Bogota, Rio Bogota

Bogota (also spelled Bogotá) is a city in the province of Rio Bogota, Taatiklatar. It has a population of 829,447 as of the C.Y. 250 census, making it the 4th largest city in the country and the largest in the province. It is located in the extreme southeast corner of Taatiklatar and Rio Bogota, at the mouth of the Rio Bogota, the namesake of the province it is in.

Income
35.9% of Bogota's residents were low-income (per capita income of <$10,000 / year) according to the C.Y. 250 census.

Gender, Sexuality
The city was 54.2% female, 43.4% male and 2.4% other (non-binary, questioning, etc.) according to the C.Y. 250 census. 39% of the city's population were non-heterosexual, and 5.9% were transgender.

Racial demographics
The city was 79.9% Latin American, 9.6% White, 4.7% Black, 2.3% East Asian, 1.7% Arab, 1.6% South Asian, 0.2% Indigenous American and <0.1% Indigenous Oceanian according to the C.Y. 250 census. 18.0% of the city's population said they had mixed racial ancestry.

Language
96% of the city's population were proficient in Spanish, 51% were proficient in English, and 19% were proficient in Taatiklarian according to the C.Y. 250 census.

History
Bogotá was founded in C.Y. 14, in the early days of Nueva España. It was named for Bogotá, Colombia. It remained part of Nueva España until C.Y. 37, when Rio Bogota and Yume, formerly part of Nueva España, were admitted into Taatiklatar after a referendum, due to cultural divides between the mainly Latin American descended people of northern Nueva España and the predominantly Spanish-descended people of the central and southern parts. Parts of the city south of the Rio Bogota river somewhat controversially remained part of Nueva España, and formed the city of Bogota del Sur. Bogotá grew as a center of Mexican and Central American culture on Cyprus in the years afterward, and it is the 4th largest city in Taatiklatar and 9th on Cyprus as a whole today.