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According to the 2020 census, the city has a population of 1,385,629 people, making it the 8th most populous city in Mexico, while the Guadalajara metropolitan area has a population of 5,268,642 people, [6] [7] making it the third-largest metropolitan area in the country and the twenty-second largest metropolitan area in the Americas. [8]
Albert S. Evans (1870), "Guadalajara", Our sister republic: a gala trip through tropical Mexico in 1869–70, Hartford, Connecticut: Columbian Book Co. John Lewis Geiger (1874), "Guadalajara" , A peep at Mexico: narrative of a journey across the republic from the Pacific of the Gulf in December 1873 and January 1874 , London: Trübner & Co.
The following is a list of municipal presidents of the city of Guadalajara, in Jalisco state, Mexico. [1] Part of a series on the. History of Mexico; Pre-Columbian.
Sculpture close to the University of Guadalajara building Mayor of Guadalajara Alfonso Petersen with Emir Kusturica at the Telmex Auditorium. The Mexican city of Guadalajara has served, since colonial times, as one of the strongest cultural hubs in the country and, as the capital of the state of Jalisco, it has absorbed, and contributed to adapt, many traditions from neighbouring towns and places.
Guadalajara is the capital and largest city of the Mexican state of Jalisco, and its metropolitan area is the third largest in Mexico. The Guadalajara metropolitan area currently has 5 buildings above 150 meters (492 feet) in height, with a further 4 under construction.
The flag of the city of Guadalajara is the emblem of Guadalajara and is used by the town hall as representative symbol of the city. [3] The flag consists of 3 horizontal stripes, blue, yellow and blue respectively, [4] in the central part of the yellow stripe is the Seal of Guadalajara conceived by the emperor Carlos V in 1539.
The coat of arms of Jalisco (Spanish: Escudo de Jalisco, lit. "state shield of Jalisco") is a symbol of the Free and Sovereign State of Jalisco in Mexico. [1]This shield symbolizes the nobility and lordship of the city of Guadalajara; virtues that the Spanish crown recognized in the work and dangers that the city's inhabitants had endured in the conquest and settlement of the city. [2]
The Guadalajara metropolitan area (officially, in Spanish: Zona Metropolitana de Guadalajara) [2] is the most populous metropolitan area of the Mexican state of Jalisco and the third largest in the country after Greater Mexico City and Monterrey.