Cienfuegos Bay
Appearance
Cienfuegos Bay | |
---|---|
Jagua Bay (Bahia de Jagua) | |
Bahia de Cienfuegos (Spanish) | |
Coordinates | 22°08′02″N 80°28′51″W / 22.13389°N 80.48083°W |
Ocean/sea sources | Caribbean Sea |
Basin countries | Cuba |
Max. length | 22 kilometres (14 mi) |
Max. width | 13 kilometres (8.1 mi) |
Surface area | 88.46 square kilometres (34.15 sq mi)[1] |
Settlements | Cienfuegos, Cuba Jagua |
Cienfuegos Bay (Spanish: Bahia de Cienfuegos) is a bay in the Caribbean Sea located in Cienfuegos Province on the southern coast of Cuba. It has served as a harbor for boats for many years. It has two of the most important ports in the country, one of which is the city of Cienfuegos, the capital of the province.
History
On his second voyage to the Americas, Christopher Columbus visited the bay in 1494. The first permanent settlements occurred in 1738. The Jagua Fortress was erected by King Philip V of Spain in 1742 to protect the bay from pirates who prowled the Caribbean coast in those days. They used it as a refuge at landfall, on their way to the city of Cienfuegos.[1]
References
- ^ a b Jagua Fortress on EcuRed