio Paz Ibero-American Library of the University of Guadalajara and the Public Library of the State of Jalisco located in the adjoining city of Zapopan—with options for querying digital information over the Internet.

The Jalisco Regional Museum (formerly the seminary of San José) was built at the beginning of the 18th century to be the Seminario Conciliar de San José. From 1861 to 1914, it housed a school called Liceo de Varones. In 1918, it became the Museum of Fine Arts. In 1976, it was completely remodeled for its present use. The museum displays its permanent collection in 16 halls, 15 of which are dedicated to Paleontology, Pre-History, and Archeology. One of the prized exhibits is a complete mammoth skeleton. The other two halls are dedicated to painting and history. The painting collection includes works by Juan Correa, Cristóbal de Villalpando and José de Ibarra.[20][76]

Architecture

The style of architecture prevalent in Europe during the founding of Guadalajara is paralleled in the city's colonial buildings. The Metropolitan Cathedral and Teatro Degollado are the purest examples of neoclassical architecture. The historical center hosts religious and civil colonial buildings, which are noted for their architectural and historical significance and are a rich mix of styles that are rooted in indigenous cultural contributions (mainly from Ute origin), incorporated in the Mozarabic and castizo, and later in modern European influences (mainly French and Italian) and American (specifically, from the United States).

 
The Plaza de la Liberación in the historic center of Guadalajara [es]

Guadalajara's historical center has an assortment of museums, theaters, galleries, libraries, auditoriums and concert halls, particular mention may be made to Hospicio Cabañas (which dates from the 18th century), the Teatro Degollado (considered the oldest opera house in Mexico), the Teatro Galerías and the Teatro Diana. The Hospicio Cabañas, which is home to some of the paintings (murals and easel) by José Clemente Orozco, was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1997. Among the many structures of beauty is the International Headquarters Temple of La Luz del Mundo in Colonia Hermosa Provincia, which is the largest in Latin America.

During the Porfiriato the French style invaded the city because of the passion of former president Porfirio Díaz in the trends of French style, also Italian architects were responsible for shaping the Gothic structures that were built in the city. The passage of time reflected different trends from the baroque to churrigueresque, Gothic and neoclassical pure.

 
San Felipe de Neri Church

The French-inspired "Lafayette" neighborhood has many fine examples of early 20th-century residences that were later converted into boutiques and restaurants.

Even the architectural lines typical of the decades of the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s the Art Deco and bold lines of postmodern architects of the time. Architectural styles found in the city include Baroque, Viceregal, Neoclassical, Modern, Eclectic, Art Deco and Neo-Gothic.

The modern architecture of Guadalajara has numerous figures of different architectural production from the neo-regionalism to the primitiveness of the 1960s. Some of these architects are: Rafael Urzua, Luis Barragán, Ignacio Díaz Morales, Pedro Castellanos, Eric Coufal, Julio de la Peña, Eduardo Ibáñez Valencia, Félix Aceves Ortega

Guadalajara's modern architecture has figures of diverse architectural output from neo-regionalism to the brutalism of the 1970s. One of these architects are: Rafael Urzua, Luis Barragán, Ignacio Díaz Morales, Pedro Castellano, Eric Coufal, July de la Peña, Eduardo Ibáñez Valencia

Festivals

 
The Guadalajara International Film Festival, founded in 1986, is the most important film festival in Latin America.

Guadalajara is also known for several large cultural festivals. The International Film Festival of Guadalajara[77] is a yearly event which happens in March. It mostly focuses on Mexican and Latin American films; however, films from all over the world are shown. The event is sponsored by the Universidad de Guadalajara, CONACULTA, the Instituto Mexicano de Cinematographía as well as the governments of the cities of Guadalajara and Zapopan. The 2009 festival had over 200 films shown in more than 16 theaters and open-air forums, such as the inflatable screens set up in places such as Chapultepec, La Rambla Cataluña, and La Minerva. In that year, the event gave out awards totaling US$500,000. The event attracts names such as Mexican director Guillermo del Toro, Greek director Constantin Costa-Gavras, Spanish actor Antonio Banderas and U.S. actor Edward James Olmos.[78]

 
The handover presentation during the 2007 Pan American Games closing ceremony for the 2011 Pan American Games in Guadalajara

The Guadalajara International Book Fair is the largest Spanish-language book fair in the world, held each year over nine days at the Expo Guadalajara.[79][80] Over 300 publishing firms from 35 countries regularly attend, demonstrating the most recent productions in books, videos and new communications technologies. The event awards prizes such as the Premio FIL for literature, the Premio de Literatura Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, also for literature, and the Reconocimento al Mérito Editorial for publishing houses. There is an extensive exposition of books and other materials in Spanish, Portuguese and English, covering academia, culture, the arts and more for sale. More than 350,000 people attend from Mexico and abroad.[79] In 2009, Nobel prize winner Orhan Pamuk, German children's author Cornelia Funke and Peruvian writer Mario Vargas Llosa participated with about 500 other authors present.[81] Activities include book presentations, academic talks, forums, and events for children.[80]

 
The Guadalajara International Book Fair is the largest Spanish-language fair in the world, as well as the largest book fair in the Americas.

The Danza de los Tastoanes is an event hosted annually on July 25 at the Municipal President's building, where the folklore dancers perform one of the oldest traditional dances and combat battle performance to honor the combats against the Spanish.[82]

The Festival Cultural de Mayo (May Cultural Festival) began in 1988. In 2009, the event celebrated the 400th anniversary of relations between Mexico and Japan, with many performances and exhibitions relation to Japanese culture. The 2009 festival featured 358 artists in 118 activities. Each year a different country is "invited." Past guests have been Germany (2008), Mexico (2007), Spain (2006) and Austria (2005). France is the 2013 guest.[83]

The Expo Ganadera is an event hosted annually in the month of October where people from all over the country attend to display the best examples of the breed and their quality that is produced in Jalisco. The event also works to promote technological advances in agriculture. The event also has separate sections for the authentic Mexican cuisine, exhibitions of livestock, charreria, and other competitions that display the Jalisco traditions.[84]

Notable festivals include:

 
Árbol adentro by José Fors
  • May Cultural Festival
  • Guadalajara International Book Fair,[85] this fair is held every year, thanks to the auspices of the University of Guadalajara, during the last week of November. It includes a large exhibition of consolidated, independent, university, national, international publishers; books and lectures are presented; it has a special area for children and young people; it is very significant for showing during the ten days of the fair to a guest country (or region, or community), to which a pavilion is dedicated to exposing the most representative of its culture. In the FIL, as it is popularly known, several awards are awarded, the most representative is the Juan Rulfo Award' Latin American and Caribbean Literature Award (formerly known as "Juan Rulfo," in honor of this author jalisciense).
  • The festivities of October: These are the traditional festivals of Guadalajara, have been held since 1965 being the first headquarters the Agua Azul Park and years later it would change headquarters to the Benito Juárez auditorium that is where this celebration is currently held. Its main attractions are the mechanical games, the palenque and the auditorium where various artists, especially Mexican music are performed every night during this celebration of the October festivities.
  • The Feast of the Dolls (Guadalajara International Puppet Festival).
  • The International Meeting of Mariachi and Charrería. As its name says, various mariachis from different parts of the world gather. As well as the charros that come from various parts to demonstrate the national sport of Mexico. It starts with a parade and over the days events are held in various scenarios throughout the city. It is held between the months of August and September.
  • Expo Ganadera.Es the largest and most important of its kind in the country. It is usually performed during the month of October.
  • The Guadalajara International Film Festival (known as Guadalajara Film Fest). With more than twenty years of experience, FICG is the most important event in Mexico in terms of film, which includes an exhibition of films, an encounter with filmmakers and actors (talent campus), and the contest of realizations that are awarded in several categories: Ibero-American and Mexican short film, Mexican and Latin American documentary, a fictional feature film, among which the "Mayahuel" in which a trajectory is awarded.
  • The International Festival of Contemporary Dance "Onésimo González." It was organized since 1999 organized by the Ministry of Culture of the Government of the State of Jalisco and the National Dance Coordination of INBA. Having in this choreographic examples of the most outstanding dance groups of the state of Jalisco, with some guest, national and international companies; promoting cultural exchange within Guadalajara, while offering open master classes to the public to enrich the dance language in this state. Performing every October at the Art and Culture Forum of this city.
  • Expo-International Friendship Fair. This city has been the cradle and shelter of distinguished [poet], writers, painters, actors, filmmakers and representatives of art internationally. One work that accounts for the richness of the poets of this city is the book Major Poetry in Guadalajara (Poetic Annotations and Criticisms).

Landmarks

The historic downtown of Guadalajara is the oldest section of the city, where it was founded and where the oldest buildings are. It centers on Paseo Morelos/Paseo Hospicio from the Plaza de Armas, where the seats of ecclesiastical and secular power are, east toward the Plaza de los Mariachis and the Hospicio Cabañas. The Plaza de Armas is a rectangular plaza with gardens, ironwork benches and an ironwork kiosk which was made in Paris in the 19th century.[20][76]

Within Guadalajara's historic downtown, there are many squares and public parks: Parque Morelos, Plaza de los Mariachis, Plaza Fundadores, Plaza Tapatia, Plaza del Agave, Parque Revolucion, Jardin del Santuario, Plaza de Armas, Plaza de la Liberacion, Plaza Guadalajara and the Rotonda de los Jaliscienses Ilustres, the last four of which surround the cathedral to form a Latin Cross.[86]

Construction began on the Metropolitan Cathedral in 1558 and the church was consecrated in 1616. Its two towers were built in the 19th century after an earthquake destroyed the originals. They are considered one of the city's symbols. The architecture is a mix of Gothic, Baroque, Moorish and Neoclassical. The interior has three naves and eleven side altars, covered by a roof supported by 30 Doric columns.[76]

 
San José de Gracia Church, built in 1899

The Rotonda de los Hombres Ilustres (Rotunda of Illustrious Men) is a monument made of quarried stone, built in 1952 to honor the memory of distinguished people from Jalisco. A circular structure of 17 columns surrounds 98 urns containing the remains of those honored. Across the street is the municipal palace which was built in 1952. It has four façades of quarried stone. It is mostly of Neoclassical design with elements such as courtyards, entrances and columns that imitate the older structures of the city.[20][76]

The Palace of the State Government is in Churrigueresque and Neoclassical styles and was begun in the 17th century and finished in 1774. The interior was completely remodeled after an explosion in 1859. This building contains murals by José Clemente Orozco, a native of Jalisco, including "Lucha Social," "Circo Político," "Las Fuerzas Ocultas," and "Hidalgo," which depicts Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla with his arm raised above his head in anger at the government and the church.[76]

The cathedral is bordered to the east by the Plaza de la Liberación, nicknamed the Plaza de las Dos Copas, referring to the two fountains on the east and west sides. Facing this plaza is the Teatro Degollado (Degollado Theater). It was built in the mid-nineteenth century in Neoclassical design. The main portal has a pediment with a scene in relief called "Apollo and the Muses" sculpted in marble by Benito Castañeda. The interior vaulted ceiling is painted with a fresco by Jacobo Gálvez and Gerardo Suárez which depicts a scene from the Divine Comedy. Behind the theater is another plaza with a fountain called the Fuente de los Fundadores (Fountain of the Founders). The plaza is in the exact spot where the city was founded and contains a sculpture depicting Cristobal de Oñate at the event (finsemana).[20]

Between the Cathedral and the Hospicio is the large Plaza Tapatía, which covers 70,000 m2 (750,000 sq ft). Its centerpiece is Inmolación de Quetzalcóatl.[20] Southeast of this plaza is the Mercado Libertad, also called the Mercado de San Juan de Dios, one of the largest traditional markets in Mexico. The Temple of San Juan de Dios, a Baroque church built in the 17th century, is next to the market.[76]

At the far east end is the Plaza de los Mariachis and the Ex-Hospicio Cabañas. The Plaza de los Mariachis is faced by restaurants where one can hear live mariachis play, especially at night. The Ex-Hospicio Cabañas extends along the entire east side of the Plaza. This building was constructed by Manuel Tolsá beginning in 1805 under orders of Carlos III. It was inaugurated and began its function as an orphanage in 1810, in spite of the fact that it would not be finished until 1845. It was named after Bishop Ruiz de Cabañas y Crespo. The façade is Neoclassical and its main entrance is topped by a triangular pediment. Today, it is the home of the Instituto Cultural Cabañas (Cabañas Cultural Institute) and its main attraction is the murals by José Clemente Orozco, which cover the main entrance hall. Among these murals is "Hombre del Fuego" (Man of Fire), considered to be one of Orozco's finest works.[20][76]

Off this east–west axis are other significant constructions. The Legislative Place is Neoclassical and was originally built in the 18th century. It was reconstructed in 1982. The Palace of Justice was finished in 1897. The Old University Building was a Jesuit college named Santo Tomás de Aquino. It was founded in 1591. It became the second Mexican University in 1792. Its main portal is of yellow stone. The Casa de los Perros (House of the Dogs) was constructed in 1896 in Neoclassical design.[20] On Avenida Juarez is the Sanctuary of Nuestra Señora del Carmen which was founded between 1687 and 1690 and remodeled completely in 1830. It retains its original coat of arms of the Carmelite Order as well as sculptures of the prophets Elijah and Elisha. Adjoining it is what is left of the Carmelite monastery, which was one of the richest in New Spain.[76]

Music

 
Guadalajara Arena (Project)

Mariachi music is strongly associated with Guadalajara both in Mexico and abroad even though the musical style originated in the nearby town of Cocula, Jalisco. The connection between the city and mariachi began in 1907 when an eight-piece mariachi band and four dancers from the city performed on stage at the president's residence for both Porfirio Díaz and the Secretary of State of the United States. This made the music a symbol of west Mexico, and after the migration of many people from the Guadalajara area to Mexico City (mostly settling near Plaza Garibaldi), it then became a symbol of Mexican identity as well.[87]

Guadalajara hosts the Festival of Mariachi and Charreria, which began in 1994. It attracts people in the fields of art, culture and politics from Mexico and abroad. Regularly the best mariachis in Mexico participate, such as Mariachi Vargas, Mariachi de América and Mariachi los Camperos de Nati Cano. Mariachi bands from all over the world participate, coming from countries such as Venezuela, Cuba, Belgium, Chile, France, Australia, Slovak Republic, Canada and the United States.

The events of this festival take place in venues all over the metropolitan area,[88][89] and include a parade with floats.[89] In August 2009, 542 mariachi musicians played together for a little over ten minutes to break the world record for largest mariachi group. The musicians played various songs ending with two classic Mexican songs "Cielito Lindo" and "Guadalajara." The feat was performed during the XVI Encuentro Internacional del Mariachi y la Charreria. The prior record was 520 musicians in 2007 in San Antonio, Texas.[90]

In the historic center of the city is the Plaza de los Mariachis, named such as many groups play here. The plaza was renovated for the 2011 Pan American Games in anticipation of the crowds visiting. Over 750 mariachi musicians play traditional melodies on the plaza, and along with the restaurants and other businesses, the plaza supports more than 830 families.[91]

A recent innovation has been the fusion of mariachi melodies and instruments with rock and roll performed by rock musicians in the Guadalajara area. An album collecting a number of these melodies was produced called "Mariachi Rock-O." There are plans to take these bands on tour in Mexico, the United States and Europe.[92]

The city is also host to several dance and ballet companies such as the Chamber Ballet of Jalisco, the Folkloric Ballet of the University of Guadalajara, and the University of Guadalajara Contemporary Ballet.

The city is home to a renowned symphony orchestra. The Orquesta Filarmónica de Jalisco (Jalisco Philharmonic Orchestra) was founded by José Rolón in 1915. It held concerts from that time until 1924, when state funding was lost. However, the musicians kept playing to keep the orchestra alive. This eventually caught the attention of authorities and funding was restated in 1939. Private funding started in the 1940s and in 1950, an organization called Conciertos Guadalajara A. C. was formed to continue fundraising for the orchestra. In 1971, the orchestra became affiliated with the Department of Fine Arts of the State of Jalisco. The current name was adopted in 1988/ International soloists such as Paul Badura-Skoda, Claudio Arrau, Jörg Demus, Henryck Szeryng, Nicanor Zabaleta, Plácido Domingo, Kurt Rydl and Alfred Brendel have performed with the organization. Today the orchestra is under the direction of Marco Parisotto.[93]

Cuisine

 
Cafe on Avenida Vallarta

As in the rest of Mexico, food in Guadalajara is a mix of pre-Hispanic and Spanish influences. Typical Mexican dishes, such as pozole, tamales, sopes, enchiladas, tacos, menudo (soup), carne en su jugo and frijoles charros are popular.

One dish specific to Guadalajara is the "torta ahogada." It consists of a salted bun or roll (typically birote) smeared with refried beans, with fried pork cut into pieces — also known as "carnitas" — all in tomato sauce seasoned with spices. It is eaten with onions reduced in lemon and hot sauce. Accompanying drinks can include tejuino, which is made with a base of sourdough corn accompanied by lemon ice cream, or tepache, which is made from the bark of fermented pineapple.

Another typical meal of Guadalajara and the entire state of Jalisco is the "birria," which is usually made with either pork, beef, or goat. Handcrafted birria is made in a special oven, which can be underground and covered with maguey leaves; the meat can be mixed with a tomato broth and spices, or consumed separately.[94] The traditional way of preparing birria is to pit roast the meat and spices wrapped in maguey leaves.[95] It is served in bowls with minced onion, limes and tortillas.

 
Tequila can only be produced in Jalisco in the regions north of Guadalajara around Santiago de Tequila and Los Altos de Jalisco.

Another typical dish of the tapatía kitchen is the carne en su jugo [es] This dish consists of a beef broth with beans from the pot and is accompanied by bacon, coriander, onion, and radish (sliced or whole). The dessert that is considered as a typical tapatío is the jericalla.

When the Spanish conquistadors arrived in the Aztec empire, a few religious ceremonies included eating pozole made with hominy and human flesh. This was the first type of pozole mentioned in Spanish writing, as a ritual dish eaten only by select priests and noblemen. The meat from the thighs of slain enemy warriors was used. The Franciscan missionaries ended this custom when they banned Aztec religious ceremonies. The pozole in the local common cuisine was related to the ritual dish, but prepared with turkey meat, and later pork, not with human flesh.[96]

 
Torta ahogada, a typical dish.

Other dishes that are popular here include pozole, a soup prepared with hominy, pork or chicken, topped with cabbage, radishes, minced onions, and other condiments; pipián, which is a sauce prepared with peanuts, squash and sesame seed, and biónico, a popular local dessert.

Jericallas are a typical Guadalajara dessert that is similar to flan, that was created to give children proper nutrients while being delicious. It is made with eggs, milk, sugar, vanilla, and cinnamon, and baked in the oven where it is broiled to the point that a burnt layer is produced. The burnt layer at the surface is what makes this dessert special and delicious.[97]

One of the drinks that is popular in Guadalajara is Tejuino, a refreshing drink that contains a corn fermented base with sugarcane, lime, salt and chili powder.[98]

The city hosts the Feria Internacional Gastronomía (International Gastronomy Fair) each year in September showcasing Mexican and international cuisines. Many restaurants, bars, bakeries and cafés participate as well as producers of beer, wine and tequila.[94]

Sports

 
Estadio Akron, House of Chivas football team, built for the 2010 Copa Libertadores

Guadalajara is home to four professional football teams; Guadalajara, also known as Chivas, Atlas, C.D. Oro and Universidad de Guadalajara. Guadalajara is the most successful and the most followed club in the country,[99] They have won the Mexican Primera División a total of 12 times, and have won the Copa MX four times. In 2017 Chivas became the first team in Mexican football history to win a Double (a league and cup title) in a single season on two different occasions and their first since the 1969–70 season.[100] Chivas went on to win the 2018 CONCACAF Champions League final against Major League Soccer side Toronto FC, the second time they have won the tournament. Chivas won the first ever CONCACAF Champions League and are the only Guadalajara-based football team to win the tournament. Atlas also plays in the Mexican Primera División. They are known in the country as 'The academy', hence they have provided Mexico's finest football players, among them: Rafael Márquez, Oswaldo Sánchez, Pável Pardo, Andrés Guardado, and the Mexican national team's former top scorer Jared Borgetti. Atlas also won several championships in amateur tournaments, and the first championship for a Guadalajaran team in 1951. They won the first division championship again in 2021. Estudiantes was associated with the Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara A.C. It played in the Primera División, with home games in the Estadio 3 de Marzo (March 3 Stadium, for the university's 1935 date of founding). They've won also a single Championship back in 1994 as they defeated Santos. The team moved to Zacatecas and became the Mineros de Zacatecas in May 2014.

Starting in October 2014, Guadalajara rejoined the Liga Mexicana del Pacífico baseball tournament with the Charros de Jalisco franchise in play at the Athletic Stadium. Charreada, the Mexican form of rodeo and closely tied to mariachi music, is popular here. The biggest place for Charreada competitions, the VFG Arena, is located near the Guadalajara Airport founded by singer Vicente Fernández. Every September 15, charros make a parade in the downtown streets to celebrate the Charro and Mariachi Day.[88]

Guadalajara hosted the 2011 Pan American Games.[101] Since winning the bid to host the Games, the city had been undergoing extensive renovations. The games brought in more than 5,000 athletes from approximately 42 countries from the Americas and the Caribbean. Sports included aquatics, football, racquetball, and 27 more, with six others being considered. COPAG (the Organizing Committee for the Pan American Games Guadalajara 2011) had a total budget of US$250 million with the aim of updating the city's sports and general infrastructure. The center of the city was repaved and new hotels were constructed for the approximately 22,000 rooms that were needed in 2011. The new bus rapid transit (BRT) system, Macrobús, was launched in March and runs along Avenida Independencia. The Pan-American village was built around the Bajio Zone. After the Games, the buildings will be used for housing. There are already 13 existing venues in Guadalajara that the games will use, including the Jalisco Stadium, UAG 3 de Marzo Stadium, and the UAG Gymnasium. Eleven new sporting facilities were created for the event. Other works included a second terminal in the airport, a highway to Puerto Vallarta and a bypass for the southern part of the city.[102]

Lorena Ochoa, a now-retired former #1 female golfer, Sergio Pérez who drives for Red Bull Racing F1 Team in Formula One, and Javier "Chicharito" Hernández, a forward who currently plays for LA Galaxy and the Mexico national team were also born in the city.

The city hosted the 2021 WTA Finals, the first time the tournament was played in Latin America.

The city will be one of three cities in Mexico to host matches during the 2026 FIFA World Cup. [103]

Government

 
City Palace of Guadalajara

As the capital of the state, the city is the seat of the state's government. As a result, state politics have a heavy influence on local decision-making and vice versa. Historically, the mayorship of the city has been a common leaping platform for the state governorship. Additionally, because of the sheer size of the Guadalajara Metropolitan Area vis-à-vis the rest of the state, the city's urban agglomeration—largely dominated and coordinated by the Guadalajara city council—captures 12 of the 20 seats in the state legislature allocated by the district.

All three branches of the state government are concentrated around the historic city center, with the Palace of Government, the seat of the state executive, immediately southeast of the cathedral. North, across the Plaza de la Liberación, is the State Legislature Building, and immediately east of the latter is the Supreme Tribunal of State Justice.

 
Palace of Justice of Jalisco

Like other municipalities in Mexico, Guadalajara is governed by a municipal president, who exercises executive power for three consecutive years. This office is currently occupied by Enrique Alfaro (Movimiento Ciudadano).

The legislature has the cabildo, formed by the form chosen by the candidate for mayor, made up of aldermen, who are not elected by the people by direct or indirect voting, but the return happens automatically if the mayor wins.

The municipality is divided into five electoral districts for the purpose of election of representatives of the city in the federal legislature. These districts are the VIII, IX, XI, XIII, and XIV of the state of Jalisco.

The city and the municipality of Guadalajara are essentially co extensive with over 99% of the municipality living within the city limits and nearly all of the municipality urbanized.[20][104] Urbanization centered on the city spreads out over seven other municipalities; of Zapopan, Tlaquepaque, Tonalá, Tlajomulco de Zuñiga, El Salto, Ixtlahuacán de los Membrillos, and Juanacatlán.[30]

These areas form the "Guadalajara Metropolitan Area" (Zona Metropolitana de Guadalajara in Spanish), which is the most populous in the state of Jalisco and the second most populous in the country after the Mexico City Metropolitan area.[30] This metropolitan area had a population of 4,298,715 in 2008.[105][30]

Municipal presidents of Guadalajara

Education

 
The University of Guadalajara, founded in 1791, is one of the highest ranking universities in Latin America.
 
State Library of Jalisco

Guadalajara is an important hub for higher education in both Mexico and Latin America, as the home to numerous nationally and internationally ranked universities and research centers.

The most important is the University of Guadalajara, which was established on October 12, 1791, by royal decree.[106] The entity underwent a number of reorganizations since then, but the modern university as it exists today was established in 1925, when the governor of Jalisco convened professors, students and others to re-establish the university. These precepts were organized into a law called the "Ley Organica."[107] It was ranked fifth among the best Mexican universities in 2012.[108]

Guadalajara is home to Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara (UAG), which was founded in 1935 and is the oldest private university in Mexico,[109] and Universidad del Valle de Atemajac (UNIVA), and the Western Institute of Technology and Higher Education.

The city hosts campuses of several private schools, including:

In addition, the city hosts numerous international schools, including:

Transportation

Guadalajara is well connected by a number of modern highways. These include Fed 15D, which connects the city northwestward to Nogales, Sonora, via Tepic, Nayarit and eastwards to Mexico City via Morelia; Fed 80D which runs northwest toward Aguascalientes; and Fed 54D which runs southward to the coast via Colima. The city's well-connected transportation infrastructure allows easy access to Mexico City, to the southeast, and to the major beach resorts of Manzanillo, Mazatlán and Puerto Vallarta to the southwest, northwest, and west, respectively.

The Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla Guadalajara International Airport, also known as Guadalajara International Airport (ICAO code: MMGL) opened in 1966. It is located 16 km (10 mi) south of downtown Guadalajara, and it was built on the Tlajomulco de Zuñiga city, near Chapala. The airport is the third most active in the country (after Mexico City and Cancún) with direct flights to many Mexican and American cities.[111]

Within the city itself, there are many forms of public transportation. The Guadalajara light rail system, named SITEUR (Sistema de Tren Eléctrico Urbano), Spanish for Urban Electrical Train System, provides rapid transit service within Guadalajara and the neighboring municipalities of Zapopan and Tlaquepaque. It consists of 3 lines: line 1, running from north to south, with 19 stations, line 2, running from downtown to the east, with 10 stations and line 3. The trains are electric and have a top speed of 70 km/h (43 mph). The 48 articulated cars currently in service[112] were built in Mexico by Concarril/Bombardier.[113] Construction on a third line began in 2014. Line 3 will run from Zapopan, in the northwest, to Tlaquepaque and Tonalá, in the southeast, via the city center.[114]

 
Guadalajara International Airport is the 10th busiest airport in Latin America and a hub for Aeroméxico, Volaris, Interjet, and VivaAerobus.

The Guadalajara Macrobús is a public transportation system based on the concept of bus rapid transit, where each bus has a single route and boarding station. Phase I of the Macrobús project opened in 2009 with a 16-kilometer-long (9.9 mi) corridor following Calzada Independencia and serving 27 stations.[115] The Guadalajara trolleybus system has been operating since the 1970s,[113][116] along with many city buses run by private companies and a bustling network of pedestrianized streets.

Mi Bici Pública, PBSC Urban Solutions-based public bike share system, was launched in 2014. In 2016, the city implemented 242 docking stations and 2116 bikes.[117] As of September 2018 Mi Bici has 19,664 annually subscribed users.[118]

In Guadalajara, a person spends an average of 82 minutes per weekday commuting with public transportation. 23% of public transit riders, ride for more than 2 hours every day. The average amount of time people wait at a stop or station for public transit is 15 min, while 22% of riders wait for an average of over 20 minutes each day. The average distance people usually ride in a single trip with public transit is 8 km, and 16% travel for over 12 km in a single direction.[119]

International relations

Diplomatic missions

Guadalajara hosts the presence of numerous diplomatic missions, as well as numerous honorary consulates:[120]

Consulates
Honorary missions

Twin towns – sister cities

Guadalajara is twinned with:[121][122][123]

Domestic cooperation

Agreements cooperation

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "División municipal. Jalisco". Cuentame.inegi.org.mx.
  2. ^ "Tendencia en PREP da triunfo a Pablo Lemus en Guadalajara". El Heraldo de México (in Spanish). 7 June 2021. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
  3. ^ "Diccionario de la lengua española -Real Academia Española". from the original on 2014-02-01. Retrieved 2014-05-01.
  4. ^ "guadalajarense - Definición quequm la pelan". Word Reference. from the original on 2014-04-22. Retrieved 2014-05-01.
  5. ^ "Guadalajara or Guadalahara". Dictionary.com. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  6. ^ "Área Metropolitana de Guadalajara". Gobierno del Estado de Jalisco (in Spanish). Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  7. ^ "Censo de Población y Vivienda 2020 - SCITEL" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-02-01.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on May 6, 2009.
  9. ^ Juan Carlos Aceros Gualdron. "Scripta Nova". Ub.es. from the original on 2010-07-06. Retrieved 2010-06-07.
  10. ^ . elfinanciero. Archived from the original on 2017-03-21. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
  11. ^ "Estados del Bajío crecen a ritmo asiático: Banamex". informador. from the original on 2017-03-19. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
  12. ^ "City Mayors reviews the richest cities in the world in 2005". Citymayors.com. 2007-03-11. from the original on 2012-09-18. Retrieved 2010-06-07.
  13. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 November 2013.
  14. ^ "El Universal - Los Estados - San Juan de Dios, el Tepito tapatío". March 2014.
  15. ^ https://time.com/collection/worlds-greatest-places-2023/6261769/guadalajara-mexico/
  16. ^ https://inguadalajara.com/history/#:~:text=It%20was%20founded%20on%20January%205%2C%201532%20Cristobal,conquests%20yet%20able%20to%20defend%20the%20natural%20bellicosity.
  17. ^ "GaWC - The World According to GaWC 2010". www.lboro.ac.uk. Retrieved 2022-03-05.
  18. ^ US News & World Report - Best Global Universities in Latin America 2019
  19. ^ "Latin America Rankings". Times Higher Education (THE). June 5, 2019.
  20. ^ 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 (in Spanish). Mexico: Instituto Nacional para el Federalismo y el Desarrollo Municipal. Archived from the original on June 16, 2011. Retrieved January 14, 2010.
  21. ^ Kirkwood, Burton (2000). History of Mexico. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing. p. 62. Retrieved January 13, 2010.
  22. ^ a b c Napolitano, Valentina (2002). Migration, Mujercitas, and Medicine Men : Living in Urban Mexico. Ewing, New Jersey, USA: University of California Press. p. 21. Retrieved January 13, 2010.
  23. ^ Kirkwood, Burton (2000). History of Mexico. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 82. Retrieved January 13, 2010.
  24. ^ a b Kirkwood, Burton (2000). History of Mexico. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 83. Retrieved January 13, 2010.
  25. ^ Sosa, Francisco (1985). Biografias de Mexicanos Distinguidos-Miguel Hidalgo (in Spanish). Vol. 472. Mexico City: Editorial Porrua. pp. 288–292. ISBN 968-452-050-6.
  26. ^ Fowler, Will (1998). Mexico in the Age of Proposals 1821–1853. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 41. Retrieved January 13, 2010.
  27. ^ Napolitano, Valentina (2002). Migration, Mujercitas, and Medicine Men : Living in Urban Mexico. Ewing, New Jersey, USA: University of California Press. p. 18. Retrieved January 13, 2010.
  28. ^ a b "Guadalajara". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2010. Retrieved January 14, 2010.[permanent dead link]
  29. ^ Napolitano, Valentina (2002). Migration, Mujercitas, and Medicine Men : Living in Urban Mexico. Ewing, New Jersey, USA: University of California Press. pp. 20–21. Retrieved January 13, 2010.
  30. ^ a b c d Consejo Nacional de Población, México; Delimitación de las zonas metropolitanas de México 2005 May 6, 2009, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008-10-18.
  31. ^ Napolitano, Valentina (2002). Migration, Mujercitas, and Medicine Men : Living in Urban Mexico. Ewing, New Jersey, USA: University of California Press. pp. 23–24. Retrieved January 13, 2010.
  32. ^ Napolitano, Valentina (2002). Migration, Mujercitas, and Medicine Men : Living in Urban Mexico. Ewing, New Jersey, USA: University of California Press. pp. 21–22. Retrieved January 13, 2010.
  33. ^ Napolitano, Valentina (2002). Migration, Mujercitas, and Medicine Men : Living in Urban Mexico. Ewing, New Jersey, USA: University of California Press. pp. 20, 22. Retrieved January 13, 2010.
  34. ^ Dugal, James (1999). . In Disaster Recovery Journal. 5 (3). Archived from the original on 2016-01-02.
  35. ^ Eisner, Peter (28 April 1992). "Nine officials charged in sewer-line explosions case". The Tech. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 112 (22). from the original on 5 October 2011. Retrieved 14 January 2010.
  36. ^ . Massachusetts: SEMP. 3 May 2006. Archived from the original on 10 February 2009. Retrieved January 14, 2010.
  37. ^ "Legal documents pertaining to this case". umn.edu. from the original on 2009-09-02. Retrieved 2010-06-07.
  38. ^ . Time. 11 May 1992. Archived from the original on 2 September 2009. Retrieved 14 January 2010.
  39. ^ Kirkwood, Burton (2000). History of Mexico. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 206. Retrieved January 13, 2010.
  40. ^ Gómez's, Gabriela & Rodelo, Frida V. (2012). "El protagonismo de la violencia en los medios de comunicación (The prominence of violence in the media)". In Rodríguez Gómez, Guadalupe (ed.). Social reality and violence. Guadalajara Metropolitan Area. social incide/Institute of Technology and Higher Studies of the West. ISBN 978-607-8044-09-2.
  41. ^ Syqueiros, Luis Felipe (2012). "The territory, the environment and the urban conditions". In Rodríguez Gómez, Guadalupe (ed.). the social reality and the Violence. Metropolitan Area of Guadalajara. Social Incide / Institute of Technology and Higher Studies of the West.
  42. ^ a b c "Megaconstrucciones.net English Version". Web Megaconstrucciones.
  43. ^ . Archived from the original on October 17, 2007.
  44. ^ http://plazadelsol.com/home.html/title-Plaza[permanent dead link] del April 2007-
  45. ^ http://siteur.jalisco.gob.mx/org.htm-título-Siteur[permanent dead link] March 2007-
  46. ^ "Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara | UAG". www.uag.mx.
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-09-16. Retrieved 2010-06-07.
  48. ^ "El Niño Arrives on Schedule". Environment Canada. 2009-12-23. Retrieved February 2, 2013.
  49. ^ "NORMALES CLIMATOLÓGICAS 1951–2010" (in Spanish). Servicio Meteorológico Nacional. from the original on October 28, 2017. Retrieved August 30, 2012.
  50. ^ "Extreme Temperatures and Precipitation for Guadalajara 1931–2010" (in Spanish). Servicio Meteorológico Nacional. from the original on October 27, 2017. Retrieved January 21, 2013.
  51. ^ (PDF) (in Spanish). Servicio Meteorológico Nacional. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 30, 2016. Retrieved January 23, 2016.
  52. ^ "Klimatafel von Guadalajara, Jalisco / Mexiko" (PDF). Baseline climate means (1961–1990) from stations all over the world (in German). Deutscher Wetterdienst. (PDF) from the original on August 3, 2019. Retrieved January 23, 2016.
  53. ^ Jalisco Ministry of Tourism (2009-08-29). "Jalisco Leads in Mexico's Tourism Recovery and Hosts the 2009 North American Leaders' Summit". Leisure & Travel Week. Atlanta, Georgia: 10.
  54. ^ a b c Moody's (2008-04-16). "Moody's Assigns Issuer Rating Of A1.MX To The Municipality of Guadalajara, Jalisco". Info – Prod Research (Middle East). Ramat-Gan.
  55. ^ a b . FDi Magazine. Archived from the original on 2009-09-16. Retrieved 2007-05-11.
  56. ^ a b c d e . Guadalajara, Mexico: Government of Jalisco. Archived from the original on March 12, 2006. Retrieved January 24, 2010.
  57. ^ (in Spanish). Guadalajara, Mexico: El Bosque Industrial Park. Archived from the original on September 23, 2009. Retrieved January 24, 2010.
  58. ^ a b c . Guadalajara, Mexico: IJALTI Jalisco. Archived from the original on September 14, 2009. Retrieved January 24, 2010.
  59. ^ a b c Norvell, Robin (December 2005). "Guadalajara Winning Back Business from Asia". Circuits Assembly. San Francisco, California. 16 (12): 6.
  60. ^ Chacón, Lilia (2009-12-15). "Ocupa México tercer lugar en TI regional" [Mexico occupies third place in regional IT]. Reforma (in Spanish). Mexico City. p. 7.
  61. ^ "The enclave economy: foreign investment and sustainable development in mexico's silicon valley". NACLA Report on the Americas. New York. 41 (2): 46. Mar–Apr 2008.
  62. ^ "Guadalajara, la primera Ciudad Inteligente" (in Spanish). Mexico City: El Informador. Retrieved October 25, 2015.
  63. ^ "Guadalajara, primera 'Ciudad Inteligente' en América Latina" (in Spanish). Mexico City: Mundo Contact. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
  64. ^ [Us] (in Spanish). Guadalajara Mexico: Galerias Guadalajara. Archived from the original on January 24, 2010. Retrieved January 24, 2010.
  65. ^ a b Eades, J (1987). Migrants Workers and the Social Order. New York: Tavistock Publications. p. 42. ISBN 0-422-61680-X. Retrieved January 24, 2010.
  66. ^ Dale Quinn (2 October 2013). "Guadalajara is now an outpost for Indian IT firms". Quartz. Retrieved 3 October 2013.
  67. ^ Harner, John. "Globalization of Food Retailing in Guadalajara, Mexico: Changes in Access Equity and Social Engagement". Colorado Springs, Colorado: Department of Geography and Environmental Studies University of Colorado at Colorado Springs. Retrieved January 24, 2010.
  68. ^ http://www.radio.udg.mx/start.htm.title-Radio[permanent dead link] January 2007
  69. ^ "Educating Cities". www.bcn.cat.
  70. ^ . Archived from the original on January 3, 2007.
  71. ^ "Guadalajara named World Book Capital 2022". UNESCO. 2020-11-04. Retrieved 2022-04-19.
  72. ^ a b . E-local.gob.mx. Archived from the original on 2006-12-05. Retrieved 2012-12-02.
  73. ^ [Museums] (in Spanish). Jalisco, Mexico: Government of Jalisco. Archived from the original on April 29, 2008. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  74. ^ "Hospicio Cabañas, Guadalajara". United Nations. from the original on April 5, 2012. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  75. ^ "Las Capitales Americanas de la Cultura" [The American Capitals of Culture] (in Spanish). Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  76. ^ a b c d e f g h "Fin de semana en Guadalajara (Jalisco)" (in Spanish). Mexico City: Mexico Desconocido magazine. Archived from the original on February 19, 2013. Retrieved January 23, 2010.
  77. ^ . Guadalajaracinemafest.com. Archived from the original on 2010-09-21. Retrieved 2010-06-07.
  78. ^ González, Mariño (2008-11-16). [Will exhibit 220 films in 9 days; 12 Mexican]. Milenio (in Spanish). Mexico City. Archived from the original on July 24, 2011. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  79. ^ a b "Feria Internacional del Libro de Guadalajara (FIL)" (in Spanish). Mexico: CONACULTA. from the original on December 1, 2010. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  80. ^ a b "Feria Internacional del Libro de Guadalajara 2009" (in Spanish). Mexico: Monitor Educativo Instituto de Investigación Innovación y Estudios de Posgrado para la Educación. from the original on July 22, 2011. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  81. ^ "Feria Internacional del Libro de Guadalajara" (in Spanish). Mexico: Instituto Mexicano de la Radio. 2009-10-27. from the original on December 27, 2010. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  82. ^ . vive.guadalajara.gob.mx. Archived from the original on 2016-11-14. Retrieved 2016-11-14.
  83. ^ "Festival Cultural de Mayo" (in Spanish). Guadalajara, Mexico: Municipality of Guadalajara. from the original on March 22, 2010. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  84. ^ "Unión Ganadera Regional de Jalisco – Expo Ganadera – Quienes somos". Ugrj.org.mx. Retrieved 2016-11-14.
  85. ^ "L.A. shines at Mexican book fair". Los Angeles Times. December 7, 2009.
  86. ^ . Tequilachef.com. Archived from the original on 2010-06-11. Retrieved 2010-06-07.
  87. ^ Turino, Thomas (Fall 2003). "Nationalism and Latin American music: Selected case studies and theoretical considerations". Revista de Música Latinoamericana. Austin, Texas. 24 (2): 169.
  88. ^ a b [16th National Encounter of Mariachi and Charreada – History] (in Spanish). Archived from the original on July 11, 2009. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  89. ^ a b [Marachi makes Guadalajara vibrate] (in Spanish). 2008-09-02. Archived from the original on 2012-01-21. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  90. ^ "México suma a récords otro por mariachis" [Mexico adds another record for mariachis]. CNN Expansion (in Spanish). 2009-08-31. from the original on September 3, 2009. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  91. ^ Informador Redacción (2009-02-28). "Rehabilitación de Plaza de los Mariachis, a cargo de particular" [Rehabilitation of the Plaza de los Mariachis in private hands]. El Informador (in Spanish). Guadalajara, Mexico. from the original on October 27, 2009. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  92. ^ ""Mariachi Rock-O", un nuevo sonido de Jalisco" [Mariachi Rock-O, a new sound from Jalisco]. El Informador (in Spanish). Guadalajara, Mexico. 2009-08-25. Archived from the original on 2009-08-30. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  93. ^ [Philharmonic Orchestra de Jalisco] (in Spanish). Guadalajara, Mexico: Orquesta Filarmónica de Jalisco. Archived from the original on January 6, 2010. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  94. ^ a b [Guadalajara Gastronomy] (in Spanish). Mexico: Visiting Mexico (SECTUR). Archived from the original on February 11, 2010. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  95. ^ (in Spanish). Archived from the original on July 26, 2009. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
  96. ^ "Pozole era preparado con carne humana en época prehispánica" (in Spanish). from the original on October 1, 2017. Retrieved October 1, 2017.
  97. ^ "El origen de la Jericalla – Zona Guadalajara". zonaguadalajara.com. 19 March 2015. Retrieved 2016-11-14.
  98. ^ . vive.guadalajara.gob.mx. Archived from the original on 2016-11-14. Retrieved 2016-11-14.
  99. ^ "Chivas, el preferido de México". Infomador. from the original on 2013-05-23. Retrieved 2012-05-22.
  100. ^ "¡Doblete Sagrado! Chivas conquista Copa y Liga después de 37 años". MedioTiempo.com (in Spanish). 29 May 2019.
  101. ^ . Guadalajara2011.org.mx. Archived from the original on December 20, 2008. Retrieved 2010-06-07.
  102. ^ Glover, Michael (June 13, 2009). "Guadalajara Prepares for 2011 PanAmerican Games". Banderas News. Puerto Vallarta. from the original on January 28, 2010. Retrieved January 28, 2010.
  103. ^ "FIFA announces hosts cities for FIFA World Cup 2026™".
  104. ^ (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2007-03-28. Retrieved 2009-11-23.
  105. ^ Consejo Nacional de Población, México; Proyecciones de la Población de México 2005–2050 October 12, 2007, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008-10-18.
  106. ^ [Royal University of Guadalajara] (in Spanish). Guadalajara, Mexico: Universidad de Guadalajara. Archived from the original on October 28, 2009. Retrieved January 25, 2010.
  107. ^ [University of Guadalajara] (in Spanish). Guadalajara, Mexico: Universidad de Guadalajara. Archived from the original on June 2, 2009. Retrieved January 25, 2010.
  108. ^ Ranking Iberoamericano "SIR 2012"
  109. ^ . Central Washington University. Archived from the original on September 9, 2006.
  110. ^ . Guadalajara, Mexico: ASFG. Archived from the original on January 27, 2010. Retrieved January 25, 2010.
  111. ^ "Passenger Statistics for 2007". Mexico: Grupo Aeropuerto del Pacifico. Retrieved January 24, 2010.
  112. ^ [Trains] (in Spanish). Guadalajara, Mexico: Government of Jalisco. Archived from the original on February 15, 2009. Retrieved January 24, 2010.
  113. ^ a b May, Jack. "Mexico Says Sí to LRT: Light Rail South of the Border". 1994 Light Rail Annual & User's Guide, pp. 5–7. Pasadena, California (US): Pentrex. ISSN 0160-6913.
  114. ^ (PDF). Línea 3 project website. Secretaría de Comunicaciones y Transportes, Jalisco. 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-04. Retrieved 2015-08-10.
  115. ^ [Macrobus Your City Moves Big Time] (in Spanish). Guadalajara, Mexico: Government of Jalisco. Archived from the original on May 16, 2010. Retrieved January 24, 2010.
  116. ^ (in Spanish). Guadalajara, Mexico: Government of Jalisco. Archived from the original on January 23, 2010. Retrieved January 24, 2010.
  117. ^ "Once bankrupt, Montreal's Bixi can't keep up with global demand". Retrieved 2016-09-15.
  118. ^ "MIBICI | Datos abiertos". www.mibici.net (in Spanish). from the original on 2018-09-04. Retrieved 2018-10-28.
  119. ^ "Guadalajara Public Transportation Statistics". Global Public Transit Index by Moovit. Retrieved June 19, 2017.   Material was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
  120. ^ Secretariat of Foreign Affairs - Foreign Missions Accredited in Guadalajara
  121. ^ "Ciudades Hermanas, un sueño malgastado". arquimediosgdl.org.mx (in Spanish). Arqui Medios. 2019-07-12. Retrieved 2020-06-03.
  122. ^ "Silicon Alleys: San Jose, Okayama Celebrate Six Decades as Sister Cities". metroactive.com. Metro Active. 2019-06-12. Retrieved 2020-06-03.
  123. ^ "City inks agreement with Changwon". theguadalajarareporter.net. The Guadalajara Reporter. 2013-05-17. Retrieved 2020-06-03.
  124. ^ a b c . Página Oficial del Gobierno de Guadalajara. April 13, 2017. Archived from the original on January 25, 2020. Retrieved December 2, 2020.

Bibliography

External links

  •   Media related to Guadalajara, Mexico at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Guadalajara travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • (in Spanish)
  • Official Travel Resource for English Speakers

guadalajara, this, article, about, city, mexico, city, spain, spain, other, uses, disambiguation, ɑː, ɑːr, gwah, spanish, ɡwaðalaˈxaɾa, listen, metropolis, western, mexico, capital, state, jalisco, according, 2020, census, city, population, people, making, mos. This article is about the city in Mexico For the city in Spain see Guadalajara Spain For other uses see Guadalajara disambiguation Guadalajara ˌ ɡ w ɑː d el e ˈ h ɑːr e GWAH de le HAR e 5 Spanish ɡwadalaˈxaɾa listen is a metropolis in western Mexico and the capital of the state of Jalisco According to the 2020 census the city has a population of 1 385 629 people making it the 7th most populous city in Mexico while the Guadalajara metropolitan area has a population of 5 268 642 people 6 7 making it the third largest metropolitan area in the country and the twentieth largest metropolitan area in the Americas 8 Guadalajara has the second highest population density in Mexico with over 10 361 people per square kilometer 9 Within Mexico Guadalajara is a center of business arts and culture technology and tourism as well as the economic center of the Bajio region 10 11 12 It usually ranks among the 100 most productive and globally competitive cities in the world 13 It is home to numerous landmarks including Guadalajara Cathedral the Teatro Degollado the Templo Expiatorio the UNESCO World Heritage site Hospicio Cabanas and the San Juan de Dios Market the largest indoor market in Latin America 14 15 GuadalajaraCity amp municipalityFrom top left to right skyline of the city Expiatorio church Hospicio Cabanas Guadalajara Cathedral Arcos de Guadalajara La Minerva and Degollado theatre FlagSealNicknames Pearl of the WestThe City of RosesTapatian pearlGuadalajaraLocation of Guadalajara within JaliscoShow map of JaliscoGuadalajaraGuadalajara Mexico Show map of MexicoGuadalajaraGuadalajara North America Show map of North AmericaCoordinates 20 40 36 N 103 20 51 W 20 67667 N 103 34750 W 20 67667 103 34750 Coordinates 20 40 36 N 103 20 51 W 20 67667 N 103 34750 W 20 67667 103 34750Country MexicoState JaliscoRegionCentroMunicipalityGuadalajaraFoundationFebruary 14 1542Founded byCristobal de OnateNamed forGuadalajara SpainGovernment MayorPablo Lemus Navarro 2 MC Area City amp municipality151 km2 58 sq mi Metro2 734 km2 1 056 sq mi Elevation1 566 m 5 138 ft Population 2020 City amp municipality1 385 629 1 Rank7th in Mexico Density1 491 57 km2 3 863 1 sq mi Metro5 286 642 3rd 1 Metro density1 897 km2 4 910 sq mi DemonymTapatio Guadalajarense archaic 3 4 Time zoneUTC 6 CST Summer DST UTC 5 CDT ClimateCwaWebsitewww wbr guadalajara wbr gob wbr mxA settlement was established in the region of Guadalajara in early 1532 by Cristobal de Onate a Basque conquistador in the expedition of Nuno Beltran de Guzman The settlement was renamed and 16 moved several times before assuming the name Guadalajara after the birthplace of Guzman and in 1542 ending up at its current location in the Atemajac Valley On November 8 1539 the Emperor Charles V had granted a coat of arms and the title of city to the new town and established it as the capital of the Kingdom of Nueva Galicia part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain After 1572 the Royal Audiencia of Guadalajara previously subordinate to Mexico City became the only authority in New Spain with autonomy over Nueva Galicia owing to rapidly growing wealth in the kingdom following the discovery of silver By the 18th century Guadalajara had taken its place as Mexico s second largest city following mass colonial migrations in the 1720s and 1760s During the Mexican War of Independence independence leader Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla established Mexico s first revolutionary government in Guadalajara in 1810 The city flourished during the Porfiriato with the advent of the industrial revolution but its growth was hampered significantly during the Mexican Revolution In 1929 the Cristero War ended within the confines of the city when President Plutarco Elias Calles proclaimed the Grito de Guadalajara The city saw continuous growth throughout the rest of the 20th century attaining a metro population of 1 million in the 1960s and surpassing 3 million in the 1990s Guadalajara is a Gamma global city 17 and one of Mexico s most important cultural centers It is home to numerous mainstays of Mexican culture including Mariachi Tequila and Birria and hosts numerous notable events including the Guadalajara International Film Festival the most important film festival in Latin America and the Guadalajara International Book Fair the largest book fair in the Americas The city was the American Capital of Culture in 2005 and has hosted numerous global events including the 1970 FIFA World Cup the 1986 FIFA World Cup the 1st Ibero American Summit in 1991 and the 2011 Pan American Games The city is home to numerous universities and research institutions including the University of Guadalajara and the Universidad Autonoma de Guadalajara two of the highest ranked universities in Mexico 18 19 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Pre Hispanic era 2 2 Foundation 2 3 Independence 2 4 20th century 2 5 Modern era 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 3 2 Topography 3 3 Urbanism 3 4 Districts 3 5 Parks 4 Demographics 4 1 Guadalajara Metropolitan Area 5 Economy 5 1 Technology 5 2 Industries 5 3 Foreign trade 6 Culture 6 1 Museums 6 2 Architecture 6 3 Festivals 6 4 Landmarks 6 5 Music 6 6 Cuisine 6 7 Sports 7 Government 7 1 Municipal presidents of Guadalajara 8 Education 9 Transportation 10 International relations 10 1 Diplomatic missions 10 2 Twin towns sister cities 10 3 Domestic cooperation 10 4 Agreements cooperation 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksEtymology EditThe conquistador Cristobal de Onate named the city in honor of the conqueror of western Mexico Nuno de Guzman who was born in Guadalajara Spain The name comes from the Arabic وادي الحجارة wadi al ḥajarah which means Valley of the Stone or Fortress Valley History EditSee also Timeline of Guadalajara Pre Hispanic era Edit Unlike the surrounding areas the central Atemajac Valley where Guadalajara is located contained no human settlements citation needed To the east of the Atemajac Valley were the Tonallan and Tetlan peoples At the extremes were the Zapopan Atemajac Zoquipan Tesistan Coyula and Huentitan The historic city center encompasses what was once four population centers as the villages of the Mezquitan Analco and Mexicaltzingo were annexed to the Atemajac site in 1669 20 Foundation Edit Main articles Nueva Galicia and Royal Audiencia of Guadalajara Monument to Beatriz Hernandez one of the founders of Guadalajara Guadalajara was originally founded at three other sites before moving to its current location The first colonial settlement in 1532 was in Mesa del Cerro now known as Nochistlan Zacatecas This site was colonized by Cristobal de Onate as commissioned by Nuno de Guzman with the purpose of securing recent conquests and defending them from the still hostile natives This colonized settlement did not last long due to its lack of usable water sources In 1533 it was moved to a site near Tonala Four years later Guzman ordered that the village be moved to Tlacotan During this time the Spanish king Charles I granted the city the coat of arms which it retains to this day 20 During the Mixton War the Caxcan Portecuex and Zacateco peoples fought back against colonizers under the command of Tenamaxtli 20 The war was initiated in response to the heinous treatment of indigenous peoples by Nuno de Guzman in particular the enslavement of captured natives After multiple defeats Viceroy Antonio de Mendoza took control of the Spanish campaign to suppress the revolt The conflict ended after Mendoza made concessions such as freeing enslaved indigenous peoples and granting amnesty 21 The village of Guadalajara barely survived the war and the villagers attributed their survival to the Archangel Michael who remains the patron of the city to this day After the war the city was moved once again this time to a more defensible location This final relocation would prove permanent In 1542 records indicate that 126 people were living in Guadalajara That same year it was granted cityhood by the king of Spain Guadalajara was officially founded on February 14 1542 in the Atemajac Valley The colonized settlement was named for Nuno de Guzman s Spanish hometown 20 In 1559 royal and bishopric offices for the province of Nueva Galicia were moved from Compostela to Guadalajara and in 1560 Guadalajara became the province s new capital Construction of the cathedral began in 1563 In 1575 religious orders such as the Augustinians and Dominicans arrived eventually making the city a center for evangelization efforts 20 While capital of the Kingdom of Nueva Galicia the city s inhabitants achieved a high standard of living due to flourishing industry agriculture commerce mining and trade The Guadalajara of the sixteenth century was a rather small and often overlooked community It was mainly frequented by traveling merchants Several epidemics drastically reduced the city s indigenous population leading to the construction of its first hospital in 1557 citation needed Guadalajara s economy during the 18th century was based on agriculture and the production of non durable goods such as textiles shoes and food products 22 Despite epidemics plagues and earthquakes Guadalajara would become one of the most important population centers in New Spain The city s heyday attracted numerous architects philosophers lawyers scientists poets writers and speakers Francisco Xavier Clavijero and Matias de la Mota Padilla were among the most prominent In 1771 Bishop Fray Antonio Alcalde arrived in the city and founded the Civil Hospital and the University of Guadalajara In 1791 the University of Guadalajara was established The dedication was held in 1792 at the site of the old Santo Tomas College While the institution was founded during the 18th century it would not be fully developed until the 20th century starting in 1925 In 1794 the Hospital Real de San Miguel de Belen or simply the Hospital de Belen was opened 20 In 1793 Mariano Valdes Tellez ran the city s first printing press whose first publication was a funeral eulogy for Fray Antonio Alcalde Independence Edit Guadalajara c 1836 Guadalajara remained the capital of Nueva Galicia with some modifications until the Mexican War of Independence 20 Miguel Hidalgo entered San Pedro now Tlaquepaque on November 25 1810 and the next day he was greeted effusively in Guadalajara The city s workers had experienced poor living conditions and were swayed by promises of lower taxes and the abolition of slavery Despite a soured welcome due to the rebel army s violence toward city residents especially royalists Hidalgo kept his promise and on December 6 1810 slavery was abolished in Guadalajara a proclamation which has been honored since the end of the war 23 During this time he founded the newspaper El Despertador Americano dedicated to the insurgent cause 20 Royalist forces marched to Guadalajara arriving in January 1811 with nearly 6 000 men 24 Insurgents Ignacio Allende and Mariano Abasolo wanted to concentrate their forces in the city and plan an escape route should they be defeated but Hidalgo rejected this idea Their second choice was to make a stand at the Puente de Calderon just outside the city Hidalgo had between 80 000 and 100 000 men and 95 cannons but the better trained royalists won decimating the insurgent army and forcing Hidalgo to flee toward Aguascalientes Guadalajara remained in royalist hands until near the end of the war 24 25 Centennial Monument to Mexican Independence On January 17 1817 the insurgent army was again defeated on the outskirts of Guadalajara in the Battle of Calderon Bridge New Galicia now Jalisco adhered to the Plan de Iguala on June 13 1821 In 1823 Guadalajara became the capital of the newly founded state of Jalisco 20 In 1844 General Mariano Paredes y Arrillaga initiated a revolt against the government of President Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna Santa Anna personally ensured that the revolt was quelled However while Santa Anna was in Guadalajara a revolt called the Three Hour Revolution brought Jose Joaquin Herrera to the presidency and put Santa Anna into exile 26 President Benito Juarez made Guadalajara the seat of his government in 1856 during the Reform War French troops entered the city during the French Intervention in 1864 and it was retaken by Mexican troops in 1866 20 Despite the violence the 19th century was a period of economic technological and social growth for the city 27 After Independence small scale industries developed many of which were owned by European immigrants Rail lines connecting the city to the Pacific coast and north to the United States intensified trade and allowed the shipment of products from rural areas of Jalisco Ranch Culture became a very important aspect of Jalisco and Guadalajara s identities during this time 22 From 1884 to 1890 electrical and railroad services as well as the Guadalajara Observatory were established 20 20th century Edit Throughout the twentieth century seeing growth in its industrial tourist and service industries Guadalajara began a period of rapid transformation into the metropolis it is today The city would gain the second largest economy in Mexico following only by Mexico City After the Mexican Revolution of 1910 Guadalajara became the second most populous city in the country However the decades that followed brought a number of regional wars in the states of Jalisco Michoacan and Guanajuato The aftermath of the Great Depression took a further toll on the city Fortunately by the 1940s the city would experience industrial demographic and trade growth In 1910 the Mexican Revolution began bringing an end to the Porfiriato With conflict concentrated in the capital Guadalajara experienced relative calm After the Cristero Conflict peace returned to Guadalajara and the city flourished outgrowing its colonial roots This period saw the birth of new schools of architecture that would decorate the city from the 1920s to the 1980s Guadalajara again experienced substantial growth after the 1930s 28 and the first industrial park was established in 1947 20 Its population surpassed one million in 1964 20 and by the 1970s it was Mexico s second largest city 28 and the largest in western Mexico 22 Most of the modern city s urbanization took place between the 1940s and the 1980s with the population doubling every ten years until it stood at 2 5 million in 1980 29 The population of the municipality has stagnated and even declined slowly but steadily since the early 1990s 30 The increase in population brought with it an increase in the size of what is now called Greater Guadalajara rather than an increase in the population density of the city Migrants coming into Guadalajara from the 1940s to the 1980s were mostly from rural areas and lived in the city center until they had enough money to buy property This property was generally bought in the edges of the city which were urbanizing into fraccionamientos or residential areas 31 In the 1980s it was described as a divided city east to west based on socioeconomic class Since then the city has evolved into four sectors which are still more or less class centered The upper classes tend to live in Hidalgo and Juarez in the northwest and southwest while the lower classes tend to live in the city center Libertad in the northeast and southeast in Reforma However lower class development has expanded on the city s periphery and upper and middle classes are migrating toward Zapopan making the situation less neatly divided 32 Central Guadalajara c 1905 Since 1996 the activity of multinational corporations has had a significant effect on the economic and social development of the city The presence of companies such as Kodak Hewlett Packard Motorola and IBM has been based on production facilities built outside the city proper bringing in foreign labor and capital This was made possible in the 1980s by surplus labor infrastructure improvements and government incentives These companies focus on electrical and electronic items which is now one of Guadalajara s two main products the other being beer This has internationalized the economy steering it away from manufacturing and toward services dependent on technology and foreign investment This has not been favorable for the unskilled working class and traditional labor sectors 33 The 1992 Guadalajara explosions occurred on April 22 1992 when gasoline explosions in the sewer system over four hours destroyed 8 km 5 mi of streets in the downtown district of Analco 34 Gante Street was the most damaged Officially 206 people were killed nearly 500 injured and 15 000 were left homeless The estimated monetary damage ranges between 300 million and 1 billion The affected areas can be recognized by their more modern architecture 35 Three days before the explosion residents started complaining of a strong gasoline like smell coming from the sewers City workers were dispatched to check the sewers and found dangerously high levels of gasoline fumes However no evacuations were ordered An investigation into the disaster found that there were two precipitating causes The first was new water pipes that were built too close to an existing gasoline pipeline Chemical reactions between the pipes caused erosion The second was a flaw in the sewer design that did not allow accumulated gases to escape 36 Arrests were made to indict those responsible for the blasts 37 Four officials of Pemex the state oil company were indicted and charged on the basis of negligence Ultimately however these people were cleared of all charges 38 Calls for the restructuring of PEMEX were made but they were successfully resisted 39 The 1990s were marked by events such as the explosions of April 22 1992 the Mexican peso crisis of 1994 and the murder of the Cardinal Juan Jesus Posadas Ocampo in 1993 40 The 1992 explosions caused massive infrastructure damage to hundreds of houses avenues streets and businesses in the Analco colony without a clear delineator of information and responsibilities to date 41 in one of the most tragic events in the history of Guadalajara The investigation of the facts lasted more than 11 years in which insufficient evidence was found to appoint a manager 42 investigations are now closed attributing the events to an accident 42 This event in addition to Mexico s 1994 economic crisis resulted in the loss of Guadalajara s industrial power 42 Modern era Edit Guadalajara and its metropolitan area have grown significantly in the 21st century surpassing 5 million people in 2018 Americas Avenue The city has hosted numerous important international events such as the first Cumbre Iberoamericana in 1991 the Third Summit of Heads of State and Governments of Latin America the Caribbean and the European Union in 2004 the Encuentro Internacional de Promotores y Gestores Culturales in 2005 and the 2011 Pan American Games It was named the American Capital of Culture in 2005 and the Ciudad Educadora Educator City in 2006 It was recognized as Mexico s first Smart City due to its use of developing technology 43 During each government period the city went through structural plans with which new areas and commercial hubs were born and with which transnational corporations and international industries arrived in the city The city housed the first shopping malls in Mexico The city expanded rapidly before merging with the Zapopan municipality Among the developments created during this period were the Guadalajara Expo the light rail shopping centers the expansion of streets and avenues and the birth and development of road infrastructure services tourism industrial etc The first shopping center in Latin America emerged in the city 44 the first urban electric train system in Latin America 45 and the first private university in Mexico 46 A 2007 survey entitled Cities of the Future FDi magazine ranked Guadalajara first among major Mexican cities and second among major North American cities in terms of economic potential behind Chicago The magazine also rated it as the most business friendly Latin American city in 2007 47 Geography EditClimate Edit Parque de los Jalicienses Ilustres Under the Koppen climate classification Guadalajara has a humid subtropical climate Cwa that is quite close to a tropical climate featuring dry warm winters and hot wet summers Guadalajara s climate is influenced by its high altitude and the general seasonality of precipitation patterns in western North America Although the temperature is warm year round Guadalajara has strong seasonal variation in precipitation The northward movement of the Inter Tropical Convergence Zone brings a great deal of rain in the summer months whereas for the rest of the year the climate is rather dry The extra moisture during the wet months moderates the temperatures resulting in cooler days and nights during this period The highest temperatures are usually reached in May averaging 33 C 91 F but can reach up to 37 C 99 F just before the onset of monsoon season March tends to be the driest month and July the wettest with an average of 273 millimeters 10 7 in of rain over a quarter of the annual average of about 1 002 millimeters 39 4 in During the summer afternoon storms are very common and can sometimes bring hail flurries to the city especially toward late August or September Winters are relatively warm despite the city s altitude with January daytime temperatures reaching about 25 C 77 F and nighttime temperatures about 10 C 50 F However the outskirts of the city generally those close to the Primavera Forest experience on average cooler temperatures than the city itself There temperatures around 0 C 32 F can be recorded during the coldest nights Frost may also occur during the coldest nights but temperatures rarely fall below 0 C 32 F in the city making it an uncommon phenomenon Cold fronts in winter can sometimes bring light rain to the city for several days in a row Snowfall is extraordinarily rare with the last recorded one occurring in December 1997 which was the first time in 116 years as it had previously last fallen in 1881 48 Climate data for Guadalajara Mexico 1951 2010 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 35 0 95 0 38 0 100 4 39 0 102 2 41 0 105 8 39 0 102 2 38 5 101 3 37 0 98 6 36 5 97 7 36 0 96 8 35 0 95 0 32 0 89 6 33 0 91 4 41 0 105 8 Average high C F 24 7 76 5 26 5 79 7 29 0 84 2 31 2 88 2 32 5 90 5 30 5 86 9 27 5 81 5 27 3 81 1 27 1 80 8 27 1 80 8 26 4 79 5 24 7 76 5 27 9 82 2 Daily mean C F 17 1 62 8 18 4 65 1 20 7 69 3 22 8 73 0 24 5 76 1 23 9 75 0 22 0 71 6 21 9 71 4 21 8 71 2 21 0 69 8 19 2 66 6 17 5 63 5 20 9 69 6 Average low C F 9 5 49 1 10 3 50 5 12 3 54 1 14 3 57 7 16 4 61 5 17 3 63 1 16 5 61 7 16 4 61 5 16 5 61 7 14 9 58 8 12 1 53 8 10 3 50 5 13 9 57 0 Record low C F 1 5 29 3 0 0 32 0 1 0 33 8 0 0 32 0 1 0 33 8 10 0 50 0 9 0 48 2 11 0 51 8 10 0 50 0 8 0 46 4 3 0 37 4 1 0 30 2 1 5 29 3 Average rainfall mm inches 15 6 0 61 6 6 0 26 4 7 0 19 6 2 0 24 24 9 0 98 191 2 7 53 272 5 10 73 226 1 8 90 169 5 6 67 61 4 2 42 13 7 0 54 10 0 0 39 1 002 4 39 46 Average rainy days 0 1 mm 2 1 1 2 0 7 1 1 3 5 15 2 21 6 20 0 15 5 6 4 1 8 1 8 90 9Average relative humidity 60 57 50 46 48 63 71 72 71 68 63 64 61Mean monthly sunshine hours 204 6 226 0 263 5 261 0 279 0 213 0 195 3 210 8 186 0 220 1 225 0 189 1 2 673 4Mean daily sunshine hours 6 6 8 0 8 5 8 7 9 0 7 1 6 3 6 8 6 2 7 1 7 5 6 1 7 3Source 1 Servicio Meteorologico Nacional humidity 1981 2000 49 50 51 Source 2 Deutscher Wetterdienst sun 1941 1990 52 Topography Edit The Barranca de Huentitan Guadalajara s natural wealth is represented by the La Primavera Forest Los Colomos and the Barranca de Huentitan The flora in these areas includes michoacan pines several species of oak sweetgum ash willow and introduced trees such as poincianas jacarandas and ficus It also includes orchids roses and various species of fungi The fauna includes typical urban fauna in addition to 106 species of mammals 19 species of reptiles and six species of fish citation needed La Barranca de Huentitan the Huentitan Forest also known as Barranca de Oblatos and Barranca de Oblatos Huentitan is a National Park located just north of the municipality of Guadalajara The barranca canyon borders two colonias neighborhoods of the city Oblatos and Huentitan It covers approximately 1 136 hectares 2 810 acres and varies 600 meters 2 000 ft in altitude The funicular railway in the park starts at 1 000 meters 3 300 ft above sea level and rises to 1 520 meters 4 990 ft above sea level In the 16th century during the Spanish Conquest the Huentitan area including the canyon was the site of battles between local Indian populations and the Spanish Later it was the site of battles between different factions during the Mexican Revolution and the Cristero Rebellion Parque 20 de Noviembre Zapopan The canyon is a biogeographic corridor that is home to four types of vegetation deciduous tropical forest gallery forest heath vegetation and secondary vegetation In addition to introduced species there are many native species of flora and fauna The canyon is studied by national and international researchers as it contains great biological diversity due to its geographical location On June 5 1997 it was declared a Protected Natural Area as an Area Subject to Ecological Conservation Zona Sujeta a Conservacion Ecologica La Cascada Cola de Caballo The Horse Tail Waterfall is located on the Guadalajara to Zacatecas road Highway 54 km 15 a few kilometers from the Northern Peripheral just after passing the village of San Esteban The waterfall is fed by a stream from the Atemajac Valley It is close to Guadalajara and a town with very little development and as a result of poor ecological practices it is very polluted El Bosque los Colomos the Colomos Forest is located in the northwestern part of Guadalajara along the Rio Atemajac It is in a wealthy part of the metropolitan area and has been developed for recreation rather than being preserved in its wild state The river was once one of the main sources of water supply to the city and today continues to provide water to some surrounding colonias neighborhoods Currently this forest covers an area of 92 hectares 230 acres in which pine trees eucalyptus trees and cedars predominate The park has jogging tracks gardens including a Japanese garden ponds a bird lake instructional areas for school field days playgrounds camping areas and horses to ride Other places of interest around Guadalajara include Camachos Aquatic Natural Park a commercial water park and Barranca Colimilla a beautiful canyon with hiking trails near Tonala east of Guadalajara Urbanism Edit Radial urban planning in central Guadalajara Map of the city s zones Street in the historic center Guadalajara s street plan has evolved over time into a radial urban plan with five major routes into and out of the city It is surrounded by ring roads The original city of Guadalajara was planned on a grid with north south and east west intersecting streets Over time villages surrounding Guadalajara were incorporated into the city first Analco to the southeast then Mexicaltzingo to the south Mezquitan to the north and San Juan de Dios to the east all of which introduced more variety to the plan As it grew towards the west it kept the original north south orientation As it grew towards the east this grid was tilted towards the south east to match up with the grids of the former towns Analco and San Juan de Dios across the river from central Guadalajara on the eastern side of Rio San Juan de Dios Rio San Juan de Dios is now underground it runs beneath Calzada Independencia When the railway was introduced to Guadalajara in 1888 the southern part of the city began development and its streets aligned with the grid to the east of the old Rio San Juan de Dios Additional 20th century expansion of the city introduced even more variety as developers introduced different kinds of non grid street plans in new areas During the government of Jose de Jesus Gonzalez Gallo between 1947 and 1953 major public works changed the urban landscape of the historic center of the city Major controversial projects included the widening of Avenida 16 de Septiembre and Avenida Juarez which were no longer adequate to handle car traffic in the center of the city In the process many buildings of architectural and historical value were demolished Historical buildings around Guadalajara Cathedral were also demolished to leave large open spaces on the four sides of the Cathedral in the form of a large Latin cross in which the cathedral is now centered There were other somewhat less controversial projects to improve the flow of traffic and increase commerce in other parts of the city Districts Edit Western Guadalajara business district skyline Guadalajara is made up of more than 2 300 colonias neighborhoods in the Metropolitan Area The oldest parts of the city include Centro the oldest in the city Santuario Mexicaltzingo Mezquitan Analco and San Juan de Dios Private houses in the oldest sector of the city are mostly made up of one and two level houses with architectural styles ranging from simple colonial architecture to the Churrigueresco Baroque and early nineteenth century European styles Just west of the oldest part of the city are upper class colonias built in the nineteenth and early twentieth century containing the neoclassical structures and houses of the Porfiriato In the 1920s 1930s 1940s and 1950s well to do Tapatios expanded into colonias Lafayette Americana Moderna and Arcos Vallarta New architectural trends of the 1960s and 1970s also left their mark in colonias such as Colonia Americana Vallarta Poniente Moderna Providencia Vallarta San Jorge Forest Gardens and Chapalita The Metropolitan Area has more wealthy neighborhoods than any other part of western Mexico These colonias are located both inside and outside the municipality of Guadalajara including some in its neighboring municipalities of Zapopan and Tlajomulco in the west and south Some of these colonias are Colinas de San Javier Puerta de Hierro Providencia Chapalita Jardines de San Ignacio Ciudad del Sol Valle Real Lomas del Valle Santa Rita Monraz Santa Anita Golf Club El Cielo Santa Isabel Virreyes Ciudad Bugambilias Las Canadas and The Stay In general residents in the west of the city are the wealthiest while residents in the east are the poorest New development to accommodate the growing population is made up of a mix of middle class colonias and housing complexes developed as part of government plans and colonias developed less formally for working class people The Metropolitan Area extends to the west in colonias such as Pinar de la Calma Las Fuentes Paseos del Sol El Colli Urbano and La Estancia and extends to the east in colonias such as St John Bosco St Andrew Oblates St Onofre Insurgents Gardens of Peace and Garden of Poets The expansion of the population creates a constant demand for more colonias and more government infrastructure services Parks Edit Parque de la Revolucion Parque Rehilete Alcalde Parks and forests are important in Guadalajara while many of the oldest neighborhoods of the municipality of Guadalajara do not have sufficient green spaces of the three most important metropolitan areas in Mexico the Guadalajara Metropolitan Area ZMG has the greenest areas and plants The most important parks are Gardens Jardines Jardin Dr Atl Jardin Francisco Zarco El Jardin Botanico Botanical Garden Jardin del Santuario Glorieta Chapalita Zapopan Jardin de San Francisco de Asis Jardin de San Sebastian de Analco Jardin del Carmen Jardin del Museo Arqueologico Garden of the Archaeological Museum Jardin Jose Clemente Orozco Parks Parques Parque Avila Camacho Parque de la Revolucion Parque Rojo to locals Parque Mirador Independencia o Barranca de Huentitan Parque Mirador Dr Atl Zapopan Parque Oblatos Parque Amarillo Colonia Jardines Alcalde Parque Talpita Parque Tucson Colonia Jardines Alcalde Parque Los Colomos Parque Morelos Parque de la Jabonera Parque Metropolitano Zapopan Parque Alcalde Parque Agua Azul Parque Gonzalez Gallo Parque de la Solidaridad Tonala Parque de la Liberacion Parque de la Expenal Explanada 18 de Marz Parque Roberto Montenegro El Salto Parque San Rafael Parque San Jacinto Forests Bosques Bosque del Centinela Zapopan Bosque de la Primavera Zapopan Tlajomulco de Zuniga y Tala Zoos Zoologicos Zoologico Villa Fantasia Zapopan Zoologico GuadalajaraDemographics Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Facade of the Roman Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral of Guadaljara The most current figures by the National Institute of Statistics and Geography INEGI confirmed in 2010 the municipality of Guadalajara has a population of approximately 1 495 189 with a population in the metropolitan area of 4 334 878 the most populous city in the state of Jalisco the most conurbation highest population within the province of Jalisco of the Guadalajara metropolitan area and the second most populous city in Mexico the first being Mexico City In 2007 the United Nations listed the world s 100 most populous urban agglomerations Mexico excelled with three cities on the list Mexico City Guadalajara and Monterrey Guadalajara ranked 66th in these cities followed by Sydney and Washington D C On the Latin American list Guadalajara ranked 10th The municipality of Guadalajara is located in the center of the State a little to the east at coordinates 20 amp 36 40 to 20 45 00 north latitude and 103 16 00 to 103 24 00 west latitude and 103 amp 16 00 to 103 24 00 west west longitude at a height of 1700 meters above sea level The municipality of Guadalajara is bounded to the north by Zapopan and Ixtlahuacan del Rio to the east by Tonala and Zapotlanejo to the south with Tlaquepaque and to the west with Zapopan Guadalajara Metropolitan Area Edit Main article Guadalajara metropolitan area Map of the Guadalajara Metropolitan Area AMG The Guadalajara metropolitan area is the second most populous metropolitan area in the country and has six central and three exterior municipalities The central municipalities are Guadalajara Zapopan Tlaquepaque Tonala Tlajomulco de Zuniga and El Salto Jalisco The exterior municipalities are Ixtlahuacan de los Membrillos Juanacatlan and Zapotlanejo Year 1738 1865 1960 1970 1980 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2018Total population 24 560 69 670 740 394 1 199 391 1 626 152 1 650 205 2 633 216 3 646 319 4 374 370 4 654 134 5 002 466The growth of the city is due to Guadalajara absorbing the closest communities This was the case with the former communities Atemajac Huentitan Tetlan Analco Mexicaltzingo Mezquitan and San Andres among others Some of the closest communities to Guadalajara Ixtlahuacan del Rio 21 7 km from the municipal seat of Guadalajara 20 51 48 96 N 103 14 22 57 W 20 8636000 N 103 2396028 W 20 8636000 103 2396028 Santa Anita 19 6 km from Guadalajara s municipal seat 20 32 59 09 N 103 26 29 50 W 20 5497472 N 103 4415278 W 20 5497472 103 4415278 Santa Cruz de las Flores 27 9 km from the municipal seat of Guadalajara 20 28 49 33 N 103 30 29 09 W 20 4803694 N 103 5080806 W 20 4803694 103 5080806 Nuevo Mexico 14 km from municipal seat of Guadalajara 20 45 47 02 N 103 26 27 24 W 20 7630611 N 103 4409000 W 20 7630611 103 4409000 Tesistan 20 8 km from the municipal seat of Guadalajara 20 47 54 91 N 103 28 39 85 W 20 7985861 N 103 4777361 W 20 7985861 103 4777361 La Primavera 24 4 km from the municipal seat of Guadalajara 20 37 59 25 N 103 33 35 37 W 20 6331250 N 103 5598250 W 20 6331250 103 5598250 Economy Edit Riu Plaza Hotel the tallest skyscraper in the city Guadalajara has the third largest economy and industrial infrastructure in Mexico 53 and contributes 37 of the state of Jalisco s total gross production Its economic base is strong and well diversified mainly based on commerce and services although the manufacturing sector plays a defining role 54 It is ranked in the top ten in Latin America in gross domestic product and the third highest ranking in Mexico In its 2007 survey entitled Cities of the Future FDi magazine ranked Guadalajara highest among major Mexican cities and designated Guadalajara as having the second strongest economic potential of any major North American city behind Chicago FDI ranked it as the most business friendly Latin American city in 2007 55 The same research noted Guadalajara as a city of the future due to its youthful population low unemployment and large number of recent foreign investment deals it was found to be the third most business friendly city in North America 55 In 2009 Moody s Investors Service assigned ratings of Ba1 Global Scale local currency and A1 mx Mexican national scale During the prior five years the municipality s financial performance had been mixed but had begun to stabilize in the latter two years Guadalajara manages one of the largest budgets among Mexican municipalities and its revenue per capita indicator Ps 2 265 places it above the average for Moody s rated municipalities in Mexico 54 The city s economy has two main sectors Commerce and tourism employ most about 60 of the population The other is industry which has been the engine of economic growth and the basis of Guadalajara s economic importance nationally even though it employs only about a third of the population 20 54 56 Industries here produce products such as food and beverages toys textiles auto parts electronic equipment pharmaceuticals footwear furniture and steel products 20 56 Two of the major industries have been textiles and shoes which are still dynamic and growing 57 Sixty percent of manufactured products are sold domestically while forty percent are exported mostly to the United States 58 This makes Guadalajara s economic fortunes dependent on those of the U S both as a source of investment and as a market for its goods 59 The city has to compete with China especially for electronics industries which rely on high volume and low wages This has caused it to move toward high mix mid volume and value added services such as automotive However its traditional advantage of proximity to the U S market is one reason Guadalajara stays competitive 59 Mexico ranked third in 2009 in Latin America for the export of information technology services behind Brazil and Argentina This kind of service is mostly related to online and telephone technical support The major challenge this sector has is the lack of university graduates who speak English 60 Technology Edit The electronics and information technology sectors that have nicknamed the city the Silicon Valley of Mexico 58 Guadalajara is the main producer of software electronic and digital components in Mexico Telecom and computer equipment from Guadalajara accounts for about a quarter of Mexico s electronics exports 59 Companies such as General Electric IBM SANMINA Intel Corporation HCL Technologies Hitachi Ltd Hewlett Packard Enterprise HP Inc Siemens Flextronics Oracle Wipro TCS Cognizant Technology Solutions and Jabil Circuit have facilities in the city or its suburbs 58 This phenomenon began after the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA International firms started building facilities in Mexico especially Guadalajara displacing Mexican firms especially in information technology One of the problems this has created is that when there are economic downturns these international firms scale back 61 Guadalajara was selected as Smart City in 2013 by IEEE the world s largest professional association for the advancement of technology Several cities invest in the areas of research to design pilot projects and as an example in early March in 2013 was the first Cluster Smart Cities in the world composed of Dublin Ireland San Jose California Cardiff Wales and Guadalajara Jalisco whose objective is the exchange of information and experiences that can be applied in principle to issues of agribusiness and health sciences The Secretariat of Communications and Transportation also reported that Guadalajara Jalisco was chosen as the official venue for the first Digital Creative City of Mexico and Latin America which will be the spearhead for Mexico to consolidate the potential in this area The Cluster Smart Cities unprecedented in the world will focus on what each of these cities is making in innovation and the creation of an alliance to attract technology The Ministry of Innovation Science and Technology SICyT of Jalisco said the combination of talent development investments allows Jalisco to enter the knowledge economy From 25 to 28 October 2015 the city was the venue for the first conference of the Smart Cities Initiative 62 63 Industries Edit Hyatt Andares Hotel Most of the economy revolves around commerce employing 60 of the population 20 This activity has mainly focused on the purchase and sale of the following products food and beverages textiles electronic appliances tobacco cosmetics sports articles construction materials and others Guadalajara s commercial activity is second only to Mexico City 56 The city is the national leader in the development and investment of shopping malls Many shopping centers have been built such as Plaza Galerias one of the largest shopping centers in Latin America and Andares Galerias Guadalajara covers 160 000 m2 1 722 225 67 sq ft and has 220 stores It contains the two largest movie theaters in Latin America both with IMAX screens It hosts art exhibits and fashion shows and has an area for cultural workshops Anchor stores includes Liverpool and Sears and specialty stores such as Hugo Boss Max Mara Lacoste Tesla Motors Costco 64 Best Buy opened its first Guadalajara store here It has an additional private entrance on the top floor of the adjacent parking lot Another Best Buy store was inaugurated in Ciudadela Lifestyle Center mall which was the chain s third largest in the world according to the company Andares shopping mall in the Puerta de Hierro Zapopan district Andares is another important commercial center in Zapopan This 530 million mixed use complex opened in 2008 designed by renowned Mexican Sordo Madaleno architecture firm features luxury residences and a high level mall anchored by two large department stores Liverpool and El Palacio de Hierro The 133 000 m2 1 400 000 sq ft mall offers hundreds of stores a big food court located on the second floor and several restaurants at the Paseo Andares A large segment of the commercial sector caters to tourists and other visitors Recreational tourism is mainly concentrated in the historic downtown 20 In addition to being a cultural and recreational attraction and thanks to its privileged geographical location the city serves as an axis to nearby popular beach destinations such as Puerto Vallarta Manzanillo and Mazatlan 56 Other types of visitors include those who travel to attend seminars conventions and other events in fields such as academic entertainment sports and business The best known venue for this purpose is the Expo Guadalajara a large convention center surrounded by several hotels It was built in 1987 and it is considered the most important convention center in Mexico by whom Foreign trade Edit Most of Guadalajara s economic growth since 1990 has been tied with foreign investment International firms have invested here to take advantage of the relatively cheap but educated and highly productive labor establishing manufacturing plants that re export their products to the United States as well as provide goods for the domestic Mexican market 65 A media report in early October 2013 stated that five major Indian IT information technology companies have established offices in Guadalajara while several other Indian IT companies continue to explore the option of expanding to Mexico Due to the competitiveness in the Indian IT sector companies are expanding internationally and Mexico offers an affordable opportunity for Indian companies to better position themselves to enter the United States market The trend emerged after 2006 and the Mexican government offers incentives to foreign companies 66 Exports from the city went from US 3 92 billion in 1995 to 14 3 billion in 2003 56 From 1990 to 2000 socio economic indicators show that quality of life improved overall however there is still a large gap between the rich and the poor and the rich have benefited from the globalization and privatization of the economy more than the poor 67 International investment has affected the labor market in the metro area and that of the rural towns and villages that surround it Guadalajara is the distribution center for the region and its demands have led to a shifting of employment from traditional agriculture and crafts to manufacturing and commerce in urban centers This has led to mass migration from the rural areas to the metropolitan area 65 Culture EditMain article Culture of Guadalajara source source source source source source source source source source source source source source The Teatro Degollado named after its builder Santos Degollado was built in 1855 Guadalajara has a lively cultural life The city exhibits works by international artists and is a must see for international cultural events whose radius of influence reaches most of the countries of Latin America including the southwestern United States Its historic center houses colonial buildings of a religious and civil character which stand out for their architectural and historical significance and constitute a rich mixture of styles whose root is found in indigenous cultural contributions mainly of incorporated into the Mozarabic and the castilian and later in modern European influences mainly French and Italian The historic center also has museums theaters galleries libraries auditoriums and concert halls Some of these buildings date from the sixteenth and seventeenth century such as the Cathedral of the Archdiocese of Guadalajara among others The city has several radio stations focused on culture one of them being Red Radio University of Guadalajara XHUG F which is transmitted to the rest of the state and neighboring states and internationally through the Internet it is also the first broadcaster via podcast in the country 68 The city produces a fully cultural television channel XHGJG TV Guadalajara is the only city to produce a cultural cutting channel in the country in addition to the Mexico D F A in Mexico City citation needed Street in the historic center This city has been the cradle and dwelling of distinguished poets writers painters actors film directors and representatives of the arts etc such as Jose Clemente Orozco Dr Atl Roberto Montenegro Alejandro Zohn Luis Barragan Carlos Orozco Romero Federico Fabregat Raul Anguiano Juan Soriano Javier Campos Cabello Martha Pacheco Alejandro Colunga Jose Fors Juan Kraeppellin Davis Birks Carlos Vargas Pons Jis Trino Erandini Enrique Oroz Ruben Mendez Mauricio Toussaint Scott Neri Paula Santiago Edgar Cobian L Felipe Manzano and the artist formerly known as Mevna the freeplay guitarist and music composer for the movies El Mariachi and The Legend of Zorro Paco Renteria important exponents of literature such as Juan Rulfo Francisco Rojas Agustin Yanez Elias Nandino Idella Purnell Jorge Souza among others classic repertoire composers such as Gonzalo Curiel Jose Pablo Moncayo Antonio Navarro Ricardo Zohn Carlos Sanchez Gutierrez and Gabriel Pareyon film directors such as Felipe Cazals Jaime Humberto Hermosillo Erik Stahl Guillermo del Toro and actors such as Katy Jurado Enrique Alvarez Felix and Gael Garcia Bernal Guadalajara was the first Mexican city to be accepted as a member of the International Association of Educational Cities 69 70 due to its strong character and identity potential for economic development through culture Guadalajara was designated as the World Book Capital for 2022 by UNESCO 71 Despite the Guadalajara area historically being an ethnically Caxcan region the Nahua peoples form the majority of Guadalajara s indigenous population 72 There are several thousand indigenous language speakers in Guadalajara although the majority of the indigenous population is integrated within the general population and can speak Spanish 72 Museums Edit Guadalajara Regional Museum The museums in Guadalajara are an extension of the cultural infrastructure of this city Many of them stand out for their architectural and historical significance There are more than 189 forums of art exhibition among cultural centers museums private galleries and cultural spaces of the town hall several of them with centuries of existence and some others in the process of being built The museums in Guadalajara belong to the cultural framework of the city among which are in all its genres exhibiting history paleontology archeology ethnography paintings crafts plastic photography sculpture works of circuits international art etc Guadalajara has twenty two museums which include the Regional Museum of Jalisco the Wax Museum the Trompo Magico children s museum and the Museum of Anthropology 73 The Hospicio Cabanas in the historic center is a World Heritage Site 74 For these attributes and others the city was named an American Capital of Culture in 2005 75 Guadalajara and the surrounding metropolitan area have numerous public private and digital libraries for the search and consultation of information The promotion of culture and the enrichment of reading have made it easier for the citizen to require several facilities in the city Some of the libraries also have a physical enclosure among them the historic Octavio Paz Ibero American Library of the University of Guadalajara and the Public Library of the State of Jalisco located in the adjoining city of Zapopan with options for querying digital information over the Internet The Jalisco Regional Museum formerly the seminary of San Jose was built at the beginning of the 18th century to be the Seminario Conciliar de San Jose From 1861 to 1914 it housed a school called Liceo de Varones In 1918 it became the Museum of Fine Arts In 1976 it was completely remodeled for its present use The museum displays its permanent collection in 16 halls 15 of which are dedicated to Paleontology Pre History and Archeology One of the prized exhibits is a complete mammoth skeleton The other two halls are dedicated to painting and history The painting collection includes works by Juan Correa Cristobal de Villalpando and Jose de Ibarra 20 76 Architecture Edit The style of architecture prevalent in Europe during the founding of Guadalajara is paralleled in the city s colonial buildings The Metropolitan Cathedral and Teatro Degollado are the purest examples of neoclassical architecture The historical center hosts religious and civil colonial buildings which are noted for their architectural and historical significance and are a rich mix of styles that are rooted in indigenous cultural contributions mainly from Ute origin incorporated in the Mozarabic and castizo and later in modern European influences mainly French and Italian and American specifically from the United States The Plaza de la Liberacion in the historic center of Guadalajara es Guadalajara s historical center has an assortment of museums theaters galleries libraries auditoriums and concert halls particular mention may be made to Hospicio Cabanas which dates from the 18th century the Teatro Degollado considered the oldest opera house in Mexico the Teatro Galerias and the Teatro Diana The Hospicio Cabanas which is home to some of the paintings murals and easel by Jose Clemente Orozco was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1997 Among the many structures of beauty is the International Headquarters Temple of La Luz del Mundo in Colonia Hermosa Provincia which is the largest in Latin America During the Porfiriato the French style invaded the city because of the passion of former president Porfirio Diaz in the trends of French style also Italian architects were responsible for shaping the Gothic structures that were built in the city The passage of time reflected different trends from the baroque to churrigueresque Gothic and neoclassical pure San Felipe de Neri Church The French inspired Lafayette neighborhood has many fine examples of early 20th century residences that were later converted into boutiques and restaurants Even the architectural lines typical of the decades of the 1940s 1950s and 1960s the Art Deco and bold lines of postmodern architects of the time Architectural styles found in the city include Baroque Viceregal Neoclassical Modern Eclectic Art Deco and Neo Gothic The modern architecture of Guadalajara has numerous figures of different architectural production from the neo regionalism to the primitiveness of the 1960s Some of these architects are Rafael Urzua Luis Barragan Ignacio Diaz Morales Pedro Castellanos Eric Coufal Julio de la Pena Eduardo Ibanez Valencia Felix Aceves OrtegaGuadalajara s modern architecture has figures of diverse architectural output from neo regionalism to the brutalism of the 1970s One of these architects are Rafael Urzua Luis Barragan Ignacio Diaz Morales Pedro Castellano Eric Coufal July de la Pena Eduardo Ibanez Valencia Festivals Edit The Guadalajara International Film Festival founded in 1986 is the most important film festival in Latin America Guadalajara is also known for several large cultural festivals The International Film Festival of Guadalajara 77 is a yearly event which happens in March It mostly focuses on Mexican and Latin American films however films from all over the world are shown The event is sponsored by the Universidad de Guadalajara CONACULTA the Instituto Mexicano de Cinematographia as well as the governments of the cities of Guadalajara and Zapopan The 2009 festival had over 200 films shown in more than 16 theaters and open air forums such as the inflatable screens set up in places such as Chapultepec La Rambla Cataluna and La Minerva In that year the event gave out awards totaling US 500 000 The event attracts names such as Mexican director Guillermo del Toro Greek director Constantin Costa Gavras Spanish actor Antonio Banderas and U S actor Edward James Olmos 78 The handover presentation during the 2007 Pan American Games closing ceremony for the 2011 Pan American Games in Guadalajara The Guadalajara International Book Fair is the largest Spanish language book fair in the world held each year over nine days at the Expo Guadalajara 79 80 Over 300 publishing firms from 35 countries regularly attend demonstrating the most recent productions in books videos and new communications technologies The event awards prizes such as the Premio FIL for literature the Premio de Literatura Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz also for literature and the Reconocimento al Merito Editorial for publishing houses There is an extensive exposition of books and other materials in Spanish Portuguese and English covering academia culture the arts and more for sale More than 350 000 people attend from Mexico and abroad 79 In 2009 Nobel prize winner Orhan Pamuk German children s author Cornelia Funke and Peruvian writer Mario Vargas Llosa participated with about 500 other authors present 81 Activities include book presentations academic talks forums and events for children 80 The Guadalajara International Book Fair is the largest Spanish language fair in the world as well as the largest book fair in the Americas The Danza de los Tastoanes is an event hosted annually on July 25 at the Municipal President s building where the folklore dancers perform one of the oldest traditional dances and combat battle performance to honor the combats against the Spanish 82 The Festival Cultural de Mayo May Cultural Festival began in 1988 In 2009 the event celebrated the 400th anniversary of relations between Mexico and Japan with many performances and exhibitions relation to Japanese culture The 2009 festival featured 358 artists in 118 activities Each year a different country is invited Past guests have been Germany 2008 Mexico 2007 Spain 2006 and Austria 2005 France is the 2013 guest 83 The Expo Ganadera is an event hosted annually in the month of October where people from all over the country attend to display the best examples of the breed and their quality that is produced in Jalisco The event also works to promote technological advances in agriculture The event also has separate sections for the authentic Mexican cuisine exhibitions of livestock charreria and other competitions that display the Jalisco traditions 84 Notable festivals include Arbol adentro by Jose Fors May Cultural Festival Guadalajara International Book Fair 85 this fair is held every year thanks to the auspices of the University of Guadalajara during the last week of November It includes a large exhibition of consolidated independent university national international publishers books and lectures are presented it has a special area for children and young people it is very significant for showing during the ten days of the fair to a guest country or region or community to which a pavilion is dedicated to exposing the most representative of its culture In the FIL as it is popularly known several awards are awarded the most representative is the Juan Rulfo Award Latin American and Caribbean Literature Award formerly known as Juan Rulfo in honor of this author jalisciense The festivities of October These are the traditional festivals of Guadalajara have been held since 1965 being the first headquarters the Agua Azul Park and years later it would change headquarters to the Benito Juarez auditorium that is where this celebration is currently held Its main attractions are the mechanical games the palenque and the auditorium where various artists especially Mexican music are performed every night during this celebration of the October festivities The Feast of the Dolls Guadalajara International Puppet Festival The International Meeting of Mariachi and Charreria As its name says various mariachis from different parts of the world gather As well as the charros that come from various parts to demonstrate the national sport of Mexico It starts with a parade and over the days events are held in various scenarios throughout the city It is held between the months of August and September Expo Ganadera Es the largest and most important of its kind in the country It is usually performed during the month of October The Guadalajara International Film Festival known as Guadalajara Film Fest With more than twenty years of experience FICG is the most important event in Mexico in terms of film which includes an exhibition of films an encounter with filmmakers and actors talent campus and the contest of realizations that are awarded in several categories Ibero American and Mexican short film Mexican and Latin American documentary a fictional feature film among which the Mayahuel in which a trajectory is awarded The International Festival of Contemporary Dance Onesimo Gonzalez It was organized since 1999 organized by the Ministry of Culture of the Government of the State of Jalisco and the National Dance Coordination of INBA Having in this choreographic examples of the most outstanding dance groups of the state of Jalisco with some guest national and international companies promoting cultural exchange within Guadalajara while offering open master classes to the public to enrich the dance language in this state Performing every October at the Art and Culture Forum of this city Expo International Friendship Fair This city has been the cradle and shelter of distinguished poet writers painters actors filmmakers and representatives of art internationally One work that accounts for the richness of the poets of this city is the book Major Poetry in Guadalajara Poetic Annotations and Criticisms Landmarks Edit The historic downtown of Guadalajara is the oldest section of the city where it was founded and where the oldest buildings are It centers on Paseo Morelos Paseo Hospicio from the Plaza de Armas where the seats of ecclesiastical and secular power are east toward the Plaza de los Mariachis and the Hospicio Cabanas The Plaza de Armas is a rectangular plaza with gardens ironwork benches and an ironwork kiosk which was made in Paris in the 19th century 20 76 Landmarks and monuments of Guadalajara Hospicio Cabanas Palacio del Gobierno Palacio Legislativo Guadalajara Monument Senora del Pilar Church Palacio de Velasco es Rotonda de los Hombres Ilustres Guadalajara City Hall Templo Expiatorio Senora de la Merced Church Palacio de Justicia Sanctuary of Guadalupe es Within Guadalajara s historic downtown there are many squares and public parks Parque Morelos Plaza de los Mariachis Plaza Fundadores Plaza Tapatia Plaza del Agave Parque Revolucion Jardin del Santuario Plaza de Armas Plaza de la Liberacion Plaza Guadalajara and the Rotonda de los Jaliscienses Ilustres the last four of which surround the cathedral to form a Latin Cross 86 Construction began on the Metropolitan Cathedral in 1558 and the church was consecrated in 1616 Its two towers were built in the 19th century after an earthquake destroyed the originals They are considered one of the city s symbols The architecture is a mix of Gothic Baroque Moorish and Neoclassical The interior has three naves and eleven side altars covered by a roof supported by 30 Doric columns 76 San Jose de Gracia Church built in 1899 The Rotonda de los Hombres Ilustres Rotunda of Illustrious Men is a monument made of quarried stone built in 1952 to honor the memory of distinguished people from Jalisco A circular structure of 17 columns surrounds 98 urns containing the remains of those honored Across the street is the municipal palace which was built in 1952 It has four facades of quarried stone It is mostly of Neoclassical design with elements such as courtyards entrances and columns that imitate the older structures of the city 20 76 The Palace of the State Government is in Churrigueresque and Neoclassical styles and was begun in the 17th century and finished in 1774 The interior was completely remodeled after an explosion in 1859 This building contains murals by Jose Clemente Orozco a native of Jalisco including Lucha Social Circo Politico Las Fuerzas Ocultas and Hidalgo which depicts Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla with his arm raised above his head in anger at the government and the church 76 The cathedral is bordered to the east by the Plaza de la Liberacion nicknamed the Plaza de las Dos Copas referring to the two fountains on the east and west sides Facing this plaza is the Teatro Degollado Degollado Theater It was built in the mid nineteenth century in Neoclassical design The main portal has a pediment with a scene in relief called Apollo and the Muses sculpted in marble by Benito Castaneda The interior vaulted ceiling is painted with a fresco by Jacobo Galvez and Gerardo Suarez which depicts a scene from the Divine Comedy Behind the theater is another plaza with a fountain called the Fuente de los Fundadores Fountain of the Founders The plaza is in the exact spot where the city was founded and contains a sculpture depicting Cristobal de Onate at the event finsemana 20 Between the Cathedral and the Hospicio is the large Plaza Tapatia which covers 70 000 m2 750 000 sq ft Its centerpiece is Inmolacion de Quetzalcoatl 20 Southeast of this plaza is the Mercado Libertad also called the Mercado de San Juan de Dios one of the largest traditional markets in Mexico The Temple of San Juan de Dios a Baroque church built in the 17th century is next to the market 76 Equestrian statue of Jose Maria Morelos At the far east end is the Plaza de los Mariachis and the Ex Hospicio Cabanas The Plaza de los Mariachis is faced by restaurants where one can hear live mariachis play especially at night The Ex Hospicio Cabanas extends along the entire east side of the Plaza This building was constructed by Manuel Tolsa beginning in 1805 under orders of Carlos III It was inaugurated and began its function as an orphanage in 1810 in spite of the fact that it would not be finished until 1845 It was named after Bishop Ruiz de Cabanas y Crespo The facade is Neoclassical and its main entrance is topped by a triangular pediment Today it is the home of the Instituto Cultural Cabanas Cabanas Cultural Institute and its main attraction is the murals by Jose Clemente Orozco which cover the main entrance hall Among these murals is Hombre del Fuego Man of Fire considered to be one of Orozco s finest works 20 76 Off this east west axis are other significant constructions The Legislative Place is Neoclassical and was originally built in the 18th century It was reconstructed in 1982 The Palace of Justice was finished in 1897 The Old University Building was a Jesuit college named Santo Tomas de Aquino It was founded in 1591 It became the second Mexican University in 1792 Its main portal is of yellow stone The Casa de los Perros House of the Dogs was constructed in 1896 in Neoclassical design 20 On Avenida Juarez is the Sanctuary of Nuestra Senora del Carmen which was founded between 1687 and 1690 and remodeled completely in 1830 It retains its original coat of arms of the Carmelite Order as well as sculptures of the prophets Elijah and Elisha Adjoining it is what is left of the Carmelite monastery which was one of the richest in New Spain 76 Music Edit Guadalajara Arena Project Mariachi music is strongly associated with Guadalajara both in Mexico and abroad even though the musical style originated in the nearby town of Cocula Jalisco The connection between the city and mariachi began in 1907 when an eight piece mariachi band and four dancers from the city performed on stage at the president s residence for both Porfirio Diaz and the Secretary of State of the United States This made the music a symbol of west Mexico and after the migration of many people from the Guadalajara area to Mexico City mostly settling near Plaza Garibaldi it then became a symbol of Mexican identity as well 87 Guadalajara hosts the Festival of Mariachi and Charreria which began in 1994 It attracts people in the fields of art culture and politics from Mexico and abroad Regularly the best mariachis in Mexico participate such as Mariachi Vargas Mariachi de America and Mariachi los Camperos de Nati Cano Mariachi bands from all over the world participate coming from countries such as Venezuela Cuba Belgium Chile France Australia Slovak Republic Canada and the United States Plaza de los Mariachis The events of this festival take place in venues all over the metropolitan area 88 89 and include a parade with floats 89 In August 2009 542 mariachi musicians played together for a little over ten minutes to break the world record for largest mariachi group The musicians played various songs ending with two classic Mexican songs Cielito Lindo and Guadalajara The feat was performed during the XVI Encuentro Internacional del Mariachi y la Charreria The prior record was 520 musicians in 2007 in San Antonio Texas 90 In the historic center of the city is the Plaza de los Mariachis named such as many groups play here The plaza was renovated for the 2011 Pan American Games in anticipation of the crowds visiting Over 750 mariachi musicians play traditional melodies on the plaza and along with the restaurants and other businesses the plaza supports more than 830 families 91 Jalisco Philharmonic Orchestra A recent innovation has been the fusion of mariachi melodies and instruments with rock and roll performed by rock musicians in the Guadalajara area An album collecting a number of these melodies was produced called Mariachi Rock O There are plans to take these bands on tour in Mexico the United States and Europe 92 The city is also host to several dance and ballet companies such as the Chamber Ballet of Jalisco the Folkloric Ballet of the University of Guadalajara and the University of Guadalajara Contemporary Ballet The city is home to a renowned symphony orchestra The Orquesta Filarmonica de Jalisco Jalisco Philharmonic Orchestra was founded by Jose Rolon in 1915 It held concerts from that time until 1924 when state funding was lost However the musicians kept playing to keep the orchestra alive This eventually caught the attention of authorities and funding was restated in 1939 Private funding started in the 1940s and in 1950 an organization called Conciertos Guadalajara A C was formed to continue fundraising for the orchestra In 1971 the orchestra became affiliated with the Department of Fine Arts of the State of Jalisco The current name was adopted in 1988 International soloists such as Paul Badura Skoda Claudio Arrau Jorg Demus Henryck Szeryng Nicanor Zabaleta Placido Domingo Kurt Rydl and Alfred Brendel have performed with the organization Today the orchestra is under the direction of Marco Parisotto 93 Cuisine Edit Cafe on Avenida Vallarta As in the rest of Mexico food in Guadalajara is a mix of pre Hispanic and Spanish influences Typical Mexican dishes such as pozole tamales sopes enchiladas tacos menudo soup carne en su jugo and frijoles charros are popular One dish specific to Guadalajara is the torta ahogada It consists of a salted bun or roll typically birote smeared with refried beans with fried pork cut into pieces also known as carnitas all in tomato sauce seasoned with spices It is eaten with onions reduced in lemon and hot sauce Accompanying drinks can include tejuino which is made with a base of sourdough corn accompanied by lemon ice cream or tepache which is made from the bark of fermented pineapple Another typical meal of Guadalajara and the entire state of Jalisco is the birria which is usually made with either pork beef or goat Handcrafted birria is made in a special oven which can be underground and covered with maguey leaves the meat can be mixed with a tomato broth and spices or consumed separately 94 The traditional way of preparing birria is to pit roast the meat and spices wrapped in maguey leaves 95 It is served in bowls with minced onion limes and tortillas Tequila can only be produced in Jalisco in the regions north of Guadalajara around Santiago de Tequila and Los Altos de Jalisco Another typical dish of the tapatia kitchen is the carne en su jugo es This dish consists of a beef broth with beans from the pot and is accompanied by bacon coriander onion and radish sliced or whole The dessert that is considered as a typical tapatio is the jericalla When the Spanish conquistadors arrived in the Aztec empire a few religious ceremonies included eating pozole made with hominy and human flesh This was the first type of pozole mentioned in Spanish writing as a ritual dish eaten only by select priests and noblemen The meat from the thighs of slain enemy warriors was used The Franciscan missionaries ended this custom when they banned Aztec religious ceremonies The pozole in the local common cuisine was related to the ritual dish but prepared with turkey meat and later pork not with human flesh 96 Torta ahogada a typical dish Other dishes that are popular here include pozole a soup prepared with hominy pork or chicken topped with cabbage radishes minced onions and other condiments pipian which is a sauce prepared with peanuts squash and sesame seed and bionico a popular local dessert Jericallas are a typical Guadalajara dessert that is similar to flan that was created to give children proper nutrients while being delicious It is made with eggs milk sugar vanilla and cinnamon and baked in the oven where it is broiled to the point that a burnt layer is produced The burnt layer at the surface is what makes this dessert special and delicious 97 One of the drinks that is popular in Guadalajara is Tejuino a refreshing drink that contains a corn fermented base with sugarcane lime salt and chili powder 98 The city hosts the Feria Internacional Gastronomia International Gastronomy Fair each year in September showcasing Mexican and international cuisines Many restaurants bars bakeries and cafes participate as well as producers of beer wine and tequila 94 Sports Edit Estadio Akron House of Chivas football team built for the 2010 Copa Libertadores Guadalajara is home to four professional football teams Guadalajara also known as Chivas Atlas C D Oro and Universidad de Guadalajara Guadalajara is the most successful and the most followed club in the country 99 They have won the Mexican Primera Division a total of 12 times and have won the Copa MX four times In 2017 Chivas became the first team in Mexican football history to win a Double a league and cup title in a single season on two different occasions and their first since the 1969 70 season 100 Chivas went on to win the 2018 CONCACAF Champions League final against Major League Soccer side Toronto FC the second time they have won the tournament Chivas won the first ever CONCACAF Champions League and are the only Guadalajara based football team to win the tournament Atlas also plays in the Mexican Primera Division They are known in the country as The academy hence they have provided Mexico s finest football players among them Rafael Marquez Oswaldo Sanchez Pavel Pardo Andres Guardado and the Mexican national team s former top scorer Jared Borgetti Atlas also won several championships in amateur tournaments and the first championship for a Guadalajaran team in 1951 They won the first division championship again in 2021 Estudiantes was associated with the Universidad Autonoma de Guadalajara A C It played in the Primera Division with home games in the Estadio 3 de Marzo March 3 Stadium for the university s 1935 date of founding They ve won also a single Championship back in 1994 as they defeated Santos The team moved to Zacatecas and became the Mineros de Zacatecas in May 2014 Estadio Charros built for the 2011 Pan American Games Starting in October 2014 Guadalajara rejoined the Liga Mexicana del Pacifico baseball tournament with the Charros de Jalisco franchise in play at the Athletic Stadium Charreada the Mexican form of rodeo and closely tied to mariachi music is popular here The biggest place for Charreada competitions the VFG Arena is located near the Guadalajara Airport founded by singer Vicente Fernandez Every September 15 charros make a parade in the downtown streets to celebrate the Charro and Mariachi Day 88 Guadalajara hosted the 2011 Pan American Games 101 Since winning the bid to host the Games the city had been undergoing extensive renovations The games brought in more than 5 000 athletes from approximately 42 countries from the Americas and the Caribbean Sports included aquatics football racquetball and 27 more with six others being considered COPAG the Organizing Committee for the Pan American Games Guadalajara 2011 had a total budget of US 250 million with the aim of updating the city s sports and general infrastructure The center of the city was repaved and new hotels were constructed for the approximately 22 000 rooms that were needed in 2011 The new bus rapid transit BRT system Macrobus was launched in March and runs along Avenida Independencia The Pan American village was built around the Bajio Zone After the Games the buildings will be used for housing There are already 13 existing venues in Guadalajara that the games will use including the Jalisco Stadium UAG 3 de Marzo Stadium and the UAG Gymnasium Eleven new sporting facilities were created for the event Other works included a second terminal in the airport a highway to Puerto Vallarta and a bypass for the southern part of the city 102 Lorena Ochoa a now retired former 1 female golfer Sergio Perez who drives for Red Bull Racing F1 Team in Formula One and Javier Chicharito Hernandez a forward who currently plays for LA Galaxy and the Mexico national team were also born in the city The city hosted the 2021 WTA Finals the first time the tournament was played in Latin America The city will be one of three cities in Mexico to host matches during the 2026 FIFA World Cup 103 Government Edit City Palace of Guadalajara As the capital of the state the city is the seat of the state s government As a result state politics have a heavy influence on local decision making and vice versa Historically the mayorship of the city has been a common leaping platform for the state governorship Additionally because of the sheer size of the Guadalajara Metropolitan Area vis a vis the rest of the state the city s urban agglomeration largely dominated and coordinated by the Guadalajara city council captures 12 of the 20 seats in the state legislature allocated by the district All three branches of the state government are concentrated around the historic city center with the Palace of Government the seat of the state executive immediately southeast of the cathedral North across the Plaza de la Liberacion is the State Legislature Building and immediately east of the latter is the Supreme Tribunal of State Justice Palace of Justice of Jalisco Like other municipalities in Mexico Guadalajara is governed by a municipal president who exercises executive power for three consecutive years This office is currently occupied by Enrique Alfaro Movimiento Ciudadano The legislature has the cabildo formed by the form chosen by the candidate for mayor made up of aldermen who are not elected by the people by direct or indirect voting but the return happens automatically if the mayor wins The municipality is divided into five electoral districts for the purpose of election of representatives of the city in the federal legislature These districts are the VIII IX XI XIII and XIV of the state of Jalisco The city and the municipality of Guadalajara are essentially co extensive with over 99 of the municipality living within the city limits and nearly all of the municipality urbanized 20 104 Urbanization centered on the city spreads out over seven other municipalities of Zapopan Tlaquepaque Tonala Tlajomulco de Zuniga El Salto Ixtlahuacan de los Membrillos and Juanacatlan 30 These areas form the Guadalajara Metropolitan Area Zona Metropolitana de Guadalajara in Spanish which is the most populous in the state of Jalisco and the second most populous in the country after the Mexico City Metropolitan area 30 This metropolitan area had a population of 4 298 715 in 2008 105 30 Municipal presidents of Guadalajara Edit Main article List of municipal presidents of GuadalajaraEducation Edit The University of Guadalajara founded in 1791 is one of the highest ranking universities in Latin America State Library of Jalisco Guadalajara is an important hub for higher education in both Mexico and Latin America as the home to numerous nationally and internationally ranked universities and research centers The most important is the University of Guadalajara which was established on October 12 1791 by royal decree 106 The entity underwent a number of reorganizations since then but the modern university as it exists today was established in 1925 when the governor of Jalisco convened professors students and others to re establish the university These precepts were organized into a law called the Ley Organica 107 It was ranked fifth among the best Mexican universities in 2012 108 Guadalajara University Center of Art Architecture and Design Guadalajara is home to Universidad Autonoma de Guadalajara UAG which was founded in 1935 and is the oldest private university in Mexico 109 and Universidad del Valle de Atemajac UNIVA and the Western Institute of Technology and Higher Education The city hosts campuses of several private schools including Universidad Panamericana Universidad La Salle ITESO Jesuit University of Guadalajara Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education Guadalajara Metropolitan Technological University es Universidad del Valle de Mexico Universidad Marista de Guadalajara es Universidad Tecnologica de Guadalajara es Universidad del Valle de AtemajacIn addition the city hosts numerous international schools including American School Foundation of Guadalajara ASFG 110 Lycee Francais de Guadalajara Colegio Aleman de GuadalajaraTransportation Edit source Guadalajara s light rail system Guadalajara is well connected by a number of modern highways These include Fed 15D which connects the city northwestward to Nogales Sonora via Tepic Nayarit and eastwards to Mexico City via Morelia Fed 80D which runs northwest toward Aguascalientes and Fed 54D which runs southward to the coast via Colima The city s well connected transportation infrastructure allows easy access to Mexico City to the southeast and to the major beach resorts of Manzanillo Mazatlan and Puerto Vallarta to the southwest northwest and west respectively The Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla Guadalajara International Airport also known as Guadalajara International Airport ICAO code MMGL opened in 1966 It is located 16 km 10 mi south of downtown Guadalajara and it was built on the Tlajomulco de Zuniga city near Chapala The airport is the third most active in the country after Mexico City and Cancun with direct flights to many Mexican and American cities 111 Within the city itself there are many forms of public transportation The Guadalajara light rail system named SITEUR Sistema de Tren Electrico Urbano Spanish for Urban Electrical Train System provides rapid transit service within Guadalajara and the neighboring municipalities of Zapopan and Tlaquepaque It consists of 3 lines line 1 running from north to south with 19 stations line 2 running from downtown to the east with 10 stations and line 3 The trains are electric and have a top speed of 70 km h 43 mph The 48 articulated cars currently in service 112 were built in Mexico by Concarril Bombardier 113 Construction on a third line began in 2014 Line 3 will run from Zapopan in the northwest to Tlaquepaque and Tonala in the southeast via the city center 114 Guadalajara International Airport is the 10th busiest airport in Latin America and a hub for Aeromexico Volaris Interjet and VivaAerobus The Guadalajara Macrobus is a public transportation system based on the concept of bus rapid transit where each bus has a single route and boarding station Phase I of the Macrobus project opened in 2009 with a 16 kilometer long 9 9 mi corridor following Calzada Independencia and serving 27 stations 115 The Guadalajara trolleybus system has been operating since the 1970s 113 116 along with many city buses run by private companies and a bustling network of pedestrianized streets Mi Bici Publica PBSC Urban Solutions based public bike share system was launched in 2014 In 2016 the city implemented 242 docking stations and 2116 bikes 117 As of September 2018 Mi Bici has 19 664 annually subscribed users 118 In Guadalajara a person spends an average of 82 minutes per weekday commuting with public transportation 23 of public transit riders ride for more than 2 hours every day The average amount of time people wait at a stop or station for public transit is 15 min while 22 of riders wait for an average of over 20 minutes each day The average distance people usually ride in a single trip with public transit is 8 km and 16 travel for over 12 km in a single direction 119 International relations EditDiplomatic missions Edit Guadalajara hosts the presence of numerous diplomatic missions as well as numerous honorary consulates 120 Consulates Consulate General of the United States Consulate of Canada Consulate of Spain Consulate of South Korea Consulate of France Consulate of Germany Consulate of Brazil Consulate of Colombia Consulate of Australia Consulate General of Panama Consulate of Iceland Consulate of the Dominican Republic Consulate of Peru Consulate of El Salvador Consulate of Malaysia Consulate of the Philippines Honorary missions Honorary Consulate of Austria Honorary Consulate of Belgium Honorary Consulate of Chile Honorary Consulate of Cyprus Honorary Consulate of Costa Rica Honorary Consulate of Denmark Honorary Consulate of Ecuador Honorary Consulate of Russia Honorary Consulate of Finland Honorary Consulate of Guatemala Honorary Consulate of Haiti Honorary Consulate of Hungary Honorary Consulate of India Honorary Consulate of Israel Honorary Consulate of Italy Honorary Consulate of Japan Honorary Consulate of Lebanon Honorary Consulate of Nicaragua Honorary Consulate of Norway Honorary Consulate of the Netherlands Honorary Consulate of Pakistan Honorary Consulate of Paraguay Honorary Consulate of Poland Honorary Consulate of Czech Republic Honorary Consulate of the United Kingdom Honorary Consulate of Romania Honorary Consulate of South Africa Honorary Consulate of Sweden Honorary Consulate of Switzerland Honorary Consulate of Uruguay Twin towns sister cities Edit See also List of twin towns and sister cities in Mexico Guadalajara is twinned with 121 122 123 Alajuela Costa Rica 1983 Albuquerque United States 1985 Caracas Venezuela 1976 Cebu City Philippines 1976 Cigales Spain 1992 Changwon South Korea 2013 Curitiba Brazil 1995 Daejeon South Korea 1997 Downey United States 1960 Guadalajara Spain 1982 Guam United States 1976 Kansas City United States 1993 Kingston Jamaica 1976 Kyoto Japan 1978 Lansing United States 1990 Laredo United States 2006 Lima Peru 1976 Malabo Equatorial Guinea 1976 Onati Spain 2003 Panama City Panama 1976 Portland United States 1983 Saint Petersburg Russia 2011 San Antonio United States 1974 San Jose Costa Rica 1976 San Jose United States 2014 San Salvador El Salvador 1976 Santo Domingo Dominican Republic 1976 Seville Spain 1977 Tegucigalpa Honduras 1976 Wroclaw Poland 1995 Xiamen China 2003 Domestic cooperation Edit Cocula 2005 Cozumel 2010 Magdalena de Kino 1984 Nochistlan 1997 Oaxaca de Juarez 2007 Quintana Roo San Luis Potosi 2006 Zacatecas Agreements cooperation Edit Buenos Aires 124 Santiago 124 Ciudad de Mexico 124 See also Edit Mexico portalList of people from Guadalajara List of companies based in Guadalajara Culture of Guadalajara Flag of Guadalajara Coat of arms of GuadalajaraReferences Edit a b Division municipal Jalisco Cuentame inegi org mx Tendencia en PREP da triunfo a Pablo Lemus en Guadalajara El Heraldo de Mexico in Spanish 7 June 2021 Retrieved 14 February 2022 Diccionario de la lengua espanola Real Academia Espanola Archived from the original on 2014 02 01 Retrieved 2014 05 01 guadalajarense Definicion quequm la pelan Word Reference Archived from the original on 2014 04 22 Retrieved 2014 05 01 Guadalajara or Guadalahara Dictionary com Retrieved 12 February 2021 Area Metropolitana de Guadalajara Gobierno del Estado de Jalisco in Spanish Retrieved 1 February 2021 Censo de Poblacion y Vivienda 2020 SCITEL in Spanish Retrieved 2021 02 01 Conapo gob mx Archived from the original on May 6 2009 Juan Carlos Aceros Gualdron Scripta Nova Ub es Archived from the original on 2010 07 06 Retrieved 2010 06 07 Aumenta la demanda de las oficinas suburbanas en Bajio elfinanciero Archived from the original on 2017 03 21 Retrieved 2016 12 04 Estados del Bajio crecen a ritmo asiatico Banamex informador Archived from the original on 2017 03 19 Retrieved 2016 12 04 City Mayors reviews the richest cities in the world in 2005 Citymayors com 2007 03 11 Archived from the original on 2012 09 18 Retrieved 2010 06 07 The Economist Intelligence Unit Hot Spots Benchmarking Global City Competitiveness PDF Archived from the original PDF on 1 November 2013 El Universal Los Estados San Juan de Dios el Tepito tapatio March 2014 https time com collection worlds greatest places 2023 6261769 guadalajara mexico https inguadalajara com history text It 20was 20founded 20on 20January 205 2C 201532 20Cristobal conquests 20yet 20able 20to 20defend 20the 20natural 20bellicosity GaWC The World According to GaWC 2010 www lboro ac uk Retrieved 2022 03 05 US News amp World Report Best Global Universities in Latin America 2019 Latin America Rankings Times Higher Education THE June 5 2019 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 Enciclopedia de los Municipios de Mexico Estado de Jalisco Guadalajara in Spanish Mexico Instituto Nacional para el Federalismo y el Desarrollo Municipal Archived from the original on June 16 2011 Retrieved January 14 2010 Kirkwood Burton 2000 History of Mexico Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing p 62 Retrieved January 13 2010 a b c Napolitano Valentina 2002 Migration Mujercitas and Medicine Men Living in Urban Mexico Ewing New Jersey USA University of California Press p 21 Retrieved January 13 2010 Kirkwood Burton 2000 History of Mexico Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group p 82 Retrieved January 13 2010 a b Kirkwood Burton 2000 History of Mexico Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group p 83 Retrieved January 13 2010 Sosa Francisco 1985 Biografias de Mexicanos Distinguidos Miguel Hidalgo in Spanish Vol 472 Mexico City Editorial Porrua pp 288 292 ISBN 968 452 050 6 Fowler Will 1998 Mexico in the Age of Proposals 1821 1853 Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group p 41 Retrieved January 13 2010 Napolitano Valentina 2002 Migration Mujercitas and Medicine Men Living in Urban Mexico Ewing New Jersey USA University of California Press p 18 Retrieved January 13 2010 a b Guadalajara Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 2010 Retrieved January 14 2010 permanent dead link Napolitano Valentina 2002 Migration Mujercitas and Medicine Men Living in Urban Mexico Ewing New Jersey USA University of California Press pp 20 21 Retrieved January 13 2010 a b c d Consejo Nacional de Poblacion Mexico Delimitacion de las zonas metropolitanas de Mexico 2005 Archived May 6 2009 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008 10 18 Napolitano Valentina 2002 Migration Mujercitas and Medicine Men Living in Urban Mexico Ewing New Jersey USA University of California Press pp 23 24 Retrieved January 13 2010 Napolitano Valentina 2002 Migration Mujercitas and Medicine Men Living in Urban Mexico Ewing New Jersey USA University of California Press pp 21 22 Retrieved January 13 2010 Napolitano Valentina 2002 Migration Mujercitas and Medicine Men Living in Urban Mexico Ewing New Jersey USA University of California Press pp 20 22 Retrieved January 13 2010 Dugal James 1999 Guadalajara Gas Explosion Disaster In Disaster Recovery Journal 5 3 Archived from the original on 2016 01 02 Eisner Peter 28 April 1992 Nine officials charged in sewer line explosions case The Tech Massachusetts Institute of Technology 112 22 Archived from the original on 5 October 2011 Retrieved 14 January 2010 The Guadalajara 1992 Sewer Gas Explosion Disaster Massachusetts SEMP 3 May 2006 Archived from the original on 10 February 2009 Retrieved January 14 2010 Legal documents pertaining to this case umn edu Archived from the original on 2009 09 02 Retrieved 2010 06 07 News on Pemex indictment Time 11 May 1992 Archived from the original on 2 September 2009 Retrieved 14 January 2010 Kirkwood Burton 2000 History of Mexico Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group p 206 Retrieved January 13 2010 Gomez s Gabriela amp Rodelo Frida V 2012 El protagonismo de la violencia en los medios de comunicacion The prominence of violence in the media In Rodriguez Gomez Guadalupe ed Social reality and violence Guadalajara Metropolitan Area social incide Institute of Technology and Higher Studies of the West ISBN 978 607 8044 09 2 Syqueiros Luis Felipe 2012 The territory the environment and the urban conditions In Rodriguez Gomez Guadalupe ed the social reality and the Violence Metropolitan Area of Guadalajara Social Incide Institute of Technology and Higher Studies of the West a b c Megaconstrucciones net English Version Web Megaconstrucciones Boletin Informativo Portal Ayuntamiento de Guadalajara Archived from the original on October 17 2007 http plazadelsol com home html title Plaza permanent dead link del https web archive org web 20070421062751 http plazadelsol com home html fechafile 21 April 2007 http siteur jalisco gob mx org htm titulo Siteur permanent dead link https web archive org web 20070331145627 http siteur jalisco gob mx org htm datefile 31 March 2007 Universidad Autonoma de Guadalajara UAG www uag mx FDi Magazine Cities of the Future Archived from the original on 2009 09 16 Retrieved 2010 06 07 El Nino Arrives on Schedule Environment Canada 2009 12 23 Retrieved February 2 2013 NORMALES CLIMATOLoGICAS 1951 2010 in Spanish Servicio Meteorologico Nacional Archived from the original on October 28 2017 Retrieved August 30 2012 Extreme Temperatures and Precipitation for Guadalajara 1931 2010 in Spanish Servicio Meteorologico Nacional Archived from the original on October 27 2017 Retrieved January 21 2013 NORMALES CLIMATOLoGICAS 1981 2000 PDF in Spanish Servicio Meteorologico Nacional Archived from the original PDF on January 30 2016 Retrieved January 23 2016 Klimatafel von Guadalajara Jalisco Mexiko PDF Baseline climate means 1961 1990 from stations all over the world in German Deutscher Wetterdienst Archived PDF from the original on August 3 2019 Retrieved January 23 2016 Jalisco Ministry of Tourism 2009 08 29 Jalisco Leads in Mexico s Tourism Recovery and Hosts the 2009 North American Leaders Summit Leisure amp Travel Week Atlanta Georgia 10 a b c Moody s 2008 04 16 Moody s Assigns Issuer Rating Of A1 MX To The Municipality of Guadalajara Jalisco Info Prod Research Middle East Ramat Gan a b Cities of the Future FDi Magazine Archived from the original on 2009 09 16 Retrieved 2007 05 11 a b c d e Economy Guadalajara Mexico Government of Jalisco Archived from the original on March 12 2006 Retrieved January 24 2010 El Bosque Industrial Park in Spanish Guadalajara Mexico El Bosque Industrial Park Archived from the original on September 23 2009 Retrieved January 24 2010 a b c Jalisco IT Guadalajara Mexico IJALTI Jalisco Archived from the original on September 14 2009 Retrieved January 24 2010 a b c Norvell Robin December 2005 Guadalajara Winning Back Business from Asia Circuits Assembly San Francisco California 16 12 6 Chacon Lilia 2009 12 15 Ocupa Mexico tercer lugar en TI regional Mexico occupies third place in regional IT Reforma in Spanish Mexico City p 7 The enclave economy foreign investment and sustainable development in mexico s silicon valley NACLA Report on the Americas New York 41 2 46 Mar Apr 2008 Guadalajara la primera Ciudad Inteligente in Spanish Mexico City El Informador Retrieved October 25 2015 Guadalajara primera Ciudad Inteligente en America Latina in Spanish Mexico City Mundo Contact Retrieved April 1 2014 Nosotros Us in Spanish Guadalajara Mexico Galerias Guadalajara Archived from the original on January 24 2010 Retrieved January 24 2010 a b Eades J 1987 Migrants Workers and the Social Order New York Tavistock Publications p 42 ISBN 0 422 61680 X Retrieved January 24 2010 Dale Quinn 2 October 2013 Guadalajara is now an outpost for Indian IT firms Quartz Retrieved 3 October 2013 Harner John Globalization of Food Retailing in Guadalajara Mexico Changes in Access Equity and Social Engagement Colorado Springs Colorado Department of Geography and Environmental Studies University of Colorado at Colorado Springs Retrieved January 24 2010 http www radio udg mx start htm title Radio permanent dead link https web archive org web 20070114041609 http www radio udg mx start htm date file 14 January 2007 Educating Cities www bcn cat International Association of Educational Cities Archived from the original on January 3 2007 Guadalajara named World Book Capital 2022 UNESCO 2020 11 04 Retrieved 2022 04 19 a b Enciclopedia de los Municipios de Mexico E local gob mx Archived from the original on 2006 12 05 Retrieved 2012 12 02 Museos Museums in Spanish Jalisco Mexico Government of Jalisco Archived from the original on April 29 2008 Retrieved January 27 2010 Hospicio Cabanas Guadalajara United Nations Archived from the original on April 5 2012 Retrieved January 27 2010 Las Capitales Americanas de la Cultura The American Capitals of Culture in Spanish Retrieved January 27 2010 a b c d e f g h Fin de semana en Guadalajara Jalisco in Spanish Mexico City Mexico Desconocido magazine Archived from the original on February 19 2013 Retrieved January 23 2010 22nd Guadalajara International Film Festival Guadalajaracinemafest com Archived from the original on 2010 09 21 Retrieved 2010 06 07 Gonzalez Marino 2008 11 16 Exhibiran 220 peliculas en 9 dias 12 mexicanas Will exhibit 220 films in 9 days 12 Mexican Milenio in Spanish Mexico City Archived from the original on July 24 2011 Retrieved January 27 2010 a b Feria Internacional del Libro de Guadalajara FIL in Spanish Mexico CONACULTA Archived from the original on December 1 2010 Retrieved January 27 2010 a b Feria Internacional del Libro de Guadalajara 2009 in Spanish Mexico Monitor Educativo Instituto de Investigacion Innovacion y Estudios de Posgrado para la Educacion Archived from the original on July 22 2011 Retrieved January 27 2010 Feria Internacional del Libro de Guadalajara in Spanish Mexico Instituto Mexicano de la Radio 2009 10 27 Archived from the original on December 27 2010 Retrieved January 27 2010 Fiestas y Tradiciones vive guadalajara gob mx Archived from the original on 2016 11 14 Retrieved 2016 11 14 Festival Cultural de Mayo in Spanish Guadalajara Mexico Municipality of Guadalajara Archived from the original on March 22 2010 Retrieved January 27 2010 Union Ganadera Regional de Jalisco Expo Ganadera Quienes somos Ugrj org mx Retrieved 2016 11 14 L A shines at Mexican book fair Los Angeles Times December 7 2009 Photo Gallery Tequilachef com Archived from the original on 2010 06 11 Retrieved 2010 06 07 Turino Thomas Fall 2003 Nationalism and Latin American music Selected case studies and theoretical considerations Revista de Musica Latinoamericana Austin Texas 24 2 169 a b 16th Encuentro Nacional del Mariachi y la Charreria Historia 16th National Encounter of Mariachi and Charreada History in Spanish Archived from the original on July 11 2009 Retrieved January 27 2010 a b Mariachi hace vibrar a Guadalajara Marachi makes Guadalajara vibrate in Spanish 2008 09 02 Archived from the original on 2012 01 21 Retrieved January 27 2010 Mexico suma a records otro por mariachis Mexico adds another record for mariachis CNN Expansion in Spanish 2009 08 31 Archived from the original on September 3 2009 Retrieved January 27 2010 Informador Redaccion 2009 02 28 Rehabilitacion de Plaza de los Mariachis a cargo de particular Rehabilitation of the Plaza de los Mariachis in private hands El Informador in Spanish Guadalajara Mexico Archived from the original on October 27 2009 Retrieved January 27 2010 Mariachi Rock O un nuevo sonido de Jalisco Mariachi Rock O a new sound from Jalisco El Informador in Spanish Guadalajara Mexico 2009 08 25 Archived from the original on 2009 08 30 Retrieved January 27 2010 Orquesta Filarmonica de Jalisco Philharmonic Orchestra de Jalisco in Spanish Guadalajara Mexico Orquesta Filarmonica de Jalisco Archived from the original on January 6 2010 Retrieved January 27 2010 a b Guadalajara Gastronomia Guadalajara Gastronomy in Spanish Mexico Visiting Mexico SECTUR Archived from the original on February 11 2010 Retrieved January 27 2010 La Birria in Spanish Archived from the original on July 26 2009 Retrieved January 27 2010 Pozole era preparado con carne humana en epoca prehispanica in Spanish Archived from the original on October 1 2017 Retrieved October 1 2017 El origen de la Jericalla Zona Guadalajara zonaguadalajara com 19 March 2015 Retrieved 2016 11 14 Que Comer vive guadalajara gob mx Archived from the original on 2016 11 14 Retrieved 2016 11 14 Chivas el preferido de Mexico Infomador Archived from the original on 2013 05 23 Retrieved 2012 05 22 Doblete Sagrado Chivas conquista Copa y Liga despues de 37 anos MedioTiempo com in Spanish 29 May 2019 The official Web site of XVI Pan American Games Guadalajara2011 org mx Archived from the original on December 20 2008 Retrieved 2010 06 07 Glover Michael June 13 2009 Guadalajara Prepares for 2011 PanAmerican Games Banderas News Puerto Vallarta Archived from the original on January 28 2010 Retrieved January 28 2010 FIFA announces hosts cities for FIFA World Cup 2026 INEGI Census 2005 in Spanish Archived from the original on 2007 03 28 Retrieved 2009 11 23 Consejo Nacional de Poblacion Mexico Proyecciones de la Poblacion de Mexico 2005 2050 Archived October 12 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008 10 18 Real Universidad de Guadalajara Royal University of Guadalajara in Spanish Guadalajara Mexico Universidad de Guadalajara Archived from the original on October 28 2009 Retrieved January 25 2010 Real Universidad de Guadalajara University of Guadalajara in Spanish Guadalajara Mexico Universidad de Guadalajara Archived from the original on June 2 2009 Retrieved January 25 2010 Ranking Iberoamericano SIR 2012 Central Washington University Study Abroad amp Exchange Programs Central Washington University Archived from the original on September 9 2006 The ASFG Guadalajara Mexico ASFG Archived from the original on January 27 2010 Retrieved January 25 2010 Passenger Statistics for 2007 Mexico Grupo Aeropuerto del Pacifico Retrieved January 24 2010 Trenes Trains in Spanish Guadalajara Mexico Government of Jalisco Archived from the original on February 15 2009 Retrieved January 24 2010 a b May Jack Mexico Says Si to LRT Light Rail South of the Border 1994 Light Rail Annual amp User s Guide pp 5 7 Pasadena California US Pentrex ISSN 0160 6913 Linea 3 del Tren Electrico de Guadalajara PDF Linea 3 project website Secretaria de Comunicaciones y Transportes Jalisco 2014 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 04 Retrieved 2015 08 10 Macrobus Tu Ciudad se Mueve en Grande Macrobus Your City Moves Big Time in Spanish Guadalajara Mexico Government of Jalisco Archived from the original on May 16 2010 Retrieved January 24 2010 Sistecozome in Spanish Guadalajara Mexico Government of Jalisco Archived from the original on January 23 2010 Retrieved January 24 2010 Once bankrupt Montreal s Bixi can t keep up with global demand Retrieved 2016 09 15 MIBICI Datos abiertos www mibici net in Spanish Archived from the original on 2018 09 04 Retrieved 2018 10 28 Guadalajara Public Transportation Statistics Global Public Transit Index by Moovit Retrieved June 19 2017 Material was copied from this source which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4 0 International License Secretariat of Foreign Affairs Foreign Missions Accredited in Guadalajara Ciudades Hermanas un sueno malgastado arquimediosgdl org mx in Spanish Arqui Medios 2019 07 12 Retrieved 2020 06 03 Silicon Alleys San Jose Okayama Celebrate Six Decades as Sister Cities metroactive com Metro Active 2019 06 12 Retrieved 2020 06 03 City inks agreement with Changwon theguadalajarareporter net The Guadalajara Reporter 2013 05 17 Retrieved 2020 06 03 a b c Firma GDL convenio con seis ciudades mexicanas para compartir experiencias de buen gobierno y conformar un nuevo pacto social Pagina Oficial del Gobierno de Guadalajara April 13 2017 Archived from the original on January 25 2020 Retrieved December 2 2020 Bibliography EditSee also Bibliography of the history of GuadalajaraExternal links Edit Media related to Guadalajara Mexico at Wikimedia Commons Guadalajara travel guide from Wikivoyage H City Council of Guadalajara in Spanish Official Travel Resource for English Speakers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guadalajara amp oldid 1147128156, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.