Nestled high in the Andes at 2620 m. (8646 ft), Santafé de Bogotá is a city of contrasts. It’s a city of highrise buildings standing next to colonial churches; a city of universities, theaters and shantytowns. It is a mixture of influences, Spanish and English and Indian; a city of great wealth and material well being and abject poverty. It is a city of wild traffic and calm oases reflecting a bygone day. It is a modern city with futuristic architecture, graffiti and congestion; restaurants, bookstores and street vendors peddling emeralds, thieves, beggars, s treet people and drug dealers wrapped around the inner core of the old city.
Santa Fé de Bogotá was founded in 1538. The name was shortened to Bogotá after independence from Spain in 1824 and was called that until recently when the original name was reinstated as Santafé de Bogotá.
Until the middle of the 1900’s, the city was quite provincial, the bureaucratic home of government and intellectual pursuits. The main industries were breweries, woolen textiles, and candlemaking. The residents or Bogotanos were viewed by the rest of the country as taciturn, cold and aloof. The Bogotanos saw themselves as intellectually superior to their countrymen. Despite these perceptions, the city has grown to be today an industrial and commercial center and the main offices of most coffee producing and exporting firms and flower growers.
In addition to being the capital, Bogotá is Colombia's largest economic center. Most companies in Colombia have their headquarters in Bogotá, as it is home to most foreign companies doing business in Colombia as well as Colombia’s main stock market. The emerald trade is a huge business in Bogotá. In downtown Bogotá, millions of dollars in domestically produced rough and cut emeralds are bought and sold daily.
Bogotá is divided into zones, each with its own characteristics:
Most of the places of interest to visitors are in the central and northern zones. The city expanded from the colonial center, thus most of the great churches are here. To the east of the city, the mountains provide a constant backdrop. The most famous peak is the Cerro de Montserrat at 3030 metres. (10,000 ft) and a favorite with Bogoteños who go there for the spectacular view, the park, the bull ring, restaurants and the famous religious site. The church here with the statue of the Señor Caído Fallen Christ, is claimed to be a place of miracles. The top is accessible by climbing hundreds of stairs (not recommended,) by the cable car which runs from 9AM to 11PM daily or by the funicular which runs only on Sunday between 5:30AM and 6PM.
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