Colonia Department
Colonia | |||
---|---|---|---|
Symbols | |||
|
|||
Basic data | |||
Country | Uruguay | ||
Capital | Colonia del Sacramento | ||
surface | 6106 km² | ||
Residents | 123.203 (2011) | ||
density | 20 inhabitants per km² | ||
ISO 3166-2 | UY-CO | ||
Website | www.colonia.gub.uy (Spanish) | ||
politics | |||
Intendant | Walter Zimmer | ||
Political party | Partido Nacional |
Coordinates: 34 ° 11 ′ S , 57 ° 42 ′ W
Colonia is a department in the south of Uruguay .
geography
Location and landscape
The department, which covers an area of 6,106 km², lies opposite the confluence of the Río Paraná and Río Uruguay to the Río de la Plata . Its capital Colonia del Sacramento , which is located on this estuary opposite the Argentine capital Buenos Aires , has 21,714 inhabitants. It is bordered to the north by Soriano , to the west by Flores , to the east by San José , and to the south and west by the Argentine province of Buenos Aires .
The area belongs to the so-called La Plata plain and is therefore part of the pampas . However, it is hilly compared to the plains to the west of the Río de la Plata, with the Sierra del Mal Abrigo and above all the Cuchilla de San Salvador standing out as the most distinctive ranges of hills. The main rivers are the Río Rosario , Río San Juan and the following: Arroyo de las Vacas , Arroyo de las Víboras , Arroyo Cufré and Arroyo Miguelete .
climate
The climate is temperate and humid with an annual mean temperature between 17 and 18 ° C and rainfall of around 1,000 mm.
Flora and fauna
The vegetation is typical of the pampas with a great variety of grasses and trees of medium height. In addition to grazing animals, the animal world is now limited to rodents, birds, fish and other aquatic life in the Río de la Plata, including the La Plata dolphin .
Natural resources
In the department area there are deposits of black granite in the northeastern tip of the area and in the area around Rosario . Further mineral resources are stored in the Mina Narancio on Arroyo Miguelete , where talc , quartz , feldspar and beryl can be found.
history
The name of the department comes from its capital Colonia del Sacramento.
Colonia del Sacramento was founded by Portuguese troops in 1680 amid the conflict over the Banda Oriental . The area was the scene of this conflict with Spain well into the 19th century, which it conquered several times until the new state of Uruguay became independent in 1825. As a result, both Portuguese and Spanish colonial architecture can be found in the cities and towns, and the city map of Colonia del Sacramento deviates in many places from the traditional Spanish-Latin American checkerboard pattern, so the streets are often based on geographic conditions , as in the Portuguese city model .
Economy and Infrastructure
Agriculture and animal husbandry form the basis of the economy. The department is best known for its dairy products and beekeeping (e.g. Nueva Helvecia ). Are cultivated u. a. Corn , sunflower , hops , flaxseed , olives , fruits and grapes . There is also little activity in mining ( quarries ).
There are small ports in the towns of Juan Lacaze, Colonia del Sacramento, Nueva Palmira y Carmelo. In industry, paper production, shipbuilding and the manufacture of synthetic materials should be mentioned; there is also agricultural industry (e.g. mills).
education
Colonia has a total of 14 secondary schools ( Liceos ), where 839 teachers teach 8,588 students. (As of December 2008)
Culture
Along with Montevideo and Canelones, Colonia is one of the departments that have been shaped most by Swiss and Italian culture. As a port city, Colonia del Sacramento took in immigrants from Europe as early as the 19th century, who, in addition to Switzerland and Italy, came mainly from Poland , Spain , France and Germany . Because of this past, the Swiss cheese specialties and pasta are particularly well known in local cuisine.
traffic
The department of Colonia is connected to the rest of the country by several national roads. The ferry connection Colonia- Buenos Aires ( Argentina ) and another boat connection Carmelo- Tigre (Argentina) are also important. The Colonia airfield is only used by private planes. In the past there were two railway lines from Colonia to Montevideo and Mercedes , which were closed in the 1980s and 1990s. However, there are projects to reopen them.
There have been negotiations with Argentina for years to build a bridge over the Río de la Plata , with several options being discussed. The most expensive but also the shortest variant because of the long river crossing would run via La Plata , while a variant via the delta of the Río Paraná would be much easier to implement; there, however, a largely intact natural area is affected.
politics
Like the other departments of Uruguay, Colonia is also headed by an elected Intendente . This has the power to determine the authorities of the localities. The current Intendente is Walter Zimmer, a member of the Partido Nacional .
population
Similar to the rest of the country, Colonia showed little population growth in the last censuses.
The demographic data in 2004 were as follows:
- Population growth: 0.448% (2004)
- Birth rate: 15.05 births / 1,000 population (2004)
- Death rate: 9.97 deaths / 1,000 population
- Median age: 33.5 (32.5 men. 34.6 women)
- Life expectancy (2004):
- Total: 76.54 years
- Men: 72.68 years
- Women: 80.61 years
- Number of children per woman: 2.19
- Average per capita income in cities with more than 5,000 inhabitants: 4,385.6 peso / month
Population development
1852 | 1860 | 1908 | 1963 | 1975 | 1985 | 1996 | 2004 | 2011 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
7,971 | 13,349 | 54,644 | 105.276 | 111,832 | 112,717 | 120.241 | 119.266 | 123.203 |
Source:
While 119,266 inhabitants were counted in 2004, the number of inhabitants determined in the 2011 census was 123,203. Of these, 60,203 were men and 63,000 women.
Major cities and towns
In addition to the capital Colonia del Sacramento, the cities of Juan Lacaze (port), Carmelo (shipbuilding), Nueva Helvecia also known as Colonia Suiza, Rosario , Nueva Palmira and Colonia Valdense are the most important towns.
Locations with more than 1,000 inhabitants (2004):
city | Residents |
---|---|
Carmelo | 16,866 |
Colonia del Sacramento | 21,714 |
Colonia Valdense | 3,087 |
Florencio Sánchez | 3,526 |
Juan Lacaze | 13,196 |
Nueva Helvecia | 10,002 |
Nueva Palmira | 9,230 |
Ombúes de Lavalle | 3,451 |
Rosario | 9,311 |
Tarariras | 6,070 |
Web links
- Colonia in the Enciclopedia Geográfica del Uruguay (Spanish)
- Geography of the department (spanish)
- Side of the government of Colonia
- Colonia
- Description of Colonia del Sacramento (Spanish)
- Description of the city of Carmelo (Spanish)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Ulises Rubens Grub : Atlas geografico de la República Oriental del Uruguay, Montevideo 1980, p. 35
- ↑ Liceos del Uruguay (Spanish) (PDF; 6.94 MB), accessed on February 29, 2012
- ↑ Projections ( Memento of the original from September 11, 2006 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. ( MS Excel ; 62 kB) of the national statistical office of Uruguay
- ↑ Censuses from 1852 to 2004 ( Memento of the original from February 26, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. ( MS Excel ; 29 kB)
- ↑ Statistical data of the 2011 census ( memento of the original from September 27, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. of the Instituto Nacional de Estadística de Uruguay , accessed on August 29, 2012 (XLS file; 25 kB)