Chilpancingo, city, capital of Guerrero estado (state), south-central Mexico. Chilpancingo lies in the Sierra Madre del Sur along the Huacapa River, which descends through the inland flanks of the mountains. In pre-Columbian times, the Olmec left remarkable cave paintings in the nearby Juxtlahuaca caverns, which include an extensive tunnel network and a subterranean lake. Spanish conquistadores founded Chilpancingo (“Place of Wasps”) in 1591. It was the site of the first Mexican congress, convoked in 1813 by José María Morelos y Pavón. The prefix de los Bravo (“of the Bravo [family]”) was added to its name in honour of its native sons and heroes of the revolution, Leonardo, Victor, and Nicolás Bravo. Battles were fought at Chilpancingo during the wars of independence and in the Mexican Revolution (1910–20). Chilpancingo’s economy depends almost entirely on the Autonomous University of Guerrero (founded 1869) and on employment with government agencies. Light manufactures include processed foods and alcoholic beverages. The city is a market for corn (maize), sugarcane, bananas, livestock, and lumber produced in its hinterland. It is on the Mexico City–Acapulco highway and has an airport. Pop. (2010) 187,251; (2020) 225,728.