- Chats in Jardín
- Chats in Yondó
- Chats in Abejorral
- Chats in San Rafael
- Chats in Nechí
- Chats in Salgar
- Chats in Remedios
- Chats in Támesis
- Chats in Yolombó
- Chats in Cañasgordas
- Chats in Granada
- Chats in San Roque
- Chats in Venecia
- Chats in Guatapé
- Chats in La Pintada
- Chats in Pueblorrico
- Chats in Cocorná
- Chats in Betulia
- Chats in San Vicente
- Chats in Cáceres
- Chats in Mutatá
- Chats in Vigía del Fuerte
- Chats in Gómez Plata
- Chats in Puerto Triunfo
- Chats in Yalí
- Chats in Betania
- Chats in Titiribí
- Chats in Angostura
- Chats in Valparaíso
- Chats in Argelia
- Chats in Entrerríos
- Chats in Valdivia
- Chats in San Jerónimo
- Chats in Nariño
- Chats in San Andrés
- Chats in Caracolí
- Chats in Maceo
- Chats in Caramanta
- Chats in Santo Domingo
- Chats in San José de la Montaña
- Chats in Tarso
- Chats in Ebéjico
- Chats in Sabanalarga
Antioquia is one of the thirty-two departments that make up the Republic of Colombia. Its capital is Medellín, the second most populated city in the country. It is located in the northwest of the country, in the Andean and Caribbean regions, bounded on the north by the Caribbean Sea, Córdoba and Bolívar, on the east by Santander and Boyacá, on the south by Caldas and Risaralda, and on the west by Chocó. With about 6.5 million inhabitants. In 2015 it is the most populated department and with 63 600 km², the sixth largest, surpassed by Amazonas, Vichada, Caquetá, Meta and Guainía.
Its territorial organization comprises nine subregions in a total of 125 municipalities, more than half of the population lives in the metropolitan area of the Aburrá Valley, and its economy generates 13.9% of the Colombian GDP, ranking second after Bogotá. Although before the Spanish conquest there were already indigenous settlements in the territory, and later with the arrival of those towns were founded, the history of the department as a territorial entity began in the year 1569 when it ordered its separation from the Governorate of Popayán. On October 30,1584, Santa Fe de Antioquia, which previously depended on said government, became the capital of the Province of Antioquia, and in 1830, with the disintegration of the republic of Gran Colombia, it re-emerged as a province until 1856, when it was formed in Sovereign State. In 1886 it became the current department with the disappearance of the United States from Colombia.