Aguascalientes Attractions
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Mexican State
Aguascalientes, bordered to the north, west and east by Zacatecas and to the south by Jalisco, is one of Mexico's smallest states. Averaging 1800 m (5900 ft) above sea level it forms part of the central Mexican highlands, hugging in the west the foothills of the Sierra Madre. Its numerous small rivers and one large one make it an unusually fertile region by Mexican standards. Almost all the population are of Spanish descent.
History
In pre-Columbian times Aguascalientes was the territory of the semi-nomadic Chichimecs (a disparaging name meaning "descended from dogs", used by more civilised tribes to refer to hunter-gatherers generally, rather than to any particular group or race). From the 8th c. onwards these relatively primitive peoples, whose languages were of the Náhuatl family, made repeated incursions into the central Mexican highlands.
Aguascalientes, bordered to the north, west and east by Zacatecas and to the south by Jalisco, is one of Mexico's smallest states. Averaging 1800 m (5900 ft) above sea level it forms part of the central Mexican highlands, hugging in the west the foothills of the Sierra Madre. Its numerous small rivers and one large one make it an unusually fertile region by Mexican standards. Almost all the population are of Spanish descent.
History
In pre-Columbian times Aguascalientes was the territory of the semi-nomadic Chichimecs (a disparaging name meaning "descended from dogs", used by more civilised tribes to refer to hunter-gatherers generally, rather than to any particular group or race). From the 8th c. onwards these relatively primitive peoples, whose languages were of the Náhuatl family, made repeated incursions into the central Mexican highlands.
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