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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, inSee also: lat. o° 14' S., long
.
7S° 45' W., about 114 M. from the Pacific See also: coast and 165 m. in a See also: direct See also: line N
.
E. of See also: 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 See also: basin of the See also: great central See also: plateau formed by the See also: volcano Pichincha on the W., the Puengasi See also: ridge on the E., and ridges N. and S. formed by spurs from the eastern See also: 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 See also: 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 See also: running nearly with the See also: cardinal points of the compass
.
The houses of Quito are chiefly of the old See also: Spanish or Moorish See also: style
.
The See also: building material in general use is See also: sun-dried bricks, which in the better houses is covered with See also: plaster or stucco
.
The public buildings are of the heavy Spanish type
.
,Facing the See also: principal square (Plaza Mayor), and occupying the whole S. side, is the See also: cathedral; on the W. side is the See also: government palace; on the N. the archbishop's palace; and on the E. the municipal See also: hall
.
The See also: elevation of this plaza is 9343 ft. above See also: sea-level
.
The finest building in the city is the See also: Jesuits' See also: church, whose
See also: facade is covered with elaborate See also: carving
.
Amongpublic institutions are the university, which occupies part of the old Jesuit See also: college, an astronomical See also: observatory, and eleven large monastic institutions, six of which are for nuns
.
One of the convents, that of See also: San Francisco, covers a whole See also: block, and ranks among the largest institutions of its kind in the See also: world
.
A part of it is in ruins, and another part has been for some See also: time used as military barracks by, the government
.
The university has faculties of See also: theology, See also: law and See also: medicine, and has 200 to 250 students, but it is antiquated in character and poorly supported
.
The eminent botanist and chemist, Dr See also: William
See also: Jameson (1796-1872), was a member of its faculty for many years
.
The city has no large commercial houses, and only an insignificant export See also: trade, chiefly hides and See also: forest products from the wooded See also: mountain slopes near by
.
Religious paintings of a See also: medieval type are produced in large numbers and exported
.
The native manufactures include tanned See also: leather, saddles, shoes, ponchos, woollen and See also: cotton See also: cloth, fibre sandals and_ sacking, blankets, coarse See also: matting and coarse woollen carpets
.
See also: Superior See also: hand-made carpets are also made, and Quito artisans show much skill in See also: wood carvings and in gold and See also: silver See also: works; the See also: women excel in See also: fine See also: needlework and lace-making
.
Quito derives its name from the Quitus, who inhabited the locality a long time before the Spanish See also: conquest
.
In 1533 See also: Sebastian Benalcazar took peaceable possession of the native See also: town (which had been successivly a capital of the Seyris and Incas), and in 1541 it was elevated to the See also: rank of a Spanish city
.
Its full title was San Francisco del Quito, and it was capital of the province or See also: presidency of Quito down to the end of Spanish colonial See also: rule
.
It has suffered repeatedly from earthquakes, the greatest damage occurring from those of 1797 and 1859
.
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