Sucre Department

Department of Colombia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sucre (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈsukɾe]) is a department in the Caribbean Region of Colombia. The department ranks 27th by area, 10,670 km2 (4,120 sq mi) and it has a population of 904,863, ranking 20th of all the 32 departments of Colombia. Sucre is bordered by the Caribbean on the northwest; by Bolívar Department on the east and by Córdoba Department on the west.

Quick facts Departamento de Sucre, Country ...
Sucre Department
Departamento de Sucre
Boat racing in Tolú
Boat racing in Tolú
Flag of Sucre Department
Coat of arms of Sucre Department
Sucre shown in red
Sucre shown in red
Topography of the department
Topography of the department
Coordinates: 9°18′N 75°24′W
Country Colombia
RegionCaribbean Region
EstablishedAugust 18, 1966
CapitalSincelejo
Largest citySincelejo
Government
  GovernorLucy Ines García Montes (2024-2027)
Area
  Total
10,917 km2 (4,215 sq mi)
  Rank27th
Population
 (2026)[1]
  Total
1,047,052
  Rank21st
  Density95.910/km2 (248.41/sq mi)
GDP
  TotalCOP 11,516 billion
(US$ 2.7 billion)
Time zoneUTC-05
ISO 3166 codeCO-SUC
Municipalities26
HDI0.764[3]
high · 19th of 33
Websitewww.sucre.gov.co
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Sucre was named in honor of the Independence hero Antonio José de Sucre who was quoted by the founders of this department in reference to Simón Bolívar's death as saying "They have killed my heart", expression said while cruising the territory of the present day Sucre Department.

As of 2026, the Sucre Department has an estimated population of 1,047,052, of which 331,045 are in the department capital Sincelejo, according to the DANE projections.

History

Pre-Columbian

Before the Spanish Conquest, the land comprising the department of Sucre was mainly inhabited by two groups of indigenous people the Zenú and the Turbacos. The Zenú language was perhaps part of the Chibchan language family by the Arhuacos branch. The Turbaco people were part of the Cariban language family and they controlled the area adjacent to the Gulf of Morrosquillo. The Zenú people by the Finzenú and Panzenú branches controlled the rest of the territory, which used to be part of a bigger territory along the current department of Córdoba and parts of Bolívar and Antioquia sometimes known as Zenú kingdom or Zenú nation.

The area adjacent to the coast was inhabited by the Turbaco people, and it was the border lands of the Caribs' territories in the Caribbean Coast of Colombia. This specific part of the Caribbean included the coasts of the present-day departments of Magdalena, Atlántico, and Bolívar.

The Zenú engineers were able to develop a complicated hydraulic infrastructure in the basin of the San Jorge river they also worked in the basin of the Sinú river in lands of the Córdoba Department involving flood control works as well as drainage and irrigation systems.[4]

Colonization

The first Spanish conquerors that sighted to the coastline of the present day Sucre Department were Alonso de Ojeda, Juan de la Cosa, Rodrigo de Bastidas and Francisco Cesar around 1499.

The conquerors thought the territory to be rich in precious metals since, but soon they would find out they were wrong about that. This situation led to the encomenderos to employ the indigenous workforce almost exclusively for cattle rising on the northern areas.

The territory had been under the tutelage of the government settled in Cartagena – except a brief period of time when it was under the jurisdiction of the central government in Bogotá – this control was effective by several denominations while the country evolved from its colonial institutions until its final republican form in 1886 and until the establishment of Sucre as a department independent from Bolivar.

More information Date, Territory ...
Date Territory
1535 Province of Cartagena (art of the Audience of Panama)
17th-18th centuries Province of Cartagena (Part of the New Kingdom of Granada)
1810–1821 Department of Cundinamarca (Part of the Gran Colombia)
1821–1829 Department of Magdalena (Part of the Gran Colombia)
1830–1858 Province of Cartagena(Part of the Republic of New Granada)
1858–1863 Sovereign State of Bolívar (Part of the Granadine Confederation)
1863–1886 Sovereign State of Bolívar (Part of the United States of Colombia)
1886–1966 Departamento de Bolivar (Part of the Republic of Colombia)
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Modern history

In 1963, the Second Assembly of Municipalities created the Department of Sucre. People vouched for its creation after a campaign led by CorpoSucre. On July 28, 1966, the Senate of Colombia started a debate on the creation of the department and on August 18 of the same year approved its creation under the 47 Law of 1966 sanctioned by the then-president of Colombia, Carlos Lleras Restrepo.

Geography

Administrative Divisions

Provinces

Sucre is subdivided into 5 regions or provinces[citation needed]:

Municipalities

Map of Municipalities in the Sucre Department.
More information Municipality, Population ...
Municipalities of Sucre Department by population 2026, birth and death rate 2025
Municipality Population [5] Birth rate [6] Death rate [7] Natural growth
Buenavista 12,308 6.9 4.9 2.0
Caimito 18,039 6.7 2.7 4.0
Chalán 4,929 9.5 4.3 5.2
Colosó 10,421 6.4 5.1 1.3
Corozal 79,231 7.4 4.8 2.6
Coveñas 22,482 9.1 3.5 5.6
El Roble 10,654 8.9 5.7 3.2
Galeras 25,942 7.6 3.7 3.9
Guaranda 19,906 11.8 3.8 8.0
La Unión 14,349 7.9 3.7 4.2
Los Palmitos 26,166 8.1 4.2 3.9
Majagual 40,840 10.4 3.6 6.8
Morroa 17,508 8.6 3.5 5.1
Ovejas 24,693 7.3 5.3 2.0
Palmito 16,607 8.1 2.8 5.3
Sampués 54,674 8.5 3.5 5.0
San Benito Abad 32,596 7.5 3.5 4.0
San Juan Betulia 14,937 7.8 4.8 3.0
San Marcos 65,526 9.4 4.8 4.6
San Onofre 53,481 9.4 4.7 4.7
San Pedro 21,251 7.6 4.2 3.4
Sincé 32,944 5.8 5.8 0.0
Sincelejo 331,045 9.4 4.9 4.5
Sucre 34,321 4.8 3.2 1.5
Tolú 38,666 10.2 5.0 5.2
Toluviejo 23,536 8.1 4.8 3.3
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Oceanic areas

The Archipelago of San Bernardo is within the Sucre Department.

A map of Archipelago of San Bernardo

Climate

January through March are dry month of almost no rainfall.[8]

Demography

According to the 2018 population census results, 12% of the population self identifies as indigenous people, gathering 5.5% of the national indigenous population; also, 11% of the population self identifies as black, creole, palenquero or afro-colombian.[9] Venezuelans started to arrive to the department in 2016 and now represent almost 3% of the population, according to the official figures in 2022.[10]

The rest of the population does not declare any ethnicity and are descendants mainly from Spanish, Indigenous and Black people; Arabs started to come in big numbers to Colombia after 1880 and they settled particularly in the Caribbean region of the country, including Sucre, they were mainly Lebanese, Palestinians and Syriacs arrived in smaller numbers, their descendants are estimated to be more than 3 million in the country, their contribution is noticeable in the culture, economy and politics in the Caribbean region.[11]

As of 2022, the population is getting closer to more than 1 million inhabitants as the national and local population growth is propelled by the massive arrival of Venezuelan migrants. During the 80s and 90s the department had high fertility rates and low death rates, in recent years the growth has slowed down as the fertility rate fell below the replacement level and the demographic transition impacts the department.[12]

Almost 32% of the entire population resided in the capital city Sincelejo and 62% of the department population lives in urban areas, specially around the capital city where Corozal, Sampues, Morroa and Los Palmitos are placed, gathering almost half a million people, according to the official population projections.[13]

More information Year, Pop. ...
Historical population
YearPop.±%
1973 411,000    
1985 561,649+36.7%
1990 701,105+24.8%
2005 772,010+10.1%
2018 904,863+17.2%
2026 1,047,052+15.7%
Source:[14]
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More information Year, Average population ...
Year Average population [15] Live births [16] Deaths [17] Natural change Crude birth rate (per 1000) Crude death rate (per 1000) Natural change (per 1000) Total fertility rate
2000 738,069 13,193 2,620 10,573 17.9 3.5 14.4
2001 747,556 13,671 2,419 11,252 18.3 3.2 15.1
2002 756,956 13,311 2,337 10,974 17.6 3.1 14.5
2003 766,160 13,389 2,212 11,177 17.5 2.9 14.6
2004 775,124 14,220 2,493 11,727 18.3 3.2 15.1
2005 783,535 15,530 2,435 13,095 19.8 3.1 16.7
2006 792,200 15,058 2,555 12,503 19.0 3.2 15.8
2007 800,848 15,042 2,798 12,244 18.8 3.5 15.3
2008 809,414 16,021 2,577 13,444 19.8 3.2 16.6 2.4
2009 817,937 15,551 2,817 12,734 19.0 3.4 15.6 2.3
2010 826,411 14,332 2,749 11,583 17.3 3.3 14.0 2.1
2011 834,736 15,481 2,534 12,947 18.5 3.0 15.5 2.3
2012 842,950 15,480 2,837 12,643 18.4 3.4 15.0 2.3
2013 851,157 14,863 3,090 11,773 17.5 3.6 13.9 2.2
2014 859,324 15,090 3,240 11,850 17.6 3.8 13.8 2.2
2015 867,701 14,558 3,460 11,098 16.8 4.0 12.8 2.1
2016 877,397 14,398 3,615 10,783 16.4 4.1 12.3 2.1
2017 888,638 15,467 3,808 11,659 17.4 4.3 13.1 2.2
2018 904,863 15,338 4,042 11,296 17.0 4.5 12.5 2.2
2019 928,362 14,844 4,256 10,588 16.0 4.6 11.4 2.0
2020 953,654 14,094 5,147 8,947 14.8 5.4 9.4 1.9
2021 972,704 14,877 5,770 9,107 15.3 5.9 9.4 1.9
2022 988,782 13,637 4,811 8,826 13.8 4.9 8.9 1.7
2023 1,004,176 11,986 4,672 7,314 11.9 4.7 7.2 1.5
2024 1,019,575 9,537 4,661 4,876 9.4 4.6 4.8 1.2
2025 1,034,102 9,027 4,701 4,326 8.7 4.6 4.1 1.1
2026 1,047,052
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References

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