San Salvador de Jujuy
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Its population at the 2001 census [INDEC] was 237,751 inhabitants. If its suburbs are included, this figure rises to around 300,000.[2] The current mayor is Raúl Jorge.
City information
The city lies on National Route 9 that connects La Quiaca Template:Convert with Salta Template:Convert, and it is Template:Convert from Buenos Aires. Tourist destinations not far from the city are Tilcara Template:Convert, Humahuaca Template:Convert, and the Calilegua National Park Template:Convert.
Jujuy is located near the Andes, at the junction of the Xibi Xibi River and the Río Grande de Jujuy, 1,238 meters above sea level. The weather is humid during the summer and dry and cold during the winter. Temperatures vary widely between day and night.
The city is the provincial government, financial and cultural centre. Most administrative offices related to economic activities that take place in other parts of the province are located here; these activities include petroleum extraction and pre-processing, sugarcane and sugar industry (Ledesma), tobacco (El Carmen, Template:Cvt south), steel (in nearby Villa Palpalá), citrus, and fruit and vegetable production for local consumption.
The city has a colonial city centre including the Cabildo, the cathedral, and colorful Andean carnivals.
The Gobernador Horacio Guzmán International Airport (Template:Comma separated entries) at coordinates Template:Coord, is Template:Convert southeast of the city (in Ciudad Perico) and has regular flights to Buenos Aires.
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Monument to Manuel Belgrano
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Belgrano Square and the Government Palace
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Cathedral of St. Francis
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Patio of the Cathedral Church
History
Template:Unreferencedsect After previous attempts in 1565 and 1592, the current city was founded as San Salvador de Velazco en el Valle de Jujuy on April 19, 1593, by Francisco de Argañarás y Murguía. The settlement initially developed as a strategic site on the mule trade route between San Miguel de Tucumán and the silver mines in Potosí, Bolivia.
Reaching its peak importance during the colonial period, San Salvador de Jujuy declined to the status of a remote provincial capital after the Argentine Declaration of Independence in 1816. The town became the capital of Jujuy Province when the latter separated from Salta Province in 1834. The 1863 Jujuy earthquake leveled the town, and it recovered slowly in the following decades. Jujuy began to grow following the arrival of the Northern Central Railway in 1900. Its first institution of higher learning, the Economic Sciences Institute, was established in 1959, and was incorporated into the new National University of Jujuy in 1973. The city was the location of a number of Argentine films, including Veronico Cruz (1988) and Una estrella y dos cafés (2005). The city's impoverished Lower Azopardo neighborhood would later give rise to Milagro Sala's Indigenist Tupac Amaru Neighborhood Association.
Climate
Jujuy has a humid subtropical climate (Cwa, according to the Köppen climate classification), mainly because of the altitude. Summers bring warm days at Template:Cvt and nights at Template:Cvt with frequent thunderstorms. The rest of the year is sunny, with temperatures at about Template:Cvt during the day and Template:Cvt at night, crisp, dry winters with warm days of Template:Cvt and cold nights at Template:Cvt, and sunny springs with warm days at Template:Cvt and cool nights at Template:Cvt. During heat waves, temperatures can sometimes reach Template:Cvt but these are not frequent and nights always bring significant cooling, as opposed to many low-lying areas in Northern Argentina. During the winter, the record low has fallen to Template:Cvt. Precipitation is about Template:Cvt, which falls in the form of thunderstorms during the warmest months. The highest temperature recorded was Template:Cvt on October 16, 2014 while the lowest temperature recorded was Template:Cvt on August 14, 1978.[3]
Notable people
- Iván Almasana (born 1993), Argentine professional footballer[4]
- Ana Pelegrín (1938–2008), researcher, writer, and educator
See also
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- List of twin towns and sister cities in Argentina
- Yolanda Carenzo (pianist born in San Salvador de Jujuy)
References
External links
- Template:In lang Municipal site
- Template:In lang City tourist and Cultural office
- Template:In lang Digital Newspaper
Template:Provincial capitals of Argentina Template:Authority control
- ↑ South American Handbook 2009 Template:ISBN p.173
- ↑ Indec:Instituto Nacional De Estadistica Y Censos De La Republica Argentina Template:Webarchive
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