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Bogotá
(redirected from Bogota, Colombia)

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Bogotá

Capital of Colombia, and of Cundinamarca department, situated at 2,640 m/8,660 ft above sea level, on the edge of the Eastern Cordillera plateau of the Andes; population (2005) 6,763,000; metropolitan area 7,887,000. Main industries include textiles, chemicals, food processing, and tobacco. Bogotá is Colombia's largest city, and the financial, commercial, and cultural centre of the country.

Bogotá was founded by the Spaniard Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada in 1538 on the site of the Chibcha Indian settlement of Bacatá, and orginally named ‘Santa Fé de Bogotá’. In 1598 Bogotá became the capital of the viceroyalty of New Granada, which became the Republic of Columbia in 1718.

The city was home to nationalist leader Simón Bolívar. The Museo del Oro (Gold Museum) has the world's largest collection of pre-Columbian gold objects, with a total of 30,000 exhibits. Educational institutions include the University of Santo Tomás (1580) and the Xavier Pontifical University (1622).



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Stringer, Department of Transportation Commissioner Iris Weinshall and the former mayor of Bogota, Colombia, Enrique Penalosa, each addresses the conference.
Born in Bogota, Colombia to a foreign service family, he grew up in Havana and Paris, and, after serving in the Army during World War II, graduated from Princeton University in 1950.
The chapel for the Los Nogales school in Bogota, Colombia was conceived as an abstract prism, formed partly by site geometry.
 
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