San Cristóbal, Táchira

San Cristobal is the capital city of the Táchira State in Venezuela, a mountain state. It is located in the southwest region of Táchira. San Cristobal was founded by Juan de Maldonado in March 31, 1561. San Cristobal makes a frontier by the west with Cúcuta, Colombia; by the east with the Apure state; and by the north with the states of Zulia, Barinas and Trujillo.

CollageSCB.jpg
Flag of San Cristóbal
Official seal of San Cristóbal
 
 
Coordinates: 7°46′N 72°14′W / 7.767°N 72.233°W / 7.767; -72.233Coordinates: 7°46′N 72°14′W / 7.767°N 72.233°W / 7.767; -72.233
CountryVenezuela Venezuela
StateTáchira
MunicipalitySan Cristóbal Municipality
FoundedMarch 31, 1561
Government
 • MayorPatricia Gutiérrez de Ceballos (2013-2017)
Area
 • City247 km2 (95 sq mi)
Elevation
860 m (2,820 ft)
Population
 (2010)
 • City645,925
 • Density2,615.7/km2 (1,634.4/sq mi)
 • Urban
1,015,623
 • Demonym
San Cristobalense
Websitehttp://sancristobal-tachira.gob.ve
San Cristóbal
Venezuela
Ubication of San Cristóbal in Venezuela

Education

San Cristobal has a large student population. There are many post-secondary schools, both public and private, in San Cristobal. Major colleges and universities of San Cristobal are listed below:

Climate

The weather in San Cristobal is tropical; the temperatures are between 19℃ and 28℃ (66 °F and 83 °F).[1] San Cristobal is characterized has two seasons: summer and spring. The temperatures between those two seasons do not change a lot. However, there is more rain in the spring than in the summer.

 
Night panorama of the city

Political Divisions

  • Parroquia San Juan Bautista^ 
  • Parroquia La Concordia
  • Parroquia Pedro María Morantes
  • Parroquia San Sebastián
  • Parroquia Francisco Romero Lobo

Sports

The Deportivo Táchira Fútbol Club was founded in 1974 by Gaetano Greco. The Stadium of the Deportivo Tachira is located in the north side of San Cristobal, and it is called Polideportivo de Pueblo Nuevo, and it has a capacity for 38,755 people.

Famous Citizens

San Cristóbal, Táchira Media

Notes

1.^ Parroquia is a section of the city.

References

Other websites

Official website Archived 2007-06-30 at the Wayback Machine