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XHGI-FM
XHGI-FM is a radio station on 97.3 FM in Zacatipan, San Luis Potosí, serving Tamazunchale Tamazunchale is a town and municipality in the state of San Luis Potosí, central Mexico. In 2010 the area of the municipality was and the population was 96,820. The population of the town was 24,562. Etymology The name Tamazunchale (Tam-uxum-t .... It is known as Radio Reyna. History XEGI-AM 1160 received its concession on July 11, 1988. It was owned by Aurora Cárdenas Toral and broadcast as a 500-watt daytimer. Her successors sold XEGI to Luis Antonio Río Castañeda and Luis Antonio, Ernesto, Ricardo and Elisa Ríos Cárdenas. They promptly turned XEGI over to Juan Roberto Reyna López in 2006. Upon his death the next year, Juan Roberto Reyna Irazabal became the concessionaire along with Esteban Javier and Sergio Manuel Reyna Irazabal, Sonia Reyna López and Elsa Irazabal McMillan. These relatives later consolidated the station under a corporation. XEGI received approval to migrat ...
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Tamazunchale
Tamazunchale is a town and municipality in the state of San Luis Potosí, central Mexico. In 2010 the area of the municipality was and the population was 96,820. The population of the town was 24,562. Etymology The name Tamazunchale (Tam-uxum-tzalle) comes from the Huastec language, and means "Place of the Government"; it was the Huastec capital around the 15th century. History The area of the State of San Luis Potosí including: Tamazunchale, Jacala, Coxcatlan, Tamacuil, Xatxapala, Tacetuco and Huahuatla along the Moctezuma River, was the Huastec Indian territory. In 1454, Montezuma, the ruler of the city of Tenochtitlan, sent his troops to dominate the Huastec nation, and won the war. The Huastec had no choice but to give in and pay tribute to the Aztec capital. In 1485, the three chiefs of the Huastec nation, Chicontepec, Temapache, and Molango, led several rebellions and were free for a time from the Aztecs. In 1487, the new ruler of Tenochtitlan, Ahuizotl sent troops to ...
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