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First populations
inhabiting Bogotá were the Muiscas, members
of Chibcha linguistic family. Upon conquerors
arrival, the group is calculated in half a million
indigenous population. They occupied the highland
and mild climate flanks between Sumapaz mountain
to the southwest and Cocuy snow peak to the northeast,
covering an approximate extension of 25.000 k2,
which comprising Bogotá high plain, current
Boyacá department portion and a small Santander
region. Most fertile lands were ancient Pleistocene
lake beds and regions irrigated by high Bogotá,
Suárez, Chicamocha and some Meta affluent
river beds.
In this area the population was organized in two
large federations, each commanded by a chief:
the southwest area dominated by the Zipa with
the center located in Bacatá, currently
Bogotá. He was the strongest leader occupying
two fifths of the territory. The northeast zone
was the Zaque domain and the center was Hunza
region, currently Tunja. Muisca population however,
contrasting with Tairona population, did not develop
large cities. Muisca, eminently farmers formed
a disperse population occupying numerous small
villages and hut settlements. Besides, some free
isolated tribes also existed: Iraca or Sugamuxi,
Tundama and Guanentá. Their inhabitants
main occupation was agriculture complemented by
hunting and fishing. They basically cultivated
corn and potatoes, beans, squash, tomatoes, “cubios”
yucca, tobacco, “arracacha”, sweet
potatoes and diverse fruit and vegetables. In
the mining field, salt and emeralds extraction
was fundamental for their own use and to trade
with other tribes from which they obtained gold
and cotton.
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Myths
and beliefs
Chía was Zipa’s territory
ceremonial center, a place destined to
worship the Moon, while the Zaque’s
ceremonial center was Sogamoso, where
the Sun temple was located. Apparently,
major Muisca priests function was astronomic
observation. Numerous archeological monuments
in the form of stone columns witness the
relation, such as «Cojines del Diablo»
(Devil’s Cushions) two large discs
carved high up in the rock within Tunja
urban perimeter, which were probably moon
observation sites. At Saquenzipa, ceremonial
center near Villa de Leyva, some 25 large
cylindrical columns aligned in the east-west
direction stand: from this place, on summer
solstice day the sun rises exactly over
Iguaque lake from where Bachué
goddess emerged as the legend tells.
Bochica, the civilizing God thought them
manual arts, gave them moral standards
and subsequently saved them from deluge
and sabana flood by breaking the rock
and letting the water flow to form Tequendama
falls. Chia goddess was the moon, Zuhé
the sun. They worshiped other astral gods.
For Muiscas, lakes were sacred places
where they had their ceremonies. Their
most important myths and legends mention
Guatavita, Siecha, Tota, Fúquene
and Iguaque lakes, where gold and ceramic
gifts have been found. They also worshiped
the dead, nobles and chiefs were mummified
and buried with all their belongings.
Goldsmith
and ceramics
Although Muisca had no gold, they obtained
ot from trading with other tribes. They
manufactured diverse pieces, the most
outstanding are tunjos, small anthropomorphic
or zoomorphic figures they offered their
gods. Among diverse techniques they used
to manufacture those pieces are lost wax,
hammering and repouseé. Gold objects
served for funerary and sacred gifts.
They also made necklaces, bracelets, earrings,
pectorals, nose rings and other pieces
they used for adorning themselves. The
Gold Museum and other private collection
museums still preserves some of those
pieces. They were excellent at weaving
and outstanding potters.
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Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada expedition
From 1533 belief persisted in the sense
that Río Grande de la Magdalena was
the trail to the South Sea, to Peru, legendary
Dorado. Such was the target Gonzalo Jiménez
de Quesada, the Spaniard conqueror who left
Santa Marta on April 6, 1536 with 500 soldiers
heading towards the interior of current
Colombia was set to reach. The expedition
divided into two groups, one under Quesada
command to move on land and the other commanded
by Diego de Urbino would go up river in
four brigantine ships to later on meet Quesada
troops at the site named Tora de las Barrancas
Bermejas. When they arrived they heard news
about Indians inhabiting the south and making
large salt cakes used to trade for wild
cotton and fish. Jiménez decided
to abandon the route to Peru and cross the
mountain in search for «salt villages».
They saw crops, trails, white salt cakes
and then huts where they found corn, yucca
and beans. From Tora the expedition went
up the Opón river and found Indians
covered with very fine painted cotton mats.
When they arrived to Grita Valley, of the
expedition leaving Santa Marta only 70 men
were left. Along their trip they took
a large amount of gold and emeralds. In
Hunza they captured the Zaque Quemuenchatocha
and headed towards Sogamoso, where they
plundered and set the Sun temple on fire
obtaining immense prize. ]
In March 22, 1537 they arrived from the
north crossing Nemocón and Zipaquirá
«salt villages» to a place
they named Valle de los Alcázarea
(Valley of the Fortress). Already in Chibcha
territory they found goods roads and moved
southwest. In a few days only they crossed
several villages, among them Lenguazaque
and Suesca. They continued through Cajicá,
Chía and Suba, the start of Bogotá
Kingdom, where they fought Bogotá
Chief Indians who tried to prevent them
from entering their town, and saw Muequetá
or Bacatá fenced ranch village,
built on a swampy ravine, Tisquesusa Zipa
capital on the right margin of the Tisquesusa
river.
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Foundation
of Bogotá
Following conquerors motto to found and
to populate, Quesada decided to build
an urban settlement to live in good order
and under stable government. To the east
on the foothills they found an Indian
village named Teusaquillo near the Zipa’s
recreation residence, supplied with water,
wood and planting land and protected from
winds by Monserrate and Guadalupe hills.
Although no document recording city foundation
has been found, August 6, 1538 is accepted
as foundation date .According to tradition,
that day Priest Fray Domingo de las Casas
said the first mass in a straw hut built
near the current cathedral or near Santander
park. It is said that the region was named
New Kingdom of Granada that day and the
village was named Santa Fe.
Urban
design
Urban design consisted in squares and
from that time the one hundred meters
per lienzo de cuadra prevails. Traverse
streets – east-west – were
7 meters wide and current carreras 10
meters wide. In 1553 the Main Plaza —now
Bolívar Plaza— was moved
to its current site and the first cathedral
construction on the eastern side began.
On the other sides the Chapter and the
Royal Hearing were located. The street
joining the Major Plaza and Herbs Plaza
—currently Santander park —
was named «Calle Real» (Royal
Street) now Carrera Seventh.
Population
of Santa Fe
Formed by white, mongrel, indigenous and
slaves; from the second half of the XVI
century the population began rapidly growing.
1789 census recorded 18,161 inhabitants
and by 1819 the city population amounted
to 30,000 inhabitants distributed in 195
blocks. Importance grew when the diocese
was created. Up to 1585 the only parish
was the Cathedral, later on Las Nieves
to the north and Santa Bárbara
south of the Main Plaza were created.
Government
and administration
City Mayor and the Chapter formed by two
Council men assisted by the Constable
and the Police Chief governed the city.
For better administering these domains
in April 1550 the Audience of Santafé
de Bogotá was organized, for Hearers
to act. From that time the city became
the capital and the home of New Kingdom
of Granada government. Fourteen years
later in 1564, the Spanish Crown designated
the first Royal Audience Chairman, Andrés
Díaz Venero de Leyva. The New Granada
became Viceroy-ship in 1739 and kept that
condition until Liberator Simón
Bolívar achieved independence in
1819.
Religion
After dominating indigenous populations
by war, conquest by religion began assisted
by religious communities established in
the entire Colombian territory from the
XVI century, Churches and convents were
built for the Franciscan, Dominican, Augustine
communities and later on in 1604, Jesuits,
Capuchin monks and Clarisse, Dominican
and Barefooted Carmelite nuns. Such communities
marked the spirit and uses of Santafereños,
since they exercised ideology, political
and cultural domination only slightly
reduced when in 1767, Carlos III ordered
Jesuit expulsion from Spanish colonies
in America.
Educational
centers
As for the rest of Spanish America, religious
communities were fundamental in the field
of education, which by order of the Crown
took place in churches and convents. The
first two universities are the deed of
Dominican monks (1563 and 1573). In 1592
San Bartolomé seminar school was
founded to provide higher education to
Spanish children; Jesuits ruled the school,
and in 605 the founded the Maximum School
located in one of the Major Plaza corners.
In 1580 Dominicans founded Pontificia
Univesidad of Santo Tomás de Aquino
Arts and Philosophy school, and in 1621
Jesuits started San Francisco Javier or
Javeriana Univesity courses. In 1653 Fray
Cristóbal de Torres founded Colegio
Mayor de Nuestra Señora del Rosario.
In 1783 the first educational community
and the first school for woman education
were founded in New Granada: La Enseñanza
school ruled by the community of María.
From that time school lessons for women
started, a right up to then reserved to
men.
Plastic
arts
During colonial centuries two trends were
clear, which common source was formed
by religious topics: culta, highly influenced
by metropolitan XVII century painting
counted in the Santa Fe school with outstanding
individuals, for instance Baltasar de
Figueroa, the head of a painters dynasty,
who created and maintained the school
where Gregorio Vázquez de Arce
y Ceballos (1638-1711), was formed, perhaps
the most outstanding person of the time;
and popular, formed by more ingenuous
painters free from influences of the time,
who did not belong to any school. They
interpreted biblical scenes, the life
of saints and Christ and the Virgin life
episodes in carved wood or painted but
in a more free style.
Wood carving is highly positioned within
plastic production of the time and the
maximum expression is found in retable
adorning most Colombian churches, for
instance San Francisco church main alter
retable, mostly carved by Ignacio García
de Ascucha.
Pedro Laboria, Spaniard formed in Seville
art schools who came to Bogotá,
very young and lived here the rest of
his life is one of the outstanding sculptors.
French influence dominating Spain during
the XVIII century when the Borbon dynasty
took the throne, also characterized American
colonies artistic trends. By mid century
painting and decoration secularized in
American colonies and French style marked
government, high Creole burgess-ship and
higher church hierarchy taste. Religious
themes gave space to personal portraits.
The best known painter of the time was
Joaquín Gutiérrez, Viceroys
portraitist.
Botanic
Expedition
The most important contribution of the
time to scientific American nature knowledge
was the Botanic Expedition, for the objective
of studying native flora. Started by order
to Archbishop-Viceroy Caballero y Góngora
under the direction of José Celestino
Mutis and contributions from scientists
as renowned as Francisco José de
Caldas, Jorge Tadeo Lozano and Francisco
Antonio Zea. Originally sited in Mariquita
in 1791 and subsequently transferred to
Santa Fe were it worked until 1816.
Painters who cooperated with the work
left a series of carefully drawn precious
illustrations in witness of research conducted.
They were Francisco Javier Matiz and Pablo
Antonio García.
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Independence
Political uneasiness felt all over Spaniard
colonies in America was expressed in New
Granada in many different ways accelerating
independence process. One of the most
transcendent was the Revolution of Comuneros,
a population riot started in Villa del
Socorro —current Department of Santander—
in March 1781. Spanish authorities refrained
the riot and José Antonio Galán,
the leader was executed. He however left
an imprint followed in 1794 by Antonio
Nariño, precursor of independence
by translating and publishing in Santafé,
the Rights or Men and the Citizen, and
by July 20th movement leaders in 1810.
Independence outcry originated in an apparently
slight dispute between Creole and Spaniards
over the loan of a flowerpot but became
popular upraise.
The period comprised between 1810 and
1815 is known as “Patria Boba”
(Silly Homeland), because during those
years Creole fought among themselves seeking
ideal government forms, initial ideological
struggles began and the first two republican
political parties —federalists and
centralists— were formed.
Terror
epoch and independence
In 1815 Pacifying Expedition commanded
by Pablo Morillo arrived in New Granada,
pretending to conquer the rebel colony.
Repression times started then and extending
until 1819. New Granada lived the Independence
War period when egregious personalities
lost their life but ended by triumphal
liberator campaign commanded by Simón
Bolívar and Francisco de Paula
Santander who fought Pantano de Vargas
and Boyacá (1819) battles to seal
independence.
Great
Colombia
In 1819 the Liberator created Gran Colombia,
a national state formed by Venezuela,
Nueva Granada and Quito, dissolved later
in 1830, the same year Simón Bolívar
died in Santa Marta.
Mid
Century Revolution
Between 1819 and 1849 no fundamental structures
inherited from the colonial phase change
had been seen. It was by mid XIX century
when a series of fundamental reforms took
place, some of the most important being
slavery abolition and religious, teaching,
print and speech industry and trade freedom,
among other. During the decade of the
70s Radicalism accentuated reforms and
State, society and institutions perception
was substantially modified. However during
the second half of the century the country
faced permanent «pronouncements»,
fights between States and fractions and
civil wars: the last and bloodier was
the One Thousand Days War from 1899 to
1902.
XIX
century educational system
Independence achieved Bogotá continued
enjoying the privilege of being the main
educational and cultural center of the
new nation.
In 1823, a few years after Great Colombia
organization, the Public Library, now
National Library extended and modernized
with new volumes and better facilities.
The National Museum was founded. Those
institutions were of great importance
to new republic cultural development.
From half century education secularization
and expansion widened formation possibilities.
The Central Univesity was the first State
school, precursor of current National
Univesity. Founded in 1867 and domiciled
in Bogotá.
Geographic
Commission
Between 1850 and 1859 the first effort
to research different regions history,
geography, cartography, economy, society
and cultures in the country was made by
the Geographic Commission directed by
Italian Agustín Codazzi. Graphic
and documentary experience achieved by
the Commission was greatly transcendent
and complemented Botanic Expedition work.
Commission sketchers were miniaturists,
portraitists and landscapers who traveled
all over the country and portrayed human
types, labors, working forms, technical
resources, garments, uses and geographic
aspects. Commission documents are kept
at the General Archive of the Nation.
Travelers
and customs painters
During the first half of the XIX century
the first republican travelers and other
visitors fascinated by nature, people
and uses left large aquarelle drawing
collections witnessing works, garments,
uses and costumes, transportation ways,
festivities and forms of life observed
around them. Around the same time, other
travelers and literates illustrated the
same topics under written text such as
«Los bogas del río Magdalena»
(Magdalena River paddlers) by Rufino José
Cuervo in 1840, and many diaries and travel
books.
Best known travelers were Walhous Mark
(1817-1895) whose excellent aquarelles
constitute valuable testimony of Colombia
at that time, Alfredo J. Gustin, César
Sighinolfi, León Gautier, Luis
Ramelli and many other. Some remained
in the country and founded schools and
academies of art to communicate their
technical and artistic knowledge. Mexican
Santiago Felipe Gutiérrez was the
foreign artist of greater influence at
the time. In 1881 he founded Gutiérrez
Academy which became National Univesity
School of Beaux Arts.
Illustrated
Newspapers
Alberto Urdaneta invited Spaniard Antonio
Rodríguez to come to the country
to manage the engraving school, which
functioned from 1881 in Bogotá.
Illustrated Newspaper (1881-1886) illustrators
formed in that school. The newspaper was
a publication founded and directed by
Urdaneta. Work of Illustrated Newspaper
cooperators is of great documentary value.
Population
Although Bogotá did not enjoy substantial
foreign immigrants flow, according to
census taken during the XIX century the
population grew quite steadily: in 1832
the census recorded 36,465 inhabitants;
in 1881, 84,723 inhabitants and by the
end of the century nearly 100,000. Population
growth from 1850 was partially due to
Mid Century reforms, which expanded work
sources. Bogotá offered work possibilities
in the trade sector or different functions.
Increase derived in physical city expansion
towards the north creating new neighborhoods
up to Chapinero village, five kilometers
away from the city.
Cultural
life in the city
Bogotá was a city quite isolated,
since communication media were scarce.
Only by the end of the century did such
isolation decline thanks to the railroad
and to some roads linking the city and
the Magdalena river and down the river
up to the Caribbean coast.
During the decade of the 70s, writers
of varied trends grouped around Mosaico
magazine, founded and directed by José
María Vergara y Vergara, to make
one of the first efforts to record Colombian
literature history and to consolidate
the cultural identity of the country.
Cultural life in the city concentrated
in literary gatherings, which during the
XIX century allowed Bogotanians to share
their literary and political concerns
and to attend musical and drama presentations.
Maldonado Theater featured theatrical
and opera presentations and by the end
of the XIX century Bogotá had two
important theatres: the Theater of Cristóbal
Colón, inaugurated in 1892, and
the Municipal Theatre, inaugurated in
1895, which featured zarzuela (operetta)
and musical shows. Also the scenario for
important Colombian history events during
the decades of the 30s and 40s.
During the XIX century, despite constant
riots and civil wars altering normal new
republic development, Bogotá preserved
traditions and uses dating back to colonial
times, combined with some European influence.
At meetings and gatherings certain foods
and beverages became mandatory: chocolate
served at night accompanied of home made
cookies and candy, and “ajiaco”
became the typical dish. During night
reunions someone played in the piano local
composers music and in larger parties
people danced pasillo a form of rapid
waltz so called for the short dancing
steps.
Artistic
production
In 1886 the National School of Beaux Arts
was founded and definitely drove artistic
development in the city. Alberto Urdaneta
was the first director. Painters Epifanio
Garay and Ricardo Acevedo Bernal, School
professors, were important portraitists,
but the most outstanding person at that
time was painter Andrés de Santamaría
(1860-1945), greatly renowned painting
in Colombia. He was Beaux Arts School
director twice and his work, associated
to impressionism, is the most important
of that time. Landscaping trend most famous
representatives were Roberto Páramo,
Jesús María Zamora, Eugenio
Peña, Luis Núñez
Borda and Ricardo Gómez Campuzano,
painters whose work is preserved in the
permanent National Museum collection.
Literary
production
Bogotá gave the Spanish speaking
world José Asunción Silva
(1865-1896), Modernism pioneer. His poetic
work in the novel De sobremesa position
him in an outstanding American literature
place. Rafael Pombo (1833-1912) was outstanding
American Romanticism poet who left a collection
of fables essential part of children imagination
and Colombian tradition.
The
railroad
The North railroad to join Bogotá
and Carare river – Magdalena river
affluent – dates back to radicalism
times, but only started shaping when the
first railroad section to Girardot was
built, under government contract with
Francisco Javier Cisneros in 1881, the
first section of which joined the Magdalena
port and Tocaima. In 1898 the rails reached
Anapoima and in 1908 the rails linked
the city and Facatativá. From that
time Bogotanians were able to mobilize
down to the Magdalena river using the
rail road. Bogotá-Chapinero-Puente
del Común section was inaugurated
in 1894, Cajicá in 1896 and Zipaquirá
in 1898. Including Soacha and Sibaté
rails by the end of the XIX century, Sabana
de Bogotá counted on one hundred
railroad kilometers.
The
telephone
The first telephone line in Bogotá
linked from September 21, 1881 the National
Palace and city mail and telegraph offices,
and on August 14, 1884, the municipality
of Bogotá granted Cuban citizen
José Raimundo Martínez the
privilege to install public telephone
services in the city. In December the
same year the first telephone was installed
in the offices of Messrs. González
Benito Hermanos connecting to another
telephone in Chapinero.
The
tramway
In December 25, 1884 the first tramway
pulled by mules was inaugurated, and covered
the route from Plaza de Bolívar
and Chapinero, and in 1892 the line kinking
Plaza de Bolívar and La Sabana
Station started operating. The tramway
ruled over wood rails but since it easily
derailed steel rails imported from England
were installed. In 1894 a tramway car
ran the Bogotá-Chapinero line every
twenty minutes. The tramway provided services
up to 1948, and was then replaced by buses.
Regeneration
President Rafael Núñez declared
Federalism end, and in 1886 the country
became a centralist Republic ruled by
the Constitution in force – save
some amendments – up to 1991. In
the middle of political and administration
avatars Bogotá continued as the
capital and principal political center
of the country.
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Early in the new century,
Colombia had to face devastating consequences
from the One Thousand Days was, which lasted from
1899 to 1902, and the loss of Panama. Between
1904 and 1909 liberal party legality was reestablished
and President Rafael Reyes endeavored to implement
a national government. Peace and State reorganization
generated economic activities increase. Bogotá
started deep architectural and urban transformation
with significant industrial and artisan production
increase. In 1910 the Industrial Exposition of
the Century took place at Park of Independence.
Stands built evidenced industrial, artisan work,
beaux arts electricity and machinery progress
achieved. The period from 1910 to 1930 is designated
conservative hegemony. Between 1924 and 1928 hard
union struggle began with oil fields and banana
zone workers strikes, leaving numerous people
killed.
Bogotá had practically no industry. Production
was basically artisan work grouped in specific
places same as commercial sectors. Plaza de Bolívar
and surroundings lodged hat stores, at Calle del
Comercio –current Carrera Seventh–
and Calle Florián –now Carrera Eight–
luxurious stores selling imported products opened
their doors; at Pasaje Hernández tailor’s
shops provided their services, and between 1870
and 1883 four main banks opened their doors: Bogotá,
Colombia, Popular and Mortgage Credit banks.
Bavaria brewery, established in 1889, was of one
the major industries. In 1923 the United States
paid the Colombian government the first installment
associated to agreed 25 million indemnification
for their intervention in Panama separation, bringing
bonanza reflected by exports increase, higher
foreign investment and development infrastructure;
roads were built, industry increased, public expense
grew and urban economy expanded.
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The
liberal republic
Following banana zone killing and conservative
party division, Enrique Olaya Herrera
took office in 1930. The liberal party
reformed, during 16 years of the so called
Liberal Republic, agricultural, social,
political, labor, educational, economic
and administrative sectors. Unionism strengthened
and education coverage expanded. In 1938
the fourth centenary of Bogotá
foundation which population had reached
333,312 inhabitants was celebrated.
The celebration produced a large number
of infrastructure works, new construction
and work sources. Following 1946liberal
party division, a conservative candidate
took presidential office again in 1948,
after liberal leader Jorge Eliécer
Gaitán killing, Bogotá downtown
was practically destroyed and violence
increased. From that date, basically city,
urban, architectural and population sectors
substantially changed.
City
life in the XX century
During those years Bogotá cultural
life transformation accelerated, partially
thanks to new communication media. Newspapers,
domestic and foreign magazines, cinema,
radio telegraph and telephone communications
multiplied and aerial transportation linked
Bogotá to the rest of the world.
Waves of peasants and farmers fleeing
violence and those coming to Bogotá
in search for work and better opportunities
tripled the population, which went from
700,000 in 1951 to 1,600,000 in 1964 and
2,500,000 inhabitants in 1973.
The city modernized, expanded work fields
and industry, finances, construction economic
offer and education. During General Rojas
Pinilla (1953 to 1957) dictatorship, television
arrived in Colombia and works such as
El Dorado airport replacing ancient Techo
airport were completed dynamizing along
the Avenue joining the airport to the
city, urban development and a large variety
of western neighborhoods development.
North Highway in turn expanded development
to the north. Official Administrative
Center project began and was subsequently
completed to form the National Administrative
Center.- CAN.
Bogotá,
Special District and Capital District
In 1954 municipalities of Usme, Bosa,
Fontibón, Engativá, Suba
and Usaquén were annexed Bogotá
and the Special District of Bogotá
was created projected towards future growth,
and the new city administration was organized.
In 1991, under new Constitution, Bogotá
became Capital District. According to
1985 census capital population had increased
to 4,100,000 and by 1993 population reached
nearly 6,000.000.
Economic
transformation
City economy has greatly developed and
diversified. Industrial production became
substantial, requiring specialized industrial
areas development. Artisan production
became one of the most appreciated ornamental
and utilitarian expression and a source
of income to family business. Commercial
activities increasingly grow and business,
financial and banking centers position
Bogotá as the economic axle of
the country and a privileged Andean Zone,
the United States and several European
and Asian countries trade market place.
The Sabana of Bogotá has become
a flower production center exported to
many countries, generating foreign currency
and a work source absorbing a high number
of labor. Informal economy and micro-enterprises
cover a large sector of the population
developing different activities.
Cultural
life
From 1950 profound architectural, sculpture,
painting, music, literature and education
development began. Universities currently
offer different artistic career studies
and specialization. Faculties of Philosophy,
Literature, History, Humanities and Social
Sciences are forming professors, researchers,
scientists, writers, musicians and cineastes
of international renown at pre-graduation,
master and doctorate levels.
Higher
education
Univesity education is one of the most
important aspects of life in Bogotá.
Univesity population is calculated at
16% total Bogotá population. Most
important universities offering pre-graduation
programs and various specialization, masters
and postgraduate studies in the country
are, among other, National Univesity,
Los Andes Univesity founded in 1948, Javeriana,
El Rosario, Santo Tomás universities
founded during the Colony and Lbre, Externado,
Jorge Tadeo Lozano, Pedagógica,
La Sabana, Sergio Arboleda and Católica
universities. Caro y Cuervo Institute
develops extremely important activities
associated to the Spanish language.
Current
Bogotá
Currently Bogotá is a modern metropolis
with nearly seven hundred million inhabitants,
covering approximately 33,000 hectares.
Tanks to technical advances inherent to
large cities, and substantial transformation
in the past eight years, Bogotá
is now a friendly, lovely city offering
rich and varied cultural life. A city
providing all modern life services and
comfort required, while not giving up
many of its colonial time uses preserved
by traditional neighborhoods.
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