San Mateo is a town and municipality in the Northern Boyaca Province, part of the Colombian department of Boyaca. The urban centre is located at an altitude of 2,500 metres (8,200 ft) in the Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes. San Mateo borders Guacamayas, Panqueba and El Cocuy in the east, Boavita in the west, Macaravita, Santander in the north and La Uvita in the south.
Before 1914, San Mateo was called La Capilla. It received its present name honouring the San Mateo field, where Antonio Ricaurte, hero of the Independence of Colombia died for the fatherland.
The history of San Mateo is not well documented. The foundation of the town has been attributed by Ramon Correa to Archbishop of Bogota Antonio Caballero y Gongora on September 21, 1773, while Caballero was working in Cordoba, Spain. Little data exists in the archives for the tumultuous period of civil wars of the republican era.
The symbol of San Mateo is the typical Colombian fruit chirimoya.
The economy of San Mateo is centered around agriculture with potatoes, maize, beans, wheat, tobacco, pea and coffee as main products cultivated. The municipality also has livestock farming and mining activities of sand, gravel and carbon.
Central square
Central square and church
Carbon mining
Livestock farming
Landscape around San Mateo