Spaniards begin colonizing the region of present…
September 1546 CE
Spaniards begin colonizing the region of present Zacatecas state in north central Mexico in 1546, two years after the discovery of silver touched off a mining boom.
The present city of Zacatecas, founded on September 8, is originally baptized "Minas de los Zacatecas" or "Mines of the Zacatecas," from the Nahuatl name for the indigenous people who inhabited the area before the arrival of the Spanish.
The name ultimately derives from the Nahuatl word for a type of grass common in the region, zacatl.
The region where this grass grew was originally called Zacatlan, and its inhabitants, Zacatecas.
Built over a rich vein of silver discovered by Juan de Tolosa in the same year, this and other mines in the vicinity would attract a large population, and it would soon became one of the chief mining centers of Mexico.
It is today the capital and largest city of the state of Zacatecas.