States of Colombia

States of Colombia existed from February 27, 1855, in the Republic of New Granada and the Granadine Confederation, where they were called "federal states". In the United States of Colombia they were called "sovereign states" (though they were not at all sovereign states in the modern sense of the word).

The Nine Sovereign States

In 1886, Colombia was reorganized into a unitary republic (i.e. present-day Republic of Colombia), by abolishing the states and dividing the country into somewhat less autonomous departments with their own departmental governments; some of which were modelled after former states.

Republic of New Granada

The centralist structure that came to be in the Republic of New Granada after the disestablishment of Gran Colombia and that was ratified by the constitution of 1843, was soon challenged; particularly the provinces of Azuero, Chiriquí, Panamá, and Veraguas, who were demanding an autonomous status. The Constitution of 1853 opened the way so that on February 27, 1855 Panamá State could be created within the Republic of New Granada.

Soon others followed suit, regionalism was too strong, and in order to prevent a breakup like the one Greater Colombia had, with Venezuela and Ecuador leaving the union, congress allowed the creation of other federal states:

The Law of June 15, 1857, created the other states that would go on to form the Granadine Confederation:

The nation was formed by the union of these Sovereign States which were confederated in perpetuity to form a Sovereign Nation, free and independent under the name of the “Granadine Confederation”.

Granadine Confederation

In 1858 the new constituency, made up in its majority of conservatives, convened and signed the Constitution for the Granadine Confederation of 1858,[4] confirming Bogotá as its Federal Capital.

On July 12, 1861, after raising in arms against the constitutional government of the president Mariano Ospina Rodríguez, the general Tomas Cipriano de Mosquera created the Tolima State, carved out of Cundinamarca State. This was confirmed and legalized by the rest of the states of the Colombian Union, by means of Article 41 of the Pact of the Union on September 20, 1861, reaffirming the legality of the institutionalism of Tolima[5]

United States of Colombia (1863-1886)

Political divisions of the United States of Colombia in 1864.

The United States of Colombia was divided into nine federal states, called "sovereign states" under the constitution of 1863. The internal territorial division of the states were defined by the legislature of each state. The states were as follows:[6]

States of the United States of Colombia
State Capital Subdivision
Antioquia Medellín Departments
Bolívar Cartagena de Indias Provinces
Boyacá Tunja Departments
Cauca Popayán Municipalities
Cundinamarca Bogotá Departments
Magdalena Santa Marta Departments
Panamá Panamá Departments
Santander Pamplona, Bucaramanga, El Socorro Departments
Tolima Purificación, Neiva, Natagaima, Guamo, Ibagué Departments

The capitals of Santander and Tolima changed several times.

Republic of Colombia

The Colombian Constitution of 1886 converted the states into departments, the presidents became renamed as governors.[7]

References

  1. "Law of the Creation of the State of Antioquía". Cervantes Virtual. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  2. "Ley de creación del Estado de Santander (1857) - Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes". Cervantesvirtual.com. Archived from the original on 2012-06-29. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  3. Archived December 23, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  4. "Constitución para la Confederación Granadina de 1858". Cervantesvirtual.com. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  5. Pérez, Felipe (1883). Geografía general física y política de los Estados Unidos de Colombia (Imprenta de Echeverría Hermanos ed.). Imprenta de Echeverría Hermanos. ISBN 9781144424846. (in Spanish)
  6. "Constitución de Colombia de 1886". Es.wikisource.org. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
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