Online Encyclopedia

POPAYAN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 81 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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POPAYAN  , a

city of
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Colombia, capital of the department of
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Cauca, about 240 M . S.W. of Bogota, on the old trade route between that city and
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Quito, in 2° 26' N., 76° 49' W . Pop . (1870), 8485; (1906, estimate), so,000 . Popayan is built on a
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great plain sloping N.W. from the
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foot of the
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volcano Purace, near the source of the Cauca and on one of its small tributaries, 5712 ft. above the sea . Its situation is singularly picturesque, the Purace rising to an
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elevation of 15,42o ft. about 20 M. south-east of the city, the Sotara volcano to approximately the same height about the same distance . south by east, and behind these at a greater distance the Pan de Azucar, 15,978 ft. high . The ridge forming the
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water-parting between the basins of the Cauca and Patia rivers crosses between the Central and Western Cordilleras at this point and culminates a few miles to the south . Popayan is the seat of a bishopric dating from 1547, whose
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cathedral was built by the
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Jesuits; and in the days of its prosperity it possessed a university of considerable reputation . It has several old churches, a college, two seminaries founded about 187o by the French Lazarists, who have restored and occupy the old Jesuit convent, and a mint established in 1749 . The city was at one time an important commercial and
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mining centre, but much of its importance was lost through the transfer of trade to
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Cali and
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Pasto, through the decay of neighbouring mining
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industries, and through
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political disturbances . Earth-quakes have also caused much damage to Popayan, especially those of 1827 and 1834 . The
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modern city has some small manufacturing industries, including woollen fabrics for clothing, but its trade is much restricted, and its importance is political rather than commercial .

Popayan was founded by

Sebastian Benalcazar in 1538 on the site of an
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Indian settlement, whose chief, Payan, had the unusual honour of having his name given to the usurping
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town . In 1558 it received a coat of arms and the title of " Muy noble y muy leal " from the king of Spain—a distinction of great Minority Report . significance in that disturbed period of colonial
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history . It is noted also as the birthplace of Caldas, the Colombian naturalist, and of Mosquera, the geographer . There are hot sulphurous springs near by on the flanks of the volcano Purace, especially at Coconuco, which are much frequented by Colombians .

End of Article: POPAYAN
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