San Pablo
Appearance
San Pablo (the Spanish equivalent of Saint Paul) is a common toponym in parts of the world where the Spanish language is or was spoken.
San Pablo may refer to:
Geography
Towns, cities, and counties called San Pablo:
- Argentina
- San Pablo (Catamarca), Catamarca Province
- Belize
- San Pablo, Orange Walk, Belize
- San Pablo, Toledo, Belize
- Bolivia
- San Pablo de Lípez, Sud Lípez Province
- Chile
- Colombia
- San Pablo, Bolívar, a town and municipality
- San Pablo de Borbur, a town and municipality
- San Pablo, Nariño, a town and municipality
- Costa Rica
- San Pablo (canton)
- San Pablo, Heredia Province
- San Pablo, Turrubares Canton, San José Province
- San Pablo, Leon Cortés Canton, San José Province
- Cuba
- San Pablo, a barrio in Consolación del Sur, Cuba
- Guatemala
- Mexico
- Paraguay
- Peru
- San Pablo, Cajamarca, San Pablo in the Cajamarca region
- San Pablo, Loreto, San Pablo in Loreto region
- San Pablo District, Bellavista
- San Pablo District, Canchis
- San Pablo District, Mariscal Ramón Castilla
- San Pablo District, San Pablo
- Philippines
- United States
Compound names with San Pablo:
- San Pablo de Borbur, Boyacá, Colombia
- San Pablo de la Moraleja, Valladolid province, Spain
- San Pablo de las Salinas, México State, Mexico
- San Pablo Guelatao, Oaxaca, Mexico
- San Pablo Jocopilas, Suchitepéquez, Guatemala
- San Pablo La Laguna, Sololá, Guatemala
- San Pablo Tacachico, La Libertad, El Salvador
- San Pablo Villa de Mitla, Oaxaca, Mexico
Other geographical features called San Pablo:
- Cerro de San Pablo, alternate name of Pilot Knob (Imperial County, California)
- San Pablo Bay, California, USA
- San Pablo Airport, Seville, Spain
- San Pablo River (Ecuador)
- San Pablo River (Panama)
Literature and Film
- USS San Pablo, a fictional United States Navy gunboat that is the setting for the 1962 novel The Sand Pebbles and the 1966 film The Sand Pebbles (film)
Ships
- USS San Pablo (AVP-30), a United States Navy ship in commission as a seaplane tender from 1943 to 1947 and as a survey ship (redesignated AGS-30 in 1949) from 1948 to 1969