Coahuila y Tejas
[[Category:1824[1] establishments|Coahuila y Texas, 1824[1]]]
Estado Libre y Soberano deCoahuila y Texas Coahuila y Tejas | |||||
State of Mexico | |||||
| |||||
Flag | |||||
Coahuila y Tejas within Mexico | |||||
Capital city | SaltilloMonclova (March 9, 1833) | ||||
Government | Federated state | ||||
Governor | |||||
Legislature | Unicameral Congress | ||||
- | Upper house | Congreso del Estado Libre y Soberano de Coahuila y Tejas[2] | |||
History | |||||
- | Mexican Independence | September 27, 1821 | |||
- | Established | May 7 | |||
- | Texas Revolution | October 2, 1835 | |||
- | Disestablished | December 15, | |||
- | Texas annexation | December 29, 1845 | |||
Area | |||||
- | 1824[3][a] | 555,500 km2 (Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character ",". sq mi) | |||
389,400 km2 (Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character ",". sq mi) | |||||
166,100 km2 (Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character ",". sq mi) | |||||
Population | |||||
- | {{{stat_year2}}} | 70,955 | |||
Density | Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character ",". /km2 (Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character ",". /sq mi) | ||||
Today part of | Mexico - Coahuila United States - Texas | ||||
^ a. Texas had approximately 389,400 km2 and Coahuila 166,100 km2. Texas had 18 municipalities: San Antonio de Bexar, 2,400; Goliad, 700; Victoria, 300; Saint Patrick, 600; San Felipe, 2,500; Columbia, 2,100; Matagorda, 1,400; Gonzalez, 900; Mine, 1,100; Nacogdoches, 3,500; San Augustine, 2,500; Liberty, 1,000; Johnsburg, 2,000; Anahuac, 50; Bevil, 140; Teran, 10; Tenaha, 100. |
Coahuila y Tejas (Coahuila and Texas) was one of the constituent states of the United Mexican States. [4]
Coahuila Y Tejas Media
Philadelphia engraver, printer, map publisher, and instrument maker William Hooker's Map of Coahuila and Texas first appeared in an 1833 promotional book on Texas by Mary Austin Holley (1784-1846), a first cousin of the famous Texas colonizer Stephen F. Austin. Holley and her publisher, Armstrong & Plaskitt of Baltimore substituted Hooker's map when Henry S. Tanner, the publisher of Stephen F.
Philadelphia engraver, printer, map publisher, and instrument maker William Hooker's Map of Coahuila and Texas first appeared in an 1833 promotional book on Texas by Mary Austin Holley (1784-1846), a first cousin of the famous Texas colonizer Stephen F. Austin. Holley and her first publisher, Armstrong & Plaskitt of Baltimore substituted Hooker's map when Henry S. Tanner, the publisher of Stephen F.
References
- ↑ (in es) Las Diputaciones Provinciales. p. 15. http://biblio.juridicas.unam.mx/libros/6/2920/11.pdf.
- ↑ (in es) Historia Legislativa del Congreso del Estado de Coahuila (15 de agosto de 1824). http://www.congresocoahuila.gob.mx/index.cfm/mod.historia_legislativa/index.coah?OP=7.
- ↑ (in es) Historia Legislativa del Congreso del Estado de Coahuila (Constitucion de 1824). http://www.congresocoahuila.gob.mx/index.cfm/mod.historia_legislativa/index.coah?OP=6.
- ↑ 5th. Article of Mexican Constitution of 1824 Archived 2018-08-16 at the Wayback Machine.