Viedma

Argentina
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Viedma, city, capital of Río Negro provincia (province), south-central Argentina. It lies along the western bank of the Negro River 20 miles (32 km) from the river’s mouth at the Atlantic Ocean, opposite Carmen de Patagones in Buenos Aires province.

A fort called Mercedes de Patagones, built there in 1779 by the explorer Francisco de Viedma, was the capital of the Patagonian territory until the Río Negro national territory was set up in 1884. In 1955, with the creation of Río Negro province, Viedma became the provincial capital. The agricultural potential of the city’s environs, long stymied by occasional inundation from the Negro River, was enhanced after 1970 with the assistance of international funds. In 1985 President Raúl Alfonsín announced that he wanted to move the Argentine capital from Buenos Aires to Viedma by 1990. However, plans to do so were indefinitely postponed. Viedma received its present name in 1878. Pop. (2001) 46,948; (2010 est.) 53,400.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Kenneth Pletcher.