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Peru
History
The
Inca Empire and Spanish Conquest
When
the Spanish landed in 1531, Peru's territory was the nucleus
of the highly developed Inca civilization. Centered at Cuzco,
the Incan Empire extended over a vast region from northern
Ecuador to central Chile. In search of Inca wealth, the
Spanish explorer Francisco Pizarro, who arrived in the
territory after the Incas had fought a debilitating civil
war, conquered the weakened people. The Spanish had captured
the Incan capital at Cuzco by 1533, and consolidated their
control by 1542. Gold and silver from the Andes enriched the
conquerors, and Peru became the principal source of Spanish
wealth and power in South America.
Pizarro
founded Lima in 1535. The viceroyalty established at Lima in
1542 initially had jurisdiction over all of South America
except Portuguese Brazil. By the time of the wars of
independence (1820-24), Lima had become the most
distinguished and aristocratic colonial capital and the
chief Spanish-stronghold in the Americas.
Independence
Peru's
independence movement was led by Jose de San Martin of
Argentina and Simon Bolivar of Venezuela. San Martin
proclaimed Peruvian independence from Spain on July 28,1821.
Emancipation was completed in December 1824, when General
Antonio Jose de Sucre defeated the Spanish troops at
Ayacucho, ending Spanish rule in South America. Spain
subsequently made futile attempts to regain its former
colonies, but in 1879 it finally recognized Peru's
independence.
After
independence, Peru and its neighbors engaged in intermittent
territorial disputes. Chile's victory over Peru and Bolivia
in the War of the Pacific (1879-83) resulted in a
territorial settlement. Following a clash between Peru and
Ecuador in 1941, the Rio Protocol--of which the United
States is one of four guarantors (along with Argentina,
Brazil and Chile)--sought to establish the boundary between
the two countries. Continuing boundary disagreement led to
brief armed conflicts in early 1981 and early 1995, but in
1998 the governments of Peru and Ecuador signed an historic
peace treaty and demarcated the border. In late 1999, the
governments of Peru and Chile likewise implemented the last
outstanding article of their 1929 border agreement.
People
Peru
is the fifth most populous country in Latin America after
Brazil, Mexico, Colombia and Argentina. Rural to urban
migration has been prevalent in recent decades, increasing
the urban population from 35.4% of the total population in
1940 to an estimated 75% today. Approximately 19 cities have
a population of 100,000 or more.
Most
Peruvians are either Spanish-speaking mestizos--a term that
usually refers to a mixture of indigenous and
European/Caucasian--or Amerindians, largely Quechua-speaking
indigenous people. Peruvians of European descent make up
about 15% of the population. There also are small numbers of
persons of African, Japanese, and Chinese ancestry.
Socioeconomic and cultural indicators are increasingly
important as identifiers. For example, Peruvians of
Amerindian descent who have adopted aspects of Hispanic
culture also are considered mestizo. With economic
development, access to education, intermarriage, and
large-scale migration from rural to urban areas, a more
homogeneous national culture is developing, mainly along the
relatively more prosperous coast. Peru's distinct
geographical regions are mirrored in a socioeconomic divide
between the coast's mestizo-Hispanic culture and the more
diverse, traditional Andean cultures of the mountains and
highlands.
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