Mexico City
Mexico City is the capital of Mexico. Mexico City is one of the fastest growing
cities in the world. The population is growing with 5% a year, mainly because
of birth and because of immigration of people from the country. Each day about
1.000 people form the country arrive in Mexico
City.
This city
is crowded, polluted, and chaotic, but it's also very beautiful! In Mexico City you can find
the richness of the nation. It is the centre of the government. It is not just
a city with skyscrapers, roads and people. The city has a lot more to give,
only you have to know were to find it. You also have to be patient. In Mexico City patience
makes it possible to survive. Mexico
City is a city of opportunities!
History:
Aztec
records set the founding date of their city at 1325, when a band of nomads from
the north settled on an island in Lake
Texcoco. The city, called
Tenochtitlán, eventually expanded to a population of more than 250,000, and by
the 16th century it had become the seat of the Aztec Empire. The Spanish
explorer Hernán Cortés first viewed the city in 1519. In 1521 his forces
occupied and systematically levelled the great Aztec metropolis, building their
own capital on the ruins. Lake
Texcoco was filled in as
the city expanded and was rebuilt in the Spanish architectural mode. From this
new town, Spanish excursions explored and subdued the Native American
inhabitants as far north as the present United
States and south into Central
America. Mexico City became the
capital of all the Spanish provinces in the western hemisphere north of Costa Rica. It
was administered by Spain
for three centuries before being won in 1821 by a revolutionary band led by
Augustine de Iturbide, later named emperor. During the Mexican-American War, Mexico City was captured
by US forces in 1847 and held for five months. It was ruled by Emperor
Maximilian and the French army from 1863 to 1867, when it was taken by
President Benito Pablo Juarez. During the years of revolution following 1910,
the capital was the scene of street fighting. By the 1920s, plans for the
urbanization of Mexico City
had been initiated. Industrialization increased as mills and factories spread
throughout the city. Slum-clearance and housing-development programmes were
initiated. Between 1930 and 1950, the population more than doubled. In 1985 a
devastating earthquake caused severe damage, leaving nearly 30,000 homeless and
thousands more dead.
Employment:
The
industry in Mexico City
produces more than 65% of the national production and there is oil industry, chemical
industry and nourishment industry. Some of the most important products are:
cement, glass, paper, clothes, electronics, household appliances and cars. Most
of the Mexican banks and insurance companies do have their main offices in this
city.
Environment:
In the
city there are a lot of roads, railroads and airways. Since 1969 you also can
find a subway. All this traffic makes much pollution (smog). On hot days there
are live threatening concentrations of sulphur fume, carbonic oxide and car
butted hydrogen in the air. In the winter it happens that the air can't rise
anymore. This causes great problems for the health of the inhabitants of the
city
Future:
In
Mexico-city the population will keep on growing fast. This will lead to many
more problems than the city probably can hold.