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*{{es icon}} [http://www.acsanmartin.com.ar/ Atlético Club San Martín]
*{{es icon}} [http://www.acsanmartin.com.ar/ Atlético Club San Martín]
*{{es icon}} [http://www.vivisanmartin2004.com.ar San Martín Tourism Guide]
*{{es icon}} [http://www.vivisanmartin2004.com.ar San Martín Tourism Guide]
*[http://www.argentinawinetourism.com/wine_tourism_argentina/02-wine_routes_argentina/04-mendoza_argentina.htm Vineyards in the East Zone of Mendoza] {{en icon}} {{es icon}} {{de icon}} {{fr icon}} {{it icon}} {{pt icon}}
*[http://www.argentinawinetourism.com/wine_tourism_argentina/02-wine_routes_argentina/06-vineyards_mendoza_argentina.htm Vineyards in the East Zone of Mendoza] {{en icon}} {{es icon}} {{de icon}} {{fr icon}} {{it icon}} {{pt icon}}





Revision as of 15:33, 14 June 2011

San Martín
City hall, San Martín, Mendoza
City hall, San Martín, Mendoza
Country Argentina
ProvinceMendoza
DepartmentSan Martín
Population
 • Total70,380
Time zoneUTC-3 (ART)
CPA base
M5570
Dialing code+54 02623

San Martín is a city in the north-center part of the Mendoza Province in Argentina. It is the capital of the San Martín Department and constitutes, with Palmira and La Colonia, the third-largest metropolitan area in the province.

History

The first San Martín inhabitants were the Huarpe Milkayak people. The territory was governed by the tribal chief called Pallamay until 1563, when the first Europeans under the command of the Captain Pedro Moyano Cornejo, arrived to the area.

The city was known as Rodeo de Moyano or, alternatively, as La Reducción (Spanish: The Reduction); but its name was changed to Villa Los Barriales in 1816, when it was included in the Corocorto Priesthood of Mendoza Province and officially established by the Governor of Mendoza, Toribio de Luzuriaga.

San Martín came into prominence in the war of the Argentine independence period, when José de San Martín received an extensive land grant in the area to take advantage of agriculture and help the Chilean army of Bernardo O'Higgins in an effort to prevent new Spanish invasions from Chile to Argentina. In 1823, the governor Pedro Molina changed the name of the city yet again in homage to the Argentine general José de San Martín[1], who, besides his inestimable historical role, contributed many innovations to the local farming sector and in viticulture, particularly.

In 1885, the first railway arrived in San Martin, uniting Buenos Aires with Mendoza and Chile. This development brought many Italian immigrants to the area from Buenos Aires; during the 1950s and '60s, National Route 7 was built between Buenos Aires and Mendoza Province, converting the city into an important distribution center along the most important highway between Buenos Aires and Santiago, Chile.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ San Martín was the first city in South America named in homage to José de San Martín.