Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Historic Monuments Zone of Querétaro' has mentioned 'Otomi' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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Santiago de Querxc3xa9taro (Spanish pronunciation:xc2xa0[sanxcbx88tjaxc9xa3o xc3xb0e kexcbx88xc9xbeetaxc9xbeo]; Otomi: Dxc3xa4hnini Maxei), known simply as Querxc3xa9taro City (Spanish: Ciudad de Querxc3xa9taro), is the capital and largest city of the state of Querxc3xa9taro, located in central Mexico. | WIKI |
Statue of Otomi trader, Conxc3xadn de Xilotepeque, (also known as Hernando de Tapia), founder of the city. | WIKI |
[6] In the later pre-Hispanic period, the area was populated by the Otomi, who had become sedentary urban dwellers with sophisticated politics by the time of the Aztec Empire, who referred to them as the Tlacetilli Otomi or "Otomi Nation/State" . | WIKI |
This area was under control of the Otomi dominion of Xilotepeque in the 1440s, which in turn was subject to the Aztec Empire of Mexihco-Tenochtitlan. | WIKI |
[6] The Otomi were the most populous ethnicity in Xilotepec although there were other groups, primarily Chichimeca as well. | WIKI |
During the pre-Hispanic and colonial times, the Otomi were organized into familial clan like groups with defined territories, living in stone, wood or adobe dwellings. | WIKI |
The foundation of the Spanish city of Santiago de Querxc3xa9taro is pegged to 25 July 1531 when Spaniard Hernxc3xa1n Pxc3xa9rez Bocanegra y Cxc3xb3rdoba arrived with the allied Otomi leader Conxc3xadn (later named Hernando de Tapia) who was the administrative head of the Otomi peoples living in Aztec controlled territory. | WIKI |
[3] On this date, the Spanish and their Nahuan allies were battling the local insurgent Otomi and Chichimecas at a hill now known as Sangremal and which was called Ynlotepeque and considered sacred in pre-Hispanic times. | WIKI |
[6] The Spanish part of the city was laid out by D. Juan Sanchez de Alaniz,[3] and the indigenous section was laid out in the traditional Otomi manner. | WIKI |
[13] According to UNESCO's website, the "old colonial town of Querxc3xa9taro is unusual in having retained the geometric street plan of the Spanish conquerors side by side with the twisting alleys of the Otomi quarters. | WIKI |
The Otomi, the Tarasco, the Chichimeca and the Spanish lived together peacefully in the town with similar standards of living, a rare occurrence at a time when the Indigenous and Hispanic were usually separated by a large income gap and at odds with one another in other parts of the nation. | WIKI |
The Otomi, the Tarasco, the Chichimeca and the Spanish lived together in the town, which is notable for the many ornate civil and religious Baroque monuments, with a skyline that has been defined since the 16th century. | UNESCO |