Intibucá Department Explained

Intibucá Department
Native Name:Departamento de Intibucá
Native Name Lang:es
Settlement Type:department
Pushpin Label Position:bottom
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Honduras
Coordinates:14.3167°N -97°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Honduras
Subdivision Type1:Municipalities
Subdivision Name1:17
Subdivision Type2:Villages
Subdivision Name2:126
Established Title:Founded
Established Date:16 Abril 1883
Seat Type:Capital city
Government Type:Departmental
Leader Party:PNH
Leader Title:Gobernador
Leader Name:Hodalma Lisseth Benítez Erazo (2018-2022)
Unit Pref:Metric
Area Rank:14th
Area Total Km2:3126
Population As Of:2015
Population Total:241568
Population Rank:13th
Population Density Km2:auto
Demographics Type1:GDP (Nominal, 2015 US dollar)
Demographics1 Title1:Total
Demographics1 Info1:$500 million (2023)[1]
Demographics1 Title2:Per capita
Demographics1 Info2:$1,800 (2023)
Demographics2 Title2:Total
Demographics2 Info2:$1.1 billion (2023)
Demographics2 Title3:Per capita
Demographics2 Info3:$3,700 (2023)
Timezone1:CDT
Utc Offset1:-6
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Postal Code:14000, 14101, 14201
Iso Code:HN-IN
Blank Name Sec1:HDI (2021)
Blank Info Sec1:0.577[2]
· 16th of 18
Footnotes:Statistics derived from Consult INE online database: Population and Housing Census 2013[3]

Intibucá (pronounced as /es/) is one of the 18 departments in the Republic of Honduras. Intibucá covers a total surface area of 1186.1mi2. Its capital is the city of La Esperanza, in the municipality of La Esperanza.[4] [5] [6]

History

The department of Intibucá was created on April 16, 1883 upon recommendation of the Governor of the department of Gracias (now called Lempira), Jose Maria Cacho in 1869. He advised that the vast size of Gracias made it difficult to govern and that it would be desirable to divide it into more than one department.

On March 7, 1883 Decree No. 10 was issued, which called for the creation of a new department to be named Intibucá in April of that year. The town of La Esperanza was designated to be the capital of the new department. To create the new department, territory from both the departments of Gracias and La Paz were reassigned.

Geography

The department of Intibucá is situated between latitudes 13°51'E and 14°42'N and longitudes 87°46'W and 88°42'W. It is bounded on the north by the departments of Comayagua, Lempira, and Santa Bárbara, on the east by the departments of Comayagua and La Paz, on the west by the department of Lempira, and on the south by the Republic of El Salvador. Intibucá is the most mountainous district of Honduras. The capital of La Esperanza lies at an elevation of 4950feet above sea level. The table-land and valleys are higher than in any other part of the country, and the ranges of the Cordilleras rise to an altitude approaching 10000feet feet above sea level.[6]

The valley of Otoro is 30 km long by 8 km wide.

The Opalaca mountains have several ridges and crosses over into the department of La Paz. Sierra de Montecillos is a natural border with the department of Comayagua, and contains the mountains Opatoro, Concepción, El Picacho, Goascotoro, El Granadino among others.

Rivers

Rivers of La Esperanza include the San Juan River and the Intibucá River, which passes through La Esperanza. Otoro River is a tributary of the Ulua River, and carries water to the Otoro valley. The Black River, known by the name of Guarajambala River, serves as a dividing line with the department of Lempira. Torola River and Gualcarque River flow into the Lempa river.

Population

According to the 1895 census, Intibucá had a population of 18,957 people at that time.[7] In 2015, it had grown to 241,568 people, divided among 17 municipalities and 126 villages (aldeas).

Forest resources

The mountains and slopes are well supplied with pine and Oak forests, and the valleys thrive with fertile, well-watered soil, covered with vegetation characteristic of the temperate rather than tropical zone.[8] [9]

Municipalities

Intibucá has the following municipalities of Honduras:

  1. Camasca
  2. Colomoncagua
  3. Concepción
  4. Dolores
  5. Intibucá
  6. Jesús de Otoro
  7. La Esperanza
  8. Magdalena
  9. Masaguara
  10. San Antonio
  11. San Francisco de Opalaca
  12. San Isidro
  13. San Juan
  14. San Marcos de Sierra
  15. San Miguel Guancapla
  16. Santa Lucía
  17. Yamaranguila

Notable residents

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: TelluBase—Honduras Fact Sheet (Tellusant Public Service Series). 2024-01-11.
  2. Web site: Sub-national HDI - Area Database - Global Data Lab. hdi.globaldatalab.org. en. 2018-09-13.
  3. Web site: Consulta Base de datos INE en línea: Censo de Población y Vivienda 2013 . Consult INE online database: Population and Housing Census 2013 . es . 1 August 2018 . Instituto Nacional de Estadística (INE) . El Instituto Nacional de Estadística (INE) . 2018-09-13.
  4. Web site: Alcaldes y Alcaldesas . 2013-10-14 . Asociación de Municipios de Honduras . https://web.archive.org/web/20130816015437/http://amhon.hn/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=107&Itemid=427 . 2013-08-16 . dead .
  5. Web site: Alcades de Honduras . 2013-10-14 . BVS Nacionales . 2014-06-30 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140630092431/http://www.muni.bvs.hn/pdf/Alcades.pdf . dead .
  6. Book: Alfred Keane Moe . John Hampden Porter . Honduras: Geographical sketch, natural resources, laws, economic conditions, actual development, prospects of future growth . Internal Bureau of the American Republics, US Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. . 1904. 44–46.
  7. Book: . Breve noticia del empadronamiento general de casas y habitantes de la República de Honduras practicado el 18 de diciembre de 1910. . Brief news of the general enumeration of houses and inhabitants of the Republic of Honduras practiced on December 18, 1910. . es . Tegucigalpa, Honduras . Tipografía Nactional . 6–7 . 2011 . Pages 6-7 summarize the development of the population of Honduras from 1791 through 1910 according to the registrations, estimates, censuses and counts between the two years. Numbers of inhabitants are given for 1791, 1801, 1826, 1850, 1881, 1887, 1895, 1901, 1905, and 1910..
  8. Book: Harcourt, C. . J. Sayer . The Conservation Atlas of Tropical Forests: The Americas . Simon & Schuster, New York . 1996 . 978-0133408867.
  9. Web site: Tropical and Subtropical Coniferous Forests. Central America: Southern Mexico, Southern Guatemala, into Honduras, El Salvador, and Nicaragua. 2013-10-15. George Powell, Sue Palminteri, Claudia Locklin, and Jan Schipper (WWF).