Oicatá

Oicatá

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Location of the municipality and town of Oicatá in the Boyacá Department of Colombia.
Coordinates: CO 5°35′N 73°19′W / 5.583°N 73.317°W / 5.583; -73.317
Country  Colombia
Department Boyacá Department
Province Central Boyacá Province
Government
  Mayor Ever Niño Cuervo
Area
  Total 59 km2 (23 sq mi)
Time zone Colombia Standard Time (UTC-5)
Doctrineros Temple 16th Century.
Home Park panoramic photo Oicatá

Oicatá is a town and municipality in the Department of Boyacá, part of the subregion of the Central Boyacá Province, in Colombia.

History

The municipality was founded on May 9, 1539 by Pedro Ruiz Corredor. Before the Spanish conquest it was the seat of the Boyacense Chibcha civilization, which was the most developed in the country socially, culturally, and in productivity. Post-Conquest, governmental power was exercised by the Governor General, who was directly appointed by the king.

After several centuries of Spanish rule, and after fierce battles, the people won their freedom from Spain in the Battle of Boyacá, where on August 7, 1819, troops under the command of Simón Bolívar defeated the Spanish forces.

In 1821 the Constitution of Cúcuta divided the country into departments, the departments into provinces, provinces into counties, and counties into parishes, establishing Boyacá Department as an administrative entity comprising the provinces of Tunja, Pamplona, Socorro and Casanare.

The Act of June 15, 1857, established Boyacá as a sovereign state consisting of the provinces of Tunja, Tundama, Casanare, and the counties of Chiquinquirá and Velez.

The Act of October 31 of that year created four departments: Tunja with 42 districts, Tundama with 46, Casanare with 21, and Oriente (East) with 6.

Under the Constitution of Rionegro in 1863 the administrative divisions of Boyacá underwent various modifications, and Law 10 of that year established a new division into 6 departments: Casanare, Tundama, North, West, East and Centre.

The centrist Constitution of 1886 divided the country into departments, the departments into provinces, and the provinces into municipalities.

The provinces were abolished in 1911 by Executive Decree No. 306, and several municipalities were separated off to form the commissariat of Arauca.

Afterward the municipalities in the Orinoco region formed the intendency of Casanare as a newly annexed territory of Boyacá Department until 1973, when it split off again.

Oicatá, Square
Representative images of Oicatá
Tree Laurel silvestre
Well of Pius IX, containing a hot spring.
Church interior

Coordinates: 5°36′N 73°19′W / 5.600°N 73.317°W / 5.600; -73.317

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