Mexicaneros


Mexicaneros are an Indigenous people from between west and northern Mexico, in the Durango and Nayarit borders. They are one of 62 indigenous cultures of Mexico. They speak the eponymous Mexicanero language, which is related to Nahuatl. They lived far from the Aztec Empire. Some 1,300 individuals spoke the Mexicanero language as of 2011.

Distribution

They live in Mezquital Municipality, Durango, Combustita, Curachitos, Chalatita, Chalchihuites, El Catorce, El Durazno, El Rincón, El Toro, Escalera, Guajolote, Huazamotita, La Cañada, La Estancia, La Guajolota, La Tinaja, Las Campanas, Las Cruces, Las Norias, Las Pilas, Llano de Jacalitos, Los Alacranes, Los Arquitos, Los Charcos, Los Crucitos, Los Espejos, Los Gavilanes, Los Leones, Mesa de los Lobos, Metatita, Nuevo León, Pino Real, San Antonio de Padua, San Bernabé, San Buenaventura, San Diego, San Francisco del Mezquital, San Pedro Xícoras , Santa María de Ocotán, Techalote and Acaponeta, El Duraznito, El Naranjo, El Resbalón, Huanacaxtle, La Guásima, La Laguna and El Nayar municipalities in Nayarit.

History

No ancient documents nor codex describe them. Hypotheses claim that they lived in the region in the pre-Columbian era. Other hypothesis state that the Spanish settled Nahua people there to support colonization, and that they were a wandering Aztec people, or that they were Caxcans who were settled in their regions by the Spanish and that their Nahuan dialect mixed with Spanish language was the Caxcan language and that they adopted Nahuatl during the Spanish colonial era. Mexicanero people have their own religion related to Aztec religion. Few syncretized this culture with Roman Catholicism.