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Consequences of the War of the Pacific

The consequences of the War of the Pacific were profound and numerous in the countries involved.

Diplomatic changes edit

After the war, Chile had obtained military hegemony at the Pacific Coast of South America. Chile's expansion was seen with concern across the continent, and Chilean diplomats responded by fomenting rivalries between Chile's neighbors and other South American countries and promoting friendly relationships between countries with disputes with Chile's neighbors. Examples are the Chilean attempts to establish friendly relationships between Ecuador and Colombia, both countries with serious territorial disputes with Peru in the Amazon.

Military co-operation with Ecuador grew considerably, and Chile sent instructors to the military academy in Quito and sold superfluous arms and munitions to Ecuador.[1] Despite Chile's overall good relations with Ecuador, both countries had a minor diplomatic crisis resulting from the capture of the Peruvian torpedo boat Alay in Ecuadorian territorial waters during the war.[2]

Argentina, the only country not at war with Chile despite a common border, had tensions with Chile since but, unlike Peru and Bolivia, successfully maintained peace with Chile but almost fought a war over the border in 1978.

Fate of war loot edit

 
Chilenization of Tacna. Black cross painted on a Peruvian household, despite raising the Chilean flag.

It was only in 2007 that the Chilean government returned almost 4,000 books to Peru's national library, more than a century after they were taken by Chilean soldiers, in the hope of improving the two nations' relations.[3]

Chilean economic boom and decline edit

As the victor and possessor of a new coastal territory following the War of the Pacific, Chile benefited by gaining a lucrative territory with significant mineral income. The national treasury grew by 900% between 1879 and 1902 because of taxes coming from the newly-acquired lands.[4] British involvement and control of the nitrate industry rose significantly,[5] but from 1901 to 1921, Chilean ownership increased from 15% to 51%.[6] The growth of Chilean economy sustained in its saltpetre monopoly[7] and meant that compared to the previous growth cycle (1832–1873), the economy became less diversified and overly dependent on a single natural resource.[8] In addition, Chilean nitrate, used worldwide as fertilizer, was sensitive to economic downturns, as farmers made cuts on fertilizer use one of their earliest economic measures in the face of economic decline.[7] It has been questioned whether or not the nitrate wealth conquered in the War of the Pacific was a resource curse.[9] During the Nitrate Epoch, the government increased public spending but was accused of squandering money.[8]

Rise of Bolivian and Peruvian anti-Chilean sentiment edit

 
Eduardo Abaroa's statue pointing to the sea. The mural reads: "What once was ours, will be ours once again" and "Hold on rotos [Chileans], because here come the Colorados of Bolivia."

Historical and current anti-Chilean resentiment in Bolivia, Peru, and Argentina was caused by the 19th-century Chilean expansionism. The War of the Pacific contributed decisively in the first two of those countries.

In Bolivia, a common political discourse attributes that country's underdevelopment to its loss of seaports in the War of the Pacific becoming a landlocked country.[10] Bolivia lost its Litoral Department and its outlet to the Pacific Ocean, following that war. Currently Chile's huge copper vein in the Atacama Desert, which makes Chile the largest copper exporter in the world, is held in the lands claimed by Bolivia; the same lands lost during the war.

In Peru, a strong anti-Chilean sentiment exists because it lost "a large chunk of its southern territory to Chile" in the War of the Pacific.[11] Peru lost its provinces of Tarapaca and Arica and then suffered the indignity of having its capital, Lima, occupied by Chile at the end of the war and even essentially ransacked.

For Argentina, since they failed to get involved in the conflict and were also colonizing the less inhabited South, mainly in fear of Brazil's possible support for Chile in the war, Chile's victory in the conflict stemmed tensions that Chile was trying to take land from the Argentines. Although that never happened and both finalized their border, both countries remained belligerent and came close to war in 1982. On the other side, Argentina's unsupportive action for Bolivia and Peru also made their relationships very tense, and there is a sense of distrust towards Argentina among many Peruvians and Bolivians.[citation needed]

Rise of superiority ideas edit

During and after the war there was a rise of racial and national superiority ideas among the Chilean ruling class.[12] Chilean historian Gonzalo Bulnes (son of president Manuel Bulnes) once wrote, "What defeated Peru was the superiority of a race and of a history".[13] During the occupation of Tacna and Arica (1884–1929) the Peruvian people and nation were treated in racist and denigrating terms by the Chilean press.[14] During the war Peruvians were disrespectfully referred to as "cholos" (a slur for persons of mixed European and non-European ancestry) by Chilean officers.[15]

Indigenous peoples edit

After the occupation of Lima, Chile diverted part of its war efforts to crush Mapuche resistance in the south.[16] Chilean troops coming from Peru entered Araucanía where they in 1881 defeated the last major Mapuche uprising.[17][18] Chile's newly-acquired Aymara population was seen after the war as a "foreign element" contrasting with the also newly-conquered Mapuches who were seen as "primordial" Chileans.[15] Following the occupation of Lima, Chilean newspapers published extremely patriotic, chauvinist, and expansionistic material.[17] An extreme example of such journalism is Revista del Sur, which stated that firearms obtained in Peru, while useless in the hands of Peruvian "fags" (Spanish: maricas), would be useful by Chileans to "kill indians" (Mapuches).[17]

After the war, the indigenous peoples in Peru became scapegoats in the narratives of Peruvian criollo elites, exemplified in the writing of Ricardo Palma:

The principal cause of the great defeat is that the majority of Peru is composed of that wretched and degraded race that we once attempted to dignify and ennoble. The Indian lacks patriotic sense; he is born enemy of the white and of the man of the coast. It makes no difference to him whether he is a Chilean or a Turk. To educate the Indian and to inspire him a feeling for patriotism will not be the task of our institutions, but of the ages.[19]

Anti-Chinese sentiment in Peru edit

Because the Chinese supported Chile in the conflict, it had stemmed a sense of Sinophobia in Peru, the first of its kind ever existed in Latin America. Armed indigenous peasants sacked and occupied haciendas of landed elite criollo "collaborationists" in the central Sierra, most of whom were of ethnic Chinese descent, and indigenous and mestizo Peruvians murdered Chinese shopkeepers in Lima. In response, the Chinese coolies revolted and even joined the Chilean Army.[20][21] In one 1881 pogrom in the Cañete Valley it is estimated that 500 to 1,500 Chinese were killed.[22] Even in the 20th century, the memory of Chinese support for Chile was so deep that Manuel A. Odría, a dictator of Peru, banned Chinese immigration as a punishment for their betrayal, and Chinese were barred from immigrating to the country until the 1970s.[23] Today, however, Sinophobia has been less relevant, and the Chinese are widely accepted as Peruvian citizens, but distrust of China and the Chinese still remains.

Unrest and war trauma in Peru edit

 
During the occupation of Peru civilians were directly involved in the war. This mural reads: "In this town six compatriots were executed by firing squad and history cannot be changed. Eternal glory to the heroes and martyrs of Quequeña!"

The War of the Pacific also sparked an indigenous peasant guerrilla movement throughout the central Sierra against Chileans and collaborationist landlords. In 1884, Cáceres turned against his former guerrilla allies to defend the old order. In 1886 and 1888, the Cáceres sent troops to the central Sierra to disarm the peasants. The lack of rule of law in central sierra was such that in one particular case, a landowner was able to recover his occupied estate only in 1902 after a massive mobilization of military, police, and gunmen.[20]

Rise of war heroes edit

Eduardo Abaroa edit

Miguel Grau edit

Miguel Grau became an important figure in Peru because of his alleged gallantry during the conflict, especially his treatment of Prat's family and rescue of Chilean sailors in Iquique,[24] which gained him recognition as the Caballero de los Mares ("Gentleman of the Seas").[25][26]

Arturo Prat edit

Overall edit

Bolivia edit

With the loss of sovereign access to the Pacific Ocean in mind, the 1904 Treaty of Peace and Friendship granted Bolivia the right to tax-free transport of goods and duty-free access to northern Chilean ports. It also obliged the Chilean government to build two rail-lines linking La Paz to Antofagasta and Arica.

Despite the concessions, the loss of the litoral (the coast) remains a deeply-emotional and political issue for Bolivians,[10] as was particularly evident during the 2003 natural gas riots. Undeterred by the seaport concessions granted to Bolivia via the 1904 treaty, Bolivian popular opinion still attributes problems to the landlocked condition, and getting a sovereign piece of the seacoast via Chilean land is often seen as the solution to the problems. Numerous Bolivian presidents pressured Chile for sovereign access to the sea. Diplomatic relations with Chile were severed on March 17, 1978 in spite of considerable commercial ties. The leading Bolivian newspaper El Diario featured at least every week an editorial on the subject, and Bolivians annually celebrate a patriotic "Dia del Mar" (Day of the Sea) to remember the crippling loss.[27]

Chile edit

During the war, Chile dropped its claims on more than 1,000,000 km2 (390,000 sq mi) of Patagonia in the 1881 Chile-Argentina treaty to ensure Argentina's neutrality. After the war, the Puna de Atacama dispute grew until 1899 since both Chile and Argentina claimed former Bolivian territories. On August 28, 1929, Chile returned the province of Tacna to Peru. In 1999, Chile and Peru at last agreed to implement the Treaty of Lima (1929) fully by providing Peru with a port in Arica.[28]

Peru edit

According to Bruce W. Farcau, "in Peru, the wounds run less deep than in neighboring Bolivia".[29] After the War of the Pacific, Peru was left without saltpeter production, the Chilean controlled production decreased to 15%, and production controlled by British investors rose to 55%.[30] According to military historian Robert L. Scheina, the Chilean plunder of Peruvian national literary and art treasures contributed to "demands of revenge among Peruvians for decades."[31] Scholar Brooke Larson pointed out that the War of the Pacific was the "first time since independence wars" that "Peru was invaded, occupied and pillaged by a foreign army" and that "no other Andean republic experienced such a costly and humiliating defeat as Peru did in the hands of Chile".[32]

The war and afterward had profound political and social instability in Peru. The war shook the whole social order of Peru: armed indigenous peasants sacked and occupied haciendas of landed elite criollo "collaborationists" in the central Sierra, Chinese coolies revolted and even joined the Chilean Army, indigenous and mestizo Peruvians murdered Chinese shopkeepers in Lima, Peruvian mobs sacked Chiclayo, and different criollo elite remained deeply divided in opposing camps.[20][21] The fear of disorder, opposing factions, and armed peasants was for many Peruvians larger than that of the Chilean invaders.[21] In some cases, the delegations of European countries and of the US provided safety during riots and persecutions.[21]

References edit

  1. ^ Burr , Robert N. 1955. The Balance of Power in Nineteenth-Century South America: An Exploratory Essay. The Hispanic American Historical Review.
  2. ^ Tromben, Carlos (2002), (PDF), International Journal of Naval History, 1 (1), archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-07-27, retrieved 2014-09-25
  3. ^ "Chile returns looted Peru books" BBC News http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7082436.stm
  4. ^ Crow, The Epic of Latin America, p. 180
  5. ^ Foster, John B. & Clark, Brett. (2003). "Ecological Imperialism: The Curse of Capitalism" (accessed September 2, 2005). The Socialist Register 2004, p190–192. Also available in print from Merlin Press.
  6. ^ Salazar & Pinto 2002, pp. 124-125.
  7. ^ a b Brown, J. R. (1963), "Nitrate Crises, Combinations, and the Chilean Government in the Nitrate Age.", The Hispanic American Historical Review, 43 (2): 230–246, doi:10.2307/2510493, JSTOR 2510493
  8. ^ a b Salazar & Pinto 2002, pp. 25–29.
  9. ^ Ducoing Ruiz, C. A.; Miró, M. B. (2012), Avoiding the Dutch disease? The Chilean industrial sector in the nitrate trade cycle. 1870–1938 (PDF)
  10. ^ a b . Council of Hemispheric Affairs. Archived from the original on 12 October 2011.
  11. ^ Lopez, Edison (16 January 2008). "Peru disputes boundary with Chile". USA Today. Lima, Peru. Associated Press. There is strong anti-Chilean sentiment in Peru because the country lost a large chunk of its southern territory to Chile in a war in 1879.
  12. ^ Ericka Beckman Imperial Impersonations: Chilean Racism and the War of the Pacific University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  13. ^ Farcau 2000, p. 169
  14. ^ William E. Skuban Lines in the sand: nationalism and identity on the Peruvian-Chilean frontier page 79:
    "because it is undoubtedly preferable to be Chilean than Peruvian, because has a cleaner and more glorious history, and its better to belong to the phalanx of the conquerors than that of the conquered, because the Chilean race is more virile, valiant, prouder, nobler and more enterprising than the Peruvian race, which due to reasons of climate will always be enervated" Chilean newspaper El Corvo quote in page 80
  15. ^ a b Vergara, Jorge Iván; Gundermann, Hans (2012). "Constitution and internal dynamics of the regional identitary in Tarapacá and Los Lagos, Chile". Chungara (in Spanish). 44 (1). University of Tarapacá: 115–134. doi:10.4067/s0717-73562012000100009.
  16. ^ Velázquez Elizararrás, Juan Carlos (2007), "El problema de los estados mediterráneos o sin litoral en el derecho internacional marítimo. Un estudio de caso: El diferendo Bolivia-Perú-Chile", Anuario Mexicano de Derecho Internacional, 7: 1379–430
  17. ^ a b c Bengoa, José (2000). Historia del pueblo mapuche: Siglos XIX y XX (Seventh ed.). LOM Ediciones. pp. 282–283. ISBN 956-282-232-X.
  18. ^ "Ocupación de la Araucanía: Últimas campañas de ocupación", Memoria chilena, retrieved June 30, 2013
  19. ^ Larson, Brooke. 2004. Trials of Nation Making: Liberalism, Race and Ethnicity in the Andes, 1810–1910. Page 196.
  20. ^ a b c Taylor, Lewis. Indigenous Peasant Rebellions in Peru during the 1880s
  21. ^ a b c d Bonilla, Heraclio. 1978. The National and Colonial Problem in Peru. Past and Present
  22. ^ Tinsman, Heidi (October 2019). "Narrating Chinese Massacre in the South American War of the Pacific". Journal of Asian American Studies. 22 (3): 277–313. doi:10.1353/jaas.2019.0038. S2CID 208688727.
  23. ^ López-Calvo, Ignacio (November 6, 2014). Dragons in the Land of the Condor: Writing Tusán in Peru. University of Arizona Press. ISBN 978-0-8165-3111-0 – via Google Books.
  24. ^ Farcau, Bruce W. (2000). The Ten Cents War: Chile, Peru, and Bolivia in the War of the Pacific, 1879–1884. Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-275-96925-7.
  25. ^ Jose Vargas Valenzuela, Naval Tradition of the Peoples of Bolivia (Editorial Los Amigos del Libro, 1974), 61
  26. ^ "José Puga, "Alistan estreno de filme chileno que hablará de la hidalguía de Miguel Grau" in El Comercio (Peru). 5 March 2009. Accessed 13 October 2011". Elcomercio.pe. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  27. ^ (in Spanish). Bolpress. 15 March 2006. p. 1. Archived from the original on 12 February 2010. Retrieved October 2, 2009.
  28. ^ Dominguez, Jorge et al. 2003 Boundary Disputes in Latin America. United States Washington, D.C.: Institute of Peace.
  29. ^ Farcau 2000, p. 2
  30. ^ British Influence on the Salt: The Origin, Nature and Decline, Soto Cárdenas, Alejandro. Santiago : Ed. University of Santiago de Chile, 1998. Page 50
  31. ^ Scheina 2003, p. 388
  32. ^ Larson, Brooke. 2004. Trials of Nation Making: Liberalism, Race and Ethnicity in the Andes, 1810–1910. Page 178.

Bibliography edit

consequences, pacific, consequences, pacific, were, profound, numerous, countries, involved, contents, diplomatic, changes, fate, loot, chilean, economic, boom, decline, rise, bolivian, peruvian, anti, chilean, sentiment, rise, superiority, ideas, indigenous, . The consequences of the War of the Pacific were profound and numerous in the countries involved Contents 1 Diplomatic changes 2 Fate of war loot 3 Chilean economic boom and decline 4 Rise of Bolivian and Peruvian anti Chilean sentiment 5 Rise of superiority ideas 6 Indigenous peoples 7 Anti Chinese sentiment in Peru 8 Unrest and war trauma in Peru 9 Rise of war heroes 9 1 Eduardo Abaroa 9 2 Miguel Grau 9 3 Arturo Prat 10 Overall 10 1 Bolivia 10 2 Chile 10 3 Peru 11 References 12 BibliographyDiplomatic changes editAfter the war Chile had obtained military hegemony at the Pacific Coast of South America Chile s expansion was seen with concern across the continent and Chilean diplomats responded by fomenting rivalries between Chile s neighbors and other South American countries and promoting friendly relationships between countries with disputes with Chile s neighbors Examples are the Chilean attempts to establish friendly relationships between Ecuador and Colombia both countries with serious territorial disputes with Peru in the Amazon Military co operation with Ecuador grew considerably and Chile sent instructors to the military academy in Quito and sold superfluous arms and munitions to Ecuador 1 Despite Chile s overall good relations with Ecuador both countries had a minor diplomatic crisis resulting from the capture of the Peruvian torpedo boat Alay in Ecuadorian territorial waters during the war 2 Argentina the only country not at war with Chile despite a common border had tensions with Chile since but unlike Peru and Bolivia successfully maintained peace with Chile but almost fought a war over the border in 1978 Fate of war loot editSee also Chilenization of Tacna Arica and Tarapaca and Patriotic Leagues Southern Cone nbsp Chilenization of Tacna Black cross painted on a Peruvian household despite raising the Chilean flag It was only in 2007 that the Chilean government returned almost 4 000 books to Peru s national library more than a century after they were taken by Chilean soldiers in the hope of improving the two nations relations 3 Chilean economic boom and decline editSee also Economic history of Chile As the victor and possessor of a new coastal territory following the War of the Pacific Chile benefited by gaining a lucrative territory with significant mineral income The national treasury grew by 900 between 1879 and 1902 because of taxes coming from the newly acquired lands 4 British involvement and control of the nitrate industry rose significantly 5 but from 1901 to 1921 Chilean ownership increased from 15 to 51 6 The growth of Chilean economy sustained in its saltpetre monopoly 7 and meant that compared to the previous growth cycle 1832 1873 the economy became less diversified and overly dependent on a single natural resource 8 In addition Chilean nitrate used worldwide as fertilizer was sensitive to economic downturns as farmers made cuts on fertilizer use one of their earliest economic measures in the face of economic decline 7 It has been questioned whether or not the nitrate wealth conquered in the War of the Pacific was a resource curse 9 During the Nitrate Epoch the government increased public spending but was accused of squandering money 8 Rise of Bolivian and Peruvian anti Chilean sentiment edit nbsp Eduardo Abaroa s statue pointing to the sea The mural reads What once was ours will be ours once again and Hold on rotos Chileans because here come the Colorados of Bolivia See also Anti Chilean sentiment Historical and current anti Chilean resentiment in Bolivia Peru and Argentina was caused by the 19th century Chilean expansionism The War of the Pacific contributed decisively in the first two of those countries In Bolivia a common political discourse attributes that country s underdevelopment to its loss of seaports in the War of the Pacific becoming a landlocked country 10 Bolivia lost its Litoral Department and its outlet to the Pacific Ocean following that war Currently Chile s huge copper vein in the Atacama Desert which makes Chile the largest copper exporter in the world is held in the lands claimed by Bolivia the same lands lost during the war In Peru a strong anti Chilean sentiment exists because it lost a large chunk of its southern territory to Chile in the War of the Pacific 11 Peru lost its provinces of Tarapaca and Arica and then suffered the indignity of having its capital Lima occupied by Chile at the end of the war and even essentially ransacked For Argentina since they failed to get involved in the conflict and were also colonizing the less inhabited South mainly in fear of Brazil s possible support for Chile in the war Chile s victory in the conflict stemmed tensions that Chile was trying to take land from the Argentines Although that never happened and both finalized their border both countries remained belligerent and came close to war in 1982 On the other side Argentina s unsupportive action for Bolivia and Peru also made their relationships very tense and there is a sense of distrust towards Argentina among many Peruvians and Bolivians citation needed Rise of superiority ideas editDuring and after the war there was a rise of racial and national superiority ideas among the Chilean ruling class 12 Chilean historian Gonzalo Bulnes son of president Manuel Bulnes once wrote What defeated Peru was the superiority of a race and of a history 13 During the occupation of Tacna and Arica 1884 1929 the Peruvian people and nation were treated in racist and denigrating terms by the Chilean press 14 During the war Peruvians were disrespectfully referred to as cholos a slur for persons of mixed European and non European ancestry by Chilean officers 15 Indigenous peoples editAfter the occupation of Lima Chile diverted part of its war efforts to crush Mapuche resistance in the south 16 Chilean troops coming from Peru entered Araucania where they in 1881 defeated the last major Mapuche uprising 17 18 Chile s newly acquired Aymara population was seen after the war as a foreign element contrasting with the also newly conquered Mapuches who were seen as primordial Chileans 15 Following the occupation of Lima Chilean newspapers published extremely patriotic chauvinist and expansionistic material 17 An extreme example of such journalism is Revista del Sur which stated that firearms obtained in Peru while useless in the hands of Peruvian fags Spanish maricas would be useful by Chileans to kill indians Mapuches 17 After the war the indigenous peoples in Peru became scapegoats in the narratives of Peruvian criollo elites exemplified in the writing of Ricardo Palma The principal cause of the great defeat is that the majority of Peru is composed of that wretched and degraded race that we once attempted to dignify and ennoble The Indian lacks patriotic sense he is born enemy of the white and of the man of the coast It makes no difference to him whether he is a Chilean or a Turk To educate the Indian and to inspire him a feeling for patriotism will not be the task of our institutions but of the ages 19 Anti Chinese sentiment in Peru editBecause the Chinese supported Chile in the conflict it had stemmed a sense of Sinophobia in Peru the first of its kind ever existed in Latin America Armed indigenous peasants sacked and occupied haciendas of landed elite criollo collaborationists in the central Sierra most of whom were of ethnic Chinese descent and indigenous and mestizo Peruvians murdered Chinese shopkeepers in Lima In response the Chinese coolies revolted and even joined the Chilean Army 20 21 In one 1881 pogrom in the Canete Valley it is estimated that 500 to 1 500 Chinese were killed 22 Even in the 20th century the memory of Chinese support for Chile was so deep that Manuel A Odria a dictator of Peru banned Chinese immigration as a punishment for their betrayal and Chinese were barred from immigrating to the country until the 1970s 23 Today however Sinophobia has been less relevant and the Chinese are widely accepted as Peruvian citizens but distrust of China and the Chinese still remains Unrest and war trauma in Peru edit nbsp During the occupation of Peru civilians were directly involved in the war This mural reads In this town six compatriots were executed by firing squad and history cannot be changed Eternal glory to the heroes and martyrs of Quequena The War of the Pacific also sparked an indigenous peasant guerrilla movement throughout the central Sierra against Chileans and collaborationist landlords In 1884 Caceres turned against his former guerrilla allies to defend the old order In 1886 and 1888 the Caceres sent troops to the central Sierra to disarm the peasants The lack of rule of law in central sierra was such that in one particular case a landowner was able to recover his occupied estate only in 1902 after a massive mobilization of military police and gunmen 20 Rise of war heroes editEduardo Abaroa edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2014 Miguel Grau edit Miguel Grau became an important figure in Peru because of his alleged gallantry during the conflict especially his treatment of Prat s family and rescue of Chilean sailors in Iquique 24 which gained him recognition as the Caballero de los Mares Gentleman of the Seas 25 26 Arturo Prat edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2014 Overall editBolivia edit With the loss of sovereign access to the Pacific Ocean in mind the 1904 Treaty of Peace and Friendship granted Bolivia the right to tax free transport of goods and duty free access to northern Chilean ports It also obliged the Chilean government to build two rail lines linking La Paz to Antofagasta and Arica Despite the concessions the loss of the litoral the coast remains a deeply emotional and political issue for Bolivians 10 as was particularly evident during the 2003 natural gas riots Undeterred by the seaport concessions granted to Bolivia via the 1904 treaty Bolivian popular opinion still attributes problems to the landlocked condition and getting a sovereign piece of the seacoast via Chilean land is often seen as the solution to the problems Numerous Bolivian presidents pressured Chile for sovereign access to the sea Diplomatic relations with Chile were severed on March 17 1978 in spite of considerable commercial ties The leading Bolivian newspaper El Diario featured at least every week an editorial on the subject and Bolivians annually celebrate a patriotic Dia del Mar Day of the Sea to remember the crippling loss 27 Chile edit See also Chilenization of Tacna Arica and Tarapaca and Patriotic Leagues Southern Cone During the war Chile dropped its claims on more than 1 000 000 km2 390 000 sq mi of Patagonia in the 1881 Chile Argentina treaty to ensure Argentina s neutrality After the war the Puna de Atacama dispute grew until 1899 since both Chile and Argentina claimed former Bolivian territories On August 28 1929 Chile returned the province of Tacna to Peru In 1999 Chile and Peru at last agreed to implement the Treaty of Lima 1929 fully by providing Peru with a port in Arica 28 Peru edit According to Bruce W Farcau in Peru the wounds run less deep than in neighboring Bolivia 29 After the War of the Pacific Peru was left without saltpeter production the Chilean controlled production decreased to 15 and production controlled by British investors rose to 55 30 According to military historian Robert L Scheina the Chilean plunder of Peruvian national literary and art treasures contributed to demands of revenge among Peruvians for decades 31 Scholar Brooke Larson pointed out that the War of the Pacific was the first time since independence wars that Peru was invaded occupied and pillaged by a foreign army and that no other Andean republic experienced such a costly and humiliating defeat as Peru did in the hands of Chile 32 The war and afterward had profound political and social instability in Peru The war shook the whole social order of Peru armed indigenous peasants sacked and occupied haciendas of landed elite criollo collaborationists in the central Sierra Chinese coolies revolted and even joined the Chilean Army indigenous and mestizo Peruvians murdered Chinese shopkeepers in Lima Peruvian mobs sacked Chiclayo and different criollo elite remained deeply divided in opposing camps 20 21 The fear of disorder opposing factions and armed peasants was for many Peruvians larger than that of the Chilean invaders 21 In some cases the delegations of European countries and of the US provided safety during riots and persecutions 21 References edit Burr Robert N 1955 The Balance of Power in Nineteenth Century South America An Exploratory Essay The Hispanic American Historical Review Tromben Carlos 2002 Naval Presence The Cruiser Esmeralda in Panama PDF International Journal of Naval History 1 1 archived from the original PDF on 2014 07 27 retrieved 2014 09 25 Chile returns looted Peru books BBC News http news bbc co uk 2 hi americas 7082436 stm Crow The Epic of Latin America p 180 Foster John B amp Clark Brett 2003 Ecological Imperialism The Curse of Capitalism accessed September 2 2005 The Socialist Register 2004 p190 192 Also available in print from Merlin Press Salazar amp Pinto 2002 pp 124 125 a b Brown J R 1963 Nitrate Crises Combinations and the Chilean Government in the Nitrate Age The Hispanic American Historical Review 43 2 230 246 doi 10 2307 2510493 JSTOR 2510493 a b Salazar amp Pinto 2002 pp 25 29 Ducoing Ruiz C A Miro M B 2012 Avoiding the Dutch disease The Chilean industrial sector in the nitrate trade cycle 1870 1938 PDF a b Bolivia Chile Pacific Access Council of Hemispheric Affairs Archived from the original on 12 October 2011 Lopez Edison 16 January 2008 Peru disputes boundary with Chile USA Today Lima Peru Associated Press There is strong anti Chilean sentiment in Peru because the country lost a large chunk of its southern territory to Chile in a war in 1879 Ericka Beckman Imperial Impersonations Chilean Racism and the War of the Pacific University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Farcau 2000 p 169 William E Skuban Lines in the sand nationalism and identity on the Peruvian Chilean frontier page 79 because it is undoubtedly preferable to be Chilean than Peruvian because has a cleaner and more glorious history and its better to belong to the phalanx of the conquerors than that of the conquered because the Chilean race is more virile valiant prouder nobler and more enterprising than the Peruvian race which due to reasons of climate will always be enervated Chilean newspaper El Corvo quote in page 80 a b Vergara Jorge Ivan Gundermann Hans 2012 Constitution and internal dynamics of the regional identitary in Tarapaca and Los Lagos Chile Chungara in Spanish 44 1 University of Tarapaca 115 134 doi 10 4067 s0717 73562012000100009 Velazquez Elizararras Juan Carlos 2007 El problema de los estados mediterraneos o sin litoral en el derecho internacional maritimo Un estudio de caso El diferendo Bolivia Peru Chile Anuario Mexicano de Derecho Internacional 7 1379 430 a b c Bengoa Jose 2000 Historia del pueblo mapuche Siglos XIX y XX Seventh ed LOM Ediciones pp 282 283 ISBN 956 282 232 X Ocupacion de la Araucania Ultimas campanas de ocupacion Memoria chilena retrieved June 30 2013 Larson Brooke 2004 Trials of Nation Making Liberalism Race and Ethnicity in the Andes 1810 1910 Page 196 a b c Taylor Lewis Indigenous Peasant Rebellions in Peru during the 1880s a b c d Bonilla Heraclio 1978 The National and Colonial Problem in Peru Past and Present Tinsman Heidi October 2019 Narrating Chinese Massacre in the South American War of the Pacific Journal of Asian American Studies 22 3 277 313 doi 10 1353 jaas 2019 0038 S2CID 208688727 Lopez Calvo Ignacio November 6 2014 Dragons in the Land of the Condor Writing Tusan in Peru University of Arizona Press ISBN 978 0 8165 3111 0 via Google Books Farcau Bruce W 2000 The Ten Cents War Chile Peru and Bolivia in the War of the Pacific 1879 1884 Westport CT Praeger Publishers p 74 ISBN 978 0 275 96925 7 Jose Vargas Valenzuela Naval Tradition of the Peoples of Bolivia Editorial Los Amigos del Libro 1974 61 Jose Puga Alistan estreno de filme chileno que hablara de la hidalguia de Miguel Grau in El Comercio Peru 5 March 2009 Accessed 13 October 2011 Elcomercio pe Retrieved 2012 02 28 El dia del mar se recordara con mas que un tradicional desfile civico in Spanish Bolpress 15 March 2006 p 1 Archived from the original on 12 February 2010 Retrieved October 2 2009 Dominguez Jorge et al 2003 Boundary Disputes in Latin America United States Washington D C Institute of Peace Farcau 2000 p 2 British Influence on the Salt The Origin Nature and Decline Soto Cardenas Alejandro Santiago Ed University of Santiago de Chile 1998 Page 50 Scheina 2003 p 388 Larson Brooke 2004 Trials of Nation Making Liberalism Race and Ethnicity in the Andes 1810 1910 Page 178 Bibliography editSalazar Gabriel Pinto Julio 2002 Historia contemporanea de Chile III La economia mercados empresarios y trabajadores LOM Ediciones ISBN 956 282 172 2 Scheina Robert L 2003 Latin America s Wars The age of the caudillo 1791 1899 Brassey s Incorporated ISBN 978 1 57488 450 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Consequences of the War of the Pacific amp oldid 1200600402, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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