Bolivar ( isp. Bolívar ) is one of the departments of Colombia . Located in the northern part of the country. In the north it is washed by the Caribbean Sea . The administrative center is the city of Cartagena [2] .
| department | |||||
| Bolivar | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| isp. Departamento de Bolívar | |||||
| |||||
| A country | Colombia | ||||
| Includes | 47 municipalities | ||||
| Adm Centre | Cartagena | ||||
| History and geography | |||||
| Date of education | 1857 | ||||
| Square | 25,978 km² (14th place ) | ||||
| Height | |||||
| Timezone | UTC-5 | ||||
| Population | |||||
| Population | 1,860,445 [1] people ( 2005 ) ( 7th place ) | ||||
| Density | 71.62 people / km² (10th place) | ||||
| Official language | Spanish | ||||
| Digital identifiers | |||||
| ISO 3166-2 code | CO-BOL | ||||
| Official site | |||||
Municipalities
Municipalities of the Bolivar department.
| No | Municipalities | Square, km² | Population, people (2010) |
|---|---|---|---|
| one | Achi (Achí) | 871 | 34,861 |
| 2 | Altos del Rosario (Altos del Rosario) | 248 | 11,735 |
| 3 | Arenal (Arenal) | 534 | 7,364 |
| four | Archona (Arjona) | 566 | 65,000 |
| five | Arroyohondo (Arroyohondo) | 162 | 8,804 |
| 6 | Barranco de Loba | 416 | 16,572 |
| 7 | Brazuelo de Papayal | 94 | 14,980 |
| eight | Calamar (Calamar) | 246 | 20,771 |
| 9 | Cantagallo | 669 | 7,839 |
| ten | El Carmen de Bolívar | 954 | 73,952 |
| eleven | Cartagena de Indias (Cartagena de Indias) | 709 | 1,043,245 |
| 12 | Sykuko (Cicuco) | 103 | 12 856 |
| 13 | Clemencia (Clemencia) | 95 | 11,961 |
| 14 | Cordova (Córdoba) | 450 | 15 113 |
| 15 | El Guamo | 390 | 7,712 |
| sixteen | El Peñón | 252 | 8 131 |
| 17 | Hatillo de Loba (Hatillo de Loba) | 150 | 13,113 |
| 18 | Magangé | 1,568 | 235,125 |
| nineteen | Mahates (Mahates) | 479 | 23 355 |
| 20 | Margarita (Margarita) | 295 | 9,419 |
| 21 | Maria la Baja | 547 | 48 021 |
| 22 | Montecristo | 2,089 | 18 386 |
| 23 | Morales | 1,765 | 19,196 |
| 24 | Noros (Norosí) | 412 | 14,928 |
| 25 | Pinillos | 753 | 24,250 |
| 26 | Rehidor (Regidor) | 106 | 4,511 |
| 27 | Rio Viejo | 1,414 | 15,223 |
| 28 | San Cristóbal | 56 | 6,578 |
| 29 | San Estanislao | 208 | 25,263 |
| thirty | San Fernando (San Fernando) | 388 | 12,632 |
| 31 | San Jacinto | 434 | 28,505 |
| 32 | San Jacinto del Cauca | 549 | 11,868 |
| 33 | San Juan Nepomuceno | 675 | 38,514 |
| 34 | San Martín de Loba | 442 | 14 365 |
| 35 | San Pablo | 1 967 | 30 100 |
| 36 | Santa Catalina | 153 | 15 312 |
| 37 | Santa Cruz de Mompox | 645 | 46,215 |
| 38 | Santa Rosa | 151 | 20,092 |
| 39 | Santa Rosa del Sur | 2,200 | 35,157 |
| 40 | Simichi | 1,445 | 44 300 |
| 41 | Soplaviento (Soplaviento) | 91 | 8,472 |
| 42 | Talaigua-Nuevo (Talaigua Nuevo) | 261 | 11,086 |
| 43 | Tiquisio | 758 | 20,169 |
| 44 | Turbaco (Turbaco) | 204 | 70 223 |
| 45 | Turban (Turbaná) | 148 | 13,507 |
| 46 | Villanueva | 135 | 18,794 |
| 47 | Zambrano (Zambrano) | 287 | 11,096 |
Notes
- ↑ Resultados censo general 2005 - Bolivar (Spanish) . Archived March 2, 2012.
- ↑ Bolivar (Colombia) // Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Efron : in 86 tons (82 tons and 4 extra). - SPb. , 1890-1907.