Cartagena
, capital of
Bolivar
departamento
, northern
Colombia
, at the northern end of Cartagena Bay. The old walled sections, including the 17th-century
fortress
of San Felipe de Barajas, lie on a peninsula and the island of Getsemani, but the city now spreads over the islands of Manga and Manzanillo and the mainland below La
Popa Hill
. In the old section are the ornate cathedral, the Church of
San Pedro Claver
(1603), the Palace of the Inquisition (1706), the main plaza, and the University of Cartagena (1827).
Founded in 1533, Cartagena de Indias gained fame after the mid-16th century when great fleets stopped annually to take on gold and other products of northern
South America
for convoy to
Spain
. The city became a centre for the Inquisition and a major slave market.
In 1811 the province of Cartagena declared its independence from Spain, and years of fighting followed. After falling into Spanish hands from 1815 to 1821, the city was recaptured by patriot forces. In the early national period, Cartagena continued as Colombia’s leading port, but it was handicapped by
inadequate
connections with the interior. By the 1840s it had declined in population and commerce. In the 20th century it experienced renewed growth and is now Colombia’s fifth largest city. Probably the most significant factor in Cartagena’s revitalization was the opening of petroleum fields in the
Magdalena River
valley after 1917. The completion of the pipeline from Barrancabermeja to the Bahia de Cartagena in 1926, and the building of an oil refinery, helped make the city the country’s chief oil port; platinum and coffee are other important exports. Manufactures include sugar, tobacco products, cosmetics, textiles, fertilizer, and leather goods. Tourism is of increasing importance. Pop. (2011 est.) 911,300.