Coordinates | 23°33′″N46°38′″N |
---|---|
Name | Quito |
Official name | San Francisco de Quito |
Settlement type | Capital city of Ecuador |
Nickname | Luz de América (Light of America), Carita de Dios (God's Face) |
Image seal | Coat of Arms of Quito.jpg |
Map caption | Location of Quito in Ecuador. |
Coordinates region | EC |
Subdivision type | Country |
Subdivision type1 | Province |
Subdivision type2 | Canton |
Subdivision name | Ecuador |
Subdivision name1 | Pichincha |
Subdivision name2 | Quito |
Parts type | Urban parishes |
Parts style | coll |
Parts | 32 urban parishes |
P1 | Argelia, La |
P2 | Belisario Quevedo |
P3 | Carcelén |
P4 | Centro Histórico |
P5 | Chilibulo |
P6 | Chillogallo |
P7 | Chimbacalle |
P8 | Cochapamba |
P9 | Comité del Pueblo |
P10 | Concepción, La |
P11 | Condado, El |
P12 | Cotocollao |
P13 | Ecuatoriana, La |
P14 | Ferroviaria, La |
P15 | Guamaní |
P16 | Inca, El |
P17 | Iñaquito |
P18 | Itchimbía |
P19 | Jipijapa |
P20 | Kennedy |
P21 | Libertad, La |
P22 | Magdalena |
P23 | Mariscal Sucre |
P24 | Mena, La |
P25 | Ponceano |
P26 | Puengasí |
P27 | Quitumbe |
P28 | Rumipamba |
P29 | San Bartolo |
P30 | San Juan |
P31 | Solanda |
P32 | Turubamba |
Government type | Mayor and council |
Leader title | Governing body |
Leader name | Municipality of Quito |
Leader title1 | Mayor |
Leader name1 | Augusto Barrera |
Leader title2 | City council |
Leader name2 | |
Established title | Foundation |
Established date | December 6, 1534 |
Founder | Sebastián de Benalcázar |
Named for | Quitu |
Elevation m | 2850 |
Elevation ft | 9350 |
Area total km2 | 324 |
Area water km2 | 0 |
Area metro km2 | 4204 |
Area footnotes | approx. |
Population as of | 2011 |
Population total | 2697698 |
Population density km2 | auto |
Population metro | 3342201 |
Population density metro km2 | auto |
Population blank1 title | Demonym |
Population blank1 | Quiteño(-a) |
Timezone | ECT |
Utc offset | -5 |
Postal code type | Postal code |
Postal code | EC1701 (new format), P01 (old format) |
Area code | (0)2 |
Pushpin map | Ecuador |
Pushpin map caption | Location of Quito within Ecuador |
Website | http://www.quito.gov.ec |
Blank info | }} |
San Francisco de Quito, most often called Quito (), is the capital city of Ecuador in northwestern South America. It is located in north-central Ecuador in the Guayllabamba river basin, on the eastern slopes of Pichincha, an active stratovolcano in the Andes mountains. With a population of 2,197,698 according to the last census (2001), and, as estimated by the municipality, approximately 2,504,991 in 2005, Quito is the second most populous city in Ecuador, after Guayaquil. It is also the capital of the Pichincha province and the seat of Metropolitan District of Quito. The canton recorded a population of 1,842,201 residents in the 2001 national census. In 2008, the city was designated as the headquarters of the Union of South American Nations.
The elevation of the city's central square (Plaza de La Independencia or Plaza Grande) is , making Quito the second-highest administrative capital city in the world (after La Paz, Bolivia), and the highest legal capital (ahead of Sucre, also in Bolivia, and Bogotá, Colombia).
The central square of Quito is located about south of the equator; the city itself extends to within about of zero latitude. A monument and museum marking the general location of the equator is known locally as la mitad del mundo (the middle of the world), to avoid confusion, as the word is Spanish for equator.
Quito, along with Kraków, were the first World Cultural Heritage Sites declared by UNESCO in 1978.
Caras and their allies were narrowly defeated in the epic battles of Tiocajas and Tixán in 1462, by an army of 250,000 led by Túpac Inca, the son of the Emperor of the Incas. After several decades of consolidation, the Kingdom of Quito became integrated into the Incan Empire. In 1534, the Caras/Quitu people were conquered by the Spanish.
Capilla del hombre quito is a museum in Quito, constructed to resemble a pre-Columbian temple. Sadly, it is still unfinished due to the artist dying. The entrance fee is $5.75
Indigenous resistance to the Spanish invasion continued during 1534, with Diego de Almagro founding Santiago de Quito (in present day Cola, near Riobamba) on August 15, 1534, later to be renamed San Francisco de Quito on August 28, 1534. The city was later moved to its present location and was refounded on 6 December 1534 by 204 settlers led by Sebastián de Benalcázar, who captured Rumiñahui and effectively ended any organized resistance. Rumiñahui was then executed on January 10, 1535. On March 14, 1541, Quito was declared a city and on February 14, 1556, was given the title Muy Noble y Muy Leal Ciudad de San Francisco de Quito ("Very Noble and Loyal City of San Francisco of Quito"). In 1563, Quito became the seat of a royal audiencia (administrative district) of Spain and became part of the Viceroyalty of Peru with its capital in Lima (see Real Audiencia de Quito).
As with other places colonized by the Christian Spanish invaders, the colonizers promptly established Roman Catholicism in Quito. The first church (El Belén) was in fact built even before the city had been officially founded. In January 1535, the San Francisco Convent was constructed, the first of about 20 churches and convents built during the colonial period. The Spanish forcibly converted the indigenous population to Christianity and used them as slave labor for construction. The Diocese of Quito was established in 1545 and was elevated to the Archdiocese of Quito in 1849.
In 1809, after nearly 300 years of Spanish colonization, Quito was a city of about 10,000 inhabitants. On August 10, 1809, a movement was started in Quito that aimed for political independence from Spain. On that date, a plan for government was established that placed Juan Pío Montúfar as president with various other prominent figures in other positions of government. However, this initial movement was ultimately defeated on August 2, 1810, when Imperial troops came from Lima, Peru, and killed the leaders of the uprising along with about 200 inhabitants of the city. A chain of conflicts concluded on May 24, 1822, when Antonio José de Sucre, under the command of Simón Bolívar, led troops into the Battle of Pichincha. Their victory marked the independence of Quito and the surrounding areas.
In 1882, insurgents arose against the regime of dictator Ignacio de Veintemilla. However, this did not end the violence that was occurring throughout the country. On July 9, 1883, the liberal commander Eloy Alfaro participated in the Battle of Guayaquil, and later, after more conflict, became the president of Ecuador on September 4, 1895. Upon completing his second term in 1911, he moved to Europe. When he returned to Ecuador in 1912 and attempted a return to power, he was arrested on January 28, 1912; thrown in prison; and assassinated by a mob that had stormed the prison. His body was dragged through the streets of Quito to a city park, where it was burned.
In 1932, the Four Days' War broke out. This was a civil war that followed the election of Neptalí Bonifaz and the subsequent realization that he carried a Peruvian passport. Workers at a major textile factory went on strike in 1934, and similar unrest continues to the present day. On February 12, 1949, a realistic broadcast of H. G. Wells' novel The War of the Worlds led to citywide panic and the deaths of more than twenty people who died in fires set by mobs.
Between 2003 and 2004, the ecologically friendly bus lines of the Metrobus were constructed, traversing the city from the north to the south. Many avenues and roads were extended and enlarged, depressed passages were constructed, and roads were restructured geometrically to increase the flow of traffic.
In recent years, Quito has been the focal point of large demonstrations that led to the ousting of presidents Abdalá Bucaram (February 5, 1997), Jamil Mahuad (January 21, 2000), and Lucio Gutiérrez (April 20, 2005).
Activity in other nearby volcanoes also can affect the city. In November 2002, after an eruption in the volcano Reventador, the city was showered with a layer of fine ash particles to a depth of several centimeters.
TAME, an airline of Ecuador, has its headquarters in Quito.
Quito is governed by a mayor and a 15-member city council. The mayor is elected to a four-year term and can be re-elected. The position also doubles as Mayor of the Metropolitan District of Quito (the canton).
As of 2008, the municipality of Quito divided the city into 32 urban parishes. These parishes, which are used by the municipality for administrative purposes, are also known as cabildos since 2001. Since the times of the Metropolitan District of Quito, parishes of this type are also grouped into larger divisions known as municipal zones (zonas municipales). These parishes are as follows:
# Belisario Quevedo # Carcelén # Centro Histórico # Chilibulo # Chillogallo # Chimbacalle # Cochapamba # Comité del Pueblo # Concepción # Cotocollao # El Condado # El Inca # Guamaní # Iñaquito # Itchimbía # Jipijapa # Kennedy # La Argelia # La Ecuatoriana # La Ferroviaria # La Libertad # La Mena # Magdalena # Mariscal Sucre # Ponceano # Puengasí # Quitumbe # Rumipamba # San Bartolo # San Juan # Solanda # Turubamba
#Alfaro #Benalcázar #Chaupicruz #Chillogallo #Cotocollao #El Salvador #González Suárez #Guápulo #La Floresta #La Libertad #La Magdalena #La Vicentina #San Blas #San Marcos #San Roque #San Sebastián #Santa Barbara #Santa Prisca #Villa Flora
Later in 2008, the relatively small González Suárez parish was removed from the list, prior to the 2009 elections.
Roads, avenues and streets
Because Quito is about 40 km (24.85 miles) long and 5 km (3.1 miles) at its widest, most of the important avenues of the city extend from north to south. The two main motorways that go from the northern part of the city to the southern are Avenue Oriental (Corridor Periférico Oriental) on the eastern hills that border the city, and Avenue Occidental on the western side of the city on the Pichincha volcano. The street 10 de Agosto also runs north to south through most of the city, running down the middle of it. Because of the hills and the city's curved shape, a grid pattern is extremely difficult to imply. The historic centre of the city is based on a grid pattern, despite the hills, with the streets Venezuela, Chile, García Moreno, and Guayaquil being the most important.
Whs | City of Quito |
---|---|
State party | |
Type | Cultural |
Criteria | ii, iv |
Id | 2 |
Region | Latin America and the Caribbean |
Year | 1978 |
Session | 2nd |
Link | http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/2 }} |
Quito has one of the largest, least-altered and best-preserved historic center in the Americas. was, together with the historic centre of Kraków in Poland, the first to be declared World Heritage Site by UNESCO on 18 September 1978. The Historic Centre of Quito is located in the center south of the capital on an area of three hundred twenty hectares, and is considered one of the most important historic areas in Latin America. Has about 130 monumental constructions (which hosts a variety of pictorial art and sculpture, mostly of religious inspired in a multi-faceted range of schools and styles) and five thousand properties registered in the municipal inventory of heritage properties. Unfortunately for several years has been somewhat neglected, which contributed to the deterioration of many of its buildings and surrounding streets to see invaded by informal trade. This not only played down beauty but also contributed to the sector has become unsafe. But now everything has changed thanks to the program that the Corporation of Development of the Historic Center is pushing to return to this place its glory of past years.
Walking through the historic centre of Quito today, now that it has been almost completely recovered, has again become a pleasant experience. The Corporation of Development of the Historic Center, is responsible for the restoration and conservation of churches, streets and plazas of this place. It has implemented several tourist sites that invite to visit the Historic Center on a trip to the past, which is not only tourism but also educational. To this end, members of the Municipal Police have been trained to serve as guides in those tours. At night, when the lights turn on in the city one can stroll through downtown in a horse-drawn carriage in the colonial style. In the Plaza de la Independencia (also known as Plaza Grande) is the Palacio de Carondelet, the seat of the Presidency of the Republic.
This monumental basilica is the most important neo-Gothic architecture in Ecuador and one of the most representative of the American continent, which at the time is the largest in the New World. It is located in the downtown of the city of Quito, in the streets Carchi and Venezuela next to the Convent of los padres Oblatos. This religious church was built to commemorate the consecration of the Ecuadorian State to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, held under the presidency of Gabriel García Moreno in 1873. It is 115 m high and consists of 24 internal chapels representing the provinces of Ecuador. This sanctuary was inaugurated and blessed by Pope John Paul II during his visit to Ecuador on 18 January 1985.
The Metropolitan Cathedral, due its location in the heart of the historic city and its status as the main church of the city, is one of the largest religious symbols of spiritual value for the Catholic community in the city. This church began its construction in 1562, seventeen years after the diocese of Quito was created (1545). The church building was completed in 1806, during the administration of President of the Real Audiencia Baron Héctor de Carondelet. One of the events that took place in this cathedral was the murder of the Bishop of Quito, José Ignacio Checa y Barba, who during the mass of Good Friday on 30 March 1877 was poisoned with strychnine dissolved in the consecrate wine. The cathedral is also the burial place of the remains of the Grand Marshall Antonio José de Sucre and also of several presidents of the Republic, as well as of bishops and priests who died in the diocesis. The cathedral is located on the south side of the Plaza de La Independencia.
This church is inspired by the Church of the Gesu in Rome, Italy. The columns are a copy of those made by Bernini in the Vatican. Inside, it has altarpieces and pulpits covered with gold leaf. In the altarpiece, designed by Legarda, has taken over as the main reason for the composition of the facade the twisted columns and the cornices that stretch to the center in arch, and has become complete the colorful set, in a crown supported by angels. The church is located between the streets García Moreno and Antonio José de Sucre. 140 years after the earthquake that destroyed the bell tower of the Church of la Compañía de Jesús, the Municipality of Quito began re-building the bell tower of 45 meters, which have the same characteristics with which it had before.
San Francisco, is the largest of the existing architectural ensembles in the historic centres of cities in Latin America. The construction of the church began in 1550, on land adjacent to the plaza where the Native Americans engaged in the barter of products.
The church is located at the intersection of Benalcázar, Bolívar, Sucre and Cuenca. Is one block ahead of the church of La Compañía de Jesús.
In colonial times, the Church of El Sagrario was one of the largest architectural bastions of Quito. The construction of the Italian Renaissance style and built in the late 17th century, has a screen that stand its sculptures and decorations. This structure was built by Bernardo de Legarda. Its central arch leads to a dome decorated with frescoes of biblical scenes featuring archangels, work by Francisco Albán. The altarpiece was gilded by Legarda. It is located on Calle García Moreno, near the Cathedral.
La Carolina more or less resembles New York City's Central Park, since both La Carolina and Central Park are surrounded by tall buildings in relation to the area of both parks.
Besides the aerial tramway to Cruz Loma, the Telefériqo as a whole is a visitor centre that includes an amusement park (Vulqano Park), fine-dining restaurants, Go Karts, Paint Ball, shopping malls, an extensive food court, and other attractions.
Pululahua Geobotanical Reserve, located a few miles northwest from La Mitad del Mundo, contains the Pululahua volcano, whose caldera (crater) is visible from a spot easily accessible by car. It is believed to be one of only a few in the world with human inhabitants.
Quito Zoo, located near the rural parish of Guayllabamba, about outside Quito, has the biggest collection of native fauna in Ecuador, including several kinds of animals that are sometimes targeted in Ecuador in the illegal fur trade.
Some of the other nearby natural attractions are:
{|class="wikitable sortable" |- ! University ! Foundation Date |- |Universidad Central del Ecuador |18/03/1826 |- |Escuela Politécnica Nacional |27/08/1869 |- |Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Ecuador |04/11/1946 |- |Instituto de Altos Estudios Nacionales |20/06/1972 |- |Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencia Sociales |16/12/1974 |- |Escuela Superior Politecnica del Ejercito E.S.P.E. |08/12/1977 |- |Universidad Tecnológica Equinoccial |18/02/1986 |- |Universidad Andina Simon Bolivar |27/01/1992 |- |Universidad Internacional SEK |30/06/1993 |- |Universidad San Francisco de Quito |25/10/1988 |- |Escuela Politecnica Javeriana del Ecuador |29/11/1995 |- |Universidad de las Americas |29/11/1995 |- |Universidad Internacional del Ecuador |30/08/1996 |- |Universidad Tecnológica America |20/08/1997 |- |Universidad Del Pacifico: Escuela de Negocios - Ecuador |18/12/1997 |- |Universidad Autonoma de Quito |07/07/1999 |- |Universidad Cristiana Latinoamericana |31/03/2000 |- |Universidad Tecnologica Israel |16/11/1999 |- |Universidad de Especialidade Turisticas |31/03/2000 |- |Universidad Alfredo Perez Guerro |15/01/2001 |- |Universitas Equatorialis |24/12/2002 |- |Universidad de los Hemisferios |20/05/2004 |- |Universidad Intercultural de las Nacionalidades y Puebloes Indigenas Amawtay Wasi |05/08/2004 |- |Universidad Iberoamericana del Ecuador |30/12/2005 |- |Universidad Og Mandino |17/11/2005 |}
Ecuador's National Museum of Medicine - A museum dedicated to the history of Medicine in Quito, founded by Dr.Eduardo Estrella Aguirre. Dr. Estrella was in the Archives of the Royal Botanic Gardens in Madrid Spain in 1985 and uncovered the lost papers and paintings documenting one of the first expeditions to South America. In Madrid Spain, Dr. Estrella worked for many years and documented his observations in the archive and was able to publish the hard work and giving the credit to the expedition of Juan Tafalla, a book called Flora Huayaquilensis.
Museo Casa de Sucre - This museum is dedicated to life of Mariscal Antonio José de Sucre, a hero of Ecuadorian independence. The ground floor has an array of weapons and military relics, many of which belonged to Sucre himself. The second floor has been restored to what it might have looked like in Sucre's time. Museo Nacional del Banco Central del Ecuador - This art museum houses 5 displays. Each one covers a different time period, ranging from prehistory to modern Ecuador.
The teams in Ecuador's First Division (Serie A and Serie B) are:
Quito is twinned with:
Madrid, Spain Buenos Aires, Argentina Bogotá, Colombia Managua, Nicaragua Louisville, Kentucky, USA Coral Gables, USA Vancouver, Canada La Paz, Bolivia Buxton, United Kingdom Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic Kraków, Poland
Surabaya, Indonesia,(Start Since 5 July 2011)
Category:Capitals in South America Category:Populated places in Pichincha Province Category:Province capitals in Ecuador Category:Quito Category:Quito Canton Category:Populated places established in 1534 Category:World Heritage Sites in Ecuador
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