Líbano, Tolima | |
Settlement Type: | Municipality |
Mapsize: | 250px |
Pushpin Mapsize: | 300 |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location in Colombia |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Colombia |
Subdivision Type1: | Department |
Subdivision Name1: | Tolima Department |
Leader Title: | Alcalde (Mayor) |
Leader Name: | José Germán Castellanos Herrera |
Established Date: | 23 April 1849 |
Area Total Km2: | 282.4 |
Area Urban Km2: | 3.64 |
Population As Of: | 2020 est. |
Population Footnotes: | [1] |
Population Total: | 36231 |
Population Density Km2: | auto |
Population Urban: | 23290 |
Population Density Urban Km2: | auto |
Coordinates: | 4.9167°N -85°W |
Timezone: | Colombia Standard Time |
Utc Offset: | -5 |
Elevation M: | 1565 |
Website: | http://www.libano-tolima.gov.co |
Líbano is a town and municipality in the Tolima department of Colombia. The population of the municipality was estimated at 36,231 as of 2020.[1] Along with Honda, Líbano is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Líbano–Honda.
Before the arrival of Europeans, the Panches, Pantagoras, Bledos, and Marquetones lived in the region. They were among the tribes most feared by the Muisca. Their society was an aristocratic hierarchy headed by a chief.
By the mid-nineteenth century, settlers from Antioquia explored south in search of vacant land, and mines, to be acquired by degrees of effort and incorporated into the national economy. A caravan of Antioqueños led by Isidro Parra, found a valley planted with cedars and oaks, and constructed a few huts. The hamlet was named Líbano, the Spanish word for Lebanon.
The layout of the built-up area of Líbano was organized as a village in 1886. Since 1900, Líbano developed as an important village, pushing dirt roads in all directions. Socio-economic development of the region was guided by its founders from the development of mining and power to the cultivation of coffee, which has become the main characteristic element of the economy, society and culture of the area.
The city of Líbano is the see of the Diocese of Líbano-Honda, created by Pope John Paul II on July 26, 1989, by the Bull "Ita Iam." The territorial area of the diocese covers an area of 3,477 km ² with approximately 240,000 inhabitants. Its first bishop was Monsignor José Luis Serna Alzate, who took office on October 7, 1989. On 5 December 2015, José Luis Henao Cadavid was installed as the fourth bishop of the diocese.
The municipality of Líbano is located in the north of the department of Tolima, about 56km (35miles) north of Ibagué, the departmental capital. Líbano is bordered to the north by the municipalities of Armero and Villahermosa, to the West by the municipality of Murillo, to the East by the municipality of Lérida and to the south by Santa Isabel and Venadillo.
Líbano is located in the Cordillera Central, east of Nevado del Ruiz. The town is at an altitude of 1565m (5,135feet) above sea level, putting it in the tierra templada, or temperate zone, of Colombia. The area is hilly and heavily forested where it is not used for agriculture. Agriculture in the area includes growing of coffee, bananas, plantains, and beans.
El Libano is a historic coffee producing municipality in Tolima. There, there are 77 villages and 3,980 families that make their living by planting coffee.
His production has also been recognized in various competitions such as the Master of Coffee Colombia, where the farmer Ómar Arango was recognized for the high quality of his coffee in 2019.
Also, the specialty coffees that come out of this municipality are exported to countries such as China, Japan, Korea, the United States, Spain, and England, among others.
In addition, it could be said that this is the municipality with the longest coffee history in Tolima, In the 1900s it had threshing machines that were headquarters of important companies in Europe, they were called “threshers”.