Northern Mexico ( ), commonly referred as El Norte, is an informal term for the northern cultural and geographical area in Mexico. Depending on the source, it contains some or all of the states of Baja California, Baja California Sur, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Durango, Nuevo León, Sinaloa, Sonora and Tamaulipas.
There is no specific border that separates the northern states from the southern states in Mexico. For some authors, only states that have a border with the United States are considered as northern Mexico, i.e. Baja California, Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León, Sonora and Tamaulipas. Others also include Durango, Sinaloa and Baja California Sur. Other people consider that the north starts above the Tropic of Cancer, but this description would include some parts of Zacatecas and San Luis Potosí that are not considered northern states.
History
Before colonization
It is not known precisely when the first settlers came to northern Mexico. The harsh climate in the region limited the practice of agriculture, so ancient cultures developed a
lifestyle dedicated to
hunter-gatherer.
One of the most important native cultures in northern Mexico are the Tepehuanes of Durango, whose autonym is Odami "people from the mountains". Similarly, the Rarámuri "people who run" of Chihuahua are called the Tarahumaras by outsiders. Other important cultures are the Mayos in Sinaloa and Sonora, the Yaquis in Sonora, and the Laguneros of Laguna Pueblo in Coahuila. In Nuevo León, many nomads were exterminated for resisting the construction of Monterrey.
Colonial era
The first city of the region was Durango, founded in 1563 by Francisco de Ibarra, a
Basques explorer. During the colonial era, Durango, Chihuahua and some parts of Sinaloa and Coahuila were a Basque colony named the
Nueva Vizcaya. Now, most Duranguenses are Basque descendants.
Other important cities like Monterrey were founded almost 50 years later.
The Spanish rulers expanded the northern frontier of the colony through centuries of difficult conquest. In the late 18th century, they established a punitive policy to defend against indigenous raids from the north. During this period, they also established separate governance for the northern regions, which were thought of as "interior provinces" from the perspective of people in Mexico City.
Postcolonial era
Northern Mexico's proximity to the United States became a major factor in the region's postcolonial history, as the northern half of Mexico was annexed into the United States by the mid-19th century.
During the
Porfiriato, the region's traditionally agricultural economy was disrupted as it became the focus of capital investments from the United States and the rest of Mexico.
Mexico sometimes feared the loss of Baja California, which had a particularly strong economic and geographic integration with the United States, due to its importance in protecting Pacific trade routes.
States
Culture
Northern Mexican culture is very different from the culture in south and central Mexico. Northern Mexican opinion tends to be more conservative on average on cultural topics like
abortion, gay marriage and legalization of
marijuana,
but more liberal on topics like business or technology.
In early 2014, the Strategic Communication Cabinet, a statistical consulting services company, published a report called "Social Intolerance In Mexico", in which polls that covered several social issues were conducted in the 45 largest cities and municipalities of the country. Aside from liberal Mexico City, the federal capital, the study found the strongest support for same-sex marriage in northern cities such as Tijuana and La Paz; whereas it was the weakest in Durango, Ciudad Victoria, Chihuahua City and Monterrey. As for LGBT adoption, it was more widely accepted in the border cities of Tijuana and Ciudad Juárez, while the least support was found in Chihuahua and Durango. Support for abortion upon request, cannabis legalisation and euthanasia was the weakest in northern Mexico. Nonetheless, Coahuila became the first state to legalise same-sex marriage in the country.
Festivities
Some important days in the north are July 8, the foundation of
Durango City (the first city founded in the North) and the carnaval of Mazatlán, celebrated 6 days before
Ash Wednesday.
Cuisine
As well as the Spanish and the Indigenous people, northern Mexico has received
Lebanese people,
Jewish, Portuguese,
Chinese people,
Irish people,
German people,
Italian people and
Spanish People immigrants. All this mixture of cultures has strongly influenced the cuisine from the north. Northern Mexican gastronomy is based on beef, goat and pig meat and flour tortillas,
which are remnants of Jewish and Lebanese heritage.
Because of the German influence cheese and dairy products are also important in the cuisine of the region.
Nachos, and are probably the three most famous dishes from the north. One of the most famous customs from northern Mexico is to reunite family and friends on weekends to prepare barbecue, named Carne Asada by the Mexicans. A variation of this tradition is to prepare discada, a mixture of grilled meats cooked on an agricultural plow disk harrow.
Sports
Association football, or soccer, is one of the region's most popular sports,
as it hosts five out of the eighteen teams that currently play in the
Liga MX, the country's top division of the domestic football league system. Major cities are home to these teams such as Monterrey and
Tigres UANL, both based in Monterrey,
Santos Laguna in Torreón,
Club Tijuana in the border city of the same name and
FC Juarez based on the homonymous border city of Juárez. Notably, Northern teams have dominated the Liga MX in the 2010s, winning a combined total of nine titles and reaching more than half of the decade's finals.
Moreover, Northern teams that play in the
Ascenso MX, the second professional level of the domestic football system, include Dorados de Sinaloa from Culiacán, Cimarrones de Sonora in Hermosillo, Tampico Madero and
Correcaminos UAT, both based in the state of Tamaulipas.
Baseball is another popular sport in northern Mexico,
particularly in states such as Sinaloa and Sonora.
Seven of the sixteen teams of the Triple-A
Mexican League, the country's oldest running professional league, are based in the North: Sultanes de Monterrey, Saraperos de Saltillo, Acereros de Monclova, Algodoneros de Unión Laguna, Generales de Durango, Tecolotes de los Dos Laredos and Toros de Tijuana. Of these, three (Saraperos, Acereros, and Algodoneros) are based in Coahuila, which is thus the only state to have more than one team in the league, and one of only three states or provinces to have three teams in Triple-A baseball (the others being
Texas and New York). Sultanes de Monterrey has been the most successful Northern team in the Mexican League, winning ten championships (the third most of any team), but Tecolotes, Saraperos, and Algodoneros all have multiple titles to their names. In winter-league play, the independent Mexican Pacific League (
Liga Mexicana del Pacífico or LMP) is based in the North, with most of its eight teams playing in Northwestern Mexico. The league is considered competitive, as the winter schedule coincides with the Major League Baseball offseason and MLB players can participate. Since the 1970s, the winner of the Mexican Pacific League has competed in the prestigious
Caribbean Series, won nine times by Mexican teams, primarily in the 21st century, such as Yaquis de Obregón and Naranjeros de Hermosillo, based in the state of Sonora, Venados de Mazatlán and Tomateros de Culiacán, both based in the state of Sinaloa.
Moreover, there are several minor state-wide baseball leagues in the region such as
Liga Estatal de Béisbol de Chihuahua,
Liga Mayor de Béisbol de La Laguna and
Liga Norte de México.
Another popular sport is basketball, played at the professional level throughout the entire year between the National Basketball League, founded in 2000, and the Pacific Coast Circuit, which exclusively involves teams based in Northwestern Mexico. The Liga de Básquetbol Estatal de Chihuahua is a minor league played primarily by local teams in the border state of Chihuahua. Remarkably, Chihuahua-born Eduardo Nájera became the second Mexican to play in the National Basketball Association (NBA), after Sinaloa-born Horacio Llamas. As for American football, National Football League (NFL) following is popular in several northern cities, particularly amongst the middle and upper classes. Notably, Torreón-born kicker Raúl Allegre played for several NFL teams throughout his career in the 1980s. Boxing is one of the most popular sports in the country and northern Mexico has long been a source of world-famous boxers such as Julio César Chávez, his son Julio, Jr., Jorge Arce and Jorge Paez.
Dialect
Northern Mexican Spanish distinguishes itself from other varieties of Spanish spoken in the country for its strong intonation. Due to its proximity to the United States, it receives a great deal of influence from English. For example, English words such as troca (truck), lonche (lunch) and bai (bye) are of common usage.
In addition to Spanish, there are also many Indigenous languages, with Tepehuan, Mayo language, and Tarahumara being among the largest and most prominent. However, another important difference between the North and South-Central Spanish is that northern Mexico Spanish has not received as much Native American influence as Central and South Mexico Spanish, this is because northern Mexico has the lowest concentration of Indigenous communities of all regions in the country and there is not a single Indigenous language that surpasses 100,000 speakers.
Curiously, in Spanish dubs from English language films or TV series, it is a cliche to associate the Northern Mexican accent with people from Australia or Southern USA, so a lot of Hispanics wrongly associate Northern Mexican Spanish with Australian English and Southern American English.
Notable people
File:Oleo Guadalupe Victoria.PNG|Guadalupe Victoria, first president of Mexico
File:Portrait of Venustiano Carranza (cropped).jpg|Venustiano Carranza, the president that promulgated the constitution of Mexico
File:Pancho villa horseback.jpg|Francisco Villa, the most notable general in the Mexican Revolution
File:Francisco I Madero-retouched.jpg|Francisco I. Madero, initiator of the Mexican Revolution and President of Mexico
File:Dolores_del_R%C3%ADo_in_The_Fugitive_(1947_film).jpg|Dolores del Río, first major female Latin American crossover star in Hollywood
File:María Félix 1947.jpg|María Félix, actress
File:Anthony Quinn signed.JPG|Anthony Quinn, actor
File:Fernando Valenzuela in bullpen.jpg|Fernando Valenzuela, pitcher for the LA Dodgers and winner of two World Series
File:Lupita Jones.jpg|Lupita Jones, Miss Universe 1991
File:Adal Ramones.jpg|Adal Ramones, comedian
File:Eduardo Najera.jpg|Eduardo Najera, former NBA player
File:Aracely Arámbula in May 2017.png|Aracely Arámbula, actress
File:Omar Chaparro in 2017.jpg|Omar Chaparro, comedian and actor
File:Susana Zabaleta 2017.png|Susana Zabaleta, soprano singer and actress
File:JaredBorgetti.jpg|Jared Borgetti, second all time scorer from the Mexican national soccer team
File:María_Espinoza_2016.jpg|María del Rosario Espinoza, three time Olympic medal winner