Nito

Nito was a trading post of the Maya civilization in Mesoamerica. The site was located at the mouth of the Dulce River, where the river empties into the Gulf of Honduras. The modern Guatemala city of San Gil de Buena Vista in Izabal Department now occupies the area.

The Maya created a network of trading posts. Some posts were connected by water. The Maya built long canoes to navigate the Campeche Bank, the Yucatan Straits, and the Gulf of Honduras. By means of the various rivers along those shores, they traveled up the rivers toward the Maya cities in the highlands of southern Mexico and Guatemala. Connections were also made to the Aztec traders at Xicalango in Mexico and to the island of Cozumel.

Some posts were connected by land. Goods were carried, usually by slaves, along paths to a port like Nito, then transferred to canoes to take advantage of the quicker water route. This network therefore provided commerce between the Maya in Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, and Honduras.[1]

Hernán Cortés arrived in 1525 at Nito after his expedition by land through the Yucatan and left by ship on his way back to Mexico.[2]

See also

Sources

[3] [4]

  1. John B. Carver, "Land of the Maya: A Traveler's Map," supplement to "La Ruta Maya," National Geographic, Vol. 176, No. 4, National Geographic Society, Washington DC, October, 1989
  2. Cortes, Hernando. "The fifth letter of Hernán Cortés to the Emperor Charles V, containing an account of his expedition to Honduras," Lenox Hill Pub.& Dist. Co. (Burt Franklin), 235 E 44th St, New York, NY 10017, Reprinted 1970, SBN: 8337-0681, Library of Congress catalog No. 77-134710, Burt Franklin: The Haklyut Society First Series (40), page 76.
  3. Cortes, Hernando. "The fifth letter of Hernán Cortés to the Emperor Charles V, containing an account of his expedition to Honduras," Lenox Hill Pub.& Dist. Co. (Burt Franklin), 235 E 44th St, New York, NY 10017, Reprinted 1970, SBN: 8337-0681, Library of Congress catalog No. 77-134710, Burt Franklin: The Haklyut Society First Series (40), page 76.
  4. John B. Carver, "Land of the Maya: A Traveler's Map," supplement to "La Ruta Maya," National Geographic, Vol. 176, No. 4. National Geographic Society, Washington DC, October, 1989
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