Tarapacá Department (Peru)
Department of Tarapacá Departamento de Tarapacá | |||||||||
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Department of Peru | |||||||||
1878–1883 | |||||||||
Tarapacá Department in 1894 | |||||||||
Capital | Tarapacá | ||||||||
Demonym | Tarapacan (en) Tarapaqueño/a (es) | ||||||||
Historical era | Prelude to the War of the Pacific | ||||||||
• Established | 17 August 1878 | ||||||||
20 October 1883 | |||||||||
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Today part of | Chile |
Tarapacá was a Department of Peru, which existed between 1878 and 1884, when it was unconditionally ceded to Chile after the War of the Pacific under the Treaty of Ancón.
History
[edit]The department was located in southern Peru, near the Pacific Ocean. It was limited to the north by the Arica Province within Moquegua Department, in the south and east by Bolivia, and on the west by the Pacific Ocean. The curaca (tribal chief) of the coastal region in Tarapacá of the Kingdom of Chucuito was Felipe Lucaya, until the Spanish conquest.
In 1600, parcels Lluta, Arica, Azapa, Tarapacá were handed over to Pedro Mesia Cordova, who then handed over the valleys of Tácana and Sama.
In 1612 Pope Paolo V authorizes the establishment of the Diocese of Arequipa in which were seven jurisdictions including the district of San Marcos Arica comprising the regions of Tacna, Tarata, Sama, Ilabaya, Locumba, Putina and Tarapacá.
By 1777 the village of Arica was composed of Ilo, Tacna, Arica, Iquique, Pica, Ilabaya, Tarata, Codpa.
In 1837, the Peru–Bolivian Confederation established the Litoral Department within South Peru, separating the provinces of Tacna and Tarapacá from the "Departamento de la Ley" (i.e. Arequipa).[1]
In 1841, under Agustín Gamarra's second government a war between Peru and Bolivia took place. Gamarra was seeking to annex the former Upper Peru to Lower Peru, but was defeated at the Battle of Ingavi in 1841 by General José Ballivián. Ballivián's troops occupied Puno, Moquegua, Tacna and Tarapacá, until Peruvian José María Lavaysen's troops from Sama defeated the invading army. In Locumba, Colonel Manuel de Mendiburu also organized forces, as well as Justo Arias Aragüez in 1842.
In 1868, Tarapacá Province was separated from the department of Moquegua under the name of "Litoral Province" on December 1.[2]
On August 17, 1878, the Department of Tarapacá was established, replacing the Litoral Province of the same name.[3] After the War of the Pacific, the territory was occupied by Chile, and the Treaty of Ancón was signed on October 20, 1883. The territory was formally integrated into Chile on October 31, 1884.[4]
Administrative divisions
[edit]Tarapacá was divided into two provinces:
Province | Capital | Districts | Current Administrative Unit |
---|---|---|---|
Tarapacá Province | Tarapacá | Tarapacá, Mamiña, Chiapa, Sibayo and Camiña | Tarapacá Region |
Iquique Province | Iquique | Pisagua, Iquique, Patillos, Pica | Iquique Province |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Peru–Bolivian Law establishing the Litoral Department" (PDF). Congress of Peru. 1837-04-25.
- ^ Balta, José (1868-12-01). "Law title" (PDF). Congress of Peru.
- ^ Ignacio Prado, Mariano (1878-08-17). "Law establishing the Department of Tarapacá" (PDF). Congress of Peru.
- ^ López Pérez, Felipe; Jara Román, Marcelo (2013). Migraciones. Una mirada interdisciplinaria (in Spanish). Universidad Católica de la Santísima Concepción. p. 17. ISBN 978-9563533170.
External links
[edit]- En la Memoria y en la Historia, a paper reflecting on the cultural and historical loss that Peru suffered with the territorial loss of Arica, Iquique and Tarapacá.