Alajuelita (canton)

Alajuelita is the 10th canton in the province of San José in Costa Rica. The canton covers an area of 21.17 km²,[1] and has a population of 75,418.[2] The capital city of the canton is Alajuelita.

Alajuelita canton in San José province

The odd-shaped canton reaches southwest from the suburbs of the national capital city of San José. It is delineated by the Río Tiribí on the northeast, Río Cañas on the east, Río Poás on the southeast, and the Cerros de Escazú at it far southwestern end. The Santuario Nacional Santo Cristo de Esquipulas is located in this canton[3] along with the Cerro San Miguel, whose metallic cross built at its peak is definitely one of the more beloved landmarks in Costa Rican Central Region.[4]

Districts

The canton of Alajuelita is subdivided into five districts (distritos):[5]

  1. Alajuelita
  2. San Josecito
  3. San Antonio
  4. Concepción
  5. San Felipe

History

The canton was established by a decree of June 4, 1909. The first settlements in the area occurred by 1650. The name "Alajuelita" comes from a diminutive form of the name of Alajuela province due to original colonization coming from that province.

gollark: It seems like they just had the wrong idea.
gollark: "Bug" would imply that they had some idea in mind but got it wrong when translating it to code.
gollark: Maybe you could have an "emergency bailout" thing by manually asking moderators or something.
gollark: That would probably help.
gollark: Oh hey, it responded.

References

  1. Instituto Geográfico Nacional (IGN), 2001.
  2. Estimates of Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Censos (INEC), May 2003.
  3. https://si.cultura.cr/infraestructura/santuario-nacional-santo-cristo-de-esquipulas.html
  4. http://www.kerwa.ucr.ac.cr/bitstream/handle/10669/13745/La%20Cruz%20de%20Alajuelita.pdf?sequence=2&isAllowed=y
  5. "División Territorial Administrativa de Costa Rica" (PDF) (in Spanish). Instituto de Fomento y Asesoria Municipal (IFAM). 5 May 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 August 2015.



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.