Santiago Tuxtla

Santiago Tuxtla
City and municipality
Top: Panoramic view of the main plaza; Middle: Santiago Apóstol Church, Santiago Tuxtla Municipal Hall; Bottom: Tres Zapotes site museum, La Corbata colossal head
Official seal of Santiago Tuxtla
Map
Coordinates: 18°27′55″N 95°18′9″W / 18.46528°N 95.30250°W / 18.46528; -95.30250
Country Mexico
StateVeracruz
Government
 • MayorKristel Hernández Topete (PRD)
Area
 • Total619.4 km2 (239.2 sq mi)
Elevation
300 m (1,000 ft)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total57,085
 • Seat
15,733
Time zoneUTC-6 (Central Standard Time)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-5 (Central Daylight Time)
WebsiteOfficial website

Santiago Tuxtla is a small city and municipality in the Mexican state of Veracruz. The area was originally part of lands granted to Hernán Cortés by the Spanish Crown in 1531. The city was founded in 1525, but it did not gain municipal status until 1932. Today, the municipality is poor and agricultural, but is home to several unique traditions such as the Santiago Tuxtla Fair and the Acarreo de Niño Dios, when images of the Child Jesus are carried in procession several times during the Christmas season. It is also home to the Museo Regional Tuxteco (Tuxtla Regional Museum) which houses much of the area's Olmec artifacts, including a number of colossal heads and other monumental stone works. The city's main plaza hosts the largest Olmec colossal head in Mexico, thus making it famous.