- Coche Island
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Coche
Sunset at Coche IslandGeography Location Caribbean Sea Coordinates 10°46′36″N 63°56′41″W / 10.77667°N 63.94472°W Area 61 km2 (23.6 sq mi) Length 11 km (6.8 mi) Width 6 km (3.7 mi) Highest elevation 60 m (200 ft) Country State Nueva Esparta State Municipio Villalba Largest city San Pedro de Coche Demographics Population 8,242 (as of 2001-10-21) - This article is about an island. For the Coche language, see Camsá language.
Isla de Coche (Coche Island) is one of three islands forming the Nueva Esparta State of Venezuela, located in the Caribbean between Isla Margarita and the mainland. The other two islands are Isla Margarita, the main island of the state, and Cubagua, the smallest.
Contents
Geography
It covers an area of 55 km² (11 km long by 6 km), with a population of about 8,200 (1999 census). The highest elevation of the island is 60 m above the sea level. The climate is tropic, with an average temperatute of approximately 27 to 38°C.
The island is coincident with the municipality of Villalba, with capital San Pedro de Coche. Other towns on Coche are El Bichar, Guinima, El Amparo, El Guamache and La Uva.
The economy depends mainly on tourism.
History
The island was discovered in 1498 by Christopher Columbus. First efforts to settle Coche was made in the early 16th Century. There was previous population of refugees originating from the city of Nueva Cádiz which was destroyed by a tropical storm on Cubagua Island. All settlers, mostly the pearl daughters, abandoned Isla Coche in 1574.
In the first half of the 20th Century, in Cumaná's library a document, written by a Franciscan monk reported that on Isla Coche a boat was discovered with the embossed inscription[citation needed] "John Bober Polonus, 1726". Polish voyager and writer, Arkady Fiedler, made efforts to find other information about the mysterious John Bober. The result of his search was the novel trilogy: "Wyspa Robinsona" ("The Robinson's Island"), "Orinoko" ("Orinoco") and "Biały Jaguar" ("The White Jaguar").
John (in Polish: Jan) Bober (half-Polish roots) was[citation needed] a settler from Virginia, and after settlers revolted against the English Lord Dunbury was crushed, he escaped from Jamestown, Virginia, on board of a pirate ship. The ship sank near the Venezuelan coast, and only John Bober and two others were caught as slaves by Arawak Indians, captured after a long swim to the shore of Isla Coche. There they spent about three years, between 1725 and 1728. In 1728, a battle took place on Isla Coche between an Indian daughter, who escaped from Margarita, supported by Bober (who supplied guns and taught them how to use them), and the Spanish from Margarita Island. The "Islanders" had won, but didn't stay there because they were afraid of Spanish revenge. They later left La Cocha and sailed to an Arawak's village named Serima, on the right bank of the Orinoco river on the mainland.
The next successful settlement took place in 19th Century, and from this date Coche is still habitated.
Airport
Location City: Isla De Coche, Venezuela
Name: Andres Miguel Salazar Marcano
ICAO: SVIE
Details
Type: Airport (Aerodrome, Airfield)
Latitude: 10°47'40"N (10.794406)
Longitude: 63°58'54"W (-63.981589)
Datum: WGS 1984
Elevation: 10 ft (3 m)
Runways: 1
Longest: 3937 × 98 ft (1200 × 30 m)External links
Coordinates: 10°46′36″N 63°56′41″W / 10.77667°N 63.94472°W
- (English)Airport information found at [as of 28 Aug., 2008]: http://gc.kls2.com/airport/SVIE
Categories:- Islands of Venezuela
- Nueva Esparta
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