Santiago Province (Dominican Republic)

Santiago
Province
Monument to the Heroes of the Restoration War
Country  Dominican Republic
Capital Santiago de los Caballeros
 - elevation 175 m (574 ft)
 - coordinates
Area 2,836.51 km2 (1,095 sq mi)
Population 1,959,105 (2011)
Density 690.67 / km2 (1,789 / sq mi)
Province since 1844
Subdivisions 9 municipalities
21 municipal districts
Congresspersons 1 Senator
18 Deputies
Timezone AST (UTC-4)
Area code 1-809 1-829 1-849
ISO 3166-2 DO-25
Postal Code 51000
Location of Santiago Province
Website: www.provinciasantiago.gov.do/

Santiago (Spanish pronunciation: [sanˈtjaɣo]) is a province of the Dominican Republic, in the north of the country. Santiago is an intellectual, educational, and cultural center. It is also a major industrial center with rum, textile, cigarette and cigar industries based there. Shoe manufacturing, leather goods, and furniture making are important parts of the province's economic life. Santiago also has major Free Zone centers with four important industrial free zones; it also has an important cement factory. Santiago is home to one of the largest medical centers in the country, Clínica Unión Médica, which serves all 13 provinces of El Cibao.

Also within striking distance there are a good number of pleasant towns, many of which are quite prosperous. Santiago is in the center of the Cibao Valley, the wealthiest region in the Republic, per capita. It is surrounded by tall mountains which have for years protected it from hurricanes and allows for dense tropical forests to develop on the slopes of such mountains, which are among the highest in the region.

Contents

Municipalities and municipal districts

The province as of June 20, 2006 is divided into the following municipalities (municipios) and municipal districts (distritos municipales – D.M.) within them:[1]

The following is a sortable table of the municipalities and municipal districts with population figures as of 2011. Urban populations consist of people living in the seats (cabeceras, literally "heads") of municipalities or of municipal districts. Rural populations are those living in the districts (Secciones, literally "sections") and neighborhoods (Parajes, literally "places") outside of them.[2]

Name Total population Urban population Rural population
Jánico &1000000000007234400000072,344 &1000000000003413300000034,133 &1000000000003821100000038,211
Licey al Medio &1000000000005304100000053,041 &1000000000002698400000026,984 &1000000000002605700000026,057
Puñal &10000000000110641000000110,641 &1000000000007210000000072,100 &1000000000003854100000038,541
Sabana Iglesia &1000000000004750400000047,504 &1000000000002239400000022,394 &1000000000002511000000025,110
San José de las Matas &10000000000113374000000113,374 &1000000000004336000000043,360 &1000000000007001400000070,014
Santiago de los Caballeros &100000000012702630000001,270,263 &100000000010000550000001,000,055 &10000000000270208000000270,208
Tamboril &1000000000009044100000090,441 &1000000000002002900000020,029 &1000000000007041200000070,412
Villa Bisonó &1000000000009064100000090,641 &1000000000004378700000043,787 &1000000000004685400000046,854
Villa González &1000000000009835600000098,356 &1000000000005780900000057,809 &1000000000004054700000040,547
Santiago de los Caballeros province &100000000019591050000001,959,105 &100000000013206510000001,320,651 &10000000000638454000000638,454

For comparison with the municipalities and municipal districts of other provinces, see the list of municipalities and municipal districts of the Dominican Republic.

Notable natives

References

  1. ^ Oficina Nacional de Estadistica, Departamento de Cartografia, Division de Limites y Linderos. "Listado de Codigos de Provincias, Municipio y Distritos Municipales, Actualizada a Junio 20 del 2006" (in Spanish). http://www.one.gob.do/index.php?option=com_docman&task=cat_view&gid=113. Retrieved 2007-01-24. 
  2. ^ Oficina Nacional de Estadística. "VIII Censo 2011 Población y Vivienda" (in Spanish) (PDF). http://one.gob.do/censo/volumen_I_pdf.zip. Retrieved 2007-01-24. 

External links