词条 | Cartagena, Colombia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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|name = Cartagena |official_name = Cartagena de Indias |type = City |nicknames = "The Magic City", "The Cosmopolitan City", "The City of Cartagena", "The Heroic", "The Rock Corral", " The Fantastic" |named_for = Cartagena, Spain |motto = "Por Cartagena" |image_skyline = Montaje Cartagena, Colombia.jpg |imagesize = |image_caption = Top: Bocagrande Harbour. Second row: View of Santa Cruz Manga Island, Heredia Theatre. Third row: ClockTower (Torre del Reloj), Pilar Republicano, San Felipe Barajas Castle (Castillo de San Felipe de Barajas) (above), Charleston Hotel (below). Bottom: City Skyline. |image_flag = Flag of Cartagena.svg |image_seal = Escudo de Cartagena de Indias.svg |image_map = Colombia - Bolívar - Cartagena de Indias.svg |mapsize = 200px |map_caption = |pushpin_map = Colombia |subdivision_type = Country |subdivision_name = {{Flag|Colombia}} |subdivision_type1 = Department |subdivision_type2 = Region |subdivision_name1 = {{flagicon image|Flag of Bolívar (Colombia).svg}} Bolívar |subdivision_name2 = Caribbean |leader_title = Mayor |leader_name = Pedrito Tomas Pereira Caballero[1] |established_title = Foundation |established_date = June 1, 1533 |founder = Pedro de Heredia |area_magnitude = |area_total_km2 = 572 |area_land_km2 = |area_water_km2 = |area_water_percent = |area_urban_km2 = |area_metro_km2 = |population_as_of = 2016 |population_note = |population_total = 971,592 [2] |population_rank = Ranked 5th |population_metro = 1,013,389[2] |population_density_km2 = auto |population_demonym = Cartagenero(s) {{es icon}} |timezone = COT |utc_offset = -5 |timezone_DST = |utc_offset_DST = |coordinates = {{coord|10|24|N|75|30|W|region:CO_type:city(892545)|display=inline,title}} |postal_code_type = Postal code |postal_code = 130000 |area_code = 57 + 5 |elevation_m = 2 |blank_name = HDI (2008) |blank_info = {{increase}} 0.798 – High |blank2_name = Patron saints |blank2_info = Saint Catherine and Saint Sebastian |blank3_name = Average temperature |blank3_info = {{convert|30|C|F|abbr=on}} |website = {{URL|www.cartagena.gov.co}} {{es icon}} }} The city of Cartagena, known in the colonial era as Cartagena de Indias ({{lang-es|Cartagena de Indias}} {{IPA-es|kaɾtaˈxena ðe ˈindjas||Es-Cartagena de Indias.oga}}), is a major port founded in 1533, located on the northern coast of Colombia in the Caribbean Coast Region. It was strategically located between the Magdalena and Sinú rivers and became the main port for trade between Spain and its overseas empire, establishing its importance by the early 1540s. During the colonial era it was a key port for the export of Peruvian silver to Spain and for the import of enslaved Africans under the asiento system. It was defensible against pirate attacks in the Caribbean.[2] It is the capital of the Bolívar Department, and had a population 971,592 as of 2016.[3] It is the fifth-largest city in Colombia and the second largest in the region, after Barranquilla. The urban area of Cartagena is also the fifth-largest urban area in the country. Economic activities include the maritime and petrochemicals industries, as well as tourism. The city was founded on June 1, 1533, and named after Cartagena, Spain, settlement in the region around Cartagena Bay by various indigenous people dates back to 4000 BC. During the Spanish colonial period Cartagena served a key role in administration and expansion of the Spanish empire. It was a center of political, ecclesiastical, and economic activity.[4] In 1984, Cartagena's colonial walled city and fortress were designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. History{{Main|History of Cartagena, Colombia|Timeline of Cartagena, Colombia}}{{Infobox UNESCO World Heritage Site| WHS = Port, Fortresses and Group of Monuments, Cartagena | Criteria = Cultural: iv, vi | ID = 285 | Year = 1984 }} Pre-Columbian era: 4000 BC – 1500 ADThe Puerto Hormiga Culture, found in the Caribbean coast region, particularly in the area from the Sinú River Delta to the Cartagena Bay, appears to be the first documented human community in what is now Colombia. Archaeologists estimate that around 4000 BC, the formative culture was located near the boundary between the present-day departments of Bolívar and Sucre. In this area, archaeologists have found the most ancient ceramic objects of the Americas, dating from around 4000 BC. The primary reason for the proliferation of primitive societies in this area is thought to have been the relative mildness of climate and the abundance of wildlife, which allowed the hunting inhabitants a comfortable life.[5][6][7] Archaeological investigations date the decline of the Puerto Hormiga culture and its related settlements to around 3000 BC. The rise of a much more developed culture, the Monsú, who lived at the end of the Dique Canal near today's Cartagena neighborhoods Pasacaballos and Ciénaga Honda at the northernmost part of Barú Island, has been hypothesized. The Monsú culture appears to have inherited the Puerto Hormiga culture's use of the art of pottery and also to have developed a mixed economy of agriculture and basic manufacture. The Monsú people's diet was based mostly on shellfish and fresh and salt-water fish.[8] The development of the Sinú society in what is today the departments of Córdoba and Sucre, eclipsed these first developments around the Cartagena Bay area. Until the Spanish colonization, many cultures derived from the Karib, Malibu and Arawak language families lived along the Colombian Caribbean coast. In the late pre-Columbian era, the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta was home to the Tayrona people, whose language was closely related to the Chibcha language family.[9][10] Around 1500 the area was inhabited by different tribes of the Carib language family, more precisely the Mocanae sub-family. Mocana villages of the Carib people around the Bay of Cartagena included:[11]
Heredia found these settlements, "...largely surrounded with the heads of dead men placed on stakes."[14]{{rp|481}} Some subsidiary tribes of the Kalamari lived in today's neighborhood of Pie de la Popa, and other subsidiaries from the Cospique lived in the Membrillal and Pasacaballos areas. Among these, according to the earliest documents available, the Kalamari had preeminence. These tribes, though physically and administratively separated, shared a common architecture, such as hut structures consisting of circular rooms with tall roofs, which were surrounded by defensive wooden palisades.[12] First sightings by Europeans: 1500–1533Rodrigo de Bastidas traveled to the Pearl Coast and the Gulf of Uraba in 1500–01. On 14 February 1504, Ferdinand V contracted Juan de la Cosa's voyage to Uraba. However, Juan de la Cosa died in 1510 along with 300 of Alonso de Ojeda's men, after an armed confrontation with indigenous people, and before Juan de la Cosa could get possession of the Gulf of Urabá area. Similar contracts were signed in 1508 with Diego de Nicuesa for the settlement of Veragua and with Alonso de Ojeda for the settlement of Uraba, "where gold had already been obtained on earlier voyages," according to Floyd.[13][14]After the failed effort to find Antigua del Darién in 1506 by Alonso de Ojeda and the subsequent unsuccessful founding of San Sebastián de Urabá in 1517 by Diego de Nicuesa, the southern Caribbean coast became unattractive to colonizers. They preferred the better known Hispaniola and Cuba.[15] Although the royal control point for trade, the Casa de Contratación gave permission to Rodrigo de Bastidas (1460–1527) to again conduct an expedition as adelantado to this area, Bastidas explored the coast and sighted the Magdalena River Delta in his first journey from Guajira to the south in 1527, a trip that ended in the Gulf of Urabá, the location of the failed first settlements. De Nicuesa and De Ojeda noted the existence of a big bay on the way from Santo Domingo to Urabá and the Panama isthmus, and that encouraged Bastidas to investigate.[16][17][18][19] Colonial era: 1533–1717Under contract to Queen Joanna of Castile, Pedro de Heredia entered the Bay of Cartagena with three ships, a lighter, 150 men, and 22 horses, on 14 January 1533. He soon found the village of Calamari abandoned. Proceeding onwards to Turbaco, where Juan de la Cosa had been mortally wounded 13 years earlier, Heredia fought an all-day battle before claiming victory. Using India Catalina as a guide, Heredia embarked on a three-month exploration expedition. He returned to Calamari in April 1533 with gold pieces, including a solid gold porcupine weighing 132 pounds. In later expeditions, Heredia raided the Sinú tombs and temples of gold. His rule as governor of Cartagena lasted 22 years, before perishing on his return to Spain in 1544.[11]{{rp|14–17}}[14]{{rp|479–85}} Cartagena was founded on June 1, 1533 by the Spanish commander, Pedro de Heredia, in the former location of the indigenous Caribbean Calamarí village. The town was named after the port city of Cartagena, in Murcia in southeast Spain, where most of Heredia's sailors had resided.[20] King Philip II gave Cartagena the title of "city" (ciudad) in 1574, adding "most noble and loyal" in 1575.[11]{{rp|23}} The city's increasing importance as a port for the export of Peruvian silver from Potosí to Spain, made it an obvious target for pirates and corsairs, encouraged by France, England, and Holland. In 1544, the city was pillaged by 5 ships and 1000 men under the command of the French pirate Jean-François Roberval, who took advantage of the city still without walls. Heredia was forced to retreat to Turbaco until a ransom was paid. A defensive tower, San Felipe del Boqueron, was built in 1566 by Governor Anton Davalos. It was supposed to protect the anchorage and the Bahia de las Animas, a water lane into Plaza de lar Mar (current day Plaze de la Aduana), but the fort's battery had limited range. Then the French pirate Martin Cote struck in 1569 with 1000 men, ransacking the city.[11]{{rp|23–24}}[28]{{rp|97–98}} A few months after the disaster of the invasion of Cote, a fire destroyed the city and forced the creation of a firefighting squad, the first in the Americas.[21]{{full citation needed|date=January 2016}} In 1568, Sir John Hawkins of England tried to trick Governor Martín de las Alas into violating Spanish law, which forbade trade with foreigners, by opening a trade fair in the city to sell goods. This would have allowed Hawkins to ravage the port afterwards; the governor declined. Hawkins bombarded the city for 8 days, but failed to level it.[22][23][24] Then Francis Drake attacked in April 1586 with 23 ships and 3,000 men. Drake burned 200 houses and the cathedral, departing only after a ransom was paid a month later.[11]{{rp|24}} Spain then commissioned Bautista Antonelli in 1586 to design a master scheme for defending its Caribbean ports. This included a second visit to Cartagena in 1594 when he drew up plans for a walled city.[25] In 1610, the Holy Office of the Inquisition was established in Cartagena and The Palace of Inquisition was completed in 1770. Sentences were pronounced in the main city plaza, today's Plaza de Bolivar, during the Autos de Fe ceremonies. Crimes under its jurisdiction included those of heresy, blasphemy, bigamy and witchcraft. A total of 767 persons were punished, which ranged from fines, wearing a Sanbenito, life imprisonment, or even death for five unlucky souls. The Inquisition was abolished with independence in 1811.[11]{{rp|28}} The first slaves were brought by Pedro de Heredia to work as "macheteros", clearing the underbrush. By the 17th Century, Cartagena had become an important New World slave market, centered about the Plaza de los Coches. Europeans began to bring slaves from Africa. Spain was the only European power that could not establish factories in Africa to purchase slaves and therefore the Spanish empire relied on the asiento system, awarding merchants (mostly from Portugal, France, England and the Dutch Empire) the license to trade enslaved people to their overseas territories.[26][27][28][11]{{rp|30}}[25]{{rp|135}} Gov. Francisco de Murga made the Inner Bay an "impregnable lagoon", according to Segovia, which included the forts El Boquerón, Castillo Grande, Manzanillo, and Manga. Besides the walls built to defend the historic district of Calamari, Francisco de Murga enclosed Getsemani with protective walls starting in 1631. This included the battery of Media Luna of San Antonio, located between the bastions of Santa Teresa and Santa Barbara, which protected the only gate and causeway to the mainland.[25]{{rp|98, 130}} The practice of Situado, is exemplified in the magnitude of the city's subsidy between 1751 and 1810, when the city received the sum of 20,912,677 Spanish reales.[29][30]{{full citation needed|date=January 2016}} {{multiple image| align = right | direction = horizontal | image1 = Hyacinthe Rigaud - Philippe V, roi d'Espagne (1683-1746) - Google Art Project.jpg | width1 = 150 | caption1 = The policies of the Bourbon Dynasty in Spain, such as those of Philip V, stimulated the economic growth and consolidation of the Spanish America. | image2 = Juan de Torrezar Díaz Pimienta.jpg | width2 = 176 | caption2 = Juan Díaz de Torrezar Pimienta as governor was the mastermind of the reconstruction of the city after the destruction of 1697 }} The Raid on Cartagena, in April 1697 during the Nine Years' War, by Sir Bernard Desjean, Baron de Pointis and Jean Baptiste Ducasse was a severe blow to Cartagena. The Baron's forces included 22 large ships, 500 canons, and 4000 troops, while Ducasse's forces consisted of 7 ships and 1,200 buccaneers. They quickly overwhelmed Sancho Jimeno de Orozco's force of 30 men in the San Luis de Bocachica fortification. Then, San Felipe de Barajas also fell and the city came under bombardment. When the Half Moon Gate was breached and Getsemani occupied, Governor Diego de los Rios capitulated. The Baron left after a month of plunder and Ducasse followed a week later.[11]{{rp|31–32}} When King Philip II employed the Italian engineer Juan Bautista Antonelli to design a master plan of fortifications for Cartagena, construction would actually continue for the next two hundred years. On 17 March 1640, three Portuguese ships under the command of Rodrigo Lobo da Silva, ran aground in the Bocagrande Channel. This accelerated the formation of a sand bar, which soon connected the Bocagrande Peninsula to the island of Tierrabomba. The defense of the bay then shifted to two forts on either side of Bocachica, San Jose and San Luis de Bocachica. San Luis was replaced by San Fernando after the 1741 English raid. The next narrow passage was formed by the Island of Manzanillo, where San Juan del Manzanillo was constructed and Santa Cruz O Castillo Grande opposite on Cruz Grande at Punta Judio, both connected by a floating chain. Finally, there was San Felipe del Boqueron, later San Sebastian del Pastelillo. The city itself was circled with a ring of bastions connected by curtains. The island of Getsemani was also fortified. Protecting the city on the landward side, atop San Lazaro hill, was the Castillo San Felipe de Barajas[31] named in honor of Spain's King Philip IV and Governor Pedro Zapata de Mendoza, Marquis of Barajas' father, the Count of Barajas. Completed in 1654, the fort was expanded in the 18th Century, and included underground corridors and galleries.[11]{{rp|25–26}}[32][25]{{rp|76}}[25]{{rp|69–72}} {{multiple image| align = right | direction = horizontal | image1 = Edward Vernon by Thomas Gainsborough.jpg | width1 = 162 | caption1 = The final serious attempt to take the city and invade New Granada was made by Edward Vernon, who failed in one of the biggest military expeditions ever sent there | image2 = Blas de Lezo unknown author.jpg | width2 = 167 | caption2 = Blas de Lezo the one-eyed, one-legged, one-handed Spanish mariner was one of those who defended the city in 1741 }} Viceregal era: 1717–1811The 18th century began poorly for the city economically, as the Bourbon dynasty discontinued the Carrera de Indias convoys. However, with the establishment of the Viceroyalty of New Granada and the colonial struggle with England, Cartagena took on the stronghold as the "gateway to the Indies of Peru". By 1777, the city included 13,700 inhabitants with a garrison of 1300. The population reached 17,600 in 1809.[25]{{rp|31–33, 36}} The reconstruction after the Raid on Cartagena (1697) was initially slow, but with the end of the War of the Spanish Succession around 1711 and the competent administration of Juan Díaz de Torrezar Pimienta, the walls were rebuilt, the forts reorganized and restored, and the public services and buildings reopened. By 1710, the city was fully recovered. At the same time, the slow but steady reforms of the restricted trade policies in the Spanish Empire encouraged the establishment of new trade houses and private projects. During the reign of Philip V of Spain the city had many new public works projects either begun or completed, among them the new fort of San Fernando, the Hospital of the Obra Pía and the full paving of all the streets and the opening of new roads.{{citation needed|date=August 2015}} In 1731, Juan de Herrera y Sotomayor founded the Military Academy of Mathematics and Practice of Fortifications in Cartagena. He is also known for designing the Puerta del Reloj starting in 1704.[25]{{rp|43, 138–39}} 1741 attackStarting in mid-April 1741, the city endured a siege by a large English armada under the command of Admiral Edward Vernon. The engagement, referred to as Battle of Cartagena de Indias, was part of the larger War of Jenkins' Ear. The English armada included 50 warships, 130 transport ships, and 25,600 men, including 2,000 North American colonial infantry. The Spanish defense was under the command of Sebastián de Eslava and Don Blas de Lezo. The British were able to take the Castillo de San Luis at Bocachica and land marines on the island of Tierrabomba and Manzanillo. The North Americans then took La Popa hill.[11]{{rp|33–35}} Following a failed attack on San Felipe Barajas on 20 April 1741, which left 800 British dead and another 1,000 taken prisoner, Vernon lifted the siege. By that time he had many sick men from tropical diseases. An interesting footnote to the battle was the inclusion of George Washington's half brother, Lawrence Washington, amongst the British colonial troops. Lawrence later named his Mount Vernon estate in honor of his commander.[11]{{rp|35–36}} Silver Age (1750–1808){{multiple image| align = right | direction = horizontal | image1 = Mestiza of Cartagena de Indias (Colombia) circa 1799.jpg | width1 = 136 | caption1 = Mestiza of Cartagena de Indias by Antonio Rodríguez Onofre, circa 1799. | image2 = Criollo of Cartagena de Indias (Colombia) circa 1796.jpg | width2 = 146 | caption2 = Criollo of Cartagena de Indias by Antonio Rodríguez Onofre, circa 1796. }} In 1762, Antonio de Arebalo published his Defense Plan, the Report on the estate of defense on the avenues of Cartagena de Indias. This engineer continued the work to make Cartagena impregnable, including the construction from 1771 to 1778, of a 3400 yards long underwater jetty across the Bocagrande called the Escollera. Arebalo had earlier completed San Fernando, and the fort-battery of San Jose in 1759, then added El Angel San Rafael on El Horno hill as added protection across the Bocachica.[25]{{rp|55, 81–94}} After Vernon, what is called the 'Silver Age' of the city (1750–1808) began. This time was one of permanent expansion of the existing buildings, massive immigration from all the other cities of the Viceroyalty, increase of the economic and political power of the city and a population growth spurt not equaled since that time. Political power that was already shifting from Bogotá to the coast completed its relocation, and the Viceroys decided to reside in Cartagena permanently. {{Citation needed|date=August 2015}} The inhabitants of the city were the richest of the colony, the aristocracy erected noble houses on their lands to form great estates, libraries and printing establishments were opened, and the first café in New Granada was even established. The good times of steady progress and advancement in the second half of the 18th century came to an abrupt end in 1808 with the general crisis of the Spanish Empire that came from the Mutiny of Aranjuez and all its consequences.{{citation needed|date=August 2015}} Among the censuses of the 18th century was the special Census of 1778, imposed by the governor of the time, D. Juan de Torrezar Diaz Pimienta – later Viceroy of New Granada – by order of the Marquis of Ensenada, Minister of Finance – so that he would be provided numbers for his Catastro tax project, which imposed a universal property tax he believed would contribute to the economy while at the same time increasing royal revenues dramatically. The Census of 1778, besides having significance for economic history, is interesting because each house had to be described in detail and its occupants enumerated, making the census an important tool[34] The census revealed what Ensenada had hoped. However, his enemies in the court convinced King Charles III to oppose the tax plan. 1811 to the 21st centuryFor more than 275 years, Cartagena was under Spanish rule. With Napoleon's imprisonment of Charles IV and Ferdinand VII, and the start of the Peninsular War, the Latin American wars of independence soon followed. In Cartagena, on 4 June 1810, Royal Commissioner Antonio Villavicencio and the Cartagena City Council banished the Spanish Governor Francisco de Montes on suspicions of sympathy for the French emperor and the French occupation forces which overthrew the king. A Supreme Junta was formed, along with two political parties, one led by Jose Maria Garcia de Toledo representing the aristocrats, and a second led by Gabriel and German Piñeres representing the common people of Getsemani. Finally on 11 November, a Declaration of Independence was signed proclaiming "a free state, sovereign and independent of all domination and servitude to any power on Earth".[11]{{rp|49–51}} The support for a declaration of independence by working class leader and artisan Pedro Romero was key in pushing the Junta to adopting it.[35] Spain's reaction was to send a "pacifying expedition" under the command of Pablo Morillo, The Pacifier, and Pascual de Enrile, which included 59 ships, and 10,612 men. The city was placed under siege on 22 August 1815. The city was defended by 3000 men, 360 cannons, and 8 ships plus ancillary small watercraft, under the command of Manuel del Castillo y Rada and Juan N. Enslava. However, by that time, the city was under the rule of the Garcia de Toledo Party, having exiled German and Gabriel Pineres, and Simon Bolivar. By 5 December, about 300 people per day died from hunger or disease, forcing 2000 to flee on vessels provided by the French mercenary Louis Aury. By that time, 6000 had died. Morillo, in retaliation after entering the city, shot nine of the rebel leaders on 24 February 1816, at what is now known as the Camellon de los Martires. These included José María García de Toledo and Manuel del Castillo y Rada.[11]{{rp|55–60}} Finally, a patriot army led by General Mariano Montilla, supported by Admiral José Prudencio Padilla, laid siege to the city from August 1820 until October 1821. A key engagement was the destruction of almost all of the royalist ships anchored on Getsemani Island on 24 June 1821. After Governor Gabriel Torres surrendered, Simon Bolivar the Liberator, bestowed the title "Heroic City" onto Cartagena. The Liberator spent 18 days in the city from 20–28 July 1827, staying in the Government Palace in Proclamation Square and the guest of a banquet hosted by Jose Padilla at his residence on Calle Larga.[11]{{rp|60, 67}} Unfortunately, the toll of war, in particular from Morillo's siege long affected the city. With the loss of the funds it had received as the main colonial military outpost, and the loss of population, the city deteriorated. It suffered a long decline in the aftermath of independence, and was largely neglected by the central government in Bogotá. In fact, its population did not reach pre-1811 numbers until the start of the 20th century.[36] These declines were also due to disease, including a devastating cholera epidemic in 1849. The Canal del Dique that connected it to the Magdalena River also filled with silt, leading to a drastic reduction in the amount of international trade. The rise of the port of Barranquilla only compounded the decline in trade. During the presidency of Rafael Nuñez, who was a Cartagena native, the central government finally invested in a railroad and other infrastructure improvements and modernization that helped the city to recover.[37] GeographyLocationCartagena faces the Caribbean Sea to the west. To the south is the Cartagena Bay, which has two entrances: Bocachica (Small Mouth) in the south, and Bocagrande (Big Mouth) in the north. Cartagena is located at 10°25' North, 75°32' West (10.41667, −75.5333).[38] NeighborhoodsThe metropolitan area of Cartagena is formed by: Northern areaIn this area is the Rafael Núñez International Airport, located in the neighborhood of Crespo, ten minutes' drive from downtown or the old part of the city and fifteen minutes away from the modern area. Zona Norte, the area located immediately north of the airport, contains the Hotel Las Americas, the urban development office of Barcelona de Indias, and several educational institutions.{{citation needed|date=February 2015}} The old city walls, which enclose the centro or downtown area and the neighbourhood of San Diego, are located to the southwest of Crespo. On the Caribbean shore between Crespo and the old city lie the neighborhoods of Marbella and El Cabrero. DowntownThe Downtown area of Cartagena has varied architecture, mainly a colonial style, but republican and Italian style buildings, such as the Cathedral's bell tower, can be seen. The main entrance to downtown is the Puerta del Reloj (Clock Gate), which exits onto the Plaza de los Coches (Square of the Carriages).[39] A few steps farther is the Plaza de la Aduana (Customs Square), next to the mayor's office. Nearby is San Pedro Claver Square and the church also named for Saint Peter Claver, where the body of the Jesuit saint ('Saint of the African slaves') is kept in a casket, as well as the Museum of Modern Art.{{refn|Peter Claver was a Spanish who traveled to Cartagena in 1610. On March 19, 1616 he was ordained as a Jesuit priest. Peter cared for the African slaves for thirty-eight years, defending the life and the dignity of the slaves. After four years of sickness, Peter died in 1654. Two services were held for him: the official funeral, and a separate memorial attended by his African friends. In 1888, the Roman Catholic Church canonized Peter. He is now Known as the patron saint of African-Americans, slaves and the Republic of Colombia.[40][41]|group=Note}} Nearby is the Plaza de Bolívar (Bolívar's Square) and the Palace of Inquisition. Plaza de Bolívar (formerly known as Plaza de La Inquisicion) is essentially a small park with a statue of Simón Bolívar in the center. This plaza is surrounded by balconied colonial buildings. Shaded outdoor cafes line the street. The Office of Historical Archives devoted to Cartagena's history is not far away. Next to the archives is the Government Palace, the office building of the Governor of the Department of Bolivar. Across from the palace is the Cathedral of Cartagena, which dates back to the 16th century. Another religious building of significance is the Iglesia de Santo Domingo in front of Plaza Santo Domingo (Santo Domingo Square). In the square is the sculpture Mujer Reclinada ("Reclining Woman"), a gift from the notable Colombian artist Fernando Botero. Nearby is the Tcherassi Hotel, a 250-year-old colonial mansion renovated by designer Silvia Tcherassi. In the city is the Augustinian Fathers Convent and the University of Cartagena. This university is a center of higher education opened to the public in the late 19th century. The Claustro de Santa Teresa (Saint Theresa Cloister), which has been remodeled and has become a hotel operated by Charleston Hotels. It has its own square, protected by the San Francisco Bastion. A 20-minute walk from downtown is the Castillo de San Felipe de Barajas, located in el Pie de la Popa (another neighborhood), the greatest fortress ever built by the Spaniards in their colonies. The tunnels were all constructed in such a way as to make it possible to hear footsteps of an approaching enemy. Some of the tunnels are open for viewing today. San DiegoSan Diego was named after the local San Diego Convent, now known as the Beaux Arts University Building. In front of it is the Convent of the Nuns of the Order of Saint Clare, now the Hotel Santa Clara. In the surrounding area is Santo Toribio Church, the last church built in the Walled City. Next to it is Fernández de Madrid Square, honoring Cartagena's hero, José Fernández de Madrid, whose statue can be seen nearby. Inside the Old City{{clarify|Since this is capitalized, it must be important and deserves more space than this. Mentioned in later paragraph as well|date=November 2012}} is found Las Bóvedas (The Vaults),[42] a construction attached to the walls of the Santa Catalina Fortress. From the top of this construction the Caribbean Sea is visible. GetsemaníOnce a district characterized by crime, Getsemani, just south of the ancient walled fortress, has become "Cartagena's hippest neighborhood and one of Latin America's newest hotspots", with plazas that were once the scene of drug dealing being reclaimed and old buildings being turned into boutique hotels.[43] BocagrandeThe Bocagrande (Big Mouth) is an area known for its skyscrapers. The area contains the bulk of the city's tourist facilities, such as hotels, shops, restaurants, nightclubs and art galleries. It is located between Cartagena Bay to the east and the Caribbean Sea to the west, and includes the two neighborhoods of El Laguito (The Little Lake) and Castillogrande (Big Castle). Bocagrande has long beaches and much commercial activity is found along Avenida San Martín (Saint Martin Avenue).{{citation needed|date=February 2015}} The beaches of Bocagrande, lying along the northern shore, are made of volcanic sand, which is slightly grayish in color. This makes the water appear muddy, though it is not. There are breakwaters about every {{convert|200|yd}}.{{citation needed|date=February 2015}} On the bay side of the peninsula of Bocagrande is a seawalk. In the center of the bay is a statue of the Virgin Mary. The Naval Base is also located in Bocagrande, looking at the Bay. {{Clear}}{{wide image|69 - Carthagène - Décembre 2008.jpg|1500px|Bocagrande's skyline at twilight from the old town, in the year 2008.}}ClimateCartagena features a tropical wet and dry climate. Humidity averages around 90%, with rainy seasons typically in May–June and October–November. The climate tends to be hot and windy. {{Weather box|location = Cartagena (Rafael Núñez International Airport) 1981–2010|metric first = Yes |single line = yes |Jan record high C = 40.0 |Feb record high C = 38.0 |Mar record high C = 38.0 |Apr record high C = 38.0 |May record high C = 40.0 |Jun record high C = 39.8 |Jul record high C = 39.0 |Aug record high C = 38.0 |Sep record high C = 39.6 |Oct record high C = 39.0 |Nov record high C = 40.0 |Dec record high C = 38.0 |year record high C = 40.0 |Jan high C = 30.6 |Feb high C = 30.7 |Mar high C = 30.8 |Apr high C = 31.2 |May high C = 31.5 |Jun high C = 31.8 |Jul high C = 31.8 |Aug high C = 31.8 |Sep high C = 31.5 |Oct high C = 31.2 |Nov high C = 31.2 |Dec high C = 30.9 |year high C = 31.2 |Jan mean C = 26.7 |Feb mean C = 26.8 |Mar mean C = 27.1 |Apr mean C = 27.8 |May mean C = 28.3 |Jun mean C = 28.5 |Jul mean C = 28.3 |Aug mean C = 28.4 |Sep mean C = 28.3 |Oct mean C = 28.0 |Nov mean C = 27.9 |Dec mean C = 27.2 |year mean C = 27.8 |Jan low C = 23.9 |Feb low C = 24.2 |Mar low C = 24.8 |Apr low C = 25.6 |May low C = 25.9 |Jun low C = 25.9 |Jul low C = 25.6 |Aug low C = 25.7 |Sep low C = 25.6 |Oct low C = 25.4 |Nov low C = 25.4 |Dec low C = 24.6 |year low C = 25.2 |Jan record low C = 19.0 |Feb record low C = 19.0 |Mar record low C = 19.0 |Apr record low C = 19.5 |May record low C = 19.0 |Jun record low C = 19.0 |Jul record low C = 20.0 |Aug record low C = 18.0 |Sep record low C = 18.5 |Oct record low C = 19.0 |Nov record low C = 19.0 |Dec record low C = 18.5 |year record low C = 18.0 |rain colour = green |Jan rain mm = 1.9 |Feb rain mm = 0.5 |Mar rain mm = 1.9 |Apr rain mm = 22.0 |May rain mm = 120.3 |Jun rain mm = 101.5 |Jul rain mm = 119.4 |Aug rain mm = 128.9 |Sep rain mm = 144.5 |Oct rain mm = 238.8 |Nov rain mm = 156.9 |Dec rain mm = 50.4 |year rain mm = 1087.0 |unit rain days = |Jan rain days = 0 |Feb rain days = 0 |Mar rain days = 1 |Apr rain days = 4 |May rain days = 10 |Jun rain days = 13 |Jul rain days = 11 |Aug rain days = 13 |Sep rain days = 15 |Oct rain days = 16 |Nov rain days = 12 |Dec rain days = 3 |year rain days = 98 |Jan humidity = 81 |Feb humidity = 79 |Mar humidity = 80 |Apr humidity = 81 |May humidity = 82 |Jun humidity = 82 |Jul humidity = 81 |Aug humidity = 82 |Sep humidity = 82 |Oct humidity = 83 |Nov humidity = 83 |Dec humidity = 82 |year humidity = 81 |Jan sun = 272.8 |Feb sun = 240.1 |Mar sun = 238.7 |Apr sun = 210.0 |May sun = 192.2 |Jun sun = 189.0 |Jul sun = 207.7 |Aug sun = 198.4 |Sep sun = 171.0 |Oct sun = 170.5 |Nov sun = 186.0 |Dec sun = 241.8 |year sun = 2518.2 |Jand sun = 8.8 |Febd sun = 8.5 |Mard sun = 7.7 |Aprd sun = 7.0 |Mayd sun = 6.2 |Jund sun = 6.3 |Juld sun = 6.7 |Augd sun = 6.4 |Sepd sun = 5.7 |Octd sun = 5.5 |Novd sun = 6.2 |Decd sun = 7.8 |yeard sun = 6.9 | Jan percentsun = 75.9 | Feb percentsun = 66.6 | Mar percentsun = 63.8 | Apr percentsun = 56.6 | May percentsun = 49.3 | Jun percentsun = 49.5 | Jul percentsun = 52.9 | Aug percentsun = 51.4 | Sep percentsun = 46.8 | Oct percentsun = 46.2 | Nov percentsun = 53.2 | Dec percentsun = 67.7 | year percentsun = |source 1 = Instituto de Hidrologia Meteorologia y Estudios Ambientales[44][45][46] |date = November 2011}}
Demographics{{Historical populations|align=none|cols=3|percentage=pagr |1533|200 |1564|2,400 |1593|3,543 |1612|5,302 |1634|8,390 |1643|12,302 |1698|14,223 |1701|10,230 |1732|12,932 |1762|14,203 |1778|16,940 |1792|19,380 |1803|23,402 |1811|29,320 |1821|5,392 |1832|8,001 |1842|4,221 |1853|6,403 |1867|8,320 |1870|7,680 |1882|13,994 |1890|17,392 |1900|21,220 |1912|29,922 |1918|34,203 |1926|64,322 |1939|87,504 |1952|123,439 |1967|299,493 |1976|312,520 |1985|554,093 |1993|725,072 |1999|837,552 |2005|893,033 |2011 est.|955,709 |2013 est.|978,600 }}{{wide image|58 - Carthagène - Décembre 2008.jpg|1500px|Panorama of Cartagena from the San Felipe de Barajas Fort, in the year 2008.}} EconomyThe main economic activities in Cartagena are industry, tourism, and commerce. The port of Cartagena is one of the largest of South America. IndustryOther prominent companies include Cementos Argos, Miss Colombia, Kola Román, Indufrial, Amazon Pepper, Vikings SA, Distribuidora Ltda Refrigeration, Central Ingenio Colombia, Perfumery Lemaitre, Cartagena Refinery Cellux Colombiana SA, Flour Three Castles, Polyban International SA, SABMiller, Dow Chemical, Cemex, Dole, and Abocol.{{citation needed|date=February 2015}}. Miss ColombiaIn 1934, Miss Colombia was founded in Cartagena de Indias. Known as Concurso Nacional de Belleza de Colombia (National Beauty Contest of Colombia), it is a national beauty pageant in Colombia. The winner, Señorita Colombia, is sent to Miss Universe and the first runner-up, Señorita Colombia Internacional or Virreina, to Miss International. Free zonesFree zones are areas within the local territory which enjoy special customs and tax rules. They are intended to promote the industrialization of goods and provision of services aimed primarily at foreign markets and also the domestic market.{{citation needed|date=February 2015}}
TourismTourism is a mainstay of the economy. The following are tourist sites within the city:
InfrastructureTransportationAs the commercial and touristic hub of the country, the city has many transportation facilities, particularly in the seaport, air, and fluvial areas.{{citation needed|date=February 2015}} In 2003,[54] the city started building Transcaribe, a mass transit system. In 2015 the system began operating in the city. RoadsThe city is linked to the northern part of the Caribbean Region through roads 90 and 90A, more commonly called Central Caribbean Road. This Road passes through Barranquilla, Santa Marta and Riohacha ending in Paraguachón, Venezuela and continues with Venezuelan numeration all the way to Caracas. Taxis in the city perimeter do not have fare meters.{{citation needed|date=February 2015}} The following roads are in the southeast portion of the city: {{clarify|reason=need to rm portions that are not in the city. Road needs a separate article|date=February 2015}}Road 25: Going through Turbaco and Arjona, and through the Montes de María when a fork divides it continuing to Sincelejo as National 25 and finally ending in Medellín, and to the east to Valledupar as number 80. Road 25 A: Going also to Sincelejo, but avoiding the mountains, connects with Road 25 in the forementioned city.{{clarify|which is what? Medellín?|date=November 2012}} AirThe Rafael Núñez International Airport, is the busiest airport in Colombia's Caribbean region and the fourth in passenger traffic in the country. The code of the airport is CTG, having flights to almost all airports in Colombia including Bogota's El Dorado International Airport. Excessive operational costs and easier connection travel and better prices had led to the shifting of the Rafael Núñez's international connection passengers away from Bogota to the nearer Tocumen International Airport in Panama and Queen Beatrix International Airport in Aruba. Also more companies prefer to serve the Colombian market from Cartagena, due to better geographical and atmospheric conditions.[55] SeaThe open ports of the city are:
Private ports of the city:
CanalsSince the 17th century the bay has been connected to the Magdalena River by the Dique Canal, built by Governor Pedro Zapata de Mendoza. After Colombian independence, the canal was abandoned. Increasing centralization left the city without resources to maintain it. The last important maintenance work was done in the 1950s during Laureano Gómez's administration. Some improvements were made by local authorities in the 1980s. This was discontinued because of legal objections from the central government that decreed that the "maintenance" of the canal did not fall under the jurisdiction of the local government. From then on, maintenance of the canal has been delayed, though it is still functional.[58] Cartagenian political leaders have argued that this state of affairs might change with a return to pre-independence funding and tax system. Under such systems the canal would be maintained properly and even expanded, benefiting the national economy.[59] Waste disposalCartagena is one of the few cities in the world with a submarine emissary inaugurated in 2013. The emissary is the third largest in the world. EducationColleges and universities
Primary and secondary schoolsInternational schools include:
LibrariesThe city has many public and private libraries:
Divided in buildings across the city being assigned to the Faculties it serves accordingly each area. The main building is in C. de la Universidad 64 and the second biggest section is located in Av. Jose Vicente Mogollón 2839.[60]
Culture{{Multiple image| align = right | direction = horizontal | width1 = 230 | width2 = 226 | image1 = Cartagena de Indias exterior del Teatro Heredia.jpg | caption1 = Theatre Heredia was opened in 1911 | image2 = Cartagena de Indias, interior del Teatro Heredia 2.jpg | caption2 = Inside of the Theatre Heredia }} Theatres and concert hallsThe first carnivals and western theaters that served in New Granada operated on, what is today, Calle del Coliseo. This was an activity patronized by the Viceroy Manuel de Guirior and Antonio Caballero y Góngora, who, like their predecessors, spent most of the time of their mandates ruling in Cartagena.
SportThe main football club in the city is Real Cartagena. Museums and galleries
World Heritage siteThe port, the fortresses and the group of monuments of Cartagena were selected in 1984 by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as significant to the heritage of the world, having the most extensive fortifications in South America. They are significant, too, for being located in a bay that is part of the Caribbean Sea. A system of zones divides the city into three neighborhoods: San Sebastian and Santa Catalina with the cathedral and many palaces where the wealthy lived and the main government buildings functioned; San Diego or Santo Toribio, where merchants and the middle class lived; and Getsemani, the suburban popular quarters.[64] Festivities
Media appearancesFilm
Television
Literature
Video games
Music
Famous people19th century
20th century
Twin towns – sister cities{{Div col}}
See also
Notes1. ^{{Cite magazine |title=Pedrito Tomás Pereira: el alcalde de Cartagena designado por Duque |trans-title=Pedrito Tomás Pereira: appointed the mayor of Cartagena by President Duque |url=https://www.semana.com/nacion/articulo/pedrito-tomas-pereira-el-alcalde-de-cartagena-designado-por-duque/583583 |date=18 September 2018 |magazine=Semana |language=Spanish |access-date=10 December 2018}} 2. ^Lance R. Grahn, "Cartagena" in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, vol. 1, p 581. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1996. 3. ^1 2 {{Cite web|url= http://www.dane.gov.co/files/investigaciones/poblacion/proyepobla06_20/Municipal_area_1985-2020.xls|title= Estimaciones de Población 1985–2005 y Proyecciones de Población 2005–2020 Total Municipal por Área (estimate)|publisher= DANE |accessdate= 10 November 2016}} 4. ^Grahn, "Cartagena" p. 582. 5. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.lablaa.org/blaavirtual/arqueologia/arqueolo/cap4.1.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060923164704/http://www.lablaa.org/blaavirtual/arqueologia/arqueolo/cap4.1.htm |dead-url=yes |archive-date=2006-09-23 |title=Biblioteca Luis Ángel Arango |publisher=Lablaa.org |date= |accessdate=2013-03-26 }} 6. ^{{cite web |url=http://pwp.supercabletv.net.co/garcru/colombia/Colombia/indios.html |title=Colombia Pais Maravilloso |publisher=Pwp.supercabletv.net.co |accessdate=2010-06-24 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130425081104/http://pwp.supercabletv.net.co/garcru/colombia/Colombia/indios.html |archivedate=April 25, 2013 |df=mdy-all }} 7. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.uninorte.edu.co/divisiones/humanidades/arqueologia/proyectos/pro_pag_13-06.html |title=Universidad del Norte |publisher=Uninorte.edu.co |accessdate=2010-06-24 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20101220195301/http://uninorte.edu.co/divisiones/Humanidades/arqueologia/proyectos/pro_pag_13-06.html |archivedate=December 20, 2010 |df=mdy-all }} 8. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.lablaa.org/blaavirtual/publicacionesbanrep/boletin/boleti3/bol12/debate.htm |title=Biblioteca Luis Ángel Arango |publisher=Lablaa.org |date=2005-06-04 |accessdate=2010-06-24 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081201091431/http://www.lablaa.org/blaavirtual/publicacionesbanrep/boletin/boleti3/bol12/debate.htm |archivedate=December 1, 2008 |df=mdy }} 9. ^"X Cátedra de Historia Ernesto Restrepo Tirado – "El Caribe en la Nación Colombiana" Guerra, Langbaek et al. Ed. Aguilar, Bogotá, 2007. {{ISBN|958-8250-31-5}}. 10. ^Allaire, Louis (1997). "The Caribs of the Lesser Antilles". In Samuel M. Wilson, The Indigenous People of the Caribbean, pp. 180–85. Gainesville, Florida: University of Florida. {{ISBN|0-8130-1531-6}}. 11. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 {{cite book|last1=Lemaitre|first1=Eduardo|title=A Brief History of Cartagena|date=1994|publisher=Compania Litografica Nacional S.A.|location=Medellin|isbn=9789586380928|page=13}} 12. ^Lemaitre, Eduardo; Historia Extensa de Cartagena de Indias, Ed. Aguilar 1976. Edited before the ISBN system was enforced in Colombia, no reedition. 13. ^{{cite book|last1=Floyd|first1=Troy|title=The Columbus Dynasty in the Caribbean, 1492–1526|date=1973|publisher=University of New Mexico Press|location=Albuquerque|pages=49, 89, 95, 135}} 14. ^1 2 {{cite book|last1=Parry|first1=John|last2=Keith|first2=Robert|title=New Iberian World: A Documentary History of the Discovery and Settlement of Latin America to the Early 17th Century, Vol. II|date=1984|publisher=Times Books|location=New York|isbn=9780812910704|page=454}} 15. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.bruceruiz.net/PanamaHistory/diego_de_nicuesa.htm |title=Diego de Nicuesa |publisher=Bruceruiz.net |date=2002-04-22 |accessdate=2010-06-24}} 16. ^{{cite web|author=Related Articles |url=http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/55612/Rodrigo-de-Bastidas |title=Rodrigo de Bastidas (Colombian explorer) – Britannica Online Encyclopedia |publisher=Britannica.com |accessdate=2010-06-24}} 17. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.bruceruiz.net/PanamaHistory/rodrigo_de_bastidas.htm |title=Rodrigo de Bastidas |publisher=Bruceruiz.net |date=2002-07-03 |accessdate=2010-06-24}} 18. ^Lemaitre, Eduardo; Historia Extensa de Cartagena de Indias, Ed. Aguilar 1976. 19. ^Corrales, Manuel Ezequiel; Documentos para la historia de la Provincia de Cartagena, Tomo II, Imp. M. Rivas, Cartagena de Indias, 1883. 20. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.lablaa.org/blaavirtual/revistas/credencial/marzo1992/marzo3.htm |title=Biblioteca Luis Ángel Arango |publisher=Lablaa.org |date=2005-06-01 |accessdate=2010-06-24}} 21. ^De Castellanos, Juan; Historia de Cartagena, Bogotá: Biblioteca de Cultura Popular de Colombia, 1942.{{page needed|date=January 2016}} 22. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.cervantesvirtual.com/servlet/SirveObras/05816284255727262232268/index.htm |title=Historia general y natural de las Indias, islas y tierra-firme del mar océano. Primera parte – Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes |publisher=Cervantesvirtual.com |accessdate=2010-06-24}} 23. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/TUDhawkinsJ.htm |title=Sir John Hawkins |publisher=Spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk |accessdate=2010-06-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110514030812/http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/TUDhawkinsJ.htm |archive-date=May 14, 2011 |dead-url=yes |df=mdy-all }} 24. ^{{cite news| url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/article677647.ece |work=The Times |location=London | title=Slavers descendant begs forgiveness | first=Alan | last=Hamilton | date=2006-06-22 | accessdate=2010-04-28}} 25. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 {{cite book|last1=Segovia|first1=Rodolfo|title=The Fortifications of Cartagena de Indias|date=2009|publisher=el Ancora Editores|location=Bogota|isbn=9789583601347|pages=23–24}} 26. ^{{cite book|title= Génesis y desarrollo de la esclavitud en Colombia siglos XVI y XVII|publisher= Universidad del Valle|isbn = 9789586703383|year= 2005|url= https://books.google.com/?id=PH_cf27ucZAC&lpg=PP1&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false|language = Spanish}} 27. ^{{cite book|title= Los místeres de las minas: crónica de la colonia europea más grande de Colombia en el siglo XIX, surgida alrededor de las minas de Marmato, Supía y Riosucio|author= Alvaro Gärtner|publisher= Universidad de Caldas|isbn = 9789588231426|year= 2005|url= https://books.google.com/?id=5cUdM30KwxkC&lpg=PP1&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false}} 28. ^{{cite web|url= http://www.gabrielbernat.es/espana/esclavitud/index.html|title= La esclavitud negra en la América española |publisher= gabrielbernat.es|year = 2003|language = Spanish}} 29. ^{{cite journal |last=Meisel Roca |first=Adolfo |title=Crecimiento a Traves de los Subsidios: Cartagena de Indias y el Situado, 1751–1810 |trans-title=Growth Through Subsidies: Cartagena de Indias and Surrounding Area, 1751–1810 |url=http://www.banrep.gov.co/docum/Pdf-econom-region/Cuadernos/CHEE09.pdf |date=April 2002 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130513083115/http://www.banrep.gov.co/docum/Pdf-econom-region/Cuadernos/CHEE09.pdf |archive-date=13 May 2013 |journal=Cuadernos de Historia Económica y Empresarial [Journal of History, Economics, and Business] |language=Spanish |access-date=9 October 2016}} 30. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.loc.gov/rr/rarebook/catalog/drake/drake-6-caribraid.html |title=The Caribbean Raid 1585–1586: Sir Francis Drake: A Pictorial Biography by Hans P. Kraus (Rare Book and Special Collections Reading Room, Library of Congress) |publisher=Loc.gov |date=2005-10-25 |accessdate=2010-06-24}}{{page needed|date=January 2016}} 31. ^{{cite web |title=Castillo San Felipe de Barajas |url=http://www.incartagenaguide.com/incartagena/castillo-san-felipe-de-barajas/ |website=Incartagenaguide.com |access-date=9 October 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160409090318/http://www.incartagenaguide.com/incartagena/castillo-san-felipe-de-barajas/ |archive-date=April 9, 2016 |dead-url=yes |df=mdy-all }} 32. ^{{cite web|url=http://ageofpirates.com/article.php?Port_of_Cartagena |title=Pirate Encyclopedia: Port of Cartagena |publisher=Ageofpirates.com |accessdate=2010-06-24}} 33. ^"The man that caused the greatest defeat ever suffered by the British Navy", sevilla.abc.es 34. ^This is used today by restoration architects in Cartagena's city center. The original of the census is preserved in the Museum of History of the city while a copy rests in the Archivo de Indias in Seville 35. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.cartagenaexplorer.com/biography-pedro-romero-cartagena-black-independence-leader/|title=Biography of Pedro Romero - Black, Working Class Hero of Cartagena's Independence|date=2018-10-25|website=Cartagena Explorer|language=en-US|access-date=2019-01-13}} 36. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.cartagenaexplorer.com/consequences-of-cartagenas-independence/|title=Consequences of Cartagena's Independence|date=2018-11-19|website=Cartagena Explorer|language=en-US|access-date=2019-01-13}} 37. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.cartagenaexplorer.com/history-of-cartagena-comprehensive/|title=History of Cartagena - A Comprehensive Guide to the History of Cartagena, Colombia|date=2018-07-11|website=Cartagena Explorer|language=en-US|access-date=2019-01-13}} 38. ^{{cite web |title=Country Files (GNS) |url=http://geonames.nga.mil/gns/html/namefiles.html |date=14 December 2015 |website=National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency |access-date=18 December 2015}} 39. ^{{cite web |title=La Torre del Reloj Testigo Silencioso de un pasado |trans-title=The Clock Tower: Silent Witness to the Past |url=http://www.traviatacartagena.com/es/marzo/arte.htm |website=Traviata Nuestra |language=Spanish |access-date=10 October 2016}} 40. ^Proceso de beatificación y canonización de San Pedro Claver. Edición de 1696. Traducción del latín y del italiano, y notas de Anna María Splendiani y Tulio Aristizábal S. J. Pontificia Universidad Javeriana. Universidad Católica del Táchira. 2002. 41. ^Valtierra, Ángel. 1964. 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Aguilar 1976 59. ^"El Porvenir", Year CXVII, Issue 29.399, p. 4, column 2. Cartagena de Indias, 1999. 60. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.unicartagena.edu.co/biblioteca.htm |title=Universidad de Cartagena – Biblioteca |publisher=Unicartagena.edu.co |accessdate=2010-06-24 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100311040151/http://www.unicartagena.edu.co/biblioteca.htm |archivedate=March 11, 2010 |df=mdy }} 61. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.ipcc.gov.co/bibliotecas.html |title=Patrimonio Cultural – Instituto de Cultura de Cartagena Colombia |publisher=Ipcc.gov.co |accessdate=2010-06-24 |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070623164113/http://www.ipcc.gov.co/bibliotecas.html |archivedate = June 23, 2007}} 62. ^{{cite web |title=Teatro Heredia |trans-title=Heredia Theatre |url=http://www.cartagenatravel.com/espanol/teatroheredia.htm |date=2002 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20020423185800/http://cartagenatravel.com/espanol/teatroheredia.htm |archivedate=April 23, 2002 |website=Cartagena Travel |language=Spanish |access-date=9 July 2016}} 63. ^{{cite web|url= http://www.eluniversal.com.co/suplementos/facetas/un-museo-que-mueve-el-espiritu-7817|title= Un museo que mueve el espíritu|publisher= eluniversal.com.co|accessdate=December 6, 2016}} 64. ^{{cite web|url=http://whc.unesco.org/pg.cfm?cid=31&id_site=285|title=Port, Fortresses and Group of Monuments, Cartagena|author=UNESCO World Heritage Centre|publisher=|accessdate=February 19, 2015}} 65. ^[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0091530/locations?ref_=tt_dt_dt The Mission] – IMDB 66. ^Recap Barely Legal, Family Guy 67. ^[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0647113/ Smuggler's Blues, Miami Vice] – IMDB 68. ^[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1256295/ Agent Afloat, NCIS] – IMDB 69. ^[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2247715/synopsis The Missionary Position, NCIS] – IMDB 70. ^http://ew.com/tv/2017/10/17/the-challenge-real-world-redemption-house/ 71. ^http://www.thesnarkingdeadrecaps.com/orphan-black-season-5-episode-10-series-finale-right-wrongs-many/ 72. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.gutenberg.org/files/1965/1965-h/1965-h.htm#link2HCH0027|title=Captain Blood, by Rafael Sabatini|website=www.gutenberg.org|access-date=2019-02-24}} 73. ^{{cite journal|last1=Williams|first1=Raymond Leslie|title=The Visual Arts, the Poetization of Space and Writing: An Interview with Gabriel García Márquez|journal=PMLA|date=March 1989|volume=104|issue=2|pages=131–40|jstor=462499}} 74. ^{{Cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/bookreviews/11061763/The-Bone-Clocks-by-David-Mitchell-review-painstakingly-kind-to-the-reader.html|title=The Bone Clocks by David Mitchell, review: 'painstakingly kind to the reader'|last=Kavenna|first=Joanna|date=2014-08-30|access-date=2018-05-21|language=en-GB|issn=0307-1235}} 75. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/27880504-cartagena|title=Cartagena|website=www.goodreads.com|access-date=2018-05-21}} 76. ^{{cite video game| title = Drake's Deception| developer = Naughty Dog| publisher =Sony Computer Entertainment | date =November 1, 2011| platform =PlayStation 3| version =| level = Chapter 2 – Greatness from Small Beginnings and Chapter 3 – Second Story Work | isolang =| quote = }} 77. ^https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7kejSqsKuvE 78. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.banrepcultural.org/blaavirtual/biografias/garcjose.htm|title=García Toledo, José María {{!}} banrepcultural.org|website=www.banrepcultural.org|language=es|access-date=2017-02-13}} 79. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.ecured.cu/Bartolom%C3%A9_Calvo|title=Bartolomé Calvo |website=www.ecured.cu|language=es|access-date=2017-02-13}} 80. ^{{Cite web|url=http://jeffschultz.blog.myajc.com/2014/02/14/braves-sign-julio-teheran-to-six-year-extension/|title=Braves sign Julio Teheran to six-year extension {{!}} Jeff Schultz blog|last=VIP|first=WordPress com|access-date=2017-01-21}} 81. ^{{Cite news|url=http://lachachara.org/2013/04/la-plaza-de-majagual-famosa-por-el-joe-arroyo/|title=La plaza de Majagual, famosa por el Joe Arroyo|newspaper=La Chachara|language=es-es|access-date=2017-01-21}} 82. ^{{Cite news|url=http://articles.latimes.com/2004/apr/03/local/me-passings3.2|title=Enrique Grau, 83; His Art Depicted Indians, Afro-Colombians|last=Staff|first=From Times|date=2004-04-03|last2=Reports|first2=Wire|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|language=en-US|issn=0458-3035|access-date=2017-01-21}} 83. ^{{cite news|url=http://travel.latimes.com/articles/la-trw-cartagena-colombia-revels-in-love-sans-cholera29oct07|title=Cartagena, Colombia revels in love, sans cholera|last=McDonnell|first=Patrick J.|date=2007-10-29|work=Los Angeles Times|publisher=|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721141432/http://travel.latimes.com/articles/la-trw-cartagena-colombia-revels-in-love-sans-cholera29oct07|archive-date=21 July 2011|via=|accessdate=21 January 2017}} 84. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.eltiempo.com/opinion/columnistas/sabas-pretelt-de-la-vega|title=Sabas Pretelt de la Vega : Perfil y columnas de Sabas Pretelt de la Vega |last=Tiempo|first=Casa Editorial El|website=El Tiempo|language=es-CO|access-date=2017-02-13}} 85. ^{{Cite web|url=http://m.es.mlb.com/player/599096/dilson-herrera|title=Dilson Herrera Stats, Fantasy & News|website=Cincinnati Reds|language=es-US|access-date=2017-02-13}} 86. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.banrepcultural.org/blaavirtual/biografias/barralva.htm|title=Barrios, Álvaro {{!}} banrepcultural.org|website=www.banrepcultural.org|language=es|access-date=2017-01-21}} 87. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.revistaarcadia.com/agenda/articulo/muere-fotografo-nereo-lopez/43875|title=Fallece el fotógrafo Nereo López|website=www.revistaarcadia.com|language=en|access-date=2017-02-13}} References{{Reflist}}Further readingColonial history{{Div col}}
External links{{Sister project links|wikt=no |commonscat=Cartagena, Colombia |n=no |q=no |s=no |author=no |b=no |v=no |voy=Cartagena_(Colombia) }}{{EB1911 poster|Cartagena (Colombia)}}
| Center = Cartagena | North = Caribbean Sea, Bocacanoa | Northeast = Bayunca, Clemencia | East = Villanueva, Bolívar, San Estanislao | Southeast = Turbaco, Arjona | South = Tierra Bomba Island, Portonao. | Southwest = Caribbean Sea | West = Caribbean Sea | Northwest = Caribbean Sea }}{{Navboxes |title= Other articles and topics related to Cartagena, Colombia |state= collapsed |list1={{Colombia topics}}{{World Heritage Sites in Colombia}}{{Treasures of Colombia}}{{Spanish Colonial architecture}}{{Latin american film festivals}}{{Central American and Caribbean Games}} }}{{Authority control}} 10 : Cartagena, Colombia|1533 establishments in the Spanish Empire|Capitals of Colombian departments|Municipalities of Bolívar Department|Populated places established in 1533|Populated places in the Bolívar Department|Port cities in Colombia|Port cities in the Caribbean|Ports and harbours of Colombia|World Heritage Sites in Colombia |
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