• about them refer to them as the Chontal of Centla, the Tabasco Chontal, or in Spanish, Chontales. They consider themselves the descendants of the Olmecs...
    10 KB (1,363 words) - 21:34, 4 December 2023
  • Thumbnail for Tabasco
    Tabasco (Spanish pronunciation: [taˈβasko] ), officially the Free and Sovereign State of Tabasco (Spanish: Estado Libre y Soberano de Tabasco), is one...
    81 KB (8,008 words) - 13:22, 15 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Tabasco mud turtle
    The Tabasco mud turtle (Kinosternon acutum), commonly known as pochitoque in Tabasco, Mexico, is a small turtle which belongs to the family Kinosternidae...
    6 KB (517 words) - 05:08, 16 December 2022
  • Thumbnail for Ixcateopan (archaeological site)
    linguistic relationship to each other: Chontales de Tabasco, as they are commonly known, another designation is mayas-chontales or Maya putunes in the academic...
    40 KB (4,723 words) - 23:41, 4 October 2023
  • Thumbnail for Pozol
    sustenance on long trips across the jungles. Since ancient times, the Maya-Chontales from Belize prepared this drink with boiled cornmeal, cocoa, and grains...
    12 KB (1,260 words) - 07:14, 29 June 2024
  • XHCPBS-FM (category Radio stations in Tabasco)
    XHCPBS-FM, known as La Voz de los Chontales, is an indigenous community radio station on 98.7 FM broadcasting in Spanish, Chontal Maya (yokot'an), Ch'ol...
    11 KB (1,205 words) - 06:35, 13 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Chontalpa
    Chontalpa (category Geography of Tabasco)
    of the State of Tabasco] José Manuel Flores López (2006). "Chontales de Tabasco" [Chontal Maya of Tabasco] (PDF) (in Spanish). Tabasco, Mexico: Comisión...
    24 KB (2,978 words) - 10:52, 24 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Nacajuca
    Nacajuca (category Populated places in Tabasco)
    arrived to the area in 1518 making contact with the Chontales here and other parts of the state of Tabasco. In 1524 and 1525, Hernán Cortés passed through...
    21 KB (2,383 words) - 04:42, 12 December 2023
  • Thumbnail for Chakán Putum
    Chakán Putum was the Gulf of Mexico, to the Southwest was Tabasco (the territory of the Chontales Mayans), to the North was the Can Pech territory, and to...
    6 KB (659 words) - 02:27, 26 September 2023
  • (XHSQB-FM 95.1). On February 28, 2020, the INPI relaunched La Voz de los Chontales, which had been shuttered as XENAC in 1989 for political reasons, as...
    13 KB (561 words) - 16:25, 7 May 2024