Oruro
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}}Template:Main other Oruro (Hispanicized spelling) or Uru Uru<ref>Yaticha Kamani / Ministerio de Educación, Aymara aru thakhinchawi, Chuqi Yapu 2011</ref> is a city in Bolivia with a population of 264,683 (2012 calculation),<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}Template:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore</ref> about halfway between La Paz and Sucre in the Altiplano, approximately Template:Convert above sea level.
It is Bolivia's fifth-largest city by population, after Santa Cruz de la Sierra, El Alto, La Paz, and Cochabamba. It is the capital of the Department of Oruro and the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oruro. Oruro has been subject to cycles of boom and bust owing to its dependence on the mining industry, notably tin, tungsten, silver and copper.
HistoryEdit
The city was founded on November 1, 1606, by Don Manuel Castro de Padilla as a silver-mining center in the Urus region. At the time it was named Real Villa de San Felipe de Austria, after the Spanish monarch Philip III. It thrived for a while, but it was eventually abandoned as the silver mines became exhausted.<ref>Oscar Cornblit. Power and Violence in the Colonial City: Oruro from the Mining Renaissance to the Rebellion of Tupac Amaru (1740-1782). Trans. Elizabeth Ladd Glick. New York: Cambridge University Press 1995.</ref>
Oruro was reestablished by European Bolivians in the late nineteenth century as a tin mining center.<ref name="LP">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It was named after the native tribe Uru-Uru. For a time, the La Salvadora tin mine owned by Simon I. Patino was the most important source of tin in the world. Gradually, as this resource became less plentiful, Oruro again went into a decline. Its economy is still based on the mining industry.<ref name="LP" />
EconomyEdit
While traditionally based upon mining, Oruro has become increasingly popular for tourism since the late 20th century. In the early 21st century, Oruro's economy grew through trade and economic connections with Chile, especially for exporting products to Pacific markets. It transported products by road through Chile to the Pacific port of Iquique to open new connections to external markets; it also used the rail connection through Uyuni to the port at Antofagasta for exports.<ref name="Ancalle-2012">Template:Cite book</ref> Thanks to increased road building, Oruro has become important as a waystation on the overland route of goods from the Atlantic port of Santos, Brazil, through Puerto Suárez and Santa Cruz to the capital, La Paz.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>
The city is served by the Oruro Airport.
Culture and educationEdit
Despite its economic decline, the city attracts numerous tourists to its Carnaval de Oruro, considered one of the great folkloric events in South America for its masked "diablada"<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and Anata.<ref>G. N. Devy, Geoffrey V. Davis, K. K. Chakravarty, Knowing Differently: The Challenge of the Indigenous, Template:ISBN (2015). Quote: "The Anata is a festivity celebrated since the early 1990s in the city of Oruro, but it is linked to pre-Hispanic agricultural practices in the rural highlands related to fertility. The most public expression of the Anata in Oruro is a danced parade that is ..."</ref> The Oruru Carnival was discovered in 1559, when the Augustinian priests were on the land, the festival is in honor of the Virgin of Candlemas.<ref>Lecount, Cynthia. "Carnival in Bolivia: Devils Dancing for the Virgin." Western Folklore 58, no. 3/4 (1999): 231-52. Accessed May 13, 2021. doi:10.2307/1500459.</ref>
The Oruro Symphony Orchestra is based in the city. Aymara painter and printmaker Alejandro Mario Yllanes (1913–1960) was born here.<ref name=nyt>Raynor, Vivien. ART; "Works by a Vanished Bolivian Painter", New York Times. 5 April 1992 (retrieved 2 May 2009)</ref>
The Universidad Técnica de Oruro, noted for its engineering school, is located in Oruro.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
ClimateEdit
Oruro lies north of the salty lakes Uru Uru and Poopó. It is three hours (by vehicle) from La Paz. Located at an altitude of 3709 meters above sea level, Oruro is well known for its cold weather. Warmer temperatures generally take place during August, September and October, after the worst of the winter chills and before the summer rains. From May to early July, night-time temperatures combined with a cold wind can bring the temperature down to well below freezing. Summers are warmer, and, although it is an arid area, it has considerable rainfall between November and March. The Köppen climate classification describes the climate as a cold subtropical highland climate, abbreviated Cfb, with winter precipitation not low enough for a Cwb designation. Due to the warm days and dry winters, snow is not a frequent occurrence as much as the bitter cold (especially at night); however, flurries can fall usually once every few years, most recently July 4, 2015.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The other three most recent snowfalls were those of 13 June 2013,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> 1 September 2010 (with accumulation),<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> as well as one in 2008.
Main attractionsEdit
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- Museo Patiño, former residence of "tin baron" Simón Iturri Patiño
- Museo Mineralógico (Mineralogical Museum): has exhibits of precious stones, minerals, and fossils
- Museo Etnográfico Minero (Ethnographical Mining Museum): housed in a mine tunnel, depicts methods of Bolivian mining
- Museo Nacional Antropológico Eduardo López Rivas (National Anthropological Museum): displays tools and information on the Chipaya and Uru tribes, and about Carnaval de Oruro.
- Churches: Catedral Nuestra Señora de la Asunción, Santuario de la Virgen del Socavón, Iglesia de Cunchupata
- Inti Raymi, a mine
EducationEdit
Because of a high proportion of German-speaking residents, many of whom came as immigrants to work in the mines, the area once had a German school, Deutsche Schule Oruro.<ref>"Deutscher Bundestag 4. Wahlperiode Drucksache IV/3672" (Template:Webarchive). Bundestag (West Germany). 23 June 1965. Retrieved on 12 March 2016. p. 18/51.</ref>
GalleryEdit
- Poopo 1991.jpg
Lake Poopó, Bolivia
- Una vista a los edificios que tiene la Ciudad de Oruro.png
Downtown Oruro, Bolivia
- Superposiciones, Oruro, Bolivia - panoramio.jpg
Oruro, Bolivia
- Catedral de Oruro - Vista Lateral.jpg
Oruro Cathedral
- Taitas.jpg
Taitas de Oruro
- Monumento a la Virgen del Socavón de noche.jpg
Monumento a la Virgen Candelaria, Oruro, Bolivia
- Plaza10deFebrero.jpg
Plaza 10 de Febrero, Oruro
Twin towns – sister citiesEdit
- Template:Flagicon Lima, Peru
- Template:Flagicon Iquique, Chile
- Template:Flagicon Calama, Chile
Notable people from OruroEdit
- Elsa Cladera de Bravo (1922–2005), trade union leader
- Hilda Mundy (1912–1980), Bolivian writer, poet & journalist
- Rajka Baković (1920–1941), Croatian student and a member of the anti-fascist resistance movement
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
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