Authors : Lucia Duque Muñoz, Wikipedia, and others.
Middle WEB
Source:
- Historical Archives of New Granada and Colombia.
- Map Joaquin Acosta (1847), Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera (1852) and Manuel María Paz and Manuel Ponce de León based on the work of Agustín Codazzi (1865)
Link: http://alhim.revues.org/index2907.html
- Historical Archives of New Granada and Colombia.
- Map Joaquin Acosta (1847), Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera (1852) and Manuel María Paz and Manuel Ponce de León based on the work of Agustín Codazzi (1865)
Link: http://alhim.revues.org/index2907.html
Title:
national territory, mapping and power in New Granada (Colombia) in mid-nineteenth century
Date Published: [2000 -]
Matter : Colombia,
Collection / Serie: Les cahiers ALHIM
Geographical area: Colombia, Chocó, Atrato,
Date facts: Siglo XIX.
entities and persons mentioned: Web Amérique Latine Histoire & Memoire.
CHOCÓ FIRST MAPS AND ATRATO
- National territory, mapping and power in New Granada (Colombia).
mid nineteenth century
photos unedited maps:
- El Chocó on the map of Joaquin Acosta (1847)
- The Chocó the map Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera (1852)
Map of the Republic of New Granada dedicated Baron von Humboldt, by the Colonel of artillery Joaquin Acosta (1847). Under the federal system in 1858 by JM Samper. Paris, Imprenta de Mangeon. 60 x 82 cm. Archivo General de la Nación. Bogotá.
The following quotation is from The hit:
http://alhim.revues.org/index2907.html # ftn11
The following quotation is from The hit:
http://alhim.revues.org/index2907.html # ftn11
11 The biography of General J. Acosta for his daughter, contains a long paragraph based on the diaries that bore his father. There has detailed the various military missions that Acosta met in Choco and his constant tours of Rio Atrato, San Juan, Size, form, and Ingar. Acosta early bonding with the independence armies put him face to face with nature in some of Granada where it is least manageable and accessible. At 19, personally appeared S. Bolivar applying for a job in the army, was appointed "lieutenant of infantry in the Cazadores Battalion," after which he was sent to fulfill military missions mainly in the Cauca and Choco. From his first expedition, he notes that abound in his diaries about printing that caused the different sites and their characteristics. Campaigns and missions constituted Chocó a pivotal moment during the first phase of military life Acosta. It was at this stage that crossed the Pacific coast north and south, tracing its major rivers (Acosta de Samper: 34-52). Later, transcribe some notes I had kept J. Acosta dated July 1826 in which Humboldt asked to see him at his office in Paris to talk and ask some questions about the Choco (Acosta de Samper: 109-110).
- The Chocó the map Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera (1852)
Charter of the Republic of New Granada, as last political division. Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera. (1852) New York, Theodore Dwight. 42 x 59 cm. Archivo General de la Nación. Bogotá.
- The Chocó on the map of Manuel María Paz and Manuel Ponce de León based on the work of Agustín Codazzi (1865)
Charter, Ponce and Peace (1863)
blog Note:
The number of names in the Chocó area on this map, and indicates the geostrategic importance was the Pacific coast of Colombia in 1863.
- Map of El Chocó, according to Wikipedia: http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choc% C3% B3
- Map of Quibdó, according to Wikipedia: http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quibd% C3% B3
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