Navojoa is located at the southern
part of the state of Sonora, 380 Miles south from
the border U.S. border and by then, constitutes
one of the municipalities of the Southern Sonora
Route.
History
The actual territory that occupies the municipality
of Navojoa was inhabited since Prehispanic times
by Mayo natives, whose history is intimately tied
to the valley and the river of the same name.
Navojoa’s name comes from the Mayo language
roots “navo” that means prickly pear,
and “jova” that means house; thus
the city it means “house or place of prickly
pears.”
In 1533 the expedition lead by Don Diego de Guzman
visited for first time this region. In 1593, Captain
Diego Martinez de Hurdaide conquered and pacified
Mayos, joining them to the Spanish colonial regime.
Since 1610, evangelization started by Jesuit
missionaries, who were then expulsed in 1767.
The Mayo Indian land in the southernmost tip
of the state was part of the original state of
Occident back in 1925. The original settlement
on the left bank of the Mayo River was given the
title of city on July 6, 1923. |