(Redirected from El Petén)
''El Petén''
'Petén' is a
department of the nation of
Guatemala. It is geographically the northernmost department of Guatemala, as well as the largest in size — at 12,960 square miles (33,566 km²) it accounts for about one third of Guatemala's area. The capital is
Flores. The population in
2005 was estimated at 450,000.
History
By the first half of the
1st millennium BCE the
Petén and
Mirador Basin of this region were already well-established with a number of
monumental sites and cities of the
Maya civilization. Significant Maya sites of this Preclassic era of
Mesoamerican chronology include
Nakbé,
El Mirador,
Naachtun,
San Bartolo and
Cival in the
Mirador Basin.
Later Petén became the heartland of the Maya Classic Period (c.
200 –
900). At its height around
750 it is estimated that Petén was home to several million people, being one of the most densely populated regions of the world at the time. Some areas are estimated to have had ca 2,000 people/km².
Agriculture was very extensive, and there is some evidence suggesting that the land was depleted by unsustainable over-farming, resulting in a famine which was an important factor in the collapse of the Classic Maya states of this area. The population is estimated to have dropped by two-thirds between the mid
9th century and the mid
10th century.
Ruins such as
Uaxactún,
Tikal,
Holmul,
Machaquilá,
Naranjo,
Nakum,
Piedras Negras, on the
Usumacinta river,
Ceibal,
Aguateca, in the
Petexbatún area,
Cancuén, on
La Pasión river,
Topoxté and
Yaxhá preserve important remnants of the Classic Maya in Petén.
The first
UNESCO World Heritage Site in the world was
Tikal, and later
Tikal National Park, was the first Mixed
Archeologic and
Natural World Heritage Site in the World.
After the Classic collapse the population of the area continued to drop dramatically, especially after the introduction of
smallpox along with European explorers. The smallpox plague arrived around
1519 or
1520, preceding by several years the first
Europeans to visit the region.
Hernán Cortés led the first expedition to pass through Petén, in
1524 to
1525, and reported that the region mostly had small hamlets separated by thick forest, with
Tayasal being the only sizable inhabited city they observed.
After Cortés' expedition, the
Spanish largely tried yo conquer Petén, with several attempts mainly from
Belize and
Alta Verapaz, for generations until an expedition from
Yucatán,
Belize and
Cobán in
Alta Verapaz, succeeded in conquering the last independent states: the Maya-Itzá, from
Tayasal, Maya-Yalnain from
Eixequil and Maya-Ko'woj from
Zacpetén, in 1697. (''see:''
Spanish conquest of Yucatán).
The Spanish town of Flores was established atop the site of
Tayasal, but this remained an isolated backwater through the colonial era and after the independence
Central America. When Guatemalan President
Rafael Carrera sent a small force to Flores to claim the region for Guatemala in the
1840s, the governments of
Mexico and Yucatán decided the region was not worth the trouble of contesting.
Starting in the
1960s the Guatemalan government offered land in Petén to any citizen willing to settle on it and pay a fee of $25. A road was opened up to Flores, although it was unpaved, and the notorious bus trip to Flores was known to take up to 24 hours to travel the 300 miles (500 km). Small airports were built at Flores and Tikal, bringing
tourists to the region. In the early
1970s a road was opened from Tikal to
Belize.
The first paved road in Petén was built in
1982.
The 'Mundo Maya' International Airport, in Santa Elena, is the second of the country
Since the
1990s many new settlers have come to Petén. The area is also experiencing severe
deforestation in its southern half.
Municipalities
Petén consists of the following municipalities, listed with their population in
2000:
#
Dolores – 26,269
#
Flores – 22,594
#
La Libertad – 79,416
#
Melchor de Mencos – 23,813
#
Poptún – 30,386
#
San Andrés – 15,103
#
San Benito – 23,752
#
San Francisco – 8,066
#
San José – 3,602
#
San Luis – 44,903
#
Santa Ana – 7,792
#
Sayaxché – 47,693
See also
★
El Zotz
★
Ixkun
External link
★
Interactive department map