"__" may come from Náhuatl words that mean "in the moon's belly button." | |
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| Numbers Don't Lie |
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| Estimated number of cactus species endemic to Mexico, the most of any country in the world | 700 |
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| | Size (in cubic feet) of the Great Pyramid of Cholula in Mexico, the world's largest pyramid by volume | 166.5 million |
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| Year Miguel Hidalgo rang the church bell in Dolores, Mexico, beginning the country's fight for independence | 1810 |
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| | Number of U.S. citizens who live in Mexico, the country's largest immigrant group | 1.6 million |
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| Mexico City wasn't officially named "Mexico City" until 2016. |
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On January 29, 2016, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto officially recognized the name of the country's capital as "Mexico City." Although this sounds perplexing for foreigners who've always used the name, for residents of the capital (who are also known as chilangos, defeños, or capitalinos), this was big news. That's because until that moment, Mexico City's official name was "Distrito Federal," or "Federal District" (D.F. for short), as stipulated by the nation's 1824 constitution. The renaming of the capital was decades in the making, and followed the lackluster federal response to the 1985 earthquake in Mexico City. Being decoupled from the "federal" label, Mexico City, with its 9 million inhabitants, could lobby for a greater degree of autonomy as an equal among the 31 other states that make up the United Mexican States. | |
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