Las Vueltas
Encyclopedia
Las Vueltas is a municipality
Municipalities of El Salvador
The departments of El Salvador are divided into 262 municipalities or municipios. The municipalities are listed below, by department El Salvador is divided into fourteen administrative divisions called departments, the equivalent of states in the United States. Each department is administered by a...

 in the Chalatenango Department
Chalatenango Department
Chalatenango is a department of El Salvador, located in the northwest of the country. The capital is the city of Chalatenango. The Chalatenango Department encompasses 2,017 km² and contains more than 220,000 inhabitants. Las Matras Archaeological Ruins contains the relics of prehistoric...

 in the North of El Salvador
El Salvador
El Salvador or simply Salvador is the smallest and the most densely populated country in Central America. The country's capital city and largest city is San Salvador; Santa Ana and San Miguel are also important cultural and commercial centers in the country and in all of Central America...

.

Las Vueltas is bordered to the north by Ojos de Agua; to the east by Las Flores; to the south by Chalatenango; and to the northeast by Concepción Quezaltepeque. The territory covers 36.83 km² In 2005 the population of the municipality was 2,101 inhabitants. For its administration, the municipality is divided into 6 cantones and 35 caseríos.

History of Las Vueltas

According to the information preserved by tradition, Las Vueltas was founded in 1765 by emigrants from Chalatenango. By legislative decree on May 12, 1902, the then municipality of La Ceiba was abolished and changed into a cantón in the municipality of Las Vueltas.

A new law, that of April 23, 1906, reinstated El Zapotal as part of Las Vuelas and also moved the prosperous cantones of La Ceiba and La Laguna to Chalatenango. Another legislative decree, on April 8, 1943, moved these two cantones out of the jurisdiction of Chalatenango and also shifted the cantones of El Zapotal and El Coyolar to Ojos de Agua.

Due to the repression of the landowners, in 1931 farmers and indigenous citizens began a rebellion (Lonely Planet). The army responded by killing 30,000 people, including the leader of the rebellion, Farabundo Martí, in a bloody act that was later referred to as La Matanza (The Massacre) (Lonely Planet). But the people remained unhappy with the government. This began a movement organized around leftist guerrillas to combat the repression violence (Stahler-Sholk, 1994:2). The government responded with violence, and the Death Squads were formed, which eventually killed and tortured thousands of people (Foley 2006). More political instability and the assassination of Archbishop Oscar Romero in 1980 sparked the beginning of the Civil War (Lonely Planet). This war, which lasted 12 years, resulted in the death of an estimated 75,000 people and the displacement of thousands more (Stahler-Sholk, 1994:3). The Peace Accords were signed on January 16, 1992 (Embajada).

The department of Chalatenango was heavily impacted by the Civil War. Many people of Las Vueltas were forced to abandon their homes because of the violence. But beginning the early 1990s, and especially after the Peace Accords, the people have returned to repopulate the municipality.

Cantones and their Caseríos

Conacaste: Conacaste,
El Arrozalito,
La Hondurita,
Chilguaste,
El Zurron,
Los Jobos

El Sicahuite: El Sicahuite,
El Cacao,
El Potrero,
Tierra Blanca,
El Tablón

La Ceiba: La Ceiba,
El Caulote,
Los Menjivar,
El Limón

La Laguna Seca: La Laguna,
El Picacho,
Vallecito,
La Quebrada,
El Chorizo,
Sitio El Amate,
Sitio El Copinol

Los Naranjos: Los Naranjos,
San Antonio,
Plan del Barro,
Los Amates

San José: San José,
El Cordoncillo,
El Balcon,
Tierra Blanca,
San José El Amatillo,
La Ceibita,
El Descanso,
El Portillo,
El Roblar

The mayor of Las Vueltas is Rosa Cándida Alas de Menjívar of the FMLN party.

Religion

There is no doubt that religion plays an important role in the lives of many people. Patron-saint and other religious festivals are still very important and celebrated in almost all of the municipalities in the country, and almost all the cantons have their own patron-saint in whose honor the festival is celebrated.

Fiestas Patronales
Urban center:
February 10–12,
in honor of the Virgin de Concepción;
October 10–13,
Anniversary of the repopulation of the municipality.

El Cantón Conacaste:
December 18, in honor of the Virgin de los Remedios

El Cantón Los Naranjos: July 15–16, in honor of Virgin del Carmen.

El Cantón El Sicahuite:
June 20–21, in honor of San Luís Gonzaga;
May 13, in honor of the Virgin de Lourdes.

Cantón San José, caserío El Amatillo: March 19, in honor of San José de la Montaña.
Cantón La Ceiba: June 13, in honor of San Antonio de Padua.

Music

Before the popular music was ranchera and vals. Some of the popular instruments used to be guitars, violins, accordions, and marimbas. This music is now no longer heard.

Agricultural Production

The people of Las Vueltas grow corn, beans, and sorghum. The majority, if it is a good crop, is for family sustenance; little is sold. The fields also produce melons, cucumbers, squash, etc.

Food and Drinks

Traditional foods include beans, tortillas, metas, soups, sweets, and seeds. Other traditional foods and dishes include:
  1. A variety of pupusas (stuffed corn tortillas)
  2. Tamales
  3. Coffee of corn of sorghum
  4. Soups made with local vegetables
  5. Sweetened ayote, a local squash
  6. Atole of fruits
  7. Natural fruit juices of local fruits, such as nance


The majority of the ingredients used to make these foods and drinks are natural and are grown in the area. They also form part of the biodiversity that, in some cases, is threatened or in danger of extinction. Nevertheless these habits are less common as more people eat commercially produced foods.

Tourist Sites

  1. Sumpul River
    Sumpul River
    The Sumpul is a river of north-western El Salvador. It flows through the Chalatenango Department....

    , where it enters in Cantón El Conacaste
  2. El Volcán / El Conacaste and la Bola, are known as "the boiler" because there is natural hot water.
  3. Above Tamulasco River there are various natural pools: La Sirena etc.

Archaeological Sites

  1. In Sicahuite there is stone art and archaeological material.
  2. In Plan de Barro there is stone art.
  3. In Las Vueltas and El Conacaste there is stone art.

Citations

ARENA. 2007. "Nuestra Historia." [Online] http://www.arena.com.sv/. Retrieved December 6, 2007.

CIA World Factbook. November 15, 2007. "El Salvador." [Online]. https://www.cia.gov/ library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/es.html. Retrieved December 5, 2007.

Comisión Nacional de Educación Política. 2002. "Historia del FMLN." [Online] http://fmln.org.sv/portal/index.php?module=htmlpages&func=display&pid=1. Retrieved December 6, 2007.

Embajada de El Salvador en EE. UU. (Embajada), De la Civilización a la Independencia. [Online]. http://www.elsalvador.org/home.nsf. Retrieved December 4, 2007.

Foley, Michael W. 2006. Laying the Groundwork: The Struggle for Civil Society in El Salvador. Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs. 38 (1): 67-104.

Lonely Planet. "El Salvador Background Information." [Online]. http://www.lonelyplanet.com/worldguide/destinations/central-america/el-salvador/essential?a=culture. Retrieved December 3, 2007.

Martínez Alas, José Salomón, Aguilardo Pérez Yancky, Ismael Ernesto Crespín Rivera, and Deysi Ester Cierra Anaya. 2005. "Diagnostico Cultural Municipio de Las Vueltas, 2005." El Instituo para Rescate Ancestral Indígena (RAIS): El Salvador.

Stahler-Sholk, Richard. 1994. El Salvador's Negotiated Transition: From Low-Intensity Conflict to Low-IntensityDemocracy. Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs. 36 (4): 1-59.

US Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (USBHRL). November 8, 2005. "International Religious Freedom Report 2005."
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