La Lechuga
La Lechuga is a city in Mexico with a population of about 7.
La Lechuga is a monstrance made between 1700 and 1707 by José de Galaz for the San Ignacio Church of Bogotá, then part of the New Kingdom of Granada. It was paid for by a group of Jesuits, probably in order to hide the gems contained in it from the Spanish Crown. La Lechuga is owned by the Bank of the Republic and is on permanent display at the Miguel Urrutia Art Museum in Bogotá, Colombia.
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About La Lechuga
| Country | Mexico |
| Continent | North America |
| Explore | 05 |
| Population | 7 |
| Local currency | MXN |
| Coordinates | 16.4606, -93.7914 |
| Time zone | America/Mexico_City |
🧭 Facts & curiosities
| Settlement type | Small town |
| Distance to the capital | 654 km · Mexico City |
| Population (Mexico) | #97714 most populated in Mexico |
| Where on Earth | 16°27′38″N · 93°47′29″W |
| Hemisphere | N · W |
| Distance to the equator | 1,832 km |
| Distance to the North Pole | 8,186 km |
| Did you know | More populous than 91% of all places |
| Same latitude as | Huế (Vietnam) |
| Antipode (other side of Earth) | -16.46, 86.21 |
✈️ Distance to major cities
| Los Angeles | 3,127 km |
| New York | 3,300 km |
| São Paulo | 6,784 km |
| London | 8,831 km |
| Paris | 9,075 km |
| Moscow | 10,791 km |