Loreto, Beni
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Place in Beni Department, Bolivia
15°11′34″S 64°45′32″W / 15.19278°S 64.75889°W / -15.19278; -64.75889 (2001)
Loreto is a smalI municipality in the Beni Department in northern Bolivia, capital of the Marbán Province and Loreto Municipality.[1] In 2001, Loreto had a population of 843.
History
Loreto was the first of the Jesuit Missions of Moxo to be founded. Loreto Mission was founded in 1682.[2]
Languages
Camba Spanish is the primary vernacular lingua franca spoken in the town. Loretano, a Moxo dialect, is the main indigenous language spoken.[3][4]
References
- ^ Observatorio de la Bolivia Democrática (OBD)[permanent dead link]
- ^ Block, David (1994). Mission culture on the upper Amazon: native tradition, Jesuit enterprise, and secular policy in Moxos, 1660-1880. Lincoln}publisher=University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-1232-1.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link). - ^ Danielsen, Swintha (2011). The personal paradigms in Baure and other South Arawakan languages. In Antoine Guillaume; Françoise Rose (eds.). International Journal of American Linguistics 77(4): 495-520.
- ^ Danielsen, Swintha; Terhart, Lena (2014). Paunaka. In Mily Crevels; Pieter Muysken (eds.). Lenguas de Bolivia, vol. III: Oriente, pp. 221-258. La Paz: Plural Editores.
External links
- Satellite map at Maplandia.com
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Beni Department
Capital: La Santísima Trinidad
and seats
- Baures (Baures)
- Exaltación (Exaltación)
- Guayaramerín (Guayaramerín)
- Huacaraje (Huacaraje)
- Loreto (Loreto)
- Magdalena (Magdalena)
- Puerto Siles (Puerto Siles)
- Reyes (Reyes)
- Riberalta (Riberalta)
- Rurrenabaque (Rurrenabaque)
- San Andrés (San Andrés)
- San Borja (San Borja)
- San Ignacio (San Ignacio)
- San Javier (San Javier)
- San Joaquín (San Joaquín)
- San Ramón (San Ramón)
- Santa Ana (Santa Ana del Yacuma)
- Santa Rosa (Santa Rosa)
- Trinidad (Trinidad)
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