Flores, Petén Department, Guatemala

History : 19th century | Transport

🇬🇹 Flores is the capital of the Petén Department, Guatemala's landlocked, northernmost department.

Flores is the seat of the municipality of Flores. Its Catedral Nuestra Señora de Los Remedios y San Pablo Itzá is the cathedral episcopal seat of the Apostolic Vicariate of El Petén (formerly a territorial prelature).

The old part of the city is located on an island on Lake Petén Itzá, connected to the mainland by a short causeway. On the mainland is the suburb Santa Elena and, to the West, the contiguous municipality of San Benito. The municipality of Flores also includes a wide swathe of rural territory stretching north from Lake Petén Itzá to the Mexican border.

History In Pre-Columbian times, Flores was the Maya city of Nojpetén. Earliest archaeological traces on the island date back to 900–600 BC, with a major expansion of the settlement occurring around 250–400 AD, making it one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the Americas.

The Itza left the Yucatán region in the 13th century and founded the city later known as Tayasal as their capital. They called it Nojpetén, (noj peten, "Great Island" in the Itza language). The Spanish called it Tayasal, possibly derived from ta Itza, or "Place of the Itza".

It was here, on the island of Flores on the shore of Lake Petén Itzá, that the last independent Maya state held out against the Spanish conquerors. In 1541, Hernán Cortés came to the island, en route to Honduras, but needed to move on and did not try to conquer it.

The Spanish did not manage to conquer the island until 1697, when they marched in, attacked via boats, and destroyed it. Those who could flee did so, and many Itzá people hid in the jungle for years. From the ruins of Nojpetén arose the modern city of Flores. The modern city can thus be regarded as the second oldest continuously inhabited settlement in the Americas, after Cholula.

History: 19th century The first photographs ever made from Flores were those taken by engineer Claudio Urrutia in 1897, when he was in charge of the Guatemala-Mexico Border Commission.

Transport Flores is served by Mundo Maya International Airport. Several international flights land here but most stop first at Guatemala City's La Aurora International Airport. The Island is also very well connected by bus, with many companies running overnight buses to Guatemala City.

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Image: Photo by Denys Barabanov on Unsplash

Flores has a population of over 45,560 people. Flores also forms the centre of the wider Petén Department which has a population of over 595,548 people.

To set up a UBI Lab for Flores see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork

Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license

Antipodal to Flores is: 90.117,-16.917

Locations Near: Flores -89.8833,16.9167

🇬🇹 Sayaxché -90.183,16.517 d: 54.8  

🇧🇿 San Ignacio -89.07,17.159 d: 90.6  

🇧🇿 Belmopan -88.75,17.25 d: 126  

🇬🇹 Cobán -90.367,15.483 d: 167.5  

🇧🇿 Orange Walk Town -88.558,18.075 d: 190.6  

🇧🇿 Belize City -88.198,17.5 d: 190.4  

🇬🇹 Zacapa -89.533,14.967 d: 220  

🇬🇹 Aguacatán -91.317,15.35 d: 231.9  

🇬🇹 Chiquimula -89.533,14.783 d: 240.2  

🇲🇽 Palenque -91.967,17.5 d: 230.6  

Antipodal to: Flores 90.117,-16.917

🇮🇩 Bengkulu 102.25,-3.783 d: 18043.9  

🇮🇩 Bengkulu City 102.264,-3.792 d: 18043.6  

🇮🇩 Liwa 104.083,-5.033 d: 18000  

🇮🇩 Tanggamus 104.623,-5.385 d: 17980.7  

🇮🇩 Lubuklinggau 102.85,-3.283 d: 17958.2  

🇮🇩 Pringsewu 104.961,-5.356 d: 17950  

🇮🇩 Lahat 103.567,-3.738 d: 17941.1  

🇮🇩 Jatinegara 106.167,-6.817 d: 17941  

🇮🇩 Padang 100.355,-0.951 d: 17915.7  

🇮🇩 Bandar Lampung 105.267,-5.45 d: 17930.3  

Bing Map

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