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Nogales is a city in the mountainous western region of the Mexican state of Veracruz. It serves as the municipal seat for the surrounding municipality of Nogales. [1] It is situated at , at an altitude of 1280 m. In the 2005 INEGI Census, the city reported a total population of 21,113.
The monastery of Santa María de Nogales (Spanish: Monasterio de Santa María de Nogales) was a Cistercian monastery in Spain. Its ruins still exist in the environs of San Esteban de Nogales . Several important figures are buried there, including Sancha Ponce de Cabrera , Pedro Ponce de Cabrera and his wife Aldonza Alfonso de León .
Nogales is a municipality in the mountainous western region of the Mexican state of Veracruz. The municipal seat is the city of Nogales . It is situated at 18°49′N 97°10′W / 18.817°N 97.167°W / 18.817; -97.167 , at an altitude of 1280 m, and covers a total surface area of 77.32
Heroica Nogales (Spanish pronunciation: [eˈɾojka noˈɣales]), more commonly known as Nogales, is a city and the county seat of the Municipality of Nogales in the Mexican state of Sonora. It is located in the north of the state across the U.S.-Mexico border , and is abutted on its north by the city of Nogales, Arizona .
This is a list which includes a photographic gallery, of some of the structures of historic significance in Nogales, Arizona.Nogales is a city in Santa Cruz County, Arizona which lies on the border of Mexico and is separated from the town of Nogales, Sonora in Mexico by a 20-foot-high row of steel beams, also known simply as the "Wall".
Colegio Fray Pedro de Gante is a Roman Catholic school in Nogales, Sonora. It was founded in 1946 by Father Ignacio de la Torre (commonly referred to as Padre Nacho). From 2010 to 2012, it was an associate member of the Arizona Interscholastic Association for the purpose of scrimmaging with Arizona high schools in football .
Mission San Cayetano del Tumacácori was established by Jesuits in 1691 in a location near a Sobaipuri settlement on the east side of the Santa Cruz River. Services were held in a small adobe structure built by the inhabitants of the village. [3] After the O'odham rebellion of 1751 the mission was abandoned for a time.
Nogales was at the beginning of the 1775–1776 Juan Bautista de Anza Expedition as it entered the present-day U.S. from New Spain, and the town is now on the Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail. On the second floor of the 1904 Nogales Courthouse is a small room dedicated to the 1775–1776 Anza Expedition. [8]