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Santa Fe - Argentina

Principal Locations
  1. Bahia Blanca
  2. Belen
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  7. Corrientes
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  21. Rawson, Chubut
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  24. Resistencia
  25. Rio Grande, Argentina
  26. Rosario
  27. Salta
  28. San Carlos de Bariloche
  29. San Fernando del Valle de Catamarca
  30. San Francisco
  31. San Isidro
  32. San Juan
  33. San Luis
  34. San Miguel de Tucumán
  35. San Salvador de Jujuy
  36. Santa Fe
  37. Santa Rosa, Argentina
  38. Santiago del Estero
  39. Trelew
  40. Ushuaia
  41. Viedma
  42. Villa María


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Santa Fe, Argentina


Santa Fe, is a city in northeastern Argentina, It is the capital of the Santa Fe Province, near the junction of the Parana and Salado rivers, opposite the city of Parana, to which Santa Fe is linked by a sub-fluvial tunnel inaugurated in 1973. The city is connected by canal with the port of Colastine on the Rio Parana. Santa Fe is the commercial and transportation center for a rich agricultural area that produces grain, vegetable oils, and meats. The city is the seat of the Catholic University of Santa Fe (inaugurated in 1959), the Litoral National University, (first founded as the Provincial University, in 1889 and which changed to its current name in 1919), several museums, and a number of buildings erected during colonial times.

Santa Fe was founded in the nearby site of Cayastá (where there is an historical park where the burial place of Hernandarias, the first american-born governor in South America is located at) in 1573 and was moved to the present site in 1653 due to the constant floodings of the Cayastá river. The city became provincial capital in 1814, when the territory of the province of Santa Fe was separated from the province of Buenos Aires by the National Constituent Assembly.

Population (1991) 353,063.

Santa Fe has been home to Carlos Monzon , among others.





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