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History
THE FIRST SETTLERS
Travel Information Peru.
The first settlers
reached Peru some 20,000
years ago. They brought
stone tools and were
hunter-gatherers, living
off game and fruit. Some
of them settled in
Paccaicasa, Ayacucho.
The most ancient
Peruvian skeletal
remains found to date
(7000 BC) show the
ancient settlers had
broad faces, pointed
heads and stood 1.60
meters tall. The early
Peruvians left examples
of cave paintings at
Toquepala (Tacna, 7600
BC) and houses in Chilca
(Lima, 5800 BC).
The process of
domesticating plants was
to lay the foundations
for organized
agriculture and the
construction of villages
and ceremonial sites. As
the regional cultures
gradually integrated,
new techniques surfaced
such as textile weaving,
metallurgy and
jewelsmithy, giving rise
to advanced cultures.
The Pre-Incas Cultures
Over the course of 1400
years, pre-Inca cultures
settled along the
Peruvian coast and
highlands. The power and
influence of some
civilizations was to
hold sway over large
swaths of territory,
which during their
decline, gave way to
minor regional centers.
Many of them stood out
for their ritual pottery,
their ability to adapt
and superb management of
their natural resources;
a vast knowledge from
which later the Inca
empire was to draw.
The first Peruvian
civilization settled in
Huantar (Ancash) in
around (1200 - 1000 BC).
The power of the
civilization, based on a
theocracy, was centered
in the Chavin de Huantar,
temple, whose walls and
galleries were filled
with sculptures of
ferocious deities with
feline features.
The Paracas culture (200
AD - 600 BC) rose to
power along the south
coast, and was to craft
superb skills in textile
weaving.
The north coast was
dominated by the Moche
civilization (200 AD -
600 BC). The culture was
led by military
authorities in the
coastal valleys, such as
the Lord of Sipan. The
Moche pots which
featured portraits, and
their iconography in
general were
surprisingly detailed
and showed great skill
in design.
The highlands saw the
rise of the Tiahuanaco
culture (200 AD) based
in the Collao region (which
covered parts of modern-day
Bolivia and Chile). The
Tiahuanaco were to
bequeath a legacy of
agricultural terracing
and the management of a
variety of ecological
zones.
The Nasca culture (300
AD - 900 BC) were able
to tame the coastal
desert by bringing water
through underground
aqueducts. They carved
out vast geometric and
animal figures on the
desert floor, a series
of symbols believed to
form part of an
agricultural calendar
which even today baffles
researchers.
The Wari culture (600
AD) introduced urban
settlements in the
Ayacucho area and
expanded its influence
across the Andes.
The refined Chimu
culture (1100 - 1500)
crafted gold and other
metals into relics and
built the mud-brick
citadel of Chan Chan,
near the northern
coastal city of
Trujillo.
The Chachapoyas culture
(800 AD) made the best
possible use of arable
land and built their
constructions on top of
the highest mountains in
the northern cloud
forest. The vast Kuelap
fortress is a fine
example of how they
adapted to their
environment.
The Incas
The Inca empire (1200 -
1500 BC) was possibly
the most organized
civilization in South
America. Their economic
system, distribution of
wealth, artistic
manifestations and
architecture impressed
the first of the Spanish
chroniclers.
The Incas worshipped the
earth goddess Pachamama
and the sun god, the
Inti. The Inca sovereign,
lord of the
Tahuantinsuyo, the Inca
empire, was held to be
sacred and to be the
descendant of the sun
god. Thus, the legend of
the origin of the Incas
tells how the sun god
sent his children Manco
Capac and Mama Ocllo (and
in another version the
four Ayar brothers and
their wives) to found
Cuzco, the sacred city
and capital of the Inca
empire.
The rapid expansion of
the Inca empire stemmed
from their extraordinary
organizational skills.
Communities were grouped,
both as families and
territorially, around
the ayllu, their corner
of the empire, and even
if villagers had to move
away for work reasons,
they did not lose their
bond to the ayllu. The
Inca moved around large
populations, either as a
reward or punishment,
and thus consolidated
the expansion while
drawing heavily from the
knowledge of the
cultures that had
flourished prior to the
Incas.
The Inca's clan was the
panaca, made up of
relatives and
descendants, except for
the one who was the
Inca's successor, who
would then form his own
panaca. Sixteenth-century
Spanish chroniclers
recorded a dynasty of 13
rulers, running from the
legendary Manco Capac
down to the
controversial Atahualpa,
who was to suffer death
at the hands of the
Spanish conquerors.
The Tahuantinsuyo
expanded to cover part
of what is modern-day
Colombia to the north,
Chile and Argentina to
the south and all of
Ecuador and Bolivia.
The members of the
panaca clans were Inca
nobles, headed by the
Inca sovereign. The
power of the clans and
the Inca was tangible in
every corner of the
empire, but the might of
the Incas reached its
peak in the architecture
of Cuzco: the Koricancha
or Temple of the Sun,
the fortresses of
Ollantaytambo and
Sacsayhuaman, and above
all the citadel of Machu
Picchu.
The encounter between
two worlds
The encounter between
the Inca culture and
Hispanic culture got
underway as a result of
the Spanish conquest in
the early sixteenth
century. In 1532, the
troops of Francisco
Pizarro captured Inca
ruler Atahualpa in the
northern highland city
of Cajamarca. The
indigenous population
was to dwindle during
the first few decades of
Spanish rule, and the
Vice-regency of Peru was
created in 1542 after a
battle between the
conquerors themselves
and the Spanish Crown.
Spain's foothold in the
New World was
consolidated in the
sixteenth century when
Viceroy Francisco de
Toledo laid down a set
of rules governing the
colonial economy: the
mita system used
indigenous labor to
operate the mines and
produce arts and crafts.
These activities,
together with a monopoly
over trade, formed the
basis of the colonial
economy. But the
changeover in the
dynasty and the Borbon
reforms in the
eighteenth century
sparked dissent among
many social sectors. The
main indigenous uprising
was led by Tupac Amaru
II, which was to set
rolling the Creole
movement that led to
independence of Hispanic
America from the Spanish
crown in the early
nineteenth century.
Until the seventeenth
century, the Peruvian
vice-regency covered an
area stretching from
Panama down to Tierra
del Fuego.
The missionary work of
the Catholic priests
blended with ancient
Andean beliefs, forging
a fusion of beliefs that
still exists today. The
Spaniards also brought
along African slaves,
who together with
Spaniards and the
indigenous population,
form part of the social
and racial fabric of
Peru.
During the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries,
Peruvian intellectual
writings and colonial
art contributed to
Spanish tradition
The birth of the
Peruvian State
Peru was declared an
independent nation by
Jose de San Martin in
1821, and in 1824 Simon
Bolivar put an end to
the War of Independence.
However, despite efforts
to organize the young
Peruvian republic, in
the nineteenth century
the country had to face
up to the cost of the
struggle: a tough
economic crisis and a
tradition of military
strongmen who gave
civilians little chance
to govern.
By 1860, thanks to
income from guano,
cotton and sugar, Peru
was able to do without
enforced labor imposed
on the indigenous
population and African
slaves alike. Chinese
and European immigrants
swelled the workforce
and integrated with
Peru's society. The
country was linked up by
a railway network, and
during the mandate of
President Manuel Pardo,
Peru organized its first
civilian government. The
first Japanese
immigrants were to
arrive at the end of the
nineteenth century.
But in 1879, the country
found itself at war with
Chile. Peru was defeated
and left bankrupt. After
another spell of
military regimes, Peru
returned to civilian
rule, giving rise to a
time called "the
Aristocratic Republic".
The economy was
dominated by the land-owning
elite, and an export-oriented
model imposed. The
success of the rubber
boom lent fresh splendor
to the myth of El
Dorado.
Peru Today
The early part of the
twentieth century was
marked by a drawn-out
civilian dictatorship
headed by President
Augusto B. Leguia. The
project to modernize the
country, creating works
for a New Fatherland
left the State heavily
in debt and unable to
deal with the 1929 crash.
It was also a time of
intellectual creativity,
symbolized by the
founder of the APRA
party, Victor Raul Haya
de la Torre and Jose
Carlos Mariategui, the
father of Socialist
beliefs in Peru and the
center of intellectual
and artistic thinking in
the country during his
short life.
After the fall of Leguia,
military regimes once
again rose to the
forefront, despite
apparently having run
their course with the
presidencies of Prado in
1939 and Bustamante y
Rivero in 1945; but in
1948 a new military
government was formed by
Manuel A. Odria. Over
the next eight years,
major public works were
built amidst severe
political repression.
Peru, which has made
major efforts to forge
friendly relations with
neighboring countries,
has managed to overcome
long-running border
conflicts. Navigation
conditions along the
Amazon River led to
agreements with Brazil,
until in 1909 the
frontier between the two
nations was finally
established. After
lengthy debate, the
border treaty with
Colombia was approved by
Congress in 1927, and
Colombians were granted
an access route to the
Amazon River. In 1929,
after border disputes
with Chile resulting
from armed conflict, the
will to improve
relations led both
nations to sign a treaty
whereby the city of
Tacna was returned to
Peru.
The border with Bolivia
was marked by mutual
accord in 1932. Finally,
after several armed
conflicts and diplomatic
controversies with
Ecuador, Peru in 1999
managed to get the 1942
Rio Protocol to prevail,
closing the final
chapter of the dispute
over the territory
within the Cordillera
del Condor mountain
range, shoring up Peru's
relations with Ecuador.
In 1968, the armed
forces staged a coup
d'etat and overthrew
then-President Fernando
Belaunde. The first few
years of the military
regime stood out from
other dictatorships in
Latin America in that
Peru's military had
socialist sympathies.
Led by General Juan
Velasco, the military
regime expanded the role
of the State in a bid to
solve the problems that
had impoverished the
country. Thus the State
nationalized the oil
industry, the media and
carried out an agrarian
reform. Velasco was
replaced by General
Francisco Morales-Bermudez,
who bowed to public
pressure and called for
a Constituent Assembly.
Belaunde was re-elected
in 1980, but the deep-lying
poverty spurred the
birth of two
insurgencies which
unleashed a wave of
violence for over a
decade. After the
government of Alan
Garcia (1985-1990),
Alberto Fujimori was
elected president in
1990, but shut down
Congress in 1992 and
decreed an emergency
government. He was re-elected
in 1995 and 2000, but
public discontent forced
him to call fresh
elections for 2001.
Valentin Paniagua was
then chosen to head a
caretaker government. In
July 2001, Dr. Alejandro
Toledo Manrique took
office as the
Constitutional President
of the Republic of Peru.
The current
constitutional president
of Peru is Alan Garcia
Pérez (2006-2011). |