Antioquia Department
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This article refers to Antioquia Department of Colombia. For the Colombian city of the same name, see Antioquia, Antioquia.
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| Image:Antioquia, Colombia (localización).png | |||||
| Capital | Medellín | ||||
| Governor | Anibal Gaviria | ||||
| Area | 63,612 km² | ||||
| Population - Total (2003) - Density | 6,990,478 90 people/km² | ||||
| Adjective | antioqueño | ||||
Antioquia was one of the states in the original "United States of Colombia", and is now a department in the northwest of the Republic of Colombia.
The department has an area of 63,612 km² (24,427 sq mi), and an estimated population of almost 7,000,000 (2006). It borders on the Caribbean Sea at the Gulf of Uraba, but is mostly mountainous, with two ranges of the Western Cordillera, and is bordered on the east by the Magdalena River. The greater part of its territory lies between the Magdalena and Cauca rivers and includes the northern end of the Central Cordillera. The country is covered with valuable forests, and its mineral wealth renders it one of the most important mining regions of the republic.
Medellín is the chief city. Other important towns are Santa Fe de Antioquia, the old capital located on the Cauca, and Puerto Berrío on the Magdalena.
Prior to the constitution of 1886, Antioquia and the other states were sovereign governments in their own right.
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[edit] Postage stamps
See : Postage stamps of Antioquia
[edit] Municipalities
Abejorral, Abriaquí, Alejandría, Amagá, Amalfi, Andes, Angelópolis, Angostura, Anorí, Antioquia, Anza, Apartadó, Arboletes, Argelia, Armenia, Barbosa, Bello, Belmira, Betania, Betulia, Bolívar, Briceño, Buritica, Cáceres, Caicedo, Caldas, Campamento, Cañasgordas, Caracolí, Caramanta, Carepa, Carmen de Viboral, Carolina del Príncipe, Caucasia, Chigorodó, Cisneros, Cocorná, Concepción, Concordia, Copacabana, Dabeiba, Don Matías, Ebejico, El Bagre, Entrerríos, Envigado, Fredonia, Frontino (Colombia), Giraldo, Girardota, Gómez Plata, Granada, Guadalupe, Guarne, Guatape, Heliconia, Hispania, Itagüí, Ituango, Jardín, Jericó, La Ceja, La Estrella, La Pintada, La Unión, Liborina, Maceo, Marinilla, Medellín, Montebello, Murindó, Mutatá, Nari, Nechi, Necoclí, Olaya, Peñol, Peque, Pueblorrico, Puerto Berrío, Puerto Nare, Puerto Triunfo, Remedios, Retiro, Rionegro, Sabanalarga, Sabaneta, Salgar, San Andrés, San Carlos, San Francisco, San Jerónimo, San José de la Montaña, San Juan de Urabá, San Luis, San Pedro, San Pedro de Urabá, San Rafael, San Roque, Santa Bárbara, Santa Rosa de Osos, Santo Domingo, Santuario, San Vicente, Segovia, Sonsón, Sopetrán, Támesis, Tarazá, Tarso, Titiribí, Toledo, Turbo, Uramita, Urrao, Valdivia, Valparaíso, Vegachi, Venecia, Vigía del Fuerte, Yali, Yarumal, Yolombo, Yondó, Zaragoza
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain. The article is available here.
[edit] External links
Antioquia travel guide from Wikitravel
Amazonas • Antioquia • Arauca • Atlántico • Bolívar • Boyacá • Caldas • Caquetá • Casanare • Cauca • Cesar • Chocó • Córdoba • Cundinamarca • Guainía • Guajira • Guaviare • Huila • Magdalena • Meta • Nariño • Norte de Santander • Putumayo • Quindío • Risaralda • San Andrés and Providencia • Santander • Sucre • Tolima • Valle del Cauca • Vaupés • Vichada
cs:Department Antioquia de:Antioquia el:Αντιόχεια Κολομβίας es:Antioquia eo:Antjokio eu:Antioquia (Kolonbia) fr:Antioquia gl:Antioquia it:Antioquia lt:Antiokijos departamentas nl:Antioquia no:Antioquia pl:Antioquia pt:Antioquia (Colômbia) sv:Antioquia

