Estelí sits in the northern region of Nicaragua historically known as Las Segovias, a name inherited from the Spanish colonial era. Long before the arrival of the Europeans, these cool highlands were inhabited by Indigenous peoples, tied to the Chorotega groups and to other populations of the Pacific-north strip, who lived from agriculture, hunting and gathering in the valleys and mountains.
The name Estelí itself is of Indigenous root, and its meaning has generated different interpretations. The most widespread explanation associates it with an expression of Nahuat origin or related to the local languages, frequently translated as 'river of blood' or linked to a place name tied to water and the area's rivers. As happens with many Indigenous place names, the exact etymology is a matter of debate and it's best to take the translations as approximations.
During the colonial period, Las Segovias were a frontier zone: lands of cattle raising, agriculture and also of conflict, far from the great colonial power centers of the Pacific. The region gradually filled with towns and hamlets that combined Indigenous and Spanish heritage, and that over time would give rise to the cities of northern Nicaragua, among them Estelí.
The history of Estelí's settlement was not linear: like many colonial towns of Central America, the population had several locations before settling on its definitive site. The first nuclei of the area were affected by the difficulties typical of a frontier region —attacks, floods, terrain conditions— that forced successive relocations of the town over the centuries.
The city gradually consolidated at its current location, in the valley at about 800 meters altitude, between the 18th and 19th centuries. There, the cool climate, the availability of water and the fertile land favored stable settlement and the growth of a population devoted to agriculture and cattle raising. Estelí gained importance as a center of northern life, articulating the trade and services of a wide mountainous region.
Throughout the 19th century and the early 20th, Estelí established itself as a departmental capital and as one of the urban hubs of the Nicaraguan north. Its position on the routes connecting the center of the country with the Honduras border reinforced its commercial role, a role that would be definitively consolidated in the 20th century with the arrival of the Pan-American Highway.
The 20th century marked Estelí deeply and painfully. During the dictatorship of the Somoza family, northern Nicaragua was a region of strongly rooted social discontent, and Estelí became one of the strongholds of the fight against the regime. That condition came at a very high cost during the Sandinista Revolution of the late 1970s.
Between 1978 and 1979, Estelí was the setting for some of the most intense urban insurrections of the war against Somoza. The city lived through several rounds of combat between the insurgent population and the National Guard, which responded with bombings and a very harsh repression. Entire neighborhoods were destroyed and the number of victims was very high, which earned Estelí popular recognition as a 'heroic city' or 'martyr city' of the revolution.
After the Sandinista triumph of 1979 and during the following decade, Estelí remained a politically active city, also crossed by the conflict of the 1980s. All that memory —of sacrifice, resistance and reconstruction— was captured very visibly in the murals that cover its walls, many painted by young people in community art projects, and that today are one of the city's hallmarks.
Estelí's great economic turning point is tied to an event that occurred thousands of kilometers away: the Cuban Revolution of 1959. After Fidel Castro came to power and the industry was nationalized, many Cuban tobacco growers —farm owners and masters of the trade— left the island in search of new lands where they could reproduce the quality of the tobacco of Vuelta Abajo, the Cuban region famous for its leaves.
Some of those exiles found in the Estelí valley, in northern Nicaragua, conditions remarkably similar to Cuba's: fertile soils, a suitable altitude and a climate conducive to growing high-quality tobacco. In 1968 Joya de Nicaragua was born —founded by Juan Francisco Bermejo and Simón Camacho in a small factory in downtown Estelí—, the country's oldest cigar brand. Its quality was such that in 1971 Joya de Nicaragua was named the 'official cigar of the White House' in the United States, and by 1976-1978 the factory came to produce some 9.2 million cigars a year.
The Sandinista Revolution and the conflict of the 1980s hit the industry head-on: the Joya de Nicaragua factory was burned down during the insurrection, and the trade embargo imposed by the United States in 1985 —in force until 1990— cut off its main market. Despite everything, the tobacco industry resurged strongly in the following decades. Today Estelí is internationally recognized as one of the great world capitals of the premium cigar: its factories employ thousands of people and hand-make cigars that rank among the most awarded on the planet. Tobacco thus became the economic engine and the distinctive brand of the city, also drawing a specialized tourism that travels specifically to get to know the tobacco factories.
Beyond tobacco, the Estelí region is also a land of coffee and of a remarkable natural wealth, which have become pillars of its economy and its tourist offer. The mountains of Las Segovias produce internationally prized high-altitude coffee, grown on farms that combine peasant tradition with cooperatives that bet on quality and, in many cases, on organic and fair-trade production.
One of the area's great natural symbols is the Miraflor Nature Reserve, declared a protected area to conserve its cloud forest and its exceptional biodiversity, which includes hundreds of orchid species and emblematic birds such as the quetzal. What's singular about Miraflor is that it's an inhabited territory: the rural communities that live within the reserve developed a pioneering model of community-based rural tourism, welcoming visitors into their homes and showing their way of life.
To this wealth are added other nearby protected areas, such as the Tisey-Estanzuela Nature Reserve, with its lookouts, its waterfall and its curious sculptures carved in stone by a peasant artist. Together, the north of Estelí offers an uncommon combination: the worldwide prestige of tobacco, the coffee tradition, the historical memory of the revolution and a mountain natural setting that makes the city a destination with a very distinct identity within Nicaragua.