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El Diario de Guayana: ... Diario Hoy: Barquisimeto: El Caroreño: Carora: Mérida state. Newspaper Edition city Digital edition Diario de los Andes:
The Pro-Cathedral of Our Lady of Fatima [1] (Spanish: Pro-catedral de Nuestra Señora de Fátima) [2] Also Ciudad Guayana Pro-Cathedral is a religious building belonging to the Catholic Church and serves as the temporary cathedral or pro-cathedral of the Diocese of Ciudad Guayana in Ciudad Guayana [3] (Dioecesis Civitatis guayanensis) in Puerto Ordaz, [4] close to Guayana Avenue, part of ...
The St. John Paul II Cathedral [1] (Spanish: Catedral de San Juan Pablo II) [2] Also Ciudad Guayana Cathedral is the name given to a project on construction of a religious building belonging to the Catholic Church and is located in the UD-251 area of Puerto Ordaz in the city of Ciudad Guayana, the largest population of Bolivar State, in the Guayana region in the southern part of the South ...
José de Jesús Nuñez Viloria (13 January 1987 – 21 July 1990) Ubaldo Ramón Santana Sequera, F.M.I. (2 May 1991 – 11 November 2000) Appointed, Archbishop of Maracaibo; Mariano José Parra Sandoval (10 July 2001 – 25 October 2016) Appointed, Archbishop of Coro; Helizandro Emiro Terán Bermúdez, O.S.A. (29 July 2017 – 19 March 2022)
Ciudad Guayana (Spanish pronunciation: [sjuˈðað ɣwaˈʝana]) (English: Guayana City) is a city in Bolívar State, Venezuela. It stretches 40 kilometers along the south bank of the Orinoco river , at the point where it is joined by its main tributary, the Caroní river .
The Guayana natural region (Spanish: Región natural de Guayana), also simply known as Guayana (English: Guiana) in Venezuela, is a large massif of approximately 441,726 km 2 (170,551 sq mi) area, equivalent to 48.2% of the total continental territory of the country. [1]
The main cities of the region are Ciudad Guayana, with more than half a million inhabitants and which is made up of Puerto Ordaz and San Félix; the capital of the State of Bolívar, Ciudad Bolívar, Upata, Caicara del Orinoco, Tumeremo, Guasipati, El Callao, El Manteco, Santa Elena de Uairén, all of these in the State of Bolívar and the ...
Before the arrival of European colonials, the Guianas were populated by scattered bands of native Arawak people. The native tribes of the Northern amazon forests are most closely related to the natives of the Caribbean; most evidence suggests that the Arawaks immigrated from the Orinoco and Essequibo River Basins in Venezuela and Guiana into the northern islands, and were then supplanted by ...