Peñarol, Montevideo

Peñarol, also known as Peñarol–Lavalleja, is a working-class barrio (neighbourhood or district) of Montevideo, Uruguay.

Peñarol–Lavalleja
Historic workers residences of the railroad company
Street map of Peñarol–Lavalleja
Location of Peñarol–Lavalleja in Montevideo
Coordinates: 34°49′S 56°11′W
Country Uruguay
DepartmentMontevideo Department
CityMontevideo

On 10 March 1913, Peñarol was declared a "pueblo" (village) by the Act of Ley Nº 4.311.[1] On 1 July 1953, its status was elevated to "villa" (town) by the Act of Ley Nº 11.967.[2] Ever since, it has been integrated to Montevideo.

Toponymic

When Montevideo was a colonial walled city and the area of Peñarol had no name and was all farms field, Giovanni Battista Crosa an oriundo from Pinerolo (Piedmont, Italy), set up a grocery store in 1776, where today is the intersection of Coronel Raíz and Route 102 (perimeter), in the currently piped nascent Miguelete stream. Crosa nicknamed the district with the name of his hometown, which is pronounced Pinareul in Piedmontese (or Pignerol in French) and was corrupted in popular speech as Peñarol.

Places of worship

  • Parish Church of St. Joseph, Husband of Mary, Av. Instrucciones 1343 (Roman Catholic)
gollark: I mean this semiunironically. It is *already* possible to generate fairly artistic images automatically via CLIP+VQGAN and similar things. This will only improve over time. Because people often like knowing that people went to some effort to make a thing, though (see handmade goods, etc.) there will probably be demand for human art anyway.
gollark: You are MUCH like Intel's flagship Xeon Platinum 8380 "Ice Lake" 2P server configuration.
gollark: Art will be automated in 10 years anyway.
gollark: If no moon is detected in 24 hours of scanning, it is deemed not there.
gollark: This would work by using shodan and/or scanning the entire IP address space for IP cameras, then looking for the moon in their feeds.

See also

References

  1. "Statistics of urban localities" (PDF). INE. 2012. Retrieved 8 September 2012.
  2. "Ley Nº 11.967". República Oriental del Uruguay, Poder Legislativo. 1953. Archived from the original on 2016-03-06. Retrieved 8 September 2012.


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