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・ Quettetot
・ Quetteville
・ Quettreville-sur-Sienne
・ Quetzal
・ Quetzal (band)
・ Quetzal (disambiguation)
・ Quetzal Education Research Center (San Gerardo de Dota, Costa Rica)
・ Quetzal file format
・ Quetzal Guerrero
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・ Quetzalcoatlus
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・ Quetzalpetlatl Corona
Quetzaltenango
・ Quetzaltenango Airport
・ Quetzaltenango Department
・ Quetzaltenango Guatemala Temple
・ Quetzaltenango Municipal Theatre
・ Quetzaltepec
・ Quetzatl
・ QuetzSat 1
・ Queuco River
・ Queudes
・ Queue
・ Queue (abstract data type)
・ Queue (hairstyle)
・ Queue area
・ Queue automaton


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Quetzaltenango : ウィキペディア英語版
Quetzaltenango

Quetzaltenango, also known by its indigenous name, Xelajú or Xela , is the second largest city of Guatemala.〔(About Quetzaltenango, Xelaju )〕 It is both the capital of Quetzaltenango Department and the municipal seat of Quetzaltenango municipality.
It has an estimated population of 224,703. The population is about 61% indigenous or Amerindian, 34% Mestizo or ladino and 5% white Latin American. Quetzaltenango is located in a mountain valley at an elevation of above sea level at its lowest part. It may reach above 2,400 meters within the city.
The Municipality of Quetzaltenango consists of an area of . Municipalities abutting the municipality of Quetzaltenango include Salcajá, Cantel, Almolonga, Zunil, El Palmar, Concepción Chiquirichapa, San Mateo, La Esperanza, Olintepeque, and San Andrés Xecul. All these municipalities are part of the Department of Quetzaltenango, except San Andrés Xecul which is a part of the Department of Totonicapán.
==History==

In Pre-Columbian times Quetzaltenango was a city of the Mam Maya people called Xelajú, although by the time of the Spanish Conquest it had become part of the K'iche' Kingdom of Q'umarkaj. The name may be derived from "Xe laju' noj" meaning "under ten mountains". The city was said to have already been over 300 years old when the Spanish first arrived. With the help of his allies, Conquistador Pedro de Alvarado defeated and killed the Maya ruler Tecún Umán here. When Alvarado conquered the city for Spain in the 1520s, he called it by the Nahuatl name used by his Central Mexican Indian allies, "Quetzaltenango", generally considered to mean "the place of the quetzal bird" (although see note on etymology below). Quetzaltenango became the city's official name in colonial times. However, many people (especially, but not only, the indigenous population) continue to call the city "Xelajú" (pronounced shay-lah-WHO) or more commonly Xela for short, and some proudly, but unofficially, consider it the "capital of the Mayas".
From 1838 to 1840 Quetzaltenango was capital of the state of Los Altos, one of the states or provinces of the Federal Republic of Central America. As the union broke up, the army of Guatemala under Rafael Carrera conquered Quetzaltenango making it again part of Guatemala. As of 1850, the city had a population of approximately 20,000.
In the 19th century, coffee was introduced as a major crop in the area, as a result the economy of Xela prospered. Much fine Belle Époque architecture can still be found in the city.
In the 1920s a young Gypsy woman named Vanushka Cardena Barajas died and was buried in the Xela city cemetery. An active legend has developed around her tomb that says those who bring flowers or write a request on her tomb will be reunited with their broken relationships. The Guatemalan songwriter Alvaro Aguilar wrote a song based on this legend.
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