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Usage on de.wikipedia.org Metro de Quito; Usage on de.wikivoyage.org Quito; Usage on eo.wikipedia.org Metroo de Quito; Usage on es.wikipedia.org Anexo:Sistemas de metro; Metro de Quito; Usage on fr.wikipedia.org Métro de Quito; Usage on it.wikipedia.org Metropolitana di Quito; Usage on pl.wikipedia.org Metro w Quito; Usage on pt.wikipedia.org ...
File:Mapa Parroquia Calderón (Quito).svg. Add languages. ... Se corrige el nombre de una de las parroquias: 19:44, 20 April 2010: 1,024 × 768 (224 KB) Alfonfin
This map is the last colonial representation of the urban form of Quito. After 1809 several uprisings and military battles led Quito to its independence and years after it became the Capital of Ecuador. The colonial period had ended and the new Republic started. The costs of war, political instability and economic crisis caused a very slow ...
Palacio Arzobispal de Quito - Anónimo - 19th century - (siglo XIX) Plaza de la Independencia. Although the first colonial town square was what today is known as Plazoleta Benalcázar, this has always been considered as tentative as it got up a path suitable for novice Spanish town of Quito.
The station at Plaza de San Francisco (by the San Francisco monastery), is the only station placed in the historic center of Quito (declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1978). [3] Due to archaeological remains found at the proposed site of the San Francisco station in late 2016, the station was moved two blocks further south to the Plaza ...
The Parque Bicentenario in Quito. The Bicentennial Park known also as Parque Bicentenario de Quito is a public green space in the city of Quito, capital of Ecuador.It is located in the north of the city, on the same land that belonged to the old airport of the city, [1] flanked by Amazonas Avenue to the west, Galo Plaza and Real Audiencia to the east, and del Maestro to the north.
A popular coalition of the land-owning criollo and working-class mestizo population governed a united Quito until political differences emerged in 1766. The unity of the popular coalition eventually collapsed and a Spanish army from Guayaquil led by Antonio de Zelaya entered Quito on September 1, 1766 effectively unopposed, returning the city ...