Honda, Tolima
Honda is a town and municipality in the Tolima department of Colombia. The population of the municipality was 24,693 as of the census 2018.[1] Along with Líbano, Honda is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Líbano-Honda. The main industries of Honda are tourism, fishing, and cattle-ranching.
Honda | |
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Municipality and town | |
| |
Nickname: "The Bridge City" | |
Country | Colombia |
Departament | Tolima |
Government | |
• Mayor | Alberto Arce Camacho |
Area | |
• Municipality and town | 304.9 km2 (117.7 sq mi) |
• Urban | 10.15 km2 (3.92 sq mi) |
Elevation | 229 m (751 ft) |
Population (2018 census)[1] | |
• Municipality and town | 24,693 |
• Density | 81/km2 (210/sq mi) |
• Urban | 23,658 |
• Urban density | 2,300/km2 (6,000/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC-5 |
Toponymy (name origin)
Honda takes its name from the Ondaimas, the indigenous people that inhabited the banks of the Magdalena river and the region where the city lies today.
Honda is called "the City of Bridges" with more than 40 of them on the rivers Magdalena, Gualí, Guarinó, and Quebrada Seca. It is also called the "City of Peace" as it escaped most of the violence of the 1950s.[2]
History
Honda was founded on August 24, 1539 by Francisco Nuñez Pedroso. The "golden age" of the city was between 1850 and 1910 when the Magdalena river constituted the only means of transportation between the Caribbean coast and the inland city of Bogotá. The city was the main river port of the country and all the imported goods and articles arrived in Bogotá through the port of Honda.
Because of its historical importance, Honda was named a Pueblo Patrimonio (heritage town) of Colombia in 2010. As of March 2021, it is the only municipality in the Middle Magdalena Valley region that has been awarded this distinction.[3]
References
- Citypopulation.de Population of Honda municipality with localities
- "HONDA: "Ciudad de la Paz", "Ciudad de los Puentes"" (in Spanish). Informativo Colombiano. Retrieved 10 August 2016.
- "GUÍA: Red Turística de Pueblos Patrimonio de Colombia" (PDF). Fondo Nacional de Turismo de la República de Colombia - FONTUR. Dec 2020. Retrieved 29 Mar 2021.