Coahuila
[key], state, 58,067 sq mi (150,394 sq km), N Mexico, on the northward
bulge of the Rio Grande, S of Texas. Saltillo is the capital. In the eastern
part of the state, where peaks of the Sierra Madre Oriental rise, are
quantities of silver, copper, lead, iron, and zinc. Coahuila is an important
coal-producing state and a leading national producer of iron and steel.
Lumbering is important, and northeast of the mountains, in the drainage area
of the Rio Grande, there is considerable cattle raising. Across W Coahuila
and E Chihuahua lie vast and arid plains (some of them recently irrigated),
which are broken by barren mountains; most notable of these plains is the
Bolsón de Mapimí, extending into Chihuahua. South of the
Bolsón is a fertile lake region, center of a vast inland basin, which
absorbs rivers with no outlet to the sea. A considerable portion of the
Laguna District
lies in this area. Torreón is
the chief metropolis. Coahuila produces cotton, corn, and grapes; the state
is noted for its wines. Exploration of the territory began in the 16th cent.
but was hampered by Native American hostility. After playing some part in
the war against Spain, Coahuila was combined (1830) with Texas, a proceeding
that caused dissatisfaction among the U.S. minority and contributed to the
Texas Revolution (1835–36). During the Mexican War, Saltillo was of
strategic importance, and the battle of Buena Vista was fought nearby.
Joined with Nuevo León by the constitution of 1857, Coahuila regained
its separate status in 1868. The revolutionary leaders Francisco I. Madero
and Venustiano Carranza were born in the state.
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