Official Name: | Clarines |
Pushpin Map: | Venezuela |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Type1: | State |
Subdivision Type2: | Municipality |
Subdivision Name1: | Anzoátegui |
Subdivision Name2: | Manuel Ezequiel Bruzual Municipality |
Established Title: | Founded |
Established Date: | 1594 |
Population As Of: | 2007 |
Population Total: | 15,000 |
Timezone: | VET |
Utc Offset: | -4 |
Coordinates: | 9.9433°N -65.1661°W |
Elevation M: | 8 |
Blank Name: | Climate |
Clarines is a town in Venezuela's Anzoátegui State, located on the right bank of the Unare River. It serves as the administrative centre for the surrounding Manuel Ezequiel Bruzual Municipality. It is located on Venezuela Route 11 (Troncal 11) and Route 9 (Troncal 9). Route 9 connects it to Caracas to the west and Barcelona to the east.[1] The town is from Puerto La Cruz, and from Puerto Piritu. The estimated population was 15,000 in 2007.
When the town was officially founded on 7 April 1594 by Francisco de Vides, a Spanish adventurer who came from the Province of Huelva, there was already a Palenques[2] Indian village there. The town was named after Our Lady of Los Clarines, the patron saint of Beas in Huelva, Andalusia. In 1650 when the Franciscan friars arrived, Clarines was still essentially an Indian village. It was not until the oil boom of the 1960s that Clarines began to change. In 1852, the population of Clarines was 4,289, including 72 people identified as white and 3,321 people identified as indigenous.
Alfredo Armas Alfonzo, Venezuelan historian and critic, was born in Clarines in 1921.Jaime Lusinchi, former president of Venezuela, was born in Clarines in 1924.
The Museo de Clarines (museum) has items of historical interest including a collection of armaments.
The local population practices subsistence farming growing plantains, yuca, beans, china, cotton, cassava, and corn. Until the exploitation of oil, the only exports were cattle and mules. Nowadays, many small companies that service the oil fields operate out of Clarines.