Querétaro, city, capital of Querétaro estado (state), central Mexico. Situated on the Mexican Plateau at an elevation of about 6,100 feet (1,860 meters) above sea level, it is some 130 miles (210 km) northwest of Mexico City. Querétaro is considered an excellent example of a Spanish colonial city; its well-preserved historic center was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1996.
Querétaro was founded by Otomí Indians and was incorporated into the Aztec empire in 1446. Until 1531, when it was brought under Spanish control, it served as an Otomí outpost against enemies to the north. It was noted for its multiethnic blend of Otomí, Tarascan, Chichimec, and Spanish residents throughout most of the colonial period. Querétaro, a major base for the Franciscans’ missionary work in North America, served as a way station and supply center for the rich mining districts of Guanajuato and Zacatecas. In 1810 it was the scene of a plot against Spain that led to the uprising headed by Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla in September of that year. In 1848 the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, terminating the Mexican War, was signed there. The forces of Benito Juárez defeated those of the emperor Maximilian at Querétaro in 1867, and Maximilian and his generals were executed by firing squad on a nearby hill. The Mexican Constitution of 1917 was written in Querétaro, and the city was the birthplace of Mexico’s Institutional Revolutionary Party in 1929.
Central Querétaro retains its narrow, twisting, colonial-era alleys amid stone streets in a grid pattern. Among its historic structures are the cathedral (restored several times), the municipal palace, and the churches of Santa Rosa de Viterbo, Santa Clara, and San Agustín. A prominent feature is an aqueduct 5.5 miles (9 km) long—some 4,200 feet (1,280 meters) of it borne on 74 stone piers up to 75 feet (23 meters) high—built in the 1720s and ’30s to transport water to the city from nearby springs.
One of Mexico’s oldest and largest cotton mills is located in Querétaro, which also produces textiles and pottery and processes crops from its agricultural hinterland. Other manufactures include automobile parts, heavy machinery, oil-drilling equipment, food products, and consumer goods. The Autonomous University of Querétaro (1951) and the Regional Museum of Querétaro (1936) are located in the city. Querétaro lies at the junction of major railway lines to Mexico City, to which it is also linked by highway and air. Pop. (2010) 626,495; metro. area, 1,087,025; (2020) 794,789; metro. area, 1,594,212.