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  2. Pipil people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pipil_people

    Settling mostly in the western side of El Salvador they incorporated the Indigenous populations into their new social and political order. with the Spaniards collecting and selling the products Indigenous people produced, because the Indigenous populations were much better at cultivating the native crops in the region especially the lucrative ...

  3. List of cities in El Salvador - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_in_El_Salvador

    City population figures below are from the World Population Review from 2024. [1] Over 100,000 or a High Human Development Index, and a high urbanization. AMSS = San Salvador Metropolitan Area Acajutla – Pop. 22,763; Apopa – Pop. 112,158 (AMSS) Antiguo Cuscatlán – Pop. 33,767 (AMSS); [1] highest HDI in the country [citation needed]

  4. Lenca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenca

    Map of El Salvador's Indigenous Peoples at the time of the Spanish conquest: 1. Pipil people, 2. Lenca people, 3. Kakawira o Cacaopera, 4. Xinca, 5. Maya Ch'orti' people, 6. Maya Poqomam people, 7. Mangue o Chorotega. Quelepa is a major site in eastern El Salvador. Its pottery shows strong similarities to ceramics found in central western El ...

  5. Panchimalco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panchimalco

    Panchimalco is known for its indigenous population and its festivities. Together with Izalco, Panchimalco is considered one of the last two remaining bastions of Amerindian peoples in El Salvador. [2] Villagers still weave and wear colorful native textiles and maintain many indigenous traditions. [3] However, the native language is not one of them.

  6. Demographics of El Salvador - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_El_Salvador

    Germans numbers in El Salvador later increased, their descendants were much more than the number of German immigrants living in El Salvador. There were cities founded by German families, like Berlín, Usulután which is a very clear example of a settlement founded by a German. Later other Germans families came to the area.

  7. Cuzcatlan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuzcatlan

    The seal of Kuskatan based on the "Lienzo de Tlaxcala" with the symbol of an altepetl. Cuzcatlan (Pipil: Kuskatan; Nahuatl: Cuzcatlan) was a pre-Columbian Nahua state confederation of the Mesoamerican postclassical period that extended from the Paz river to the Lempa river (covering most of western El Salvador); this was the nation that Spanish chroniclers came to call the Pipils or Cuzcatlecos.

  8. Salvadorans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salvadorans

    Its pottery shows strong similarities to ceramics found in central western El Salvador and the Maya highlands. The Lenca sites of Yarumela, Los Naranjos in Honduras, and Quelepa in El Salvador, all contain evidence of the Usulután-style ceramics. The Cacaopera people are an indigenous people in El Salvador who are also known as the Matagalpa ...

  9. History of El Salvador - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_El_Salvador

    Before the Spanish conquest, the area that is known as El Salvador was composed of three indigenous states and several principalities. In central El Salvador were the indigenous inhabitants, the Pipils, or the Pipiles, a tribe of nomadic Nahua people that were settled there for a long time. The Pipil strongly resisted Spanish efforts to extend ...