Santiago is a municipality and city located in the center of the Mexican state of Nuevo León. It is part of the Monterrey metropolitan area and its area comprises around . According to the 2020 census, it had a population of 46,784.
Santiago, Nuevo León, was named a "Pueblo Mágico" in 2006 by Mexico's Secretariat of Tourism. Santiago joined the UNESCO Global Network of Learning Cities in 2017.
In 1645, Don Diego RodrÃÂguez de Montemayor, great-grandson of Don Diego de Montemayor, requested permission from Governor Don MartÃÂn de Zavala to obtain land. His mother, Doña Mónica RodrÃÂguez, already owned properties up to the El Cerrito River in the region known as Las Palmas, so he asked that these be adjacent to his mother's. Zavala verbally granted him permission for the first settlement where today the Héroes del 47 Street intersects with the National Highway.
On March 20, 1646, MartÃÂn de Zavala legalized RodrÃÂguez de Montemayor's lands with official documentation. The land stretched from the Cerrito River to the San Juan River, now known as Escamilla. Official documents grant him eight caballerÃÂas of land and two cattle sites. Two years later, Diego RodrÃÂguez de Montemayor negotiated with his uncle Gregorio Fernández de Montemayor to acquire the territory of the Escamilla stream, extending towards the Ramos River. In 1650, Diego RodrÃÂguez de Montemayor married Inés de la Garza, with whom he had 12 children, but shortly thereafter they decided to leave the area.
Santiago is a municipality located in the center of the Mexican state of Nuevo León. It is part of the Monterrey metropolitan area and its area comprises around .
"La Boca" Dam, one of the water reservoirs serving the metropolitan area, is located within the municipality. "Cola de Caballo" is a famous waterfall and tourist attraction.
Santiago has a humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification Cwa) with cool, dry winters and hot and humid summers. It is receives almost twice as much rain as nearby Monterrey.