Online Encyclopedia

TEGUCIGALPA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 506 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TEGUCIGALPA  , the

capital of
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Honduras and of the depart-merit of Tegucigalpa; situated 3200 ft. above sea-level, on the
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river Choluteca, and at the head of a railway to the
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port of
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San Lorenzo on Fonseca
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Bay . Pop . (1905) about 35,000 . Tegucigalpa is the largest and finest city in the republic . The majority of its houses are of one storey, built round a central court; the windows are usually unglazed but protected by iron bars which project into the narrow cobble-paved streets . The focus of civic
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life is near the central park, in which stands a
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bronze equestrian statue of Francisco Morazan (1792-1842), the Hondurian statesman and soldier . Fronting the park is a domed.
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cathedral, one of the largest and most ornate churches in Honduras . Other noteworthy buildings are the government offices, university, school of industry and
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art,
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national printing
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works, and law courts . A lofty ten-arched
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bridge over the Choluteca connects the city with its
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principal suburb, Concepcion or Comayaguela . Tegucigalpa became capital of Honduras, a status it had previously shared with
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Comayagua, in 1880 . During the 18th century the neighbourhood was famous for its gold,
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silver and marble, but in
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modern times the mines and quarries have greatly declined in value, and farming is the chief
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local industry . In 1907 Tegucigalpa was occupied by the Nicaraguan invaders .

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