Online Encyclopedia

QUITO

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 763 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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QUITO  , the

capital of the republic of Ecuador, the see of an archbishopric covering the same territory, and the capital of the province of Pichincha, in
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lat. o° 14' S., long . 7S° 45' W., about 114 M. from the Pacific coast and 165 m. in a
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direct
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line N . E. of Guayaquil, with which it is connected by a railway completed in 1908 . Pop . (1906) 50,840, of whom 1365 were foreigners, mostly Colombians . It occupies a small basin of the
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great central plateau formed by the
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volcano Pichincha on the W., the Puengasi ridge on the E., and ridges N. and S. formed by spurs from the eastern side of Pichincha . The ground upon which the city is built is uneven and is traversed from W. to E. by two deep ravines (quebradas), one of which is arched over in great
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part to preserve the alignment of the streets, the drainage of which escapes through a cleft in the ridge northward to the plain of Tumbaco . The city is in great part laid out in rectangular squares, the streets
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running nearly with the cardinal points of the compass . The houses of Quito are chiefly of the old
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Spanish or Moorish style . The
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building material in general use is sun-dried bricks, which in the better houses is covered with
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plaster or stucco . The public buildings are of the heavy Spanish type . ,Facing the
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principal square (Plaza Mayor), and occupying the whole S. side, is the
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cathedral; on the W. side is the government palace; on the N. the archbishop's palace; and on the E. the municipal hall .

The

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elevation of this plaza is 9343 ft. above sea-level . The finest building in the city is the
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Jesuits' church, whose
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facade is covered with elaborate
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carving . Amongpublic institutions are the university, which occupies part of the old Jesuit college, an astronomical
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observatory, and eleven large monastic institutions, six of which are for nuns . One of the convents, that of
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San Francisco, covers a whole block, and ranks among the largest institutions of its kind in the
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world . A part of it is in ruins, and another part has been for some time used as military barracks by, the government . The university has faculties of
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theology, law and
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medicine, and has 200 to 250 students, but it is antiquated in character and poorly supported . The eminent botanist and chemist, Dr William Jameson (1796-1872), was a member of its faculty for many years . The city has no large commercial houses, and only an insignificant export trade, chiefly hides and
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forest products from the wooded mountain slopes near by . Religious paintings of a
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medieval type are produced in large numbers and exported . The native manufactures include tanned leather, saddles, shoes, ponchos, woollen and cotton
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cloth, fibre sandals and_ sacking, blankets, coarse
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matting and coarse woollen carpets .
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Superior hand-made carpets are also made, and Quito artisans show much skill in wood carvings and in gold and
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silver
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works; the
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women excel in
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fine
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needlework and lace-making . Quito derives its name from the Quitus, who inhabited the locality a long time before the Spanish
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conquest .

In 1533

Sebastian Benalcazar took peaceable possession of the native
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town (which had been successivly a capital of the Seyris and Incas), and in 1541 it was elevated to the rank of a Spanish city . Its full title was San Francisco del Quito, and it was capital of the province or
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presidency of Quito down to the end of Spanish colonial
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rule . It has suffered repeatedly from earthquakes, the greatest damage occurring from those of 1797 and 1859 .

End of Article: QUITO
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