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Cafayate

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Cafayate ( Spanish pronunciation: [kafaˈʎate] ) is a town located at the central zone of the Valles Calchaquíes in the province of Salta , Argentina. It sits 1,683 metres (5,522 ft) above mean sea level , at a distance of 189 kilometres (117 mi) from Salta City and 1,329 kilometres (826 mi) from Buenos Aires . It has about 12,000 inhabitants (2001 census [ INDEC ] ).

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7-578: The town is an important tourist centre for exploring the Calchaquíes valleys, and because of the quality and originality of the wines produced in the area. The town was founded in 1840 by Manuel Fernando de Aramburu , at the site of a mission. In 1863 the Cafayate Department was created, of which Cafayate is the capital. The Cafayates were a tribe of the Diaguita - Calchaquí group, which, together with

14-437: Is not paved and should be avoided during the raining season). Other points of interest from Cafayate include Molinos, Tolombón and San Isidro ranch. The town of Cafayate is an attraction by itself, with its laid-back rhythm, colonial style, and wine cellars open to the public. [1] Manuel Fernando de Aramburu Manuel Fernando de Aramburú y Frías (1770 – September 1843) was a Río de la Plata colonel who fought for

21-725: The royalists during the Argentine War of Independence . Fernando de Aramburú was born in San Carlos , in the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata in 1770. He was educated in Spain, where he joined the army, and subsequently returned to Río de la Plata at the end of the 18th century, settling in Buenos Aires , and then in 1803 returned to Salta . In 1806 he joined the forces of his province, and accompanied

28-524: The area is torrontés . Most wine-cellars around the town host free guided tours. Many of the most impressive sights in the Valley of the Río las Conchas (Quebrada de Cafayate) are along the paved, 183-kilometres-long National Route 68 that goes from Salta to Cafayate. National Route 40 goes for 165 kilometres from Cafayate to Cachi , another of the most visited points in the area (please note that this stretch of RN40

35-630: The related Tolombón , inhabited the Valles Calchaquíes prior to the arrival of the Spanish Conquistadores . Their language was known as Cacán . Like other Diaguita tribes, they had recently fallen under the influence of the Incas , after a prolonged resistance. They later mounted a fierce resistance to the Spaniards. Even though most agree that the root of Cafayate is Quechua , the meaning of

42-578: The term is disputed. Some claim it to mean "Box of Water", others to be a deformation of Capac-Yac ("Great Lake") or Capac-Yaco ("Great Chief" or "Wealthy People"). Another Cacán version understands it as "Grave of Sorrows". The wine production is most important in the Valles Calchaquíes. The wines produced in the region benefit from the low-humidity mild weather of the valleys that receive an average of less than 250 mm of precipitation per year. The most characteristic type of wine cultivated in

49-722: The viceroy Sobremonte in his unsuccessful campaign to reconquer Buenos Aires, during the British invasions of the River Plate . In 1810, he supported the May Revolution and voted in favour of the recognition of the Primera Junta in the open council held in Salta. In 1815 he formed a cavalry squad in San Carlos, with which he opened a new front in the interior of the province, fighting against

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