From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a timeline of the
history of the city of
Buenos Aires ,
Argentina .
Prior to 19th century
1536 – First foundation of the city by
Pedro de Mendoza .
1542 – City attacked by indigenous people and settlers abandon it, moving to
Asunción .
1580 – Second foundation of the city around fort built by
Juan de Garay .
1591 – Dominican monastery established.
1604 – San Francisco monastery established.
1611 – Men's Hospital founded.
1620 – Town becomes capital of
Buenos Aires Province .
1671 –
Cathedral inaugurated.
1711 –
Cabildo built.
1716 – Granted the royal motto Most Noble and Loyal ("Muy Noble y muy Leal")
1720 – Recoleta church built.
1722 – Completion of
Saint Ignatius Church
1727 – San Miguel church founded.
1743 – Women's Hospital established.
1744 – Las Monjas convent founded.
1749 – San Juan convent established.
1752 –
Cathedral built.
1755 – Female Orphan School established.
1763 – Anglo-Portuguese invasion, part of the
Seven Years' War , repelled by Viceroy Cevallos.
1768 – Merced church built.
1776 – City becomes capital of
Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata .
1778 – "Free trade regulations" in effect.
1779 – Foundling Asylum established.
1794 –
Consulado (merchant guild) established.
[4]
19th century
1800s-1840s
1850s–1890s
Buenos Aires, ca.1860
20th century
1900s–1940s
1950s–1990s
21st century
2000s
2010s
2010
2011
2012
2013
2015
3 June: The feminist movement
Ni una menos organizes its first massive demonstrations against
gender-based violence , popularising the campaign throughout Argentina and several Latin American countries.
2016
Population: 13,879,707 (urban agglomeration).
[31]
2017
2020s
See also
References
^ Ralph Lee Woodward Jr. (2013) [2005], "Merchant Guilds", in Cynthia Clark Northrup (ed.), Encyclopedia of World Trade , Routledge,
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^
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d Alberto B. Martínez (1914), Baedeker of the Argentine Republic , Barcelona: R. Sopena, printer,
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^ "Timelines: History of Argentina from 1580 to 1983",
World Book , USA
^ International Center for the Arts of the Americas.
"Documents of 20th-century Latin American and Latino Art" .
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston . Retrieved May 30, 2015 .
^ Steven Anzovin and Janet Podell, ed. (2000).
Famous First Facts . H.W. Wilson Co.
ISBN
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^ Osvaldo Pellettieri (2005), Historia del Teatro Argentino en Buenos Aires (in Spanish), Editorial Galerna,
ISBN
9789505564668 ,
OL
9138085M , 950556466X
^
"LA EXPOSICIÓN CONTINENTAL SUDAMERICANA (15-3-1882) El arcón de la historia Argentina" (in Spanish). 2015-12-15. Retrieved November 17, 2017 .
^ Vernon N. Kisling, ed. (2000).
Zoo and Aquarium History . USA:
CRC Press .
ISBN
978-1-4200-3924-5 .
^
"Garden Search: Argentina" . London:
Botanic Gardens Conservation International . Retrieved May 30, 2015 .
^
a
b
"Movie Theaters in Buenos Aires, Argentina" , CinemaTreasures.org , Los Angeles: Cinema Treasures LLC, retrieved 29 July 2013
^
Ten of the world's most beautiful bookshops , BBC, 27 March 2014
^
"Population of capital city and cities of 100,000 or more inhabitants" . Demographic Yearbook 1955 . New York:
Statistical Office of the United Nations .
^
United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs , Statistical Office (1976).
"Population of capital city and cities of 100,000 and more inhabitants" . Demographic Yearbook 1975 . New York. pp. 253–279. {{
cite book }}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link )
^
"Think Tank Directory" . Philadelphia, USA:
Foreign Policy Research Institute . Archived from
the original on 10 November 2013. Retrieved 29 July 2013 .
^ United Nations Department for Economic and Social Information and Policy Analysis, Statistics Division (1997).
"Population of capital cities and cities of 100,000 and more inhabitants" . 1995 Demographic Yearbook . New York. pp. 262–321. CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link )
^
a
b
c
"Argentina Profile: Timeline" . BBC News. 13 July 2012. Retrieved 29 July 2013 .
^
"Jefe de Gobierno" (in Spanish). Buenos Aires Ciudad. Retrieved 4 April 2013 .
^
"Argentine mayors" . City Mayors.com . London:
City Mayors Foundation . Retrieved 27 April 2013 .
^
"Argentina Floods" . BBC News. 3 April 2013.
^
"Population of capital cities and cities of 100,000 or more inhabitants" . Demographic Yearbook 2016 .
United Nations Statistics Division . 2017.
^ Marcuzzi, Josefina (August 17, 2015).
"Puerto Madero: crece la torre más alta de la ciudad" .
La Nacion (in Spanish).
Archived from the original on April 20, 2021. Retrieved January 13, 2023 .
^
"Argentina elected host country of Specialised Expo 2023" . Retrieved 15 November 2017 .
This article incorporates information from the
Spanish Wikipedia .
Bibliography
Published in the 18th–19th centuries
Jedidiah Morse (1797),
"Buenos Ayres" , The American Gazetteer , Boston: S. Hall, and Thomas & Andrews
Emeric Essex Vidal (1820), Picturesque illustrations of Buenos Ayres and Monte Video , London: R. Ackermann,
OCLC
6287966 ,
OL
6939031M
Josiah Conder (1830),
"Buenos Ayres" , The Modern Traveller , London: J.Duncan
David Brewster , ed. (1830).
"Buenos Ayres" .
Edinburgh Encyclopædia . Edinburgh: William Blackwood.
Michael George Mulhall; E.T. Mulhall (1869),
"City of Buenos Ayres (etc.)" , Handbook of the River Plate , Buenos Ayres: Standard Printing Office
Ernst Nolte (1882).
The Stranger's Guide for Buenos Aires . Buenos Aires: German Library.
Archibald Wilberforce, ed. (1893).
"Buenos Ayres" . Capitals of the Globe . NY: Peter Fenelon Collier.
hdl :
2027/mdp.39015061863513 .
Published in the 20th century
Manuel Bilbao (1902), Buenos Aires (in Spanish), Buenos Aires: J.A. Alsina,
OL
24423913M
Statistical Annuary of the City of Buenos Aires . Buenos Aires: Compania Sud-Americana de Billetes de Banco. 1907.
Arthur Ruhl (1908).
"City of Good Airs" .
Scribner's Magazine . NY: 105 v.
hdl :
2027/mdp.39076001655666 .
Mitchell's Standard Guide to Buenos Aires , Buenos Aires: Mitchell's Book Store, 1909,
OL
7167609M
Lamoureux, Andrew Jackson (1910).
"Buenos Aires (city)" .
Encyclopædia Britannica . Vol. 4 (11th ed.). pp. 752–754.
A. Stuart Pennington (1910),
"The Capital" , The Argentine Republic , London: Stanley Paul & Co.
Charles Warren Currier (1911),
"(Buenos Aires)" , Lands of the Southern Cross: a Visit to South America , Washington, DC: Spanish-American Publication Society
United States Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce (1914),
"Buenos Aires" , Trade Directory of South America for the Promotion of American Export Trade , Washington DC: Government Printing Office,
OCLC
5821807
Henry Stephens (1915),
"Buenos Aires" , South American Travels , New York: Knickerbocker Press,
OCLC
6588111
Annie Smith Peck (1916),
"(Buenos Aires)" , The South American Tour , New York: G.H. Doran,
OCLC
4541554
Gordon Ross (1917),
"Mondevideo and Buenos Aires" , Argentina and Uruguay , London: Methuen
Ernst B. Filsinger (1922),
"Buenos Aires" , Commercial Travelers' Guide to Latin America , Washington, DC: Govt. Print. Office
W. A. Robson , ed. (1954).
"Buenos Aires" . Great Cities of the World: their Government, Politics and Planning . Routledge.
ISBN
978-1-135-67247-8 .
J. R. Scobie. (1972) "Buenos Aires as a commercial-bureaucratic city, 1880-1919: characteristics of a city's orientation." Amer. Historical Rev. 77, 4: 1035–1073.
Alonso, Paula. 1993. "Politics and Elections in Buenos Aires, 1890–1898: The Performance of the Radical Party." Journal of Latin American Studies 25 (3): 465–487.
Jose Moya. Cousins and Strangers: Spanish Immigrants in Buenos Aires, 1850–1930 . Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998
Published in the 21st century
Matthew B. Karush (2003). "National Identity in the Sports Pages: Football and the Mass Media in 1920s Buenos Aires". The Americas . 60 (1): 11–32.
doi :
10.1353/tam.2003.0073 .
JSTOR
3654752 .
S2CID
144462904 .
Donna J. Guy (2004). "Women's Organizations and Jewish Orphanages in Buenos Aires, 1918-1955". Jewish History . 18 (1): 75–93.
doi :
10.1023/B:JEHI.0000005737.07142.ab .
JSTOR
20100924 .
S2CID
159828141 .
Subverting the spaces of invitation? Local politics and participatory budgeting in post-crisis Buenos Aires , London:
Crisis States Research Centre , 2005 – via
International Relations and Security Network
David Marley (2005), "Buenos Aires", Historic Cities of the Americas , Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO, p. 651+,
ISBN
1576070271
Lyman L. Johnson; Zephyr Frank (2006). "Cities and Wealth in the South Atlantic: Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro before 1860". Comparative Studies in Society and History . 48 (3): 634–668.
doi :
10.1017/s0010417506000259 .
JSTOR
3879439 .
S2CID
144781582 .
Craig Epplin (2007). "New Media, Cardboard, and Community in Contemporary Buenos Aires". Hispanic Review . 75 (4): 385–398.
doi :
10.1353/hir.2007.0033 .
JSTOR
27668813 .
S2CID
162202775 .
Filipe Campante;
Edward Glaeser (2009),
Yet Another Tale of Two Cities: Buenos Aires and Chicago , Cambridge, Massachusetts:
National Bureau of Economic Research
Viviana L. Grieco (2009). "Socializing the King's Debt: Local and Atlantic Financial Transactions of the Merchants of Buenos Aires, 1793–1808". The Americas . 65 (3): 321–350.
doi :
10.1353/tam.0.0100 .
JSTOR
25488140 .
S2CID
153346955 .
Susan Hallstead-Dabove (2009). "Disease and immorality: the problem of fashionable dress in Buenos Aires, 1862-1990". Latin American Literary Review . 37 (73): 90–117.
JSTOR
41478056 .
Diego Armus (2011), The Ailing City: Health, Tuberculosis, and Culture in Buenos Aires, 1870–1950 , Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press,
ISBN
9780822349990
Kristen McCleary (2012).
"Inflaming the Fears of Theatergoers: How Fires Shaped the Public Sphere in Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1880-1910" . In Greg Bankoff; et al. (eds.). Flammable Cities: Urban Conflagration and the Making of the Modern World . USA: University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 254–272.
ISBN
978-0-299-28383-4 .
External links
Media related to
History of Buenos Aires at Wikimedia Commons