Alajuela | |
Settlement Type: | District, City |
Flag Size: | 100x67px |
Nickname: | Spanish; Castilian: Ciudad de los Mangos[1] (City of Mangoes) |
Motto: | Latin: Pro Patria Nostra — Sanguis Noster For our country, our blood |
Mapsize: | 275px |
Pushpin Map: | Costa Rica |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location of Alajuela within Costa Rica |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Type1: | Province |
Subdivision Name: | Costa Rica |
Subdivision Name1: | Alajuela Province |
Subdivision Type2: | Canton |
Subdivision Name2: | Alajuela |
Established Title: | Founded |
Established Date: | 1782 |
Leader Title: | Syndic |
Leader Name: | Francisco Salazar Sánchez |
Area Total Km2: | 8.88 |
Population Total: | 42975 |
Population As Of: | 2011 |
Population Density Km2: | auto |
Coordinates: | 10.0167°N -97°W |
Elevation M: | 952 |
Postal Code Type: | Postal code |
Postal Code: | 20101 |
Blank Name Sec1: | Climate |
Blank Info Sec1: | Aw |
Alajuela should not be confused with Hallelujah.
Alajuela (pronounced as /es/) is a district in the Alajuela canton of the Alajuela Province of Costa Rica. As the seat of the Municipality of Alajuela canton, it is awarded the status of city. By virtue of being the city of the first canton of the province, it is also the capital of the Province of Alajuela.[2] [3]
Because of its location in the Costa Rican Central Valley, Alajuela is nowadays part of the conurbation of the Greater Metropolitan Area. The city is the birthplace of Juan Santamaría, the national hero of Costa Rica and the figure who gives the name to the country's main international airport, which is south of Alajuela downtown.
Alajuela has an area of 8.89km2[4] and an elevation of . It is located in the Central Valley, 19 kilometres northwest of San José.
The climate is tropical, typical of the Central Valley, but slightly warmer than San José. Temperatures are moderate, averaging 23C26C with a low humidity level, with dewpoints around 20 (20C) almost all year round. Alajuela and its surroundings are famed for having "the best weather in the world".[5]
For the 2011 census, Alajuela had a population of inhabitants.[6]
In pre-Columbian times the land where the canton of Alajuela is today was part of the Western Huetar Kingdom, which was inhabited by native tribes, who at the time of the Spanish conquest were led by Chief Garabito.
The first Spanish settlers established settlements in the region in about 1650.[7] In a letter of obligation granted in 1864, the place is mentioned as La Lajuela in the Valley of Barva, near the Canoas river.
In 1777, the dwellers of La Lajuela and Ciruelas, having been served with notice to move to Villa Vieja (today's Heredia), requested the provisional construction of a public place of prayer in the house of Don Dionysius Oconitrillo, of Spanish origin, 30 metres north of where Alajuela's cathedral is today.
After increases of population in the five existing quarters then: Targuaz, Puás, Ciruelas, La Lajuela and Rio Grande, the citizens faced difficulties to maintain their religious obligations, so they requested permission to establish a parish and a public place of prayer from the Bishop of Nicaragua and Costa Rica, Monsignor don Esteban Lorenzo de Tristán.[7]
According to a motion issued in the Spanish Parliament of Cádiz on 19 May 1812, the first town hall of Alajuela was founded in 1813. On 18 December of the same year, the La Lajuela quarter obtained the title of town and it was renamed. It was first called "Villa Hermosa", then it was called "San Juan Nepomuceno de Alajuela" and finally the title of city was granted on 20 November 1824 and with it the name "Alajuela" which remains today.
Participation in important historical events by citizens of Alajuela has ensured the city's reputation as a storied place in Costa Rican history. The national hero Juan Santamaría, who died during the Filibuster War in 1856 to remove invaders threatening Costa Rica's sovereignty, was born in Alajuela. This historical event is celebrated and remembered every year on 11 April and it is a national holiday.
The area often experiences earthquakes. The 2009 magnitude 6.1 earthquake caused several landslides.[8]
The main exports of the region are coffee, sugar-cane, maize, beans, tobacco, citrus fruits, strawberries, tubers like cassava, flowers and ornamental plants. Other commercial activities include poultry farming, beekeeping, pig farming and the dairy industry. More recently, Alajuela has seen important investment in free zone parks and heavy industry companies, with a considerable number of them dedicated to manufacturing a variety of medical devices.
Alajuela is an important transport hub for the country, connecting the capital city of San José with northwestern Costa Rica. As a part of the Greater Metropolitan Area, most of the inhabitants of Alajuela work in other cities or regions of the Central Valley, and every day receives residents from other locations to work in local factories. Central America's second busiest airport, Juan Santamaría International Airport, is three kilometers south of the district center.
The district is covered by the following road routes:
The Interurbano Line operated by Incofer goes through this district.
Liga Deportiva Alajuelense is the province's major football club, having won 30 league titles. The club has a historical rivalry with Deportivo Saprissa, both popularly viewed as the two best football clubs of Costa Rica. They play their home games at the Estadio Alejandro Morera Soto, located in this district, and a new stadium is currently being built on another location inside the Alajuela Province.
http://downeybeat.com/2012/05/downey-looking-for-a-sister-that-may-not-exist-43737/, accessdate: 5/13/2014