El Banco, city, northern Colombia, at the junction of the Magdalena and César rivers. The conquistador Gonzalo Jiménez de Quezada arrived at the site in 1537 and found the Indian village of Sompallón; he called it Barbudo (“Bearded One”) because of its bearded chief. In 1544 Alonzo de San Martín renamed it Tamalameque (now the name of a town a few miles to the southeast). In 1749 José Domingo Ortiz, a freed black slave carrying a statue of the Virgin Mary, led a group of settlers to the locality that became known as Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria de El Banco (“Our Lady of Candlemas of the Riverbank”). Fishing and stock raising are the chief occupations, although small factories produce mattresses and brooms. Pop. (2003 est.) 52,643.