Difference between revisions of "Buenos Aires" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{coor title dm|34|36.1|S|58|22.5|W|type:city}}
{{coor title dms|34|36|13|S|58|22|54|W|type:city}}
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{{Infobox Settlement
{{otheruses}}
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|name      =Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires
{{Infobox City
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|nickname    =<br>''The Queen of [[Río de la Plata|El Plata]]'', ''The South American Paris'', ''The Capital of [[Argentine Tango|Tango]]'', ''The [[List of cities in Argentina|city]] of [[Argentine literature|books]]'', ''The Paris of the [[Pampas]]'',<ref>[http://www.travelandleisure.com/articles/buenos-aires-steps-it-up Buenos Aires Reinventing Itself] Travel+Leisure. Retrieved March 22, 2012.</ref> ''The [[Culture of Argentina|Cultural]] Capital of Latin America''<ref>[http://www.bue.gov.ar/?ncMenu=785&&lang=en Cultural Capital of Latin America] Official Website of the City of Buenos Aires. Retrieved March 22, 2012.</ref>
|official_name          = Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires
+
|settlement_type  =[[Autonomous City]]
|native_name            = Buenos Aires
+
|official_name    =''Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires''<br/>Autonomous City of Buenos Aires
|nickname              = ''Reina del Plata''
+
|image_skyline   =Buenos Aires-Av. 9 de julio.jpg
|motto               
+
|imagesize     =250px
|image_skyline = Buenos Aires-Av. 9 de julio.jpg
+
|image_caption   =Avenida 9 de Julio
|imagesize = 250px
+
|imagesize    =260px
|image_caption = The [[9 de Julio Avenue|Nueve de Julio Avenue]], named in honor of Argentine Independence Day (July 9, 1816)
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|image_flag     =Flag of Buenos Aires City.png
|image_flag             = Flag of Buenos Aires (City) in Argentina.gif
+
|image_shield   =Escudo de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires.png
|image_shield           = Buenos_Aires_Coats_of_Arms.gif
+
|image_blank_emblem  =
|image_map             = Mapa de Buenos Aires.svg
+
|emblem_size    =
|mapsize               = 200px
+
|image_map     = Ar-map-es.png
|map_caption           =
+
|mapsize     =150px
|subdivision_type       =  
+
|pushpin_map    =
|subdivision_type      =  
+
|map_caption   =Location within Argentina
|subdivision_type1     =  
+
|coordinates_region  =AR
|subdivision_name      =  
+
|subdivision_type   =Country
|subdivision_name1      =  
+
|subdivision_name  =[[Argentina]]
|leader_title           = [[Chiefs of Government of Buenos Aires|Chief of Government]]
+
|subdivision_type1   =
|leader_name           = [[Jorge Telerman]] ([[Mauricio Macri]] elected as successor)
+
|subdivision_name1  =
|established_title     = Established
+
|government_type  =[[Autonomous city]]
|established_date       = 1536, 1580
+
|leader_title   =[[List of mayors and chiefs of government of Buenos Aires|Chief of Government]]
|area_magnitude         =  
+
|leader_name   =[[Mauricio Macri]]
|area_total_sq_mi       = 78.5
+
|leader_title1    =Senators
|area_total_km2             = 203
+
|leader_name1    =[[María Eugenia Estenssoro]], [[Samuel Cabanchik]], [[Daniel Filmus]]
|area_land_sq_mi         = 78.5  
+
|established_title   =Established
|area_land_km2             = 203
+
|established_date   =1536, 1580
|area_water_sq_mi       =  
+
|area_magnitude   =
|area_water_km2             =  
+
|area_total_sq_mi   =78.5
|area_water_percent     =  
+
|area_total_km2   =203
|area_urban_sq_mi       =
+
|area_land_sq_mi   =78.5
|area_urban_km2             =
+
|area_land_km2   =203
|area_metro_sq_mi       =
+
|area_water_sq_mi   =
|area_metro_km2             = 4758
+
|area_water_km2   =
|population_as_of       = 2003 est.
+
|area_water_percent   =
|population_note        =  
+
|area_urban_sq_mi   =
|population_total       = 2768772
+
|area_urban_km2   =
|population_metro       = 13349000
+
|area_metro_sq_mi   =1837
|population_urban       =  
+
|area_metro_km2   =4758
|population_density_km2    = 13679.6
+
|population_as_of   =2010 census.
 +
|population_footnotes  =<ref name=indecpop>{{cite web|url= http://www.censo2010.indec.gov.ar/preliminares/cuadro_totalpais.asp|title=Argentina: Censo2010 |accessdate=March 22, 2012}}</ref>
 +
|population_total   =2,891,082
 +
|population_metro   =12,801,364
 +
|population_urban   =
 +
|population_density_km2    = 14000
 
|population_density_sq_mi =  
 
|population_density_sq_mi =  
|timezone              =  
+
|population_density_metro_km2=2700
|utc_offset            =  
+
|population_density_metro_sq_mi=
|timezone_DST          =  
+
|population_demonym  =''[[porteño]]'' (m), ''porteña'' (f) <!-- Spanish demonyms are always displayed in lower-case —>
|utc_offset_DST        =  
+
|timezone1  =[[Time in Argentina|ART]]
|latd= 34|latm=36 |lats=36.00 |latNS=S
+
|utc_offset1  =−3
|longd= 58|longm= 22|longs= 11.99|longEW=W
+
|timezone1_DST  =<!--NO—>
|elevation_m              =  
+
|utc_offset1_DST  =<!--NO—>
|elevation_ft          =  
+
|coordinates_display  =y
|postal_code_type      =
+
|elevation_m    =
|website               = http://www.buenosaires.gov.ar/ {{es icon}}
+
|elevation_ft    =
 +
|postal_code_type  =
 +
|area_code    =[[Argentine telephone numbering plan|011]]
 +
|blank_name    ='''[[Human Development Index|HDI]]''' (2010)
 +
|blank_info    = 0.876 – <span style="color:#090">high</span><ref>{{cite web|title=Desarrollo humano en Argentina / 2010 |url=http://hdr.undp.org/en/reports/national/latinamericathecaribbean/argentina/Argentina_INDH_2010.pdf |accessdate=February 24, 2012}}</ref>
 +
|website     =[http://www.buenosaires.gov.ar/ buenosaires.gov.ar]&nbsp;{{Es icon}}
 +
[http://www.bue.gov.ar/?lang=en bue.gov.ar] {{en}}
 
}}
 
}}
  
'''Buenos Aires''' is the [[capital]] of [[Argentina]] and its largest city and [[port]]. It is located on the southern shore of the [[Río de la Plata]], on the southeastern coast of the [[South America|South American]] continent.
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'''Buenos Aires''' is the [[capital]] of [[Argentina]] and its largest city. It is located on the southern shore of the [[Río de la Plata]], 150 miles (240 kilometers) from the [[Atlantic Ocean]]. It is one of the world's largest cities and one of its most important ports.
 
 
After the internal conflicts of the nineteenth century, Buenos Aires was [[Federalization of Buenos Aires|federalized]] and removed from [[Buenos Aires Province]] in 1880; its city limits were enlarged to include the former towns of Belgrano and Flores; both are now [[Barrios of Buenos Aires|neighborhoods in the city]].
 
  
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Buenos Aires is the center of the Argentina's government, commerce, business, politics, and culture. Its wealth and influence dominate the life of the rest of the nation and extend well beyond the nation’s borders. The city covers an area of 77 square miles (200 square kilometers). The total metropolitan area, however, spreads over 1,421 square miles (3,680 square kilometers). About a third of Argentina's people live in the Buenos Aires metropolitan area, which has a population of over 13 million.
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{{toc}}
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Most residents of Buenos Aires have European origins, and the art and architecture of the city reflects this. However Buenos Aires is a magnet for immigration from poorer neighboring countries, as well as significant numbers of people from Asian countries.
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[[Image:Buenos Aires shortly after its foundation 1536.png|thumb|250px|left|Map of Buenos Aires of 1530s.]]
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[[Image:Rio de la Plata BA 2.JPG|thumb|250px|right|A NASA satellite photo of the Río de la Plata area. Gran Buenos Aires can be seen on the right.]]
 
== Names ==
 
== Names ==
{{main|Names of Buenos Aires}}
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One tradition says Buenos Aires was originally named after the ''Virgine de Bonaria'' of [[Cagliari]], [[Sardinia]]. According to another tradition, sixteenth century Spanish sailors named the port for their patron saint, Santa María del Buen Aire (Saint Mary of the Good Air).
[[Image:Buenos Aires -Argentina- 136.jpg|thumb|left|220px|Residential buildings in Buenos Aires.]]
 
Buenos Aires ({{lang-en|Fair Winds}}, {{pronounced|ˈbwe.nɔs ˈaj.ɾɛs}}) was originally named after the ''Virgine de Bonaria'' of [[Cagliari]], [[Sardinia]].
 
  
Argentines sometimes refer to the city as ''Capital Federal'' to differentiate the city from the province of the same name.  In the [[1994 reform of the Argentine Constitution|1994 constitution]], the city was given [[autonomous entity|autonomy]], hence its formal name: ''Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires''.
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Argentines sometimes refer to Buenos Aires as ''Capital Federal'' to differentiate the city from the province of the same name.
  
The abbreviations ''Bs. As.'', ''Baires'' and ''B.A.'' are sometimes used, the first one mostly in writing and the latter two in everyday speech. The city is sometimes called ''La Reina del Plata'', that is, "The Queen of the Plate" (a reference to the Plate river basin).
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The abbreviations ''Bs. As.,'' ''Baires,'' and ''B.A.'' are sometimes used, the first one mostly in writing and the latter two in everyday speech. The city is sometimes called ''La Reina del Plata,'' that is, "The Queen of the Plate" (a reference to the Plate river basin).
  
 
== History ==
 
== History ==
[[Image:Ar-map-es.png|thumb|left|200px|Location in Argentina]]
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[[Portugal|Portuguese]] seaman [[Juan Díaz de Solís]], navigating in the name of [[Spain]], was the first European to reach the [[Río de la Plata]] in 1516, but his expedition was cut short by an attack in which he was killed by the native [[Charrúa]] or [[Guaraní]] tribe, in today's [[Uruguay]].
[[Portugal|Portuguese]] seaman [[Juan Díaz de Solís]], navigating in the name of [[Spain]], was the first European to reach the [[Río de la Plata]], in 1516, but his expedition was cut short by an attack in which he was killed by the native [[Charrúa]] or [[Guaraní]] tribe, in today's Uruguay.
 
 
 
The city was first established as ''Ciudad de Nuestra Señora Santa María del Buen Ayre''<ref name="Short history"/> (literally "City of Our Lady Saint Mary of the Fair Winds") on February 2, 1536 by a Spanish expedition under [[Pedro de Mendoza]]. The location of Mendoza's city was in today's [[San Telmo]] district, south of the city center.
 
 
 
More attacks by the indigenous peoples forced the settlers away, and in 1541 the site was abandoned. A second (and permanent) settlement was established in 1580 by [[Juan de Garay]], who arrived by sailing down the [[Paraná River]] from [[Asunción]] (now the capital of [[Paraguay]]).
 
  
From its earliest days, the success of Buenos Aires depended on trade. During most of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Spain insisted that all trade to Europe pass through [[Lima, Peru]] so that taxes could be collected. This scheme frustrated the traders of Buenos Aires, and a thriving contraband industry developed. Unsurprisingly, this also instilled a deep resentment in ''porteños'' (residents of Buenos Aires) towards Spanish authorities.<ref name="Short history"/>
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===Founding===
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The city was first established as ''Ciudad de Nuestra Señora Santa María del Buen Ayre'' (literally "City of Our Lady Saint Mary of the Fair Winds") on February 2, 1536 by a Spanish expedition under [[Pedro de Mendoza]]. The location of Mendoza's city was in today's [[San Telmo]] district, south of the city center. More attacks by the indigenous peoples forced the settlers away, and in 1541 the site was abandoned. A second  settlement was established in 1580 by [[Juan de Garay]], who arrived by sailing down the [[Paraná River]] from [[Asunción]], now the capital of [[Paraguay]].
  
Sensing these feelings, [[Carlos III of Spain]] progressively eased the trade restrictions and finally declared Buenos Aires an open port in the late 1700s. Those placating actions did not have the desired effect, and the ''porteños'', some of them versed in the ideology of the [[French revolution]], became even more desirous of independence from Spain.
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From its earliest days, the success of Buenos Aires depended on trade. During most of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Spain insisted that all trade to Europe pass through [[Lima, Peru]], so that taxes could be collected. This scheme frustrated the traders of Buenos Aires, and a thriving contraband industry developed. Unsurprisingly, this also instilled resentment among the ''porteños'' (residents of Buenos Aires) against Spanish authorities.
  
During the [[British invasions of the Río de la Plata]] British forces invaded Buenos Aires twice in 1806–1807 but were repulsed by local militias. Ultimately, on May 25, 1810, while Spain endured the [[Peninsular War]] and after a week of mostly pacific deliberations, the ''[[Spanish Criollo peoples|criollo]]'' citizens of Buenos Aires successfully ousted the Spanish Viceroy and established a provisional government. May 25 is now celebrated as a national holiday ([[May Revolution]] Day). Formal independence from Spain was declared only in 1816.
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Sensing these feelings, [[Carlos III of Spain]] progressively eased the trade restrictions and finally declared Buenos Aires an open port in the late 1700s. These placating actions did not have the desired effect, however; and the ''porteños,'' some of them versed in the ideology of the [[French Revolution]], became even more desirous of independence from Spain.
  
Historically, Buenos Aires has been Argentina's main center for liberal and free-trade ideas, while many of the provinces, especially to the Northwest, advocated a more conservative-Catholic approach to political and social issues.  Many tensions within Argentine history, starting with the centralist-federalist conflicts of the nineteenth century, can be traced back to these contrasting views.
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===1800s===
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During the British invasions of the Río de la Plata, British forces attacked Buenos Aires twice in 1806–1807 but were repulsed by local militias. Ultimately, on May 25, 1810, while Spain endured the [[Peninsular War]] and after a week of mostly peaceful deliberations, the ''[[Spanish Criollo peoples|criollo]]'' (European) citizens of Buenos Aires successfully ousted the Spanish Viceroy and established a provisional government. May 25 is now celebrated as a national holiday, [[May Revolution]] Day. Formal independence from Spain was declared only in 1816.
  
In the nineteenth century the city suffered naval [[blockade]]s on two occasions: by the [[France|French]] from 1838 to 1840, and a joint Anglo-French blockade from 1845 to 1848. Both blockades failed to gain surrender of the city, and the foreign powers eventually desisted from their demands.
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Historically, Buenos Aires has been Argentina's main center for liberal and free-trade ideas, while many of the provinces, especially to the northwest, advocated a more conservative-Catholic approach to political and social issues. Many tensions within Argentine history, starting with the centralist-federalist conflicts of the nineteenth century, can be traced back to these contrasting views.
  
[[Image:Buenos Aires shortly after its foundation 1536.png|thumb|200px|Map of Buenos Aires of 1530s.]]
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In the nineteenth century the city suffered naval [[blockade]]s on two occasions: by the [[France|French]] from 1838 to 1840, and a joint Anglo-French blockade from 1845 to 1848. Both blockades failed to gain surrender of the city, and the foreign powers eventually gave up.
During most of the nineteenth century, the political status of the city remained a sensitive subject. It was already capital of [[Buenos Aires Province]], and between 1853 and 1860 it was the capital of the seceded [[State of Buenos Aires]]. The issue was debated more than once on the battlefield, until the matter was finally settled in 1880, when the city was [[Federalization of Buenos Aires|federalized]] and became the seat of government, with its mayor appointed by the president. The [[Casa Rosada]] became the seat of the office of the [[President of Argentina|President]].
 
  
Railroad construction in the second half of the nineteenth century increased the economic power of Buenos Aires as raw materials flowed into its factories; Buenos Aires became a multicultural city that ranked itself with the major European capitals. The [[Colón Theater]] became one of the world's top opera venues. The city's main avenues were built in those years, and the dawn of the twentieth century saw the construction of South America's then-tallest buildings and first [[Buenos Aires Metro|subway]] network.
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[[Image:CasaRosada3.JPG|thumb|300px|The Casa Rosada]]
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During most of the nineteenth century, the political status of the city remained a sensitive subject. It was already capital of [[Buenos Aires Province]], and between 1853 and 1860 it was the capital of the seceded [[State of Buenos Aires]]. The issue was debated more than once on the battlefield, until the matter was finally settled in 1880, when the city was [[Federalization of Buenos Aires|federalized]] and became the seat of government, with its mayor appointed by the president. The [[Casa Rosada]] became the seat of the office of the [[President of Argentina|President]].
  
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: [[Image:Arms.jpg|frame|Coat of arms of Buenos Aires, used since 1591]] —>
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===Nineteenth century===
By the 1920s Buenos Aires was a favored destination for immigrants from Europe, as well as from the poorer provinces and neighboring countries. Large [[shanty town]]s ''([[villa miseria|villas miseria]])'' started growing around the city's industrial areas, leading to extensive social problems, which contrasted sharply with Argentina's image as a country of riches.
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Railroad construction in the second half of the nineteenth century increased the economic power of the city as raw materials flowed into its factories, and Buenos Aires became a multicultural city that ranked itself with the major European capitals. The [[Colón Theater]] emerged as one of the world's top opera venues. The city's main avenues were built in those years, and the dawn of the twentieth century saw the construction of South America's then-tallest buildings and first [[Buenos Aires Metro|subway]] network.
  
<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:Jperon.jpg|thumb|[[Juan Domingo Perón]], three-time [[President of Argentina]]]] —>
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By the 1920s Buenos Aires was a favored destination for immigrants from Europe, as well as from the poorer provinces and neighboring countries. Large [[shanty town]]s, called ''([[villa miseria|villas miseria]]),'' started growing around the city's industrial areas, leading to extensive social problems, which contrasted sharply with Argentina's image as a country of riches.
[[Image:Map of Buenos Aires.jpg|thumb|left|1888 German map of Buenos Aires.]]
 
Buenos Aires was the cradle of [[Peronism]]: the now-mythical demonstration of October 17, 1945 took place in [[Plaza de Mayo]].<ref name="Clarín guide">''Guía visual de Buenos Aires centro histórico'', [[Clarín (newspaper)|''Clarín'']] Viajes, 2001. ISBN 950-782-166-X</ref>  Industrial workers of the Greater Buenos Aires industrial belt have been Peronism's main support base ever since, and Plaza de Mayo became the site for demonstrations and many of the country's political events.
 
  
On June 16, 1955 a splinter faction of the navy bombed the Plaza de Mayo area, killing 364 civilians (see ''[[Bombing of Plaza de Mayo]]''). This was the only time the city was attacked from the air. This event was followed by a military uprising that would depose President Perón three months later (see ''[[Revolución Libertadora]]'').
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[[Image:Cabildoabierto.jpg|thumb|250px|Peronist rally in Buenos Aires in 1951]]
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Buenos Aires was also the cradle of [[Peronism]], under the leadership of [[Juan Peron]], (serving as president from 1946 to 1955 and from 1973 to 1974) and [[Eva Peron]]: the now-mythical demonstration of October 17, 1945 took place in [[Plaza de Mayo]]. Industrial workers of the Greater Buenos Aires industrial belt have been Peronism's main support base ever since, and Plaza de Mayo became the site for demonstrations and many of the country's political events.
  
In the 1970s, the city suffered from fighting between the left-wing revolutionary movements ([[Montoneros]], [[People's Revolutionary Army (Argentina)|E.R.P.]] and [[F.A.R.]]) and right-wing paramilitary groups [[Argentine Anticommunist Alliance|Triple A]], supported by [[Isabel Perón]], who became president of Argentina in 1974, after Juan Perón's death.  
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On June 16, 1955 a splinter faction of the navy bombed the Plaza de Mayo area, killing 364 civilians. This was the only time the city was attacked from the air. This event was followed by a military uprising that would depose President Perón three months later.
  
The military [[coup d'etat|coup]] of 1976, led by [[Jorge Rafael Videla]], only escalated this conflict; the "[[Dirty War]]" produced between 10,000 and 30,000 ''[[desaparecidos]]'', people kidnapped and killed by the military during the years of the junta.<ref name="Millions">''We are Millions: Neo-liberalism and new forms of political action in Argentina'', Marcela Lópéz Levy, Latin America Bureau, London, 2004. ISBN 1-899365-63-X</ref> The silent marches of their mothers ([[Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo]]) are a well-known image of Argentine suffering during those times.
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===Recent history===
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In the 1970s, the city suffered from fighting between the left-wing revolutionary movements ([[Montoneros]], [[People's Revolutionary Army (Argentina)|E.R.P.]], and [[F.A.R.]]) and the right-wing [[Argentine Anticommunist Alliance]] (Triple A), supported by [[Isabel Perón]], who became President of Argentina in 1974, after Juan Perón's death. The military [[coup d'etat|coup]] of 1976, led by [[Jorge Rafael Videla]], only escalated this conflict; the subsequent "[[Dirty War]]" produced between 10,000 and 30,000 ''[[desaparecidos]],'' ("the disappeared") people kidnapped and killed by the military during the years of the junta.<ref>Marcela Lópéz Levy, ''We are Millions: Neo-liberalism and new forms of political action in Argentina'' (London: Latin America Bureau, 2004).</ref> The silent marches of their mothers ([[Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo]]) are a well-known image of Argentine suffering during those times.
  
 
The city was visited by [[Pope John Paul II]] twice: in 1982, due to the outbreak of the [[Falklands War|Falklands-Malvinas War]], and a second visit in 1987, which gathered crowds never seen before in the city.
 
The city was visited by [[Pope John Paul II]] twice: in 1982, due to the outbreak of the [[Falklands War|Falklands-Malvinas War]], and a second visit in 1987, which gathered crowds never seen before in the city.
  
On March 17, 1992 a bomb exploded in the [[Israeli Embassy attack in Buenos Aires|Israeli Embassy]] killing 29 and injuring 242. Another explosion, on July 18 1994, destroyed a building housing several [[Jew]]ish organizations killing 85 and injuring many more ''(see [[AMIA bombing]])''.
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On March 17, 1992 a bomb exploded in the [[Israeli Embassy attack in Buenos Aires|Israeli Embassy]] killing 29 and injuring 242. Another explosion, known as the ''[[AMIA bombing]]),'' destroyed a building housing several [[Jew]]ish organizations on July 18, 1994, killing 85 and injuring many more.
  
On December 30 2004, a fire at [[República Cromagnon]] concert hall killed almost 200 people, the greatest non-natural tragedy in Argentine history.
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On December 30, 2004, a fire at [[República Cromagnon]] concert hall killed almost 200 people, the greatest non-natural tragedy in Argentine history.
  
 
== Government and politics ==
 
== Government and politics ==
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[[Image:Buenos Aires-Plaza Congreso-Pensador de Rodin.jpg|thumb|250px|The Plaza Congreso in Buenos Aires]]
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As the nation's capital, Buenos Aires is home to the three branches of Argentina's government: the executive (president and vice-president), legislative (bicameral National Congress or Congreso Nacional) and judicial (Supreme Court or Corte Suprema).
  
In 1996, under the [[1994 reform of the Argentine Constitution]], the city gained autonomous status, and held its first mayoral elections (the mayor's title was changed to "Chief of Government"). The winner was [[Fernando de la Rúa]], who would be President of Argentina in the period from 1999 to 2001.
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In 1996, under the [[1994 reform of the Argentine Constitution]], the city gained autonomous status, and held its first mayoral elections. The mayor's title was changed to "Chief of Government." The winner was [[Fernando de la Rúa]], who would be President of Argentina in the period from 1999 to 2001.
  
De la Rúa's successor, [[Aníbal Ibarra]], won two popular elections, but was [[impeachment|impeached]] (and ultimately deposed on March 6, 2006) as a result of the fire at [[República Cromagnon]]. [[Jorge Telerman]], who had been the acting mayor, was invested with the office.
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De la Rúa's successor, [[Aníbal Ibarra]], won two popular elections, but was [[impeachment|impeached]] and ultimately deposed on March 6, 2006 as a result of the fire at [[República Cromagnon]]. [[Jorge Telerman]], who had been the acting mayor, was invested with the office.
  
In the mayoral election of June 3, 2007, [[Mauricio Macri]] obtained a plurality of the vote, forcing a runoff election against [[Daniel Filmus]] on June 24, which Macri won with over 60 perecent of the vote. Macri will assume the office in December of 2007.
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In the mayoral election of June 3, 2007, [[Mauricio Macri]] obtained a plurality of the vote, forcing a runoff election against [[Daniel Filmus]] on June 24, which Macri won with over 60 percent of the vote.
  
=== National representation ===
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Buenos Aires is represented in the [[Argentine Senate]] by three senators. The people of Buenos Aires also elect 25 national deputies for the [[Argentine Chamber of Deputies]].
Buenos Aires is represented in the [[Argentine Senate]] by three senators (as of January 2007, [[Rodolfo Terragno]], [[María Leguizamón]] and [[Vilma Ibarra]]).<ref>[http://www.senado.gov.ar Honorable Senate of the Nation], accessed 2006-08-07</ref> The people of Buenos Aires also elect 25 national deputies for the [[Argentine Chamber of Deputies]].
 
  
=== ''Barrios'' ===
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The city is divided into 48 ''[[barrio]]s'' (neighborhoods) for administrative purposes. The division was originally based on Catholic ''parroquias'' ([[parish]]es), but has undergone a series of changes since the 1940s. A newer scheme has divided the city into 15 ''comunas'' (communes).
{{main|Barrios of Buenos Aires}}
 
[[Image:HabxbarrioBSAS.jpg|thumb|right|155px|Buenos Aires inhabitants by neighbourhood]]
 
The city is divided into 48 ''[[barrio]]s'' (neighborhoods) for administrative purposes.<ref name="city government">[http://www.buenosaires.gov.ar/ Government of Buenos Aires], accessed 2006-08-07.</ref> The division was originally based on Catholic ''parroquias'' ([[parish]]es), but has undergone a series of changes since the 1940s. A newer scheme has divided the city into 15 ''comunas'' (communes).<ref>[http://www.pagina12.com.ar/diario/sociedad/3-55934-2005-09-02.html 'Buenos Aires con quince comunas'] by Pedro Lipcovich, [[Página/12|''Página/12'']], 2005-09-02</ref>
 
  
 
== Population ==
 
== Population ==
The people of Buenos Aires are known as ''[[wikt:porteño|porteños]]'' (people of the port), due to the significance of the port in the development of the city and the nation. The people of Buenos Aires province (sometimes excluding the city's suburbia) are called ''bonaerenses''.
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The people of Buenos Aires are known as ''porteños'' (people of the port), due to the significance of the port in the development of the city and the nation. The people of Buenos Aires province (sometimes excluding the city's suburbia) are called ''bonaerenses'' (people of good air or 'bon aire').
  
=== Census data ===
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According to the 2001 census, the city proper has a population of 2,776,138, while the [[Greater Buenos Aires]] metropolitan area has more than 12.4 million inhabitants. More recent estimates put the latter figure at more than 13 million The population of the city proper has been stagnant since the late 1960s, due to low birth rates and a slow emigration to suburbia.
[[Image:Population of Buenos Aires 1740-2010.png|thumb|left|200px|Population growth since 1740]]
 
[[Image:Buenos Aires -Argentina- 131.jpg|thumb|left|175px|The city's population density is about 13.000 hab/km².]]
 
According to the census, the city proper has a population of 2,776,138, while the [[Greater Buenos Aires]] metropolitan area has more than 12.4 million inhabitants ({{census-ar|2001}}). The population of the city has been stagnant since the late 1960s, due to low birth rates and a slow emigration to suburbia.
 
  
=== Origin ===
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Most ''porteños'' have European origins, with [[Spain|Spanish]] and [[Italy|Italian]] descent being the most common, mainly from the [[Galicia (Spain)|Galician]], [[Asturias|Asturian]], and [[Basque Country (autonomous community)|Basque]] regions of Spain, and the [[Calabria]]n, [[Liguria]]n,  
Most ''porteños'' have European origins, with [[Spain|Spanish]] and [[Italy|Italian]] descent being the most common, mainly from the [[Galicia (Spain)|Galician]], [[Asturias|Asturian]], and [[Basque Country (autonomous community)|Basque]] regions of Spain, and the [[Calabria]]n, [[Liguria]]n, [[Piedmont]], [[Lombardy]] and [[Naples|Neapolitan]] regions of Italy.
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[[Piedmont]], [[Lombardy]] and [[Naples|Neapolitan]] regions of Italy.
  
 
Other European origins include [[Germany|German]], [[Portugal|Portuguese]], [[Poland|Polish]], [[Ireland|Irish]], [[France|French]], [[Croatia]]n, [[England|English]] and [[Wales|Welsh]]. In the 1990s, there was a small wave of immigration from [[Romania]] and [[Ukraine]].
 
Other European origins include [[Germany|German]], [[Portugal|Portuguese]], [[Poland|Polish]], [[Ireland|Irish]], [[France|French]], [[Croatia]]n, [[England|English]] and [[Wales|Welsh]]. In the 1990s, there was a small wave of immigration from [[Romania]] and [[Ukraine]].
  
There is a minority of old ''[[Spanish Criollo peoples|criollo]]'' stock, dating back to the Spanish colonial days. ''Criollo'' and Spanish-aboriginal ([[mestizo]]) population in the city has increased mostly as a result of migration, both from the provinces and from nearby countries such as [[Bolivia]], [[Peru]] and [[Paraguay]], since the second half of the 20th century.
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There is a minority of old ''[[Spanish Criollo peoples|criollo]]'' (European) stock, dating back to the Spanish colonial days. ''Criollo'' and Spanish-aboriginal ([[mestizo]]) population in the city has increased mostly as a result of migration, both from the provinces and from nearby countries such as [[Bolivia]], [[Peru]] and [[Paraguay]], since the second half of the twentieth century.
  
Important [[Arab]] (mostly [[Syria]]n-[[Lebanon|Lebanese]]) and [[Armenians|Armenian]] communities have been significant in commerce and civic life since the beginning of the 20th century.
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Important [[Arab]] (mostly [[Syria]]n-[[Lebanon|Lebanese]]) and [[Armenians|Armenian]] communities have been significant in commerce and civic life since the beginning of the twentieth century.
  
 
The [[Jewish]] community in [[Greater Buenos Aires]] numbers around 250,000, and is the largest in [[Latin America]]. Most are of Northern and Eastern European [[Ashkenazi]] origin, mostly German and Russian Jews; with a significant minority of [[Sephardic]], mostly [[Syrian Jews]].
 
The [[Jewish]] community in [[Greater Buenos Aires]] numbers around 250,000, and is the largest in [[Latin America]]. Most are of Northern and Eastern European [[Ashkenazi]] origin, mostly German and Russian Jews; with a significant minority of [[Sephardic]], mostly [[Syrian Jews]].
  
[[Image:Obelisco.JPG|thumb|right|155px|The Obelisk from street level.]]
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[[Image:BuenosAiresCathedral1.JPG|thumb|left|300px|Buenos Aires' Metropolitan Cathedral]]
The first major [[Asia|East Asian]] community in Buenos Aires was the [[Japan]]ese, mainly from [[Okinawa]]. Traditionally, Japanese-Argentines were noted as [[flower]] growers; in the city proper, there was a Japanese near-monopoly in [[dry cleaning]]. Later generations have branched into all fields of activity. Ever since the 1970s there has been an important influx of immigration from [[China]] and [[Korea]] ''(see also: [[Asian-Argentines]])''.
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Besides substantial immigration from neighboring countries, during the middle and late 1990s Argentina received significant numbers of people from Asian countries such as [[Korea]] (both North and South), [[China]] and [[Vietnam]], which joined the previously existing Sino-Japanese communities in Buenos Aires.
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According to official data, between 1992 and 2003 an average 13,187 people per year immigrated legally in Argentina. The government calculates that a total of 504,000 people entered the country during the same period, giving about 345,000 illegal immigrants. The same source gives a plausible total figure of 750,000 illegals currently residing in Argentina.
  
=== Religion ===
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Most inhabitants are [[Roman Catholic Church|Roman Catholic]]. Buenos Aires is the seat of a Roman Catholic [[metropolitan archbishop]] (who is the [[prelate]] of Argentina), as well as of several [[Eastern Orthodox]] and [[Anglican]] hierarchies. [[Evangelicalism|Evangelical]] churches have steadily increased their ranks since the 1980s.
Most inhabitants are [[Roman Catholic Church|Roman Catholic]]. Buenos Aires is the seat of a Roman Catholic [[metropolitan archbishop]] (who is the [[prelate]] of Argentina), as well as of several [[Eastern Orthodox]] and [[Anglican]] hierarchs. [[Evangelicalism|Evangelical]] churches have steadily increased their ranks since the 1980s.
 
  
 
Sizable [[Judaism|Jewish]] and [[Muslim]] communities have existed in the city for over 100 years.
 
Sizable [[Judaism|Jewish]] and [[Muslim]] communities have existed in the city for over 100 years.
  
 
== Climate ==
 
== Climate ==
{{climate chart
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The city has a humid subtropical climate with average temperatures in the afternoon ranging from 30°C (86°F) in January to 10°C (50°F) in July. Rain can be expected at any time of year. [[Snowfall|Snow]] fell on July 9, 2007 for the first time since 1918. Hailstorms are a more common phenomenon.
|{{PAGENAME}}
 
|20|30|119
 
|19|29|118
 
|17|26|134
 
|13|23|97
 
|10|19|74
 
|8|16|63
 
|8|15|66
 
|8|17|70
 
|10|19|73
 
|13|22|119
 
|15|25|109
 
|18|28|105
 
|source=[http://www.climate-charts.com/Locations/a/AG87585.html#data]
 
|float=right
 
}}
 
The city has a humid subtropical climate (Köppen classification Cfa) with average temperatures in the afternoon ranging from 30°C (86°F) in January to 10°C (50°F) in July. Rain can be expected at any time of year. [[Snowfall|Snow]] fell on July 9, 2007 for the first time since 1918. Hailstorms are a more common phenomenon.
 
  
 
Many locals leave Buenos Aires during the hot summer months (December, January and February) and head for seaside resorts on the [[Atlantic Ocean|Atlantic]] coast.
 
Many locals leave Buenos Aires during the hot summer months (December, January and February) and head for seaside resorts on the [[Atlantic Ocean|Atlantic]] coast.
  
 
== Economy ==
 
== Economy ==
[[Image:Rio de la Plata BA 2.JPG|thumb|A NASA satellite photo of the Río de la Plata area. Gran Buenos Aires can be seen on the right.]]
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[[Image:Buenos Aires-Center-P3050007.JPG|right|thumb|A building with European and modern styles in Buenos Aires.]]
Buenos Aires is the financial, industrial, commercial, and cultural hub of Argentina. Its port is one of the busiest in the world{{Fact|date=July 2007}}. Tax collection related to it has caused many political problems in the past [[History of Argentina|[*]]]; navigable rivers by way of the Rio de la Plata connect the port to north-east Argentina, [[Brazil]], [[Uruguay]] and [[Paraguay]]. As a result, it serves as the distribution hub for a vast area of the south-eastern region of the South American continent. In 2007 the city has a mean Nominal GDP per capita of around $US 14,000, which makes it one of the wealthiest cities in [[Latin America]].
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Buenos Aires is the financial, industrial, commercial, and cultural hub of Argentina. Its port is one of the busiest in the world. Navigable rivers by way of the Rio de la Plata connect the port to north-east Argentina, [[Brazil]], [[Uruguay]] and [[Paraguay]]. As a result, it serves as the distribution hub for a vast area of the south-eastern region of the South American continent. In 2007 the city has a mean Nominal GDP per capita of around $US 14,000, which makes it one of the wealthiest cities in [[Latin America]].
  
To the west of Buenos Aires is the ''[[Pampa Húmeda]]'', the most productive agricultural region of Argentina (as opposed to the dry southern [[Pampa]], mostly used for cattle farming). Meat, dairy, grain, tobacco, wool and hide products are processed or manufactured in the Buenos Aires area. Other leading industries are automobile manufacturing, oil refining, metalworking, machine building, and the production of textiles, chemicals, clothing, and beverages.
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To the west of Buenos Aires is the ''[[Pampa Húmeda]],'' the most productive agricultural region of Argentina (as opposed to the dry southern [[Pampa]], mostly used for cattle farming). Meat, dairy, grain, tobacco, wool and hide products are processed or manufactured in the Buenos Aires area. Other leading industries are automobile manufacturing, oil refining, metalworking, machine building, and the production of textiles, chemicals, clothing, and beverages.
  
 
== Culture ==
 
== Culture ==
[[Image:Buenos Aires-Av. de Mayo-Palacio Barolo-1.jpg|thumb|1923 Barolo Palace, on Avenida de Mayo.]]
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[[Image:TeatroColonBsAsAR.JPG|thumb|left|250px|The Teatro Colón opera house]]
Strongly influenced by [[European culture]], Buenos Aires is sometimes referred to as the "Paris of [[South America]]".<ref>[http://travel.canoe.ca/Travel/SouthAmerica/2005/03/06/953104-sun.html 'Paris of the South'] by Kenneth Bagnell, [[Canadian Online Explorer|Canoe]] travel, 2005-03-07, accessed 2006-08-07.</ref><ref name="Short history">''Argentina: A Short History'' by Colin M. Lewis, Oneworld Publications, Oxford, 2002. ISBN 1-85168-300-3</ref>
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Strongly influenced by [[European culture]], Buenos Aires is sometimes referred to as the "Paris of [[South America]]."
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It is the site of the [[Colon Theater|Teatro Colón]], one of the world's greatest [[opera]] houses.<ref>Cathy Runciman and Leticia Saharrea (eds.), ''Time Out Guide: Buenos Aires'' (London: Penguin Books, 2001).</ref> There are several [[symphony orchestra]]s and choral societies. The city has numerous museums related to history, fine arts, modern arts, decorative arts, popular arts, sacred art, arts and crafts, theater, and popular music, as well as the preserved homes of noted art collectors, writers, composers and artists. It harbors many public libraries and cultural associations as well as the largest concentration of active theaters in Latin America. It has a world-famous [[Buenos Aires Zoo|zoo]] and [[Buenos Aires Botanical Garden|Botanical Garden]], a large number of landscaped parks and squares, as well as churches and places of worship of many denominations, many of which are architecturally noteworthy.
  
Buenos Aires is the site of the [[Colon Theater|Teatro Colón]], one of the world's greatest [[opera]] houses.<ref name="Time Out">''Time Out Guide: Buenos Aires'', Cathy Runciman & Leticia Saharrea (eds), Penguin Books, London, 2001. ISBN 0-14-029398-1</ref> There are several [[symphony orchestra]]s and choral societies. The city has numerous museums related to history, fine arts, modern arts, decorative arts, popular arts, sacred art, arts and crafts, theater and popular music, as well as the preserved homes of noted art collectors, writers, composers and artists. It harbors many public libraries and cultural associations as well as the largest concentration of active theaters in Latin America{{Fact|date=July 2007}}. It has a world-famous [[Buenos Aires Zoo|zoo]] and [[Buenos Aires Botanical Garden|Botanical Garden]], a large number of landscaped parks and squares, as well as churches and places of worship of many denominations, many of which are architecturally noteworthy.<ref name="Time Out"/>
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=== Tango ===
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[[Image:Tango-Show-Buenos-Aires-01.jpg|thumb|200px|A tango performance in Buenos Aires]]
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[[Tango music]] was born in the suburbs, notably in the [[brothel]]s of the ''Junín y Lavalle'' district and in the ''arrabales'' (poorer suburbs). Its sensual dance moves were not seen as respectable until adopted by the [[Paris]]ian high society in the 1920s, and then all over the world. In Buenos Aires, tango dancing schools (known as ''academias'') were usually men-only establishments.
  
=== Language ===
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Starting in the 1920s, the Buenos Aires style of [[tango music]] evolved into an elaborate genre. In its heyday, tango had many famous orchestras such as those led by [[Aníbal Troilo]] and [[Juan D'Arienzo]], and singers such as [[Carlos Gardel]] and [[Edmundo Rivero]]. Tango enjoyed a resurgence in global popularity later in the twentieth century due almost exclusively to [[Astor Piazzolla]] and his development of the [[tango nuevo]] style.
Known as ''[[Rioplatense Spanish]]'', Buenos Aires' [[Spanish language|Spanish]] (and also in other cities like [[Rosario]] and [[Montevideo]], [[Uruguay]]) is characterized by ''[[voseo]]'', ''[[yeísmo]]'' and aspiration or loss of syllable-final ''-s''. It is heavily influenced by the dialects of Spanish spoken in [[Andalusia]] and [[Murcia]]. A phonetic study conducted by the Laboratory for Sensory Investigations of [[CONICET]] and the [[University of Toronto]] showed that the ''porteño'' accent is closer to the [[Neapolitan]] dialect of [[Italian language|Italian]] than any other spoken language.
 
  
In the early twentieth century, Argentina absorbed millions of immigrants, many of them Italians, who spoke mostly in their local dialects (mainly Neapolitan, [[Sicilian language|Sicilian]] and [[Genoa]]n). Their adoption of [[Spanish language|Spanish]] was gradual, creating a [[pidgin]] of Italian dialects and Spanish that was called ''[[cocoliche]]''. Its usage declined around the 1950s, and today survives mostly as comic relief.
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Buenos Aires holds an annual "Tango Day" each December 11.
  
As many Spanish immigrants were from [[Galicia (Spain)|Galicia]], to the extent that Spaniards are still generically called ''gallegos'' ([[Galician people|Galicians]]), [[Galician language]], cuisine and culture had a major presence in the city for most of the twentieth century. In recent years, descendants of Galician immigrants have led a mini-boom in [[Celtic music]] (which also highlighted the [[Welsh settlement in Argentina|Welsh traditions of Patagonia]]).
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In the [[San Telmo]] barrio, Sundays are devoted to [[tango]] shows on the streets and antiques trade in the [[bazaar]]s around Dorrego Square. Tango shows can be found in establishments such as Rivero's ''El Viejo Almacén.''
  
[[Yiddish]] was commonly heard in Buenos Aires, especially in the [[Balvanera]] garment district and in [[Villa Crespo]], until the 1960s. [[Korean language|Korean]] and [[Chinese language|Chinese]] have become significant since the 1970s. Most of the newer immigrants learn Spanish quickly and assimilate into city life.
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=== Cinema ===
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Buenos Aires has been the center of the [[Argentine cinema]] industry in [[Argentina]] for over 100 years since French camera operator [[Eugene Py]] directed the pioneering film ''[[La Bandera Argentina]]'' in 1897. Since then, over 2000 films have been directed and produced within the city. The culture of [[tango music]] has been incorporated into many of the films produced.
  
The ''[[lunfardo]]'' [[argot]] originated within the prison population, and in time it spread to all ''porteños''. Lunfardo uses words from Italian dialects, from [[Brazil]]ian [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]], from African and Caribbean origin and even from English; and employs humorous tricks such as inverting the syllables within a word ([[vesre]]). Today, lunfardo is mostly heard on tango lyrics; the slang of the younger generations has been evolving away from it.
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===Media===
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Buenos Aires publishes the largest newspapers in the country, many of which have electronic editions on the Internet. The largest daily circulation is claimed by ''Clarín.'' While lower in circulation, ''La Nación'' and ''La Prensa,'' founded in 1870 and 1869, respectively, are highly regarded in the Spanish-speaking world as well as among the international press. The English-language daily ''Buenos Aires Herald'' is also widely available throughout the republic. During the military dictatorship of the 1970s it was well-known for its independent stance and open criticism of the government. Foreign-language papers are common in the capital.
  
See also: [[Belgranodeutsch]].
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The majority of radio and television stations are privately operated. They have periodically become organs of state propaganda, only to be returned to some independence by succeeding governments.
 
 
=== Tango ===
 
[[Tango music]] was born in the suburbs, notably in the brothels of the ''Junín y Lavalle'' district and in the ''arrabales'' (poorer suburbs). Its sensual dance moves were not seen as respectable until adopted by the [[Paris]]ian high society in the 1920s, and then all over the world.  In Buenos Aires, tango dancing schools (known as ''academias'') were usually men-only establishments.
 
  
Starting in the 1920s, the Buenos Aires style of [[tango music]] evolved into an elaborate genre.  In its heyday, tango had many famous orchestras such as those led by [[Aníbal Troilo]] and [[Juan D'Arienzo]], and singers such as [[Carlos Gardel]] and [[Edmundo Rivero]]. Tango enjoyed a resurgence in global popularity later in the twentieth century due almost exclusively to [[Astor Piazzolla]] and his development of the [[tango nuevo]] style.
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[[Image:Piramide-de-Mayo-Buenos-Aires.jpg|thumb|The Plaza de Mayo]]
  
Buenos Aires holds an annual "Tango Day" each December 11.
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Buenos Aires is also one of the most important book and magazine publishing centers in Latin America.
  
In [[San Telmo]], Sundays are devoted to tango shows on the streets and antiques trade in the [[bazaar]]s around Dorrego Square. Tango shows can be found in establishments such as Rivero's ''El Viejo Almacén''.<ref name="Time Out"/>
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[[Internet service provider|ISPs]] provide dial-up, cable, satellite-based and [[ADSL]] connections. The Internet boom in the early 2000s gave birth to many ''[[Cyber cafe|cibercafés]].'' There are a growing number of wi-fi hotspots, mostly around the downtown area and now in all "Subte" lines, except for the A line, which is in process.
  
=== Cinema ===
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=== Tourism ===
Buenos Aires has been the center of the [[Argentine cinema]] industry in [[Argentina]] for over 100 years since French camera operator [[Eugene Py]] directed the pioneering film ''[[La Bandera Argentina]]'' in 1897. Since then, over 2000 films have been directed and produced within the city, many of them referring to the city in their titles, such such as ''[[Buenos Aires Plateada]]'', and ''[[Buenos Aires a la vista]]''. The culture of [[tango music]] has been incorporated into many films produced in the city, especially since the 1930s. Many films have starred tango performers such as [[Hugo del Carril]], [[Tita Merello]], [[Carlos Gardel]] and [[Edmundo Rivero]].
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The main tourist attractions of Buenos Aires are around the downtown area, including [[Plaza de Mayo]], [[Florida Street]], and [[Puerto Madero]].
  
===Media===
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The Plaza de Mayo lies at the heart of Buenos Aires. The offices of the president of Argentina, the Casa Rosada (called so because of the building's pink overtones) are at the east end of the plaza. A broad boulevard called the Avenida de Mayo runs west from the Plaza de Mayo to the Plaza del Congreso and the National Congress Building.  
Buenos Aires publishes the largest newspapers in the country, many of which have electronic editions on the Internet. The largest daily circulation is claimed by Clarín. While lower in circulation, La Nación and La Prensa, founded in 1870 and 1869, respectively, are highly regarded in the Spanish-speaking world as well as among the international press. The English-language daily Buenos Aires Herald is also widely available throughout the republic. During the military dictatorship of the 1970s it was well-known for its independent stance and open criticism of the government. Foreign-language papers are common in the capital. Buenos Aires is one of the most important of publishing centers in Latin America.
 
  
The majority of radio and television stations are privately operated. They have periodically become organs of state propaganda, only to be returned to some independence by succeeding governments.
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The Plaza de Mayo is also the site of the Metropolitan Cathedral, another significant building from the colonial period. The rest of what remains of colonial Buenos Aires is located mostly south of the plaza, in the recently restored [[San Telmo]], or Barrio Sur district.
  
===Internet===
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The central business district lies just north and west of the Plaza de Mayo. The Avenida 9 de Julio, the widest street in the world, runs north and south through this district. This street is 425 feet (130 meters) wide. East of the central business district lies the city's waterfront, with huge docks and other facilities for oceangoing ships.  
Buenos Aires [[Internet service provider|ISPs]] provide dial-up, cable, satellite-based and [[ADSL]] connections to the [[Internet]]. The Internet boom in the early 2000s gave birth to ''[[Cyber cafe|cibercafés]]''. There is a growing number of wi-fi hotspots, mostly around the downtown area and now in all "Subte" lines, except for the A line, which is in process.
 
  
== Tourism ==
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Residential neighborhoods called ''barrios'' occupy most of the other parts of Buenos Aires. Each barrio has its own churches, schools, grocery stores, meat markets, and bakeries. One of Buenos Aires' most colorful barrios is [[La Boca]], which is known for its brightly painted houses and excellent Italian restaurants.
{{main|Tourism in Buenos Aires}}
 
The city has many museums, historical buildings, shopping centers, hotels. The main tourist attractions are around the downtown area, including [[Plaza de Mayo]], [[Florida Street]], [[San Telmo]] and [[Puerto Madero]].
 
  
 
== Transportation ==
 
== Transportation ==
[[Image:Buenos Aires Monserrat.jpg|thumb|200px|Subway station in Monserrat, Buenos Aires]]
 
  
 
=== Public transport ===
 
=== Public transport ===
A majority of residents in Buenos Aires and its suburbs use [[public transportation]]. A Buenos Aires invention is the "[[colectivo]]," originally a small bus built out of a truck chassis and seating 21 to 27. Today they have grown in size and carry up to 60 passengers. Numerous colectivos and larger public buses traverse the city continuously each hour providing access to virtually all neighborhoods.
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A majority of residents in Buenos Aires and its suburbs use [[public transportation]]. A Buenos Aires invention is the ''"[[colectivo]],"'' originally a small bus built out of a truck chassis and seating 21 to 27. Today they have grown in size and carry up to 60 passengers. Numerous ''colectivos'' and larger public buses traverse the city continuously each hour providing access to virtually all neighborhoods.
  
The [[Buenos Aires Metro]] (locally known as ''el subte'', from ''"subterráneo"'' meaning "underground") is an extensive system providing access to various parts of the city.  Opened in 1913, it is the oldest subway system in the Southern Hemisphere and in the Spanish-speaking world.[2]  The system has five lines, named A to E, 80 stations, and 46 km (28 mi) of track. An expansion program is underway to enlarge existing lines deeper into the outer neighborhoods and add a new north-south line. Track length is expected to reach 89 km (55 mi) by the year 2011.
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The [[Buenos Aires Metro]] (locally known as ''el subte,'' from ''"subterráneo"'' meaning "underground") is an extensive system providing access to various parts of the city.  Opened in 1913, it is the oldest subway system in the Southern Hemisphere and in the Spanish-speaking world.  
  
 
Buenos Aires had an extensive tramway network with over 857 km (535 mi) of track, which was dismantled during the 1960s in favor of bus transportation. A new 2-km light rail tram "[[Tranvía del Este]]" in the Puerto Madero district is now operating. Extensions planned will link the [[Estación Retiro|Retiro]] and [[Estación Constitución|Constitución]] terminal train stations.
 
Buenos Aires had an extensive tramway network with over 857 km (535 mi) of track, which was dismantled during the 1960s in favor of bus transportation. A new 2-km light rail tram "[[Tranvía del Este]]" in the Puerto Madero district is now operating. Extensions planned will link the [[Estación Retiro|Retiro]] and [[Estación Constitución|Constitución]] terminal train stations.
  
 
=== Roadways ===
 
=== Roadways ===
[[Image:Avenida-julio.jpg|left|thumb|225px|9 de Julio Avenue, Buenos Aires.]]
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Buenos Aires used to be relatively congestion-free for a city of its size. Toll [[highway]]s were opened in the late 1970s by then-mayor [[Osvaldo Cacciatore]] providing fast access to the downtown area, and increasing the number of cars coming into the city. During Cacciatore's tenure, the streets of the downtown financial district (roughly one square kilometer in size) were declared off-limits to private cars during daytime. Main avenues of the city include the 140 meter (460 feet) wide [[9 de Julio Avenue]], the over-35-km-long (22 mi) [[Rivadavia Avenue]], and [[Corrientes Avenue]], the main thoroughfare of culture and entertainment. [[Avenida General Paz]] is a motorway that surrounds Buenos Aires thus separating the city from [[Buenos Aires Province]].
Buenos Aires used to be relatively congestion-free for a city of its size. Toll [[freeway]]s opened in the late 1970s by then-mayor [[Osvaldo Cacciatore]] provided fast access to the downtown area, increasing the number of cars coming into the city. During Cacciatore's tenure, the streets of the downtown financial district (roughly one square kilometre in size) were declared off-limits to private cars during daytime. Main avenues of the city include the 140 meter (460 feet) wide [[9 de Julio Avenue]], the over-35-km-long (22 mi) [[Rivadavia Avenue]],<ref>[http://www.clarin.com/diario/2006/02/26/laciudad/h-05615.htm 'Avenida Rivadavia:Un largo recorrido de contrastes'] by Nora Sánchez, [[Clarín (newspaper)|''Clarín'']], 2006-02-26</ref> and [[Corrientes Avenue]], the main thoroughfare of culture and entertainment. [[Avenida General Paz]] is a motorway that surrounds Buenos Aires thus separating the city from [[Buenos Aires Province]].
 
 
 
Following the [[Economy of Argentina|economic mini-boom of the 1990s]], more people started [[commuting]] by car, and congestion increased. Most major avenues are [[gridlock]]ed at peak hours.  Another source of congestion is the flight of many people to the country on weekends.
 
[[Image:Buenos Aires-Center-P3050007.JPG|right|thumb|A building with European and modern styles in Buenos Aires.]]
 
Black-and-yellow taxis roam the streets at all hours. Some of these are unlicensed (controls are not fully enforced), so visitors are advised to phone a reputable radio-link company (Radio Taxi). Low-fare limo services, known as ''remises'', have become more popular in recent years.
 
  
 
=== Rail ===
 
=== Rail ===
Argentina's extensive [[railway]] network converges in Buenos Aires. The three principal stations for both long-distance passenger services and [[commuter train]]s are [[Estación Retiro]], [[Estación Constitución]], and [[Estación Once]]. Most lines use [[Diesel]] power; some commuter lines switched to electric power during the 1980s and 1990s <ref name="Time Out"/>.
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Argentina's extensive [[railway]] network converges in Buenos Aires. The three principal stations for both long-distance passenger services and [[commuter train]]s are [[Estación Retiro]], [[Estación Constitución]], and [[Estación Once]]. Most lines use [[Diesel]] power; some commuter lines switched to electric power during the 1980s and 1990s.
  
There is a project to build a [[Buenos Aires-Rosario-Córdoba high-speed railway]], which would join the three largest cities in Argentina. Bids were opened in mid-2006; the only proposal standing as of June 2007 is by French firm Alstom. Financing is a major stumbling block for the project, whose start has been delayed several times.<!-- see http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tren_de_Alta_Velocidad_(Argentina) —>
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A [[Buenos Aires-Rosario-Córdoba high-speed railway]], which would join the three largest cities in Argentina, has also been proposed. Bids were opened in mid-2006, but the only proposal standing as of June 2007 is by French firm Alstom. Financing is a major stumbling block for the project, whose start has been delayed several times.
  
 
=== Airports ===
 
=== Airports ===
Line 252: Line 234:
  
 
== Sports ==
 
== Sports ==
[[Football (soccer)|Football]] (soccer) is a passion for Argentines. Buenos Aires has the highest concentration of football teams of any city in the world (featuring no less than 24 professional football teams),<ref name="observer">[http://observer.guardian.co.uk/osm/story/0,,1182710,00.html 50 sporting things you must do before you die], ''[[The Observer]]'', 2004-04-04</ref> with many of its teams playing in the major league. The best-known rivalry is the one between [[Boca Juniors]] and [[Club Atlético River Plate|River Plate]]; a match between these two teams was named as one of the "50 sporting things you must do before you die" by ''The Observer''.<ref name="observer"/>  Other major clubs include [[San Lorenzo de Almagro]], [[Club Atlético Vélez Sársfield|Vélez Sársfield]] and [[Club Atlético Huracán|Huracán]].
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[[Football (soccer)|Football]] (soccer) is a passion for Argentines. Buenos Aires has the highest concentration of football teams of any city in the world (featuring no less than 24 professional football teams),<ref name="observer">[http://observer.guardian.co.uk/osm/story/0,,1182710,00.html 50 sporting things you must do before you die], ''The Observer'', April 4, 2004. Retrieved May 31, 2016.</ref> with many of its teams playing in the major league. The best-known rivalry is the one between [[Boca Juniors]] and [[Club Atlético River Plate|River Plate]]. Other major clubs include [[San Lorenzo de Almagro]], [[Club Atlético Vélez Sársfield|Vélez Sársfield]] and [[Club Atlético Huracán|Huracán]].
  
 
Buenos Aires has been a candidate city for the [[Olympic Games|Summer Olympic Games]] on three occasions: for the [[1956 Summer Olympics|1956 Games]], lost by a single vote to [[Melbourne]]; for the [[1968 Summer Olympics]], which were held in [[Mexico City]] (to this date, the only Games held in Latin America); and in [[2004 Summer Olympics|2004]], when the games were awarded to [[Athens]].
 
Buenos Aires has been a candidate city for the [[Olympic Games|Summer Olympic Games]] on three occasions: for the [[1956 Summer Olympics|1956 Games]], lost by a single vote to [[Melbourne]]; for the [[1968 Summer Olympics]], which were held in [[Mexico City]] (to this date, the only Games held in Latin America); and in [[2004 Summer Olympics|2004]], when the games were awarded to [[Athens]].
  
[[Image:Puente de la Mujer.jpg|thumb|225px|[[Santiago Calatrava|Calatrava]]'s Puente de La Mujer (Women's Bridge) in Puerto Madero.]]
+
Buenos Aires hosted the [[1951 Pan American Games]] - the first and was also host city to several World Championship events: the 1950 and 1990 [[Basketball World Championship]]s, the 1982 and 2002 [[Volleyball World Championship|Men's Volleyball World Championships]] and—most remembered—the [[1978 FIFA World Cup]], won by [[Argentina national football team|Argentina]] on June 25, 1978 when it defeated the [[Netherlands national football team|Netherlands]] by 3–1.
However, Buenos Aires hosted the [[1951 Pan American Games]] - the first,<ref name="Time Out"/> and was also host city to several World Championship events: the 1950 and 1990 [[Basketball World Championship]]s, the 1982 and 2002 [[Volleyball World Championship|Men's Volleyball World Championships]] and, most remembered, the [[1978 FIFA World Cup]], won by [[Argentina national football team|Argentina]] on June 25 1978 when it defeated the [[Netherlands national football team|Netherlands]] by 3&ndash;1.
 
  
 
Other popular sports in Buenos Aires are [[horse racing]], [[tennis]], [[golf]], [[basketball]], [[Rugby union|rugby]], and [[field hockey]].
 
Other popular sports in Buenos Aires are [[horse racing]], [[tennis]], [[golf]], [[basketball]], [[Rugby union|rugby]], and [[field hockey]].
 +
 +
Famous sportsmen native to the Buenos Aires area include soccer star [[Diego Maradona]] and tennis great [[Guillermo Vilas]].
  
 
== Notes ==
 
== Notes ==
{{Wikisource1911Enc|Buenos Aires (city)}}
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<references/>
<!-- ----------------------------------------------------------
 
  See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Footnotes for a
 
  discussion of different citation methods and how to generate
 
  footnotes using the<ref>, </ref> and  <reference /> tags
 
----------------------------------------------------------- —>
 
{{reflist}}
 
* {{en icon}} [http://wwwa.britannica.com/ebi/article-9273392 Encyclopædia Britannica]
 
* {{en icon}} [http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761571750/Buenos_Aires_(city).html Microsoft Encarta]
 
* {{en icon}} [http://worldfacts.us/Argentina-Buenos-Aires.htm General Information]
 
  
== External links ==
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==References==
* {{Wikitravelpar|Buenos Aires (city)}}
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* Levy, Marcela Lópéz. ''We are Millions: Neo-liberalism and new forms of political action in Argentina.'' London: Latin America Bureau, 2004. ISBN 189936563X
{{Commons|Buenos Aires}}
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* Podalsky, Laura. ''Specular City: Transforming Culture, Consumption,and Space in Buenos Aires, 1955-1973.'' Temple University Press, 2002. ISBN 1566399483
{{wiktionarypar|Porteño}}
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* Runciman, Cathy and Leticia Saharrea, eds. ''Time Out Guide: Buenos Aires.'' London: Penguin Books,  2001. ISBN 0140293981
* {{Wikimaplink|-34610000|-58370000|12|Buenos Aires}}
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* Scobie, James R. ''Buenos Aires: Plaza to Suburb, 1870-1910.'' Oxford University Press, 1992. ISBN 0195024370
* {{es icon}} [http://www.buenosaires.gov.ar/ Official government website]
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* Wilson, Jason. ''Buenos Aires: A Cultural History (Cultural Histories Series).'' Interlink Books, 1999. ISBN 156656347X
* [http://www.bue.gov.ar/home/index.php?&lang=en Official tourism website]
 
  
  
{{-}}
 
{{Barrios of Buenos Aires}}
 
{{Provinces of Argentina}}
 
{{Pan American Games host cities}}
 
 
{{South American capitals}}
 
{{South American capitals}}
  
 
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[[Category:Geography]]
 
[[Category:Geography]]
 
[[Category:Cities]]
 
[[Category:Cities]]

Latest revision as of 18:37, 22 November 2023

Coordinates: 34°36.1′S 58°22.5′W

Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires
—  Autonomous City  —
Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires
Autonomous City of Buenos Aires
Avenida 9 de Julio
Avenida 9 de Julio
Flag of Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires
Flag
Coat of arms of Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires
Coat of arms
Nickname:
The Queen of El Plata, The South American Paris, The Capital of Tango, The city of books, The Paris of the Pampas,[1] The Cultural Capital of Latin America[2]
Location within Argentina
Location within Argentina
Country Argentina
Established 1536, 1580
Government
 - Type Autonomous city
 - Chief of Government Mauricio Macri
 - Senators María Eugenia Estenssoro, Samuel Cabanchik, Daniel Filmus
Area
 - Autonomous City 203 km² (78.5 sq mi)
 - Land 203 km² (78.5 sq mi)
 - Metro 4,758 km² (1,837 sq mi)
Population (2010 census.)[3]
 - Autonomous City 2,891,082
 - Density 14,000/km² (36,259.8/sq mi)
 - Metro 12,801,364
 - Metro Density 2,700/km² (6,993/sq mi)
Area code(s) 011
HDI (2010) 0.876 – high[4]
Website: buenosaires.gov.ar (Spanish)

bue.gov.ar (English)

Buenos Aires is the capital of Argentina and its largest city. It is located on the southern shore of the Río de la Plata, 150 miles (240 kilometers) from the Atlantic Ocean. It is one of the world's largest cities and one of its most important ports.

Buenos Aires is the center of the Argentina's government, commerce, business, politics, and culture. Its wealth and influence dominate the life of the rest of the nation and extend well beyond the nation’s borders. The city covers an area of 77 square miles (200 square kilometers). The total metropolitan area, however, spreads over 1,421 square miles (3,680 square kilometers). About a third of Argentina's people live in the Buenos Aires metropolitan area, which has a population of over 13 million.

Most residents of Buenos Aires have European origins, and the art and architecture of the city reflects this. However Buenos Aires is a magnet for immigration from poorer neighboring countries, as well as significant numbers of people from Asian countries.

Map of Buenos Aires of 1530s.
A NASA satellite photo of the Río de la Plata area. Gran Buenos Aires can be seen on the right.

Names

One tradition says Buenos Aires was originally named after the Virgine de Bonaria of Cagliari, Sardinia. According to another tradition, sixteenth century Spanish sailors named the port for their patron saint, Santa María del Buen Aire (Saint Mary of the Good Air).

Argentines sometimes refer to Buenos Aires as Capital Federal to differentiate the city from the province of the same name.

The abbreviations Bs. As., Baires, and B.A. are sometimes used, the first one mostly in writing and the latter two in everyday speech. The city is sometimes called La Reina del Plata, that is, "The Queen of the Plate" (a reference to the Plate river basin).

History

Portuguese seaman Juan Díaz de Solís, navigating in the name of Spain, was the first European to reach the Río de la Plata in 1516, but his expedition was cut short by an attack in which he was killed by the native Charrúa or Guaraní tribe, in today's Uruguay.

Founding

The city was first established as Ciudad de Nuestra Señora Santa María del Buen Ayre (literally "City of Our Lady Saint Mary of the Fair Winds") on February 2, 1536 by a Spanish expedition under Pedro de Mendoza. The location of Mendoza's city was in today's San Telmo district, south of the city center. More attacks by the indigenous peoples forced the settlers away, and in 1541 the site was abandoned. A second settlement was established in 1580 by Juan de Garay, who arrived by sailing down the Paraná River from Asunción, now the capital of Paraguay.

From its earliest days, the success of Buenos Aires depended on trade. During most of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Spain insisted that all trade to Europe pass through Lima, Peru, so that taxes could be collected. This scheme frustrated the traders of Buenos Aires, and a thriving contraband industry developed. Unsurprisingly, this also instilled resentment among the porteños (residents of Buenos Aires) against Spanish authorities.

Sensing these feelings, Carlos III of Spain progressively eased the trade restrictions and finally declared Buenos Aires an open port in the late 1700s. These placating actions did not have the desired effect, however; and the porteños, some of them versed in the ideology of the French Revolution, became even more desirous of independence from Spain.

1800s

During the British invasions of the Río de la Plata, British forces attacked Buenos Aires twice in 1806–1807 but were repulsed by local militias. Ultimately, on May 25, 1810, while Spain endured the Peninsular War and after a week of mostly peaceful deliberations, the criollo (European) citizens of Buenos Aires successfully ousted the Spanish Viceroy and established a provisional government. May 25 is now celebrated as a national holiday, May Revolution Day. Formal independence from Spain was declared only in 1816.

Historically, Buenos Aires has been Argentina's main center for liberal and free-trade ideas, while many of the provinces, especially to the northwest, advocated a more conservative-Catholic approach to political and social issues. Many tensions within Argentine history, starting with the centralist-federalist conflicts of the nineteenth century, can be traced back to these contrasting views.

In the nineteenth century the city suffered naval blockades on two occasions: by the French from 1838 to 1840, and a joint Anglo-French blockade from 1845 to 1848. Both blockades failed to gain surrender of the city, and the foreign powers eventually gave up.

The Casa Rosada

During most of the nineteenth century, the political status of the city remained a sensitive subject. It was already capital of Buenos Aires Province, and between 1853 and 1860 it was the capital of the seceded State of Buenos Aires. The issue was debated more than once on the battlefield, until the matter was finally settled in 1880, when the city was federalized and became the seat of government, with its mayor appointed by the president. The Casa Rosada became the seat of the office of the President.

Nineteenth century

Railroad construction in the second half of the nineteenth century increased the economic power of the city as raw materials flowed into its factories, and Buenos Aires became a multicultural city that ranked itself with the major European capitals. The Colón Theater emerged as one of the world's top opera venues. The city's main avenues were built in those years, and the dawn of the twentieth century saw the construction of South America's then-tallest buildings and first subway network.

By the 1920s Buenos Aires was a favored destination for immigrants from Europe, as well as from the poorer provinces and neighboring countries. Large shanty towns, called (villas miseria), started growing around the city's industrial areas, leading to extensive social problems, which contrasted sharply with Argentina's image as a country of riches.

Peronist rally in Buenos Aires in 1951

Buenos Aires was also the cradle of Peronism, under the leadership of Juan Peron, (serving as president from 1946 to 1955 and from 1973 to 1974) and Eva Peron: the now-mythical demonstration of October 17, 1945 took place in Plaza de Mayo. Industrial workers of the Greater Buenos Aires industrial belt have been Peronism's main support base ever since, and Plaza de Mayo became the site for demonstrations and many of the country's political events.

On June 16, 1955 a splinter faction of the navy bombed the Plaza de Mayo area, killing 364 civilians. This was the only time the city was attacked from the air. This event was followed by a military uprising that would depose President Perón three months later.

Recent history

In the 1970s, the city suffered from fighting between the left-wing revolutionary movements (Montoneros, E.R.P., and F.A.R.) and the right-wing Argentine Anticommunist Alliance (Triple A), supported by Isabel Perón, who became President of Argentina in 1974, after Juan Perón's death. The military coup of 1976, led by Jorge Rafael Videla, only escalated this conflict; the subsequent "Dirty War" produced between 10,000 and 30,000 desaparecidos, ("the disappeared") people kidnapped and killed by the military during the years of the junta.[5] The silent marches of their mothers (Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo) are a well-known image of Argentine suffering during those times.

The city was visited by Pope John Paul II twice: in 1982, due to the outbreak of the Falklands-Malvinas War, and a second visit in 1987, which gathered crowds never seen before in the city.

On March 17, 1992 a bomb exploded in the Israeli Embassy killing 29 and injuring 242. Another explosion, known as the AMIA bombing), destroyed a building housing several Jewish organizations on July 18, 1994, killing 85 and injuring many more.

On December 30, 2004, a fire at República Cromagnon concert hall killed almost 200 people, the greatest non-natural tragedy in Argentine history.

Government and politics

The Plaza Congreso in Buenos Aires

As the nation's capital, Buenos Aires is home to the three branches of Argentina's government: the executive (president and vice-president), legislative (bicameral National Congress or Congreso Nacional) and judicial (Supreme Court or Corte Suprema).

In 1996, under the 1994 reform of the Argentine Constitution, the city gained autonomous status, and held its first mayoral elections. The mayor's title was changed to "Chief of Government." The winner was Fernando de la Rúa, who would be President of Argentina in the period from 1999 to 2001.

De la Rúa's successor, Aníbal Ibarra, won two popular elections, but was impeached and ultimately deposed on March 6, 2006 as a result of the fire at República Cromagnon. Jorge Telerman, who had been the acting mayor, was invested with the office.

In the mayoral election of June 3, 2007, Mauricio Macri obtained a plurality of the vote, forcing a runoff election against Daniel Filmus on June 24, which Macri won with over 60 percent of the vote.

Buenos Aires is represented in the Argentine Senate by three senators. The people of Buenos Aires also elect 25 national deputies for the Argentine Chamber of Deputies.

The city is divided into 48 barrios (neighborhoods) for administrative purposes. The division was originally based on Catholic parroquias (parishes), but has undergone a series of changes since the 1940s. A newer scheme has divided the city into 15 comunas (communes).

Population

The people of Buenos Aires are known as porteños (people of the port), due to the significance of the port in the development of the city and the nation. The people of Buenos Aires province (sometimes excluding the city's suburbia) are called bonaerenses (people of good air or 'bon aire').

According to the 2001 census, the city proper has a population of 2,776,138, while the Greater Buenos Aires metropolitan area has more than 12.4 million inhabitants. More recent estimates put the latter figure at more than 13 million The population of the city proper has been stagnant since the late 1960s, due to low birth rates and a slow emigration to suburbia.

Most porteños have European origins, with Spanish and Italian descent being the most common, mainly from the Galician, Asturian, and Basque regions of Spain, and the Calabrian, Ligurian, Piedmont, Lombardy and Neapolitan regions of Italy.

Other European origins include German, Portuguese, Polish, Irish, French, Croatian, English and Welsh. In the 1990s, there was a small wave of immigration from Romania and Ukraine.

There is a minority of old criollo (European) stock, dating back to the Spanish colonial days. Criollo and Spanish-aboriginal (mestizo) population in the city has increased mostly as a result of migration, both from the provinces and from nearby countries such as Bolivia, Peru and Paraguay, since the second half of the twentieth century.

Important Arab (mostly Syrian-Lebanese) and Armenian communities have been significant in commerce and civic life since the beginning of the twentieth century.

The Jewish community in Greater Buenos Aires numbers around 250,000, and is the largest in Latin America. Most are of Northern and Eastern European Ashkenazi origin, mostly German and Russian Jews; with a significant minority of Sephardic, mostly Syrian Jews.

Buenos Aires' Metropolitan Cathedral

Besides substantial immigration from neighboring countries, during the middle and late 1990s Argentina received significant numbers of people from Asian countries such as Korea (both North and South), China and Vietnam, which joined the previously existing Sino-Japanese communities in Buenos Aires.

According to official data, between 1992 and 2003 an average 13,187 people per year immigrated legally in Argentina. The government calculates that a total of 504,000 people entered the country during the same period, giving about 345,000 illegal immigrants. The same source gives a plausible total figure of 750,000 illegals currently residing in Argentina.

Most inhabitants are Roman Catholic. Buenos Aires is the seat of a Roman Catholic metropolitan archbishop (who is the prelate of Argentina), as well as of several Eastern Orthodox and Anglican hierarchies. Evangelical churches have steadily increased their ranks since the 1980s.

Sizable Jewish and Muslim communities have existed in the city for over 100 years.

Climate

The city has a humid subtropical climate with average temperatures in the afternoon ranging from 30°C (86°F) in January to 10°C (50°F) in July. Rain can be expected at any time of year. Snow fell on July 9, 2007 for the first time since 1918. Hailstorms are a more common phenomenon.

Many locals leave Buenos Aires during the hot summer months (December, January and February) and head for seaside resorts on the Atlantic coast.

Economy

A building with European and modern styles in Buenos Aires.

Buenos Aires is the financial, industrial, commercial, and cultural hub of Argentina. Its port is one of the busiest in the world. Navigable rivers by way of the Rio de la Plata connect the port to north-east Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Paraguay. As a result, it serves as the distribution hub for a vast area of the south-eastern region of the South American continent. In 2007 the city has a mean Nominal GDP per capita of around $US 14,000, which makes it one of the wealthiest cities in Latin America.

To the west of Buenos Aires is the Pampa Húmeda, the most productive agricultural region of Argentina (as opposed to the dry southern Pampa, mostly used for cattle farming). Meat, dairy, grain, tobacco, wool and hide products are processed or manufactured in the Buenos Aires area. Other leading industries are automobile manufacturing, oil refining, metalworking, machine building, and the production of textiles, chemicals, clothing, and beverages.

Culture

The Teatro Colón opera house

Strongly influenced by European culture, Buenos Aires is sometimes referred to as the "Paris of South America." It is the site of the Teatro Colón, one of the world's greatest opera houses.[6] There are several symphony orchestras and choral societies. The city has numerous museums related to history, fine arts, modern arts, decorative arts, popular arts, sacred art, arts and crafts, theater, and popular music, as well as the preserved homes of noted art collectors, writers, composers and artists. It harbors many public libraries and cultural associations as well as the largest concentration of active theaters in Latin America. It has a world-famous zoo and Botanical Garden, a large number of landscaped parks and squares, as well as churches and places of worship of many denominations, many of which are architecturally noteworthy.

Tango

A tango performance in Buenos Aires

Tango music was born in the suburbs, notably in the brothels of the Junín y Lavalle district and in the arrabales (poorer suburbs). Its sensual dance moves were not seen as respectable until adopted by the Parisian high society in the 1920s, and then all over the world. In Buenos Aires, tango dancing schools (known as academias) were usually men-only establishments.

Starting in the 1920s, the Buenos Aires style of tango music evolved into an elaborate genre. In its heyday, tango had many famous orchestras such as those led by Aníbal Troilo and Juan D'Arienzo, and singers such as Carlos Gardel and Edmundo Rivero. Tango enjoyed a resurgence in global popularity later in the twentieth century due almost exclusively to Astor Piazzolla and his development of the tango nuevo style.

Buenos Aires holds an annual "Tango Day" each December 11.

In the San Telmo barrio, Sundays are devoted to tango shows on the streets and antiques trade in the bazaars around Dorrego Square. Tango shows can be found in establishments such as Rivero's El Viejo Almacén.

Cinema

Buenos Aires has been the center of the Argentine cinema industry in Argentina for over 100 years since French camera operator Eugene Py directed the pioneering film La Bandera Argentina in 1897. Since then, over 2000 films have been directed and produced within the city. The culture of tango music has been incorporated into many of the films produced.

Media

Buenos Aires publishes the largest newspapers in the country, many of which have electronic editions on the Internet. The largest daily circulation is claimed by Clarín. While lower in circulation, La Nación and La Prensa, founded in 1870 and 1869, respectively, are highly regarded in the Spanish-speaking world as well as among the international press. The English-language daily Buenos Aires Herald is also widely available throughout the republic. During the military dictatorship of the 1970s it was well-known for its independent stance and open criticism of the government. Foreign-language papers are common in the capital.

The majority of radio and television stations are privately operated. They have periodically become organs of state propaganda, only to be returned to some independence by succeeding governments.

The Plaza de Mayo

Buenos Aires is also one of the most important book and magazine publishing centers in Latin America.

ISPs provide dial-up, cable, satellite-based and ADSL connections. The Internet boom in the early 2000s gave birth to many cibercafés. There are a growing number of wi-fi hotspots, mostly around the downtown area and now in all "Subte" lines, except for the A line, which is in process.

Tourism

The main tourist attractions of Buenos Aires are around the downtown area, including Plaza de Mayo, Florida Street, and Puerto Madero.

The Plaza de Mayo lies at the heart of Buenos Aires. The offices of the president of Argentina, the Casa Rosada (called so because of the building's pink overtones) are at the east end of the plaza. A broad boulevard called the Avenida de Mayo runs west from the Plaza de Mayo to the Plaza del Congreso and the National Congress Building.

The Plaza de Mayo is also the site of the Metropolitan Cathedral, another significant building from the colonial period. The rest of what remains of colonial Buenos Aires is located mostly south of the plaza, in the recently restored San Telmo, or Barrio Sur district.

The central business district lies just north and west of the Plaza de Mayo. The Avenida 9 de Julio, the widest street in the world, runs north and south through this district. This street is 425 feet (130 meters) wide. East of the central business district lies the city's waterfront, with huge docks and other facilities for oceangoing ships.

Residential neighborhoods called barrios occupy most of the other parts of Buenos Aires. Each barrio has its own churches, schools, grocery stores, meat markets, and bakeries. One of Buenos Aires' most colorful barrios is La Boca, which is known for its brightly painted houses and excellent Italian restaurants.

Transportation

Public transport

A majority of residents in Buenos Aires and its suburbs use public transportation. A Buenos Aires invention is the "colectivo," originally a small bus built out of a truck chassis and seating 21 to 27. Today they have grown in size and carry up to 60 passengers. Numerous colectivos and larger public buses traverse the city continuously each hour providing access to virtually all neighborhoods.

The Buenos Aires Metro (locally known as el subte, from "subterráneo" meaning "underground") is an extensive system providing access to various parts of the city. Opened in 1913, it is the oldest subway system in the Southern Hemisphere and in the Spanish-speaking world.

Buenos Aires had an extensive tramway network with over 857 km (535 mi) of track, which was dismantled during the 1960s in favor of bus transportation. A new 2-km light rail tram "Tranvía del Este" in the Puerto Madero district is now operating. Extensions planned will link the Retiro and Constitución terminal train stations.

Roadways

Buenos Aires used to be relatively congestion-free for a city of its size. Toll highways were opened in the late 1970s by then-mayor Osvaldo Cacciatore providing fast access to the downtown area, and increasing the number of cars coming into the city. During Cacciatore's tenure, the streets of the downtown financial district (roughly one square kilometer in size) were declared off-limits to private cars during daytime. Main avenues of the city include the 140 meter (460 feet) wide 9 de Julio Avenue, the over-35-km-long (22 mi) Rivadavia Avenue, and Corrientes Avenue, the main thoroughfare of culture and entertainment. Avenida General Paz is a motorway that surrounds Buenos Aires thus separating the city from Buenos Aires Province.

Rail

Argentina's extensive railway network converges in Buenos Aires. The three principal stations for both long-distance passenger services and commuter trains are Estación Retiro, Estación Constitución, and Estación Once. Most lines use Diesel power; some commuter lines switched to electric power during the 1980s and 1990s.

A Buenos Aires-Rosario-Córdoba high-speed railway, which would join the three largest cities in Argentina, has also been proposed. Bids were opened in mid-2006, but the only proposal standing as of June 2007 is by French firm Alstom. Financing is a major stumbling block for the project, whose start has been delayed several times.

Airports

The Buenos Aires international airport, Ministro Pistarini International Airport, is located in the suburb of Ezeiza and is often called simply "Ezeiza." The Aeroparque Jorge Newbery airport, located in the Palermo neighborhood next to the riverbank, serves mostly domestic traffic.

Sports

Football (soccer) is a passion for Argentines. Buenos Aires has the highest concentration of football teams of any city in the world (featuring no less than 24 professional football teams),[7] with many of its teams playing in the major league. The best-known rivalry is the one between Boca Juniors and River Plate. Other major clubs include San Lorenzo de Almagro, Vélez Sársfield and Huracán.

Buenos Aires has been a candidate city for the Summer Olympic Games on three occasions: for the 1956 Games, lost by a single vote to Melbourne; for the 1968 Summer Olympics, which were held in Mexico City (to this date, the only Games held in Latin America); and in 2004, when the games were awarded to Athens.

Buenos Aires hosted the 1951 Pan American Games - the first and was also host city to several World Championship events: the 1950 and 1990 Basketball World Championships, the 1982 and 2002 Men's Volleyball World Championships and—most remembered—the 1978 FIFA World Cup, won by Argentina on June 25, 1978 when it defeated the Netherlands by 3–1.

Other popular sports in Buenos Aires are horse racing, tennis, golf, basketball, rugby, and field hockey.

Famous sportsmen native to the Buenos Aires area include soccer star Diego Maradona and tennis great Guillermo Vilas.

Notes

  1. Buenos Aires Reinventing Itself Travel+Leisure. Retrieved March 22, 2012.
  2. Cultural Capital of Latin America Official Website of the City of Buenos Aires. Retrieved March 22, 2012.
  3. Argentina: Censo2010. Retrieved March 22, 2012.
  4. Desarrollo humano en Argentina / 2010. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  5. Marcela Lópéz Levy, We are Millions: Neo-liberalism and new forms of political action in Argentina (London: Latin America Bureau, 2004).
  6. Cathy Runciman and Leticia Saharrea (eds.), Time Out Guide: Buenos Aires (London: Penguin Books, 2001).
  7. 50 sporting things you must do before you die, The Observer, April 4, 2004. Retrieved May 31, 2016.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Levy, Marcela Lópéz. We are Millions: Neo-liberalism and new forms of political action in Argentina. London: Latin America Bureau, 2004. ISBN 189936563X
  • Podalsky, Laura. Specular City: Transforming Culture, Consumption,and Space in Buenos Aires, 1955-1973. Temple University Press, 2002. ISBN 1566399483
  • Runciman, Cathy and Leticia Saharrea, eds. Time Out Guide: Buenos Aires. London: Penguin Books, 2001. ISBN 0140293981
  • Scobie, James R. Buenos Aires: Plaza to Suburb, 1870-1910. Oxford University Press, 1992. ISBN 0195024370
  • Wilson, Jason. Buenos Aires: A Cultural History (Cultural Histories Series). Interlink Books, 1999. ISBN 156656347X


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