Siparia

Siparia is a town in southern Trinidad, in Trinidad and Tobago, south of San Fernando, southwest of Penal and Debe and southeast of Fyzabad. Also called "The Sand City", it was originally a non-Mission Amerindian settlement. Siparia grew to be the administrative centre for Saint Patrick County, and later the Siparia Regional Corporation. Today it is a commercial centre and market town serving the surrounding agricultural areas and oil fields. Siparia is also the seat of the Siparia Regional Corporation.

Siparia
Town
Nickname(s): 
The Sand City
Siparia
Location of Siparia, Trinidad and Tobago
Siparia
Siparia (Caribbean)
Siparia
Siparia (North America)
Coordinates: 10°08′N 61°30′W
CountryTrinidad and Tobago
RegionSiparia
Settled1758
Area
  Total47.8 km2 (18.5 sq mi)
Elevation39 m (128 ft)
Population
 (2011)
  Total14,535
  Density300/km2 (790/sq mi)
Demonym(s)Siparian
Time zoneUTC−4 (AST)
Postal Code(s)
72xxxx
Area code(s)+1 (868)-649

La Divina Pastora (Siparia Mai)

Siparia is the site of the annual festival of "La Divina Pastora", named for the church's patron saint. The festival occurs each year on the saint's day of La Divina Pastora, a few weeks after Easter. The same statue, a Black Virgin, is venerated by Hindus during a separate festival, held on Good Friday and Maundy Thursday. The Hindu celebration is often referred to the "Siparia Fete". She is La Divina Pastora, the Divine Shepherdess, a manifestation of the Virgin Mary, to Catholics, and Siparia Mai (Mother of Siparia) to Hindus. Sometimes Sipari Mai is associated with a particular Hindu goddess, such as Kali, and sometimes she is a goddess in her own right. These two religious groups are most commonly associated with her, but persons of many other religions, including Muslims, Spiritual Baptist, Rastafarians, Yorubas (Orishas), Buddhist, Bahá'ís and indigenous Warao people have been known to worship the popular saint.

The origin of the statue is unknown, but seems to have been in the Siparia area since the 18th century.

Notable people from Siparia

gollark: I do wonder, though, has anyone actually tested whether train pathfinding time is brought to actually-significant levels with loops?
gollark: I'm pretty sure it's a preference thing and that elsewhere there are arguments raging on it.
gollark: Also, "use the same train direction" as other people would probably make more sense than "use this train direction".
gollark: You can also remove belts without rotating them.
gollark: Oh, also, rule 12: "Do not rotate belts ..."?

References

  1. "Elevation of Siparia,Trinidad and Tobago Elevation Map, Topo, Contour". floodmap.net. floodmap.net. Retrieved April 5, 2016.
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