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Encyclopedia > Cartagena de Indias

For other places of the same name, see Cartagena

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Bocagrande Cartagena
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San Pedro Square,Old City Cartagena

Cartagena, Colombia, also known as Cartagena de Indias, is a large seaport on the north coast of Colombia. Founded in 1533 by don Pedro de Heredia, and named after Cartagena, Spain, it was a major center of early Spanish settlement in the Americas, and continues to be an economic hub as well as a popular tourist destination.


Cartagena faces the Caribbean Sea to the west. To the south is the Bahia de Cartagena (Bay of Cartagena), which has two entrances: Bocachica in the south, and Bocagrande in the north. During the 16th and 17th centuries, Cartagena was part of the Spanish Main, one of the chief ports of the Spanish treasure fleet and so a prime target for English and French pirate and privateers (such as Sir Francis Drake, who sacked the city in 1580). Many of Cartagena's fortifications still stand: the Castle of San Felipe, built between 1536 and 1657; the walls around the Old City (las Murallas); the undersea wall across Bocagrande built between 1771 and 1778; and the forts of San Jose and San Fernando, built between 1751 and 1759 at Bocachica.


Many colonial buildings can be found in the Old City, including the Palace of the Inquisition, a cathedral, the Convent of Santa Clara (now a hotel) and a Jesuit college. St. Peter Claver patron saint of the slaves worked in and from the Jesuit college. Just outside the city walls, you can see the "India Catalina" statue, a local Indian hero.


To the south of the Murallas is the modern city of Cartagena on the peninsula of Bocagrande. Cartagena is the capital of the department of Bolivar, with a population of 812,595 (1997 estimate). It is one of Colombia's major seaports as well as the terminus of an oil pipeline. The city is served by Rafael Núñez International Airport, north of the city. Cartagena also is home of the largest Colombian Navy (Armada de la Republica de Colombia) base over the Caribbean, named A.R.C Bolivar.


About 30 km southeast of Cartagena are the Islas de Rosario (Rosario Islands), a nationally protected park which features an aquarium with trained dolphins and many varieties of tropical fish and sharks.


Due to Cartagena's tropical location, the climate changes very little, with an average highs of 31°C (88°F) and average low of 24°C (75.4°F) throughout the year. Cartagena also averages around 90% humidity, with a rainy season typically in October. Cartagena receives about 100 cm (40 inches) of rain a year.


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  Results from FactBites:
 
Cartagena de Indias (177 words)
Cartagena was discovered by Rodrigo de Bastidas in 1503 at the same time he discovered the entire Atlantic coast of Colombia.
During almost all the colonial period, Cartagena was the arrival point for the galleons, for which it became the main port of commercial interchange for the traders of the principal departments of the country.
Cartagena was the first colombian city that declared its absolute independence from Spain on November 11 of 1811.
Cartagena, Colombia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (521 words)
Cartagena, Colombia, also known as Cartagena de Indias or La Heroica (The Heroic), is a large seaport on the north coast of Colombia.
During the 16th and 17th centuries, Cartagena was part of the Spanish Main, one of the chief ports of the Spanish treasure fleet and so a prime target for English and French pirate and privateers (such as Sir Francis Drake, who sacked the city in 1586).
Cartagena is the capital of the department of Bolivar, with a population of 812,595 (1997 estimate).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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