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  2. Spanish conquest of El Salvador - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Spanish_conquest_of_El_Salvador

    San Salvador, El Salvador: Universidad Tecnológica de El Salvador. ISSN 2307-3942. Giusto, Vicente Jorge; and Rolando Iuliano (1989). "Aportes Para Una Historia Socio-economica De El Salvador: Desde La Colonia Hasta La Crisis Del Mercado Comun Centroamericano" (in Spanish). Revista de Historia de América, no. 108: 5–71. Mexico City: Pan ...

  3. File:Pueblos Indigenas antes de la conquista El Salvador.svg

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pueblos_Indigenas...

    Date: 17 February 2011: Source: Own work, basada en imagen (hecha por Paul Amaroli) y texto del documento Sistema Urbano del Plan Nacional de Ordenamiento y desarrollo territorial (2005); imagen de Barón Castro, Rodolfo (1978) La Población de El Salvador; y texto de la Carta-Relación de Diego García de Palacios a Felipe II sobre la provincia de Guatemala en 1576, la Relación breve y ...

  4. List of World Heritage Sites in El Salvador - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_World_Heritage...

    Joya de Cerén was a pre-Hispanic farming community that, like Pompeii and Herculaneum in Italy, was buried under an eruption of the Laguna Caldera volcano c. AD 600. Because of the exceptional condition of the remains, they provide an insight into the daily lives of the Central American populations who worked the land at that time. [3]

  5. Salvadoran Lenca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salvadoran_Lenca

    Salvadoran Lenca or Potón is a language of the linguistic family of the Lenca languages spoken in El Salvador; and of which two dialects have been described: that of Chilanga (extinct), and that of Guatajiagua; Other dialects may have existed in the past in the other towns where the Lencas lived in present-day El Salvador. [4]

  6. Texistepeque - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texistepeque

    Texistepeque is a city and municipality in the Santa Ana department of western El Salvador. It lies in the center of the department, north of Santa Ana and south of Metapán. It was founded by the Poqomam Maya peoples and conquered by the Pipil people of Cuzcatlan until the Spanish conquest.

  7. Pipil people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pipil_people

    The seal of Kuskatan based on the "Lienzo de Tlaxcala" with the symbol of an altepetl. The term Nahua is a cultural and ethnic term used for Nahuan-speaking groups. Though they are Nahua, the term Pipil is the term that is most commonly encountered in anthropological and linguistic literature.

  8. Pasaquina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pasaquina

    For the nineteenth century, the region was incorporated into the Department of San Miguel in 1824 and annexed to the Union in 1865. They earned the title of "town" in 1872, and the title of "city" in 1920. On September 8 2024, a helicopter crashed in the municipality. All 9 people on board were killed

  9. San Vicente, El Salvador - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Vicente,_El_Salvador

    San Vicente (Spanish pronunciation: [sam biˈsente]) is a municipality in the San Vicente department of El Salvador. It was founded by 50 Spanish families in 1635 under the Tempisque tree, which is still standing today.