Moravia (canton)

Moravia
Canton

Moravia Canton Church

Coat of arms

Moravia canton in San José province
Country Costa Rica
Province San José
Established July 31, 1914
Named for Juan Rafael Mora Porras
Capital San Vicente
Districts
Government
  Type Municipality
  Body Municipal Council
  Mayor[1] Juan Pablo Hernández Cortés
Area
  Total 28.63 km2 (11.05 sq mi)
Elevation 1.396 m (4.580 ft)
Population (2011)
  Total 56,919
  Density 1,947/km2 (5,040/sq mi)
Website www.moravia.go.cr

Moravia is the 14th canton in the province of San José in Costa Rica. The canton covers an area of 28.62 km²,[2] and had a total population of 56,919 people at the 2011 Census.[3][4] The capital city of the canton is San Vicente.

Geography

The elongated canton begins in the northern suburbs of the national capital city of San José and continues northeast toward the Cordillera Central (Central Mountain Range). The Virilla, Pará, and Blanco rivers on the north and west, and the Quebrada Azul and Macho rivers on the southeast, partially delineate the boundaries of the canton.[5]

Other rivers in Moravia include Quebrada Barreal, Quebrada Lajas, Quebrada San Francisco, Quebrada Tornillal, Quebrada Yerbabuena, Río Acequia, Río Agrá, Río Hondura, Río Ipís, Río Pará Grande, Río Paracito, and Río Zurquí. Mountain peaks in the area include Zurquí (1,583m), Vargas (1,396m), and Trina (1,270m).[5]

Moravia combines densely populated suburbs in the south with rural mountain landscapes in the San Jerónimo district to the north. The cantons surrounding Moravia are Coronado to the east and north, San Isidro, Santo Domingo, and Tibás to the west, and Goicoechea to the south.[5]

Districts

Moravia is subdivided into three distritos administrativos (Spanish: "administrative districts") and 44 barrios (neighbourhoods):[6][7][8]

Districts Barrios
San Vicente
  • Alondra
  • Americano
  • Américas
  • Bajo Isla
  • Bajo Varelas
  • Barro de Olla
  • Caragua
  • Carmen
  • Colegios
  • Colegios Norte
  • Chaves
  • El Alto (part)
  • Flor
  • Florencia
  • Guaria
  • Guaria Oriental
  • Isla
  • Jardines de Moravia
  • La Casa
  • Ladrillera
  • Robles
  • Romeral
  • Sagrado Corazón
  • San Blas
  • San Jorge
  • San Martín
  • San Rafael
  • Santa Clara (part)
  • Santo Tomás
  • Saprissa
La Trinidad
  • Altos de Trinidad
  • Cipreses
  • Colonia
  • Moral
  • Níspero
  • Rosal
  • Ruano
  • Sitios
  • Tanques
  • Virilla
San Jerónimo
  • Alto Palma (part)
  • Platanares
  • Tornillal
  • Torre

History

The canton was established by law the 31 of July 1914 and will celebrate its centenary in 2014. It is named in honour of President Juan Rafael Mora Porras (1814 – 1860). Since there was already a canton called Mora, this one was named Moravia.[9]

Law No. 55 established Villa San Vicente on 1 August 1914. The first session of the Council of Moravia was held on 19 January 1915, and the first electric street lighting was installed in the same year. Law No. 3248 gave the town of San Vicente city status on 6 December 1963.[10]

Education

The first school was founded in 1848, called "school for the education of the children of the residents of San Vicente", and was located on the north side of the current San Vicente city park, called Parque de Moravia. A charity school was created in 1862, with two sections, one for boys and one for women.

In 1891, an adobe and brick building was created for the school and this was renamed Escuela Graduada de Varones de San Vicente (Graduate School for Boys of Saint Vincent) in 1893. Two years later, the name Graduada de Mujeres de San Vicente (Graduate School of Women of Saint Vincent) was added and these names were maintained until 1932, when the school was renamed again as Escuela Porfirio Brenes Castro, its current name. The school Porfirio Brenes Castro now occupies a city block to the south of Parque de Moravia.

The private school, Saint Francis College, was founded on 23 February 1950, and another school, "Colegio Nuestra Señora de Sión", "Saint Anthony School", "Saint Joseph",Liceo de Moravia, began teaching in March 1966.,[10] and Liceo Laboratorio Emma Gamboa.

Costa Rica's Japanese international school, Escuela Japonesa de San José (サンホセ日本人学校 Sanhose Nihonjin Gakkō), is located in Moravia.[11]

References

  1. Mayor Information, Municipality's official webpage (Spanish)
  2. Instituto Geográfico Nacional (IGN), 2001.
  3. (Spanish)
  4. Census Information; La Nación Newspaper in Spanish.
  5. 1 2 3 Map of Moravia Atlas Cantonal de Costa Rica, 1985.
  6. División Territorial Administrativa de Costa Rica Publicación en La Gaceta No. 100, 2009-05-26. (Spanish)
  7. "División Territorial Administrativa de Costa Rica" (PDF) (in Spanish). Instituto de Fomento y Asesoria Municipal (IFAM). 5 May 2009.
  8. Children of San Vicente GeoPlanet Explorer. Retrieved: 2012-03-13.
  9. Cantón de Moravia Municipalidad de Moravia. Retrieved: 2012-03-13. (Spanish)
  10. 1 2 Breve Reseña Histórica de Moravia Municipalidad de Moravia. retrieved: 2012-03-13. (Spanish)
  11. "トップへ戻る" Escuela Japonesa de San José. Retrieved on March 15, 2015. "学校所在地 Barrio Los Colegios, de Colegio de Farmaceuticos 50mts.al este , Moravia, San Jose , Costa Rica"


Coordinates: 10°00′46″N 84°01′20″W / 10.012778°N 84.022222°W / 10.012778; -84.022222

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