- Lara
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estado (state), northwestern Venezuela. It was named for independence hero Gen. Juan Jacinto Lara. Bordered on the north by Falcón, east by Yaracuy, south by Portuguesa and Trujillo, and west by Zulia, the state comprises 7,645 sq mi (19,800 sq km) and lies in the Segovia Highlands, a hilly region plagued by recurring droughts. Subsistence agriculture, the traditional way of life, persists, although the growing of sisal and coffee supplements the cultivation of cacao, corn (maize), potatoes, and tobacco. Goats are important in the north; cattle raising is widespread, especially around Carora. There is a small amount of mining in the state, but the copper mines of Aroa, once owned by Simón Bolívar, have been abandoned. Lara accounts for almost all of Venezuela's sisal; its manufacture into bags, sacks, and cordage is an important industry. The state is traversed by highways that link Barquisimeto, the state capital, with the major urban centres to the northeast. Pop. (2007 est.) 1,795,069.
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Universalium. 2010.