Chan Santa Cruz

Chan Santa Cruz
U Noh Kah Balam Nah Chan Santa Cruz
1849–1901
Flag of Chan Santa Cruz
Territory under the Mayan control, c. 1870.
CapitalNoh Kah Balam Nah Chan Santa Cruz
Common languagesMayan languages
Halach Uinik (governor) 
 1849–1852
Jose Maria Barrera
Ahau K'atun Kiuik' (supreme general) 
 Longest serving
Bernardino Cen
 Last
Francisco May
History 
 Established
1849
 Disestablished
1901
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Republic of Yucatan
Mexico
Today part ofQuintana Roo

Chan Santa Cruz was a late 19th-century indigenous Maya state in the modern-day Mexican state of Quintana Roo. It was also the name of a shrine that served as the center of the Maya Cruzoob religious movement, and of the town that developed around the shrine, now known as Felipe Carrillo Puerto. The town was historically the main center of what is now Quintana Roo, and it acted as the de facto capital for the Maya during the Caste War of Yucatán.