Provinces of Cuba
Provinces of Cuba Provincias de Cuba (Spanish) | |
---|---|
Category | Unitary state |
Location | Republic of Cuba |
Number | 15 Provinces |
Populations | 84,263(Isla de la Juventud) – 2,154,454 (La Habana) |
Areas | 281.18 square miles (728.3 km2) (Isla de la Juventud) – 5,951.31 square miles (15,413.8 km2) (Camagüey Province) |
Government | Dual-Party Government |
Subdivisions | Municipality |
Administratively, Cuba is divided into 15 provinces and one special municipality not included in any province. The last modification was approved in August 2010 (by the Cuban National Assembly), splitting Havana province into two new provinces: Artemisa (which incorporates the three eastern municipalities of the neighbour Pinar del Río) and Mayabeque. The new provinces started functioning from January 1, 2011. Havana City Province (Ciudad de La Habana) recovered its original name: La Habana (Havana in English).
List of provinces
From west to east, Cuba's provinces are:
- Pinar del Río
- Artemisa
- La Habana
- Mayabeque
- Matanzas
- Cienfuegos
- Villa Clara
- Sancti Spíritus
- Ciego de Ávila
- Camagüey
- Las Tunas
- Granma
- Holguín
- Santiago de Cuba
- Guantánamo
- Isla de la Juventud is a "special municipality". Isla de la Juventud ("Island of Youth") was known until the 1970s as the Isla de Pinos ("Isle of Pines").
History
The provinces were created in 1879 by the Spanish colonial government. From 1879 to 1976, Cuba was divided into 6 provinces, which maintained with little changes the same boundaries and capital cities, although with modifications in official names. These "historical" provinces are the following (from west to east):
- Pinar del Río
- La Habana, included the city of Havana, current Mayabeque, some municipalities of current Artemisa Province (prior to 1970: 5 municipalities; from 1970 to 2011, 8 municipalities, including Artemisa city itself) and the Isle of Pines (current "Isla de la Juventud").
- Matanzas
- Las Villas (before 1940 named "Santa Clara"), contained the present-day provinces of Cienfuegos, Villa Clara and Sancti Spíritus
- Camagüey (before 1899 named "Puerto Príncipe"), contained the present-day provinces of Camagüey and Ciego de Ávila, as well as two municipalities of current Las Tunas Province (prior to 1970).
- Oriente (before 1905 named "Santiago de Cuba"), contained the present-day provinces of Las Tunas, Granma, Holguín, Santiago de Cuba and Guantánamo
Demographics
Pop. = Population. Source: Cuba census 2002 [1]
Province | Capital | Pop. (2012) | Pop. (%) | Area (km²) | Area (%) | Density |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Camagüey | Camagüey | 768,311 | 7.02 | 15,386.16 | 13.2 | 50.22 |
Ciego de Ávila | Ciego de Ávila | 424,750 | 3.68 | 6,971.64 | 5.6 | 60.70 |
Cienfuegos | Cienfuegos | 400,768 | 3.54 | 4,188.61 | 3.9 | 94.54 |
La Habana | Havana | 2,154,454 | 19.70 | 728.26 | 0.7 | 3,053.49 |
Granma | Bayamo | 830,645 | 7.36 | 8,374.24 | 7.9 | 98.20 |
Guantánamo | Guantánamo | 506,369 | 4.54 | 6,167.97 | 6.0 | 82.22 |
Holguín | Holguín | 1,027,683 | 9.14 | 9,215.72 | 8.5 | 109.90 |
Isla de la Juventud | Nueva Gerona | 84,263 | 0.77 | 2,419.27 | 2.1 | 35.78 |
Artemisa | Artemisa | 487,339 | 4.49 | 4,003.24 | 3.75 | 125.5 |
Las Tunas | Las Tunas | 525,729 | 4.70 | 6,592.66 | 6.0 | 79.77 |
Matanzas | Matanzas | 679,314 | 6.00 | 11,791.82 | 10.0 | 56.80 |
Mayabeque | San José de las Lajas | 371,198 | 3.41 | 3,743.81 | 3.49 | 102.2 |
Pinar del Río | Pinar del Río | 585,452 | 5.32 | 8,883.74 | 8.32 | 67.00 |
Sancti Spíritus | Sancti Spíritus | 462,114 | 4.12 | 6,777.28 | 6.3 | 68.33 |
Santiago de Cuba | Santiago de Cuba | 1,053,837 | 9.27 | 6,227.78 | 5.9 | 168.32 |
Villa Clara | Santa Clara | 783,708 | 7.31 | 8,441.81 | 7.6 | 97.17 |
Cuba | Havana | 11,163,934 | 109,884.01 | 101.72 |
Presidents of the People's Power Provincial Assemblies
Presidents of the Provincial Assemblies of People's Power in each province in the country (local governments).[2]
Province | President of the Provincial Assembly |
---|---|
Camagüey | Jesús Arturo García Collazo |
Ciego de Ávila | Agustín Gregorio Arza Pascual |
Cienfuegos | Rolando Díaz González |
La Habana | Marta Hernández Romero |
Granma | Jesús Antonio Infante López |
Guantánamo | Luis Fernando Navarro Fernández |
Holguín | Alberto Olivera Fis |
Isla de la Juventud | Roberto Unger Pérez |
Mayabeque | Armando Cuellar Domínguez |
Artemisa | Raúl Rodríguez Cartaya |
Las Tunas | Víctor Luis Rodríguez Carballosa |
Matanzas | Nilo Tomás Díaz Fundora |
Pinar del Río | Vidal Pérez Baños |
Sancti Spíritus | Fidel Pérez Luzbert |
Santiago de Cuba | Rolando Yero García |
Villa Clara | Alexander Rodriguez Rosada |
See also
- Politics of Cuba
- Ranked list of Cuban provinces
- Cuba Census 2002 data
- List of places in Cuba
- Municipalities of Cuba
- List of Caribbean First-level Subdivisions by Total Area
- ISO 3166-2:CU
References
- ↑ Cuba Census 2002 Population table
- ↑ "Presidentes de las Asambleas Provinciales del Poder Popular en cada provincia" (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2007-06-09. Retrieved 2007-02-10.
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External links
- Cuba at GeoHive
- Provinces of Cuba at statoids.com
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