The name of Ciego de Ávila has an origin as curious as it is descriptive. In colonial Cuban Spanish, a 'ciego' was a clearing in the forest or a cleared plot, closed in by vegetation, with no visible way out through the woods. The region where the city stands today was, in the colonial era, an area of forests and estates, and one of those clearings or 'ciegos' belonged to an owner named Ávila. From the combination of both elements —the geographic feature and the name of the landowner— the place name 'Ciego de Ávila' was born.
This origin marks a fundamental difference from the great colonial towns of Cuba, such as Trinidad, Sancti Spíritus or Bayamo, formally founded in the 16th century by Diego Velázquez. Ciego de Ávila was not one of those early towns: it arose much later, as a settlement that grew slowly around estates and roads of the island's interior, and that only reached town and then city status well into the 19th century.
That relative youth explains much of the city's look: its more regular layout, its architecture without great 16th-century colonial jewels and its character as an inland town tied to agriculture and, later, to military strategy and the railway. Far from the air of an old town, Ciego de Ávila is a city with more modern roots within the Cuban landscape.
For much of the colonial era, the Ciego de Ávila area was a territory of estates, forests and roads in the center of the island, without an important urban core. The settlement grew gradually under cattle ranching and agriculture, and as the communications of the Cuban interior improved.
It was during the 19th century that the settlement acquired its own urban identity. The growth of the population and of economic activity led to it being recognized first as a town and, later, as a city, establishing itself as the head of its district. This late development, well into the 19th century, contrasts with the founding towns of the 16th century and gave Ciego de Ávila its profile as a relatively modern city.
In this period the characteristics that today distinguish the city took shape, among them its famous arcades: the covered galleries that run along the main streets protecting from the sun and rain, an architectural feature that would earn it the nickname 'the city of arcades'. The location of the town in the center of the island, on the communication axes that cross it, would be key to its role in the military events that were to come.
The event that gave the region its greatest historical relevance was the construction, by the Spanish army, of the Júcaro to Morón Trocha. During Cuba's wars of independence in the 19th century —in particular during the Ten Years' War (1868-1878)—, the Spanish raised this fortified military line that crossed the island from coast to coast: from Júcaro, on the south coast, to Morón, in the north, passing through the Ciego de Ávila area.
The trocha was an impressive defensive work for its time: it combined forts and watchtowers, wire fences, trenches, electric lights and a railway line, all with the aim of preventing the independence troops (the mambises) from crossing from the rebel east toward the west of the island. It thus sought to contain and isolate the insurrection. It was one of the great works of military engineering of its time in the Americas.
Despite its magnitude, the trocha did not fully achieve its purpose: at different stages of the wars, the independence fighters managed to breach it, in feats that were etched into the epic of the Cuban struggle. Today remnants of some of those fortifications are preserved along the former route, a testimony to the strategic role that the Ciego de Ávila region played in the fight for Cuba's independence.
With independence and the start of the Republic in the 20th century, the Ciego de Ávila region experienced a period of economic growth driven by agriculture. Sugarcane spread across the central plain, with large sugar mills that energized the economy and attracted population, capital and investment, including that of foreign companies, especially American ones.
But the crop that would mark the city's identity was pineapple. The region became one of the great producing centers of this fruit in Cuba, to the point that Ciego de Ávila is known as 'the land of the pineapple', with the fruit present in its economy, its cuisine, its festivities and even its symbols. Along with the arcades, the pineapple is one of the great local emblems.
This economic boom was reflected in the city with the construction of significant buildings, such as the Teatro Principal (opened around 1927), which bear witness to the prosperity of those years. The city grew and modernized, establishing itself as an important urban center of the island's interior, articulated by the Carretera Central and the railway that cross it.
After the triumph of the Cuban Revolution of 1959, the Ciego de Ávila region joined the country's economic and social transformations. The most important administrative change came in 1976, with Cuba's new political-administrative division: Ciego de Ávila became the capital of its own province, split off from the former province of Camagüey, reinforcing its role as the political and service center of the territory.
In the following decades, the great engine of the province's transformation was tourism, thanks to one of its greatest natural treasures: the cays of the Jardines del Rey archipelago, on the north coast. The development of Cayo Coco and Cayo Guillermo as first-rate beach destinations, with large all-inclusive resorts, made the province one of the most important sun-and-beach tourist hubs in Cuba. The connection of the cays with the mainland was achieved by building a long causeway over the sea, an engineering work as impressive as it was disputed for its environmental effects.
Today, Ciego de Ávila combines its profile as an inland provincial city —with its arcades, its Parque Martí and its pineapple tradition— with its role as the gateway to one of the great beach destinations in the Caribbean. The province's history is completed by places like Morón, the Leche and Redonda lagoons, and the remnants of the former Júcaro to Morón Trocha, which recall its military past.