Tejutla

Tejutla is a municipality in the western highlands of , in the department of . Tejutla was officially founded on 25 July 1672, although it was already an important town within the Mam kingdom in 1524, at the time of the Spanish conquest of Guatemala.
Tap on a place
to explore it
  • Type: Town with 3,160 residents
  • Description: municipality in San Marcos Department, Guatemala; former Mercedarian doctrine
  • Also known as: Tejutla, San Marcos

Tejutla

Latitude
15.12254° or 15° 7′ 21″ north
Longitude
-91.80596° or 91° 48′ 22″ west
Population
3,160
Elevation
2,481 metres (8,140 feet)
Open location code
767C45FV+2J
Open­Street­Map ID
node 1073096698
Open­Street­Map feature
place=­town
Geo­Names ID
3588460
Wiki­data ID
Q1748860
This page is based on OpenStreetMap, GeoNames, Wikidata, Wikimedia Commons, and Wikipedia.
We’d love your help improving our open data sources. Thank you for contributing.

Satellite Map

Discover Tejutla from above in high-definition satellite imagery.

In Other Languages

From Cebuano to Swedish—“Tejutla” goes by many names.
  • Cebuano: Municipio de Tejutla
  • Cebuano: Tejutla
  • Chinese: Tejutla
  • Chinese: 特胡特拉
  • Dutch: Tejutla
  • French: Tejutla
  • German: Tejutla
  • Italian: Tejutla
  • Min Nan Chinese: Tejutla
  • Polish: Tejutla
  • Portuguese: Tejutla
  • Spanish: Tejutla
  • Swedish: Municipio de Tejutla
  • Swedish: Tejutla

Places with the Same Name

Discover other places named “Tejutla”.

Localities in the Area

Explore places such as El Plan and Los Pinos.

Notable Places Nearby

Highlights include Autobuses a San Marcos and Municipalidad de Tejutla.

Guatemala: Must-Visit Destinations

Delve into Guatemala City, Antigua Guatemala, Tikal, and Quetzaltenango.

Curious Places to Discover

Uncover intriguing places from every corner of the globe.
About Mapcarta. Data © OpenStreetMap contributors and available under the Open Database License". Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license, except for photos, directions, and the map. Description text is based on the Wikipedia page “Tejutla”. Photo: Simon Burchell, CC BY-SA 4.0.