Home >> Real Estate >> Travel Review: Manzanillo
Register Now Free
Send real estate referrals here

Search properties

 

Business Directory Search

Latest Service Provider

SA Newsletter

Get the latest information about Mexico from the experts.
No account yet?

Travel Review: Manzanillo

Print E-mail

Manzanillo: Digging Up the Past

ManzanilloMexico’s Pacific Coast has long been celebrated for its rich, mystical history and romantic tales steeped with pirates, plunder and quests for gold. Centuries ago off this coast, Spaniard Hernán Cortés first dropped anchor and dreamed of laying the foundations of a kingdom that would become Mexico.

The area known today as Manzanillo had flourished for centuries under pre-Hispanic natives, long before Hernán Cortés and his fleet of Spaniards landed off the shores of the Bay of Buena Esperanza in 1522 while searching for riches in the Pacific. In the neighboring cove of Playa de la Audencia, now site of Hotel Sierra, Cortés' trusted captain, Gonzalo de Sandoval, first met with local Indian chieftains.

However, even before Cortés set foot on the beaches, the Nahuatl Indians, one of the oldest surviving tribes, called the area Cozcatlan, meaning "Place of Pearls." Another indigenous tribe knew it as Tlacotla, but it was widely known as Caxitlan from the early 1500s onward.

In 1527, Manzanillo underwent a new incarnation when navigator Alvaro de Saavedra christened it Puerto de Santiago de la Buena Esperanza, or Santiago Port’s Bay of Good Hope. The bay proved to be a safe harbor and an ideal site for building Cortés’ fleet, which eventually conquered the Philippines.

At the time, abundant groves of manzanillo trees grew here with inedible yellow-red manzanilla fruit, but offered wood that was water resistant, flexible, and strong. These trees were the primary source of shipbuilding material for several hundred years. The name Puerto de las Manzanillas emerged in 1752 – after the tree’s poisonous fruit – and later became known as Puerto del Manzanillo in 1821, after all but one of the trees had been cut down.

The last tree stood as a living monument at the harbor entrance for many years, and local legend tells how people would rest in the shade of the tree, and often become enticed by the small apples in its branches. Many would sample the deadly fruit and fall ill or die from its poison.

Finally in 1825, the governor of Colima state ordered the remaining tree to be cut down to protect his subjects. Even today, great planks of wood used to support and launch the ships lie in the waters only meters from shore beside Kármina Palace in the Bay of Buena Esperanza, forming a natural reef for local marine life.

In the following 300 years, Manzanillo and the surrounding Pacific Coast developed a mystical lore with fabulous tales of Portugese pirates - from whom Cortés and his galleon twice sought shelter in the Bay of Buena Esperenza - and other renegades of the sea from England, France and Spain engaging in magnificent battles, looting and burning passing ships for their rich cargo. A few of these battles took place on the land where Kármina Palace now stands.

Manzanillo gained city status in 1873, and during the next few decades, grew as the success of the Colima railroad introduced potable water and electricity. Finally in 1908, President Porfirio Dias declared it an official port of entry and inaugurated the railroad service from Guadalajara.

Today, Manzanillo is the largest Mexican port on the Pacific coast, and has undergone numerous reconstructions and upgrades to deepen and modernize the harbor to provide access to international shipping lines. A coal-fueled power generating plant built by the federal government sits at the edge of the harbor and supplies electricity to five Mexican states. And the area continues to grow in popularity, thanks to many sites of natural beauty, warm weather, friendly locals, and the magnificent sailfish and marlins that are reeled in by tourists and professional sport fishers alike.

For lots more information about Manzanillo and great travel stories, visit www.mexicanpacific.com.

Return to top

 
< Prev   Next >

Other Articles

 

Travel Review: Atotonilco, Guanajuato

Atotonilco is located on a good road just outside San Miguel de Allende, in the state of Guanajuato, and is on the World Monuments Watch list, among 100 "most endangered" sites because of the amazing frescoes that fill the walls, doorways and vaults of its astonishing interior.

 



 

Travel Review: Acapulco

Desperately in need of a quick trade route between Southeast Asia and the Mexican Pacific in order to better compete with the British, among other European rivals, Philip II of Spain ordered the conquest of the Philippines, his namesake, and of the Molucca or "Spice" Islands, during the mid-16th century.

 



 

Travel Review: The State of Guerrero

The landscape along the "Highway of the Sun," that places Mexico City within a scant three hours of Acapulco, is especially dazzling after the Querendes tunnel, with its palmetto forest, organ and candlestick cactus canefields - often tipped with frail, heather-like flowers - stretching into the distance, wide riverbeds and mesquite-covered red rock hills. We are entering the "Hot Country," where the sun like a hammer on the devil's anvil is king.

 



Travel Review: The Mayan Site of Izamal

Itzamná, supreme Mayan deity in Northern Yucatan, is credited not only with founding the grandiose ceremonial center that later became the Peninsula's greatest monastery, but he also founded religion and the priesthood. He discovered the cultivation and application of henequen fiber, for the ropes, mats and clothing on which the local economy was based.



 

Travel Review: Monterrey

Actually another world, as different from the central plateau as it possibly can be, Monterrey is considerably more than business and industry, though its well-earned fame does seem to center on steel, cement, paper, beer, glass and banking.

 



 

Travel Review: Ajusco

Everyone in México City, especially those who drive south on the Periférico or look west from a tower in Lomas, is familiar with the silhouette - like a crooked bracket lain sideways - of the Ajusco.

 



<<  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10  >  >>

 Travel Mexico P... Travel Mexico -... Weekend Trip Me... Travel Mexico -...
 Travel Mexico -... Travel Mexico -... Travel Mexico -... Scuba Diving in...
 Weekend Trip Me... Weekend Trip Me... Travel Mexico -... Travel Mexico -...
 Magic Town Mexi... Travel Mexico -... Travel Mexico -... Travel Mexico -...
 Skydiving in Me... Cervantino Inte... Travel Mexico -... Travel Mexico -...
 Travel Mexico -... Magic Town Mexi... Travel Mexico -... Mazamitla - Pue...
 Tapalpa - Puebl... Tequila - Puebl... Mexcaltitan - P... Useful Travel T...
 Cosala - Pueblo... Jerez - Pueblos... Real de Catorce... Malinalco
 Santiago - Pueb... Parras - Pueblo... Alamos - Pueblo... Mitla
 Mexico Aims to ... Tourist Revenue... Mexico Timeshar... Vacation Rental...
 Airlines Servin... Car Rentals Health and Safe... Foreign Embassi...
 Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ...
 Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ...
 Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ...
 Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ...
 Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ...
 Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ... Travel Review: ...
 Travel Review: ...


Warning: implode() [function.implode]: Bad arguments. in /home/emexpert/public_html/modules/mod_relateditem_articlepage.php on line 79

Warning: mysql_num_rows(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL result resource in /home/emexpert/public_html/includes/database.php on line 398

Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in /home/emexpert/public_html/modules/mod_relateditem_articlepage.php on line 87

Related Articles

Service Request

Most viewed articles Upcoming events
No Events Available
Lastest news

Warning: mysql_fetch_array(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL result resource in /home/emexpert/public_html/modules/mod_advertise.php on line 46
Recent Classified Ads