On August 8, 1705, a Spanish captain named Juan García de la Candelaria bought from the Crown a mountain spot known simply as 'Los Llanos' and set up an estate with four ranches. He didn't know it, but he had just planted the seed of what is today the great city of western Honduras. That handful of ranches, later christened 'Santa Rosa de los Llanos' in honor of Santa Rosa de Lima, would end up being the 'Sultana of the West': tobacco capital of Honduras, a benchmark for highland coffee and one of the most beautiful colonial old towns in the country. But to understand how a remote ranch became that, you have to go back even further, to the time when these lands were a frontier between two Indigenous worlds.
In pre-Hispanic times, the western region where Santa Rosa de Copán lies today was a meeting zone of cultures. To the north and west stretched the influence of the Maya world, whose great regional capital was the nearby city of Copán, one of the most refined metropolises of Classic Maya civilization. To the south and east, the territory was the domain of the Lenca people, one of the most important Indigenous ethnic groups of Honduras. This position as a cultural frontier gave the region a rich and complex history, in which different peoples coexisted and interacted. The mountain lands, fertile and of temperate climate, were suited to agriculture, and the Indigenous peoples inhabited and cultivated them long before the arrival of the Europeans.
With the Spanish conquest in the 16th century, the western region was incorporated into colonial rule, in the context of the province of Honduras and the orbit of nearby Gracias (which became the seat of the Audiencia de los Confines in 1544). The mixing between Spaniards and Indigenous people and the Crown's reorganization of the territory gradually shaped the colonial society of the area. In that context arose the Los Llanos estate of García de la Candelaria and, with it, the town that would soon be tied forever to a crop that would mark it: tobacco.
The development of Santa Rosa de Copán as a town was intimately tied, from its colonial origins, to the cultivation and trade of tobacco. The region of western Honduras proved suitable for this crop, and the Spanish Crown, which closely controlled tobacco as a profitable monopoly, decided to concentrate its production here.
The founding milestone came in 1765, when the Royal Tobacco Factory (Real Factoría de Tabacos) was created in Santa Rosa de los Llanos, the colonial institution charged with centralizing and managing the production, processing and trade of tobacco for the whole region. The following year, in 1766, the captain general Pedro de Salazar Herrera formalized the 'Tobacco Revenue' (Renta de Tabaco), which regulated planting to control the crop and monopolize the business for the Crown's benefit. The Factory transformed the town: it attracted officials, merchants, workers and capital, made Santa Rosa the administrative heart of Honduran tobacco and gave it the impulse that lifted it out of anonymity. From then on, tobacco was inscribed in the city's DNA.
The growth also translated into political rank. In 1802 Santa Rosa was elevated to the category of municipality, and on April 12, 1843, under the presidency of General Francisco Ferrera, it received by decree the title of city. This tobacco tradition, born in the colonial era, endured and developed over the centuries to give rise to the artisanal cigar industry that today makes Santa Rosa de Copán famous —companies like Flor de Copán are direct heirs of that history. The factories where the master rollers assemble by hand the cigars exported to the world continue the thread that began with the Royal Factory. Tobacco was not only an economic engine: it was the foundation of the identity of a city that still today smells of and lives around this tradition.
Over the 19th and 20th centuries, Santa Rosa de Copán grew in importance until it became the main city of western Honduras and the capital of the Copán department. Its economic vigor, tied to tobacco and, increasingly, to the coffee of the region's mountains, and its role as a center of commerce and services of the west, earned it the affectionate and proud nickname 'Sultana of the West.'
The city developed while keeping its colonial mountain character: its cobbled streets, its tile-roofed houses, its churches and its traditional layout. Over time, this valuable historic ensemble was recognized for its heritage importance, and the historic center of Santa Rosa de Copán was declared a National Monument, which recognizes and protects its architectural and cultural value as one of the most beautiful colonial cities of western Honduras.
As it grew as a regional center, Santa Rosa de Copán kept alive its double productive vocation: that of tobacco, with its artisanal cigar factories that gained international prestige, and that of highland coffee, one of the pillars of the western economy. That combination of colonial heritage, tobacco tradition and coffee culture defined the identity of the 'Sultana of the West,' a city at once hardworking and elegant, proud of its roots and its emblematic products.
Today, Santa Rosa de Copán keeps its role as the main city and service center of western Honduras, as well as its identity tied to tobacco and coffee. The artisanal cigar industry remains an emblem of the city: the factories where cigars are hand-rolled continue producing and exporting, and they have also become a tourist attraction, with visits that allow you to get to know the tobacco tradition up close.
The highland coffee of the west, for its part, remains an economic and cultural pillar, and Honduras has established itself as one of the great coffee producers of Central America. The city's cafés and the surrounding farms offer the visitor the chance to enjoy and get to know this product that involves numerous families of the region.
In recent decades, Santa Rosa de Copán has also developed its tourist side, making use of its colonial charm, its heritage declared a National Monument, its tobacco and coffee culture, and its privileged position as a communications hub of the west. The city functions as a base and support point for the region's tourist circuit, which includes the famous Maya ruins of Copán, historic Gracias and the Lenca Route. Thus, the 'Sultana of the West' combines its productive tradition and its heritage with its role as a gateway to one of the richest corners in history, culture and nature of Honduras.