Chipilo
Chipilo | ||
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Chipilo de Francisco Javier Mina | ||
The Church of Chipilo at night | ||
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Chipilo Location in Mexico | ||
Coordinates: 19°00′22″N 98°19′50″W / 19.00611°N 98.33056°WCoordinates: 19°00′22″N 98°19′50″W / 19.00611°N 98.33056°W | ||
Country | Mexico | |
State | Puebla | |
Municipality | San Gregorio Atzompa | |
Population | 3,493 |
Chipilo is a small city in the state of Puebla, Mexico. It is located 12 kilometres (7 miles) south of the state capital Puebla, Puebla, at a height of 2,150 metres (7,054 feet) above sea level. Its official name is Chipilo de Francisco Javier Mina. The people of Chipilo are called chipileños in Spanish, or cipilegni in Venetian.
Chipilo was founded on October 2, 1882, by immigrants from the northern Italian region of Veneto. Most came from the town of Segusino and other surrounding towns in the province of Treviso. These immigrants arrived in Mexico in search of fertile land, leaving behind the poverty that was plaguing Veneto at that time. Most of them took up cattle raising, and the dairy products of Chipilo became famous in Puebla and other regions in central Mexico. Some maintain a derived Venetian dialect (part of Venetian language).
In 1982, the townspeople of Chipilo celebrated the 100th anniversary of the foundation of the city along with visitors from the Veneto region. In this celebration the city of Segusino, Italy, was declared Chipilo's Twin city.
Most people from this town have acquired nicknames over the years, which travel on through generations. On Tuesdays and Thursdays, the teenagers of the town drive up and down the main road, cruising. Unlike towns in the United States where most younger people hang out on Fridays, the kids in Chipilo hang out each Sunday in what they call "el centro".
History
Chipilo was founded on October 2, 1882 by Italian immigrants from the northern region of Veneto, although there were some people from Piedmont and Lombardy among the founders.[1]
Most of them came from Segusino[2] and surrounding villages in the provinces of Treviso and Belluno, like Quero, Valdobbiadene, Feltre and Maser. In this sense, the Italian immigration to Chipilo differs from elsewhere in Latin America, but it resembles the agricultural regions of Argentina, areas where most immigrants come from the regions of Central-Northern Italy.
People
- Eduardo Montagner Anguiano, writer.
- Martín Stefanonni Mazzocco, politician.
Twin towns – Sister cities
See also
References
- ↑ Italiani a Chipilo (in Italian).
- ↑ Publicaciones del municipio de Segusino sobre Chipilo (Italian)
- ↑ http://www.lugaresdemexico.com/chipilo.html/
- ↑ http://es.db-city.com/M%C3%A9xico--Veracruz-de-Ignacio-de-la-Llave--Huatusco/
- ↑
- //es.db-city.com/Italia--Trentino-Alto-Adigio--Trento--Trento/
External links
- Description of the Venetan dialect of Chipilo, in Spanish
- Story of Chipilo, and old pictures of the city, in Italian
- Brief History of Chipilo and pictures of the city, in Spanish
- Historical research on Chipilo, in Spanish
- Ethnography of Chipilo, in Spanish