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Estado de Mexico : ウィキペディア英語版
State of Mexico

The State of Mexico ((スペイン語:Estado de México), ), officially the Free and Sovereign State of Mexico ((スペイン語:Estado Libre y Soberano de México)), is one of the 31 states which, with the Federal District, comprise the 32 federal entities of Mexico. It is the most populous, as well as the most densely populated state. It is divided into 125 municipalities and its capital city is Toluca de Lerdo.
The State of Mexico is often abbreviated to "Edomex" from ''Estado de México'' in Spanish. It is located in South-Central Mexico. It is bordered by the states of Querétaro and Hidalgo to the north, Morelos and Guerrero to the south, Michoacán to the west, Tlaxcala and Puebla to the east, and surrounds the Federal District.
The state’s origins are in the territory of the Aztec Empire, which remained a political division of the New Spain during the Spanish colonial period. After Independence, Mexico City was chosen as the capital of the new nation; its territory was separated out of the state. Years later, parts of the state were broken off to form the states of Hidalgo, Guerrero and Morelos. These territorial separations have left the state with the size and shape it has today, with the Toluca Valley to the west of Mexico City and a panhandle that extends around the north and east of this entity.
The state name is simply ''México'' according to the 1917 Constitution of the United Mexican States, but to distinguish it from both the city and the country it is most often called ''Estado de México''. The demonym used to refer to people and things from the state is ''mexiquense'', distinct from ''mexicano'' ("Mexican"), that describes the people or things from the country as a whole.
== Origin and etymology ==

(詳細はNahuatl name for the Valley of Mexico where in the cities of the Mexica (the proper name for the Aztec Triple Alliance) were located. As such, the district that became Mexico City was properly known as Mexico-Tenochtitlan in the years shortly before and after Spanish conquest. After the Spanish Conquest, the term ''México'' came to be used for Tenochtitlan/Mexico City and all the pre-conquest lands it controlled, including several other aforementioned Mexican states originally incorporated in the boundaries of the Mexico state.
There are two possible origins for the name “Mexico.” The first is that it derives from metztli (moon) and xictla (navel) to mean from the navel of the moon. This comes from the old Aztec idea that the craters on the moon form a rabbit figure with one crater imitating a navel. The other possible origin is that it is derived from “Mextictli” an alternate name for the god Huitzilopochtli.
''Anáhuac'' was the proper term for all territories dominated by the Aztec Empire, from ''Cem Anáhuac'', "the entire earth" or "surrounded by waters" e.g. the waters of Lake Texcoco which were considered to be the center of the Aztec world,〔(A Nahuatl Interpretation of the Conquest )〕〔(Universidad Anáhuac )〕 and as such was proposed as an early name for the entire nation of Mexico prior to independence, to distinguish it from the (preexisting) administrative division of New Spain that became the State of Mexico.〔(¿Puede ser libre la Nueva España? )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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