Caribbean region of Colombia
The Caribbean region of Colombia or Colombian Caribbean is the northern, coastal region of Colombia located contiguous to the Caribbean. It is mainly composed of 8 departments. It is the second most populated region in the country after the Andean Region with approximately 11 million residents according to the Colombian Census 2018. The area covers a total land area of, including the Archipelago of San Andrés, Providencia and Santa Catalina in the Caribbean Sea.
The Caribbean region coast extends from the Gulf of Urabá to the Gulf of Venezuela. Straddling the coast are Colombia's two main Atlantic port cities of Barranquilla and Cartagena. The administration of the region is covered by eight department governments: Atlántico, Bolívar, Cesar, Sucre, Córdoba, Magdalena, La Guajira and San Andrés and Providencia. These eight departments also cover approximately 182 municipalities according to the 2018 Census by DANE Colombia. Most of its inhabitants speak a dialect of Caribbean Spanish with variations within its subregions.
Administrative divisions
Eight departments form the Caribbean region:| Department | Capital |
- Antioquia Department: in the Gulf of Urabá most of the territory of the subregion of Urabá Antioquia.
- Chocó Department: covering a small territory in the Gulf of Urabá. Chocó is the only Department of Colombia with coasts on both the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.
Demographics
| Department | 2018 Census | 2005 Census | Capital |
| Atlántico | 2,835,509 | 2,112,001 | Barranquilla |
| Bolívar | 2,258,929 | 1,836,640 | Cartagena de Indias |
| Cesar | 1,359,719 | 878,437 | Valledupar |
| Córdoba | 1,868,166 | 1,462,909 | Montería |
| La Guajira | 1,015,909 | 655,943 | Riohacha |
| Magdalena | 1,476,665 | 1,136,819 | Santa Marta |
| San Andrés and Providencia | 65,663 | 55,426 | San Andrés |
| Sucre | 981,727 | 762,263 | Sincelejo |
| Total Caribbean | 11,796,624 | 8,900,438 |
Economy
The economy of the Caribbean region is based mainly in the exploitation of natural resources such as coal and natural gas, salt, agricultural products mainly bananas, coffee and oil palm, cotton, tropical fruits among many other products, livestock raising which is practiced extensively in almost all the territory, in Córdoba, Sucre, Atlántico, Magdalena, Bolívar, Cesar and southern La Guajira. There is also a service industry and a local import-export industry, mainly in the ports of Cartagena, Barranquilla, and Santa Marta. Another major part of the economy is tourism, which concentrates also in Cartagena and Santa Marta along with San Andres and Providencia Islands.Culture
Sports
Unlike the rest of the country where soccer predominates, baseball in this region is the most popular sport, with teams such as Caimanes de Barranquilla, Tigres de Cartagena, Vaqueros de Montería, Leones de Barranquilla and Toros de Sincelejo competing in the Colombian Professional Baseball League. The Caribbean region has been the cradle of not only successful baseball players, but also for having perhaps the most important and outstanding athlete in the region, Édgar Rentería, St. Louis Cardinals hall of famer, in addition to other successful Major League players and even world champions with the Colombia national baseball team at the already extinct Amateur World Series such as Orlando Cabrera, Petaca Rodríguez, Orlando RamíOn the other hand, soccer is another sport that grew significantly to become one of the most popular sports in this Caribbean area, the second most popular sport now, with teams such as Junior de Barranquilla, Unión Magdalena, Real Cartagena or Jaguares de Córdoba competing in the first and second divisions of the country. The Caribbean region has been the birthplace of successful soccer players, many of them world-renowned such as Carlos Valderrama, Radamel Falcao, Teófilo Gutiérrez, and Carlos Bacca.
The region is also known for its love of combat sports. Boxing is a popular sport in certain areas and the region has given rise to numerous world champions, such as Antonio Cervantes, Rodrigo Valdez and Miguel "Happy" Lora. In some municipalities of Urabá, it is the most popular sport above baseball and soccer, although the latter sports are dominant in almost the entire subregion. Traditionally alongside with baseball, it was one of the two most popular sports, but its popularity declined over the years, and soccer grew immensely in the Caribbean region.
Music and dance
The most popular local rhythms are the cumbia and vallenato however, there is a great musical influence from the rest of the Caribbean nations with Salsa, merengue, more recently reggaeton and many Afro-Caribbean rhythms. This influence also developed the Champeta which has similarities with reggaeton. Other genres include porro.Traditional dances are mostly of Afro-Colombian origin with the influence in cumbia and the mapalé.