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Maritime history of Chile

The Maritime history of Chile started when Chile gained independence, but traces it origin in the colonial era and has ultimately origin in the seafaring tradition of the Iberian Peninsula, Europe and the Mediterranean as well as from indigenous peoples of Chile.

View of Valparaíso Bay in 1830 before it became a major commercial hub in the South Pacific

Pre–Columbian times edit

 
Reconstruction of a dalca a type of pirogue that were used in Chiloé Archipelago, by both Spaniads and Huilliches who adopted it from the Chono people

In the Chiloé Archipelago a watercraft called "dalca" was of common use in Pre–Columbian times. Dalcas were made of planks and were mainly used for seafaring while wampus were used for navigating rivers and lakes. It is not known what kind of oars early Mapuches presumably used.[1]

Polynesian seafarers edit

In 2007, evidence appeared to have been found that suggested pre-Columbian contact between Polynesians from the western Pacific and the Mapuche people. Chicken bones found at the site El Arenal in the Arauco Peninsula, an area inhabited by Mapuche, support a pre-Columbian introduction of chicken to South America.[2] The bones found in Chile were radiocarbon-dated to between 1304 and 1424, before the arrival of the Spanish. Chicken DNA sequences taken were matched to those of chickens in present-day American Samoa and Tonga; they did not match the DNA of European chickens.[2][3] But, a later report in the same journal, assessing the same mtDNA, concluded that the Chilean chicken specimen clusters with the European/Indian subcontinental/Southeast Asian sequences. Thus it does not support a Polynesian introduction of chickens to South America.[4]

In December 2007, several human skulls with Polynesian features, such as a pentagonal shape when viewed from behind, were found lying on a shelf in a museum in Concepción. These skulls turned out to have come from people of Mocha Island, an island just off the coast of Chile in the Pacific Ocean, today inhabited by Mapuche. Professor Lisa Matisoo-Smith of the University of Otago and José Miguel Ramírez Aliaga of the University of Valparaíso hope to win agreement soon with the locals of Mocha Island to begin an excavation to search for Polynesian remains on the island.[5]

Colonial Chile (1520–1810) edit

In connection to the Conquest of Chile a sequence of maritime expeditions were launched, the first three where; Juan Bautista Pastene (September 1544), Francisco de Ulloa (November 1553 – 1554) and Juan Ladrillero (1557–1558).[6] All these were exploratory expeditions aiming to reach the Strait of Magellan from the Pacific ports of Chile.[6]

Spanish maritime policy edit

In the 16th and 17th century Spain considered the Pacific Ocean a Mare clausum – a sea closed to other naval powers. As the only known entrance from the Atlantic the Strait of Magellan was at times patrolled by fleets sent to prevent entrance of non-Spanish ships. On the western end of the Pacific Ocean the Dutch threatened the Spanish Philippines.[7]

Shipyards in Chile edit

In the 18th century the shipbuilding industry in Valdivia, one of the city's main economic activities, reached its peak building numerous ships including frigates.[8][9] Other shipyards of Chile included those of Concepción and Chiloé Archipelago.[10] The Chiloé shipyards constructed he bulk of the ships in Chile until the mid-18th century.[10] In 1794 a new shipyards was established the mouth of Maule River (present day Constitución).[10] Despite some navigators expressing that Valdivia had better conditions than Guayaquil in Ecuador, this last port was the chief Spanish shipyard in the Pacific.[8][10]

Independence and republic (1810–present) edit

During the later stages of Chile's independence war it was conceived that the country needed a navy to bring under Chilean control areas that could not be reached by land like Chiloé Archipelago and Valdivia. The newly formed Chilean navy was put under command of Lord Cochrane, who introduced British customs. The Chilean navy succeeded in capturing Valdivia and landing a Chilean-Argentine army in Peru for further fight against the royalists.

Later on the Chilean navy saw action in the War of the Confederation, the Chincha Islands War, the War of the Pacific and the 1891 Chilean Civil War. The navy was also instrumental into bringing the Strait of Magellan and Easter Island under Chilean control in 1843 and 1888 respectively.

During the second half of the 19th century the Chilean navy begun a series of explorations towards the Patagonian archipelagoes. These explorations where fueled by several factors including the establishment of Chilean rule in the Strait of Magellan, the increased trade with Europe and border disputes with Argentina in Patagonia.

Chilean Navy put to test at war (1836–1883) edit

War of the Confederation (1836–39) edit

Chincha Islands War (1864–66) edit

War of the Pacific (1879–1883) edit

 
The Naval Battle of Iquique of 1879 shown in the picture is remembered a public holiday each May 21 in Chile, and authorities call May the month of the sea

When the War of the Pacific between Chile and the Bolivia-Peru alliance broke out the few roads and railroad lines, the disputed and nearly waterless and largely unpopulated Atacama Desert turned out to be difficult to occupy. From the beginning naval superiority was critical.[11] Early on Chile blockaded the Peruvian port of Iquique, on April 5.[12] Following a first naval encounter between Chile and Peru in the indecisive Battle of Chipana (April 12, 1879) the Battle of Iquique (May 21, 1879) proved one of the war's most memorable battles of the war as Huáscar engaged and sank the Esmeralda; during the battle, Chilean commander Arturo Prat was fatally shot while attempting to board the Huáscar. In the aftermath, Grau ordered the rescue of the remaining Chilean sailors.[13] Meanwhile, the Independencia chased the schooner Covadonga until the heavier Independencia collided with a submerged rock and sank in the shallow waters near Punta Gruesa. This naval battle gave a tactical victory to Peru as it stopped the blockade of Iquique. Nevertheless, it was a Pyrrhic victory; the loss of the Independencia, one of Peru's most important ships, was a fatal blow.[14]

The Battle of Angamos, on October 8, 1879 proved decisive.[15] In this battle, the Chilean Navy managed to capture the Huáscar after several hours of fierce battle, despite her remaining crew's attempts to scuttle her.[16] Miguel Grau died during the fighting, but his deeds made him a Peruvian national hero.[17] After the loss of the Huáscar, the Peruvian navy still had some successful actions, particularly during the Naval Battle of Arica (February 27, 1880) and the Second Naval Battle of Arica (March 17, 1880),[18] but its remaining units were locked in its main port during the long Blockade of Callao. When the Peruvian capital of Lima fell after the battles of San Juan and Miraflores, the Peruvian naval officers scuttled the entire fleet to prevent its capture by the Chilean forces.[19]

Pacific hegemony (1883–90) edit

In March 1885 Colombia thinned its military presence in Panama by sending troops stationed there to fight rebels in Cartagena.[20][21] These favourable conditions prompted an insurgency in Panama.[20] The United States Navy was sent there to keep order, in light of invoking its obligations according to the treaty being signed in 1846.[20] >

In response to the American intervention, Chile sent the protected cruiser Esmeralda to Panama City, arriving on April 28.[21] The Esmeralda's captain was ordered to stop by any means an eventual annexation of Panama by the United States.[22] According to a U.S. publication in August 1885, right after the Panama events, "[The Esmeralda] could destroy our whole navy, ship by ship and never be touched once."[21]

After navy visits to Easter Island in 1875 and 1887, Chilean navy officer Policarpo Toro managed to negotiate an incorporation of the island into Chile with native Rapanui in 1888. By occupying Easter Island, Chile joined the imperial nations.[23] By 1900 nearly all Pacific islands were in control of Britain, France, United States, Germany, Japan, and Chile.[24]

Polynesian trade and annexation of Easter Island edit

In Oceania, France gained a leading position as imperial power after making Tahiti and New Caledonia protectorates in 1842 and 1853 respectively.[24]

Chile's interest in expanding into the islands of the Pacific Ocean dates to the presidency of José Joaquín Prieto (1831–1841) and the ideology of Diego Portales, who considered that Chile's expansion into Polynesia was a natural consequence of its maritime destiny.[25][A] Nonetheless, the first stage of the country's expansionism into the Pacific began only a decade later, in 1851, when—in response to an American incursion into the Juan Fernández Islands—Chile's government formally organized the islands into a subdelegation of Valparaíso.[27] That same year, Chile's economic interest in the Pacific were renewed after its merchant fleet briefly succeeded in creating an agricultural goods exchange market that connected the Californian port of San Francisco with Australia.[28] By 1861, Chile had established a lucrative enterprise across the Pacific, its national currency abundantly circulating throughout Polynesia and its merchants trading in the markets of Tahiti, New Zealand, Tasmania, Shanghai; negotiations were also made with the Spanish Philippines, and altercations reportedly occurred between Chilean and American whalers in the Sea of Japan.This period ended as a result of the Chilean merchant fleet's destruction by Spanish forces in 1866, during the Chincha Islands War.[29]

Chile's Polynesian aspirations would again be awakened in the aftermath of the country's decisive victory against Peru in the War of the Pacific, which left the Chilean fleet as the dominant maritime force in the Pacific coast of the Americas.[25] Valparaíso had also become the most important port in the Pacific coast of South America, providing Chilean merchants with the capacity to find markets in the Pacific for its new mineral wealth acquired from the Atacama.[30] During this period, the Chilean intellectual and politician Benjamín Vicuña Mackenna (who served as senator in the National Congress from 1876 to 1885) was an influential voice in favor of Chilean expansionism into the Pacific—he considered that Spain's discoveries in the Pacific had been stolen by the British, and envisioned that Chile's duty was to create an empire in the Pacific that would reach Asia.[25] In the context of this imperialist fervor is that, in 1886, Captain Policarpo Toro of the Chilean Navy proposed to his superiors the annexation of Easter Island; a proposal which was supported by President José Manuel Balmaceda because of the island's apparent strategic location and economic value. After Toro transferred the rights to the island's sheep ranching operations from Tahiti-based businesses to the Chilean-based Williamson-Balfour Company in 1887, Easter Island's annexation process was culminated with the signing of the "Agreement of Wills" between Rapa Nui chieftains and Toro, in name of the Chilean government, in 1888.[31] By occupying Easter Island, Chile joined the imperial nations.[23]

By 1900 nearly all Oceania islands were in control of Britain, France, United States, Germany, Japan, Mexico, Ecuador and Chile.[24]

Naval arms race (1890–1914) edit

Naval mutiny of 1931 edit

1960 tsunami edit

On May 22, 1960 the Chilean coast from Mocha Island (38° S)and to Aysén Region (45° S) was devastated by a tsunami triggered by the 1960 Valdivia earthquake. Further north the port of Talcahuano did not suffered any mayor damages, only some flooding. Some tugboats and small sailboats stranded on Rocuant Island.[32]

The small port of Bahía Mansa had all of its new infrastructure destroyed by the tsunami that reached heights of up to 10 m.a.s.l. in that place. The boat Isabella that at was at time in the port lost its anchors.[32]

In Valdivia River and Corral Bay several vessels wrecked due to the earthquake among them Argentina, Canelos, Carlos Haverbeck, Melita and the salvaged remnants of Penco. Canelos was anchored at Corral and filling a cargo of wood and other products destined to northern Chile when the quake struck. Canelos engine was warmed up in view of this events. After hours of drifting around in Corral Bay and Valdivia River the ship wrecked and was abandoned by its crew at 18.00 PM. Two men on board of Canelos died. As of 2000 the remnants of Canelos are still visible. Santiago, another ship anchored at Corral by the time of the quake, managed to leave Corral in a bad state but wrecked off the coast of Mocha Island on May 24.[32]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ According to economist Neantro Saavedra-Rivano: "Of all Latin American countries, Chile has been the most explicit and consistent throughout its history in expressing its vocation as a Pacific nation and acting in accordance with this conception."[26]

References edit

  1. ^ Bengoa 2003, pp. 72–74.
  2. ^ a b Storey, A. A.; Ramirez, J. M.; Quiroz, D.; Burley, D. V.; Addison, D. J.; Walter, R.; Anderson, A. J.; Hunt, T. L.; Athens, J. S.; Huynen, L.; Matisoo-Smith, E. A. (2007). "Radiocarbon and DNA evidence for a pre-Columbian introduction of Polynesian chickens to Chile". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 104 (25): 10335–10339. doi:10.1073/pnas.0703993104. PMC 1965514. PMID 17556540.
  3. ^ Whipps, Heather (June 4, 2007). "Chicken Bones Suggest Polynesians Found Americas Before Columbus". Live Science. Retrieved 2007-06-05.
  4. ^ Gongora, J.; Rawlence, N. J.; Mobegi, V. A.; Jianlin, H.; Alcalde, J. A.; Matus, J. T.; Hanotte, O.; Moran, C.; Austin, J. J.; Ulm, S.; Anderson, A. J.; Larson, G.; Cooper, A. (2008). "Indo-European and Asian origins for Chilean and Pacific chickens revealed by mtDNA". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 105 (30): 10308–10313. doi:10.1073/pnas.0801991105. PMC 2492461. PMID 18663216.
  5. ^ Lawler, Andrew (11 June 2010). "Beyond Kon-Tiki: Did Polynesians Sail to South America?". Science. 328 (5984): 1344–1347. doi:10.1126/science.328.5984.1344. PMID 20538927.
  6. ^ a b Barros, José Miguel (1981). "Expedición al estrecho de Magallanes en 1553: Gerónimo de Vivar y Hernando Gallego" (PDF). Anales del Instituto de la Patagonia. 12: 31–40.
  7. ^ Lytle Schurz, William (1922), "The Spanish Lake", The Hispanic American Historical Review, 5 (2): 181–194, doi:10.2307/2506024, JSTOR 2506024
  8. ^ a b Guarda 1973, pp. 45–47.
  9. ^ Isabel, Montt Pinto (1971). Breve Historia de Valdivia. p. 55.
  10. ^ a b c d León Sáenz, Jorge (2009), "Los astilleros y la indutria matitima en el Pacífico americano: Siglos XVI a XIX", Diálogos, Revista Electrónica de Historia, 10 (1): 44–90
  11. ^ Farcau 2000, p. 65.
  12. ^ López Urrutia, Carlos (2003). La Guerra del Pacífico, 1879–1884. Ristre Editorial. pp. 37–42. ISBN 9788493271336. Retrieved January 17, 2010.
  13. ^ Farcau 2000, p. 74.
  14. ^ Spila, Benedetto (1883). Chile en la guerra del Pacífico. Valparaíso, Chile: Impr. del Nuevo Mercurio. p. 94. Retrieved January 17, 2010.
  15. ^ Luna Vegas, Emilio (1978). Cáceres, genio militar. Peru: Librería Editorial Minerva-Miraflores. p. 19. Retrieved July 22, 2009.
  16. ^ Valdés Vergara, Francisco (1908). Historia de Chile para la enseñanza primaria. California: Sociedad "Imprenta y litografía Universo". p. 319. Retrieved July 22, 2009.
  17. ^ Milla Batres 1994, p. 73
  18. ^ Elías Murguía, Julio J. (1980). Marinos peruanos en Arica. Peru: Instituto de Estudios Histórico-Maritimos del Perú. p. 38. Retrieved July 22, 2009.
  19. ^ Paz Soldán, Juan Pedro (July 1919). "El hundimiento de la Escuadra Peruana – 16 de enero de 1881". El Mercurio Peruano — Revista Mensual de Ciencias Sociales y Letras. III (13). Lima, Perú: 44–47. Retrieved 2011-09-24.
  20. ^ a b c Wicks, Daniel H. (1980). "Dress Rehearsal: United States Intervention on The Isthmus of Panama, 1885". Pacific Historical Review. 49 (4): 581–605. doi:10.2307/3638968. JSTOR 3638968.
  21. ^ a b c Tromben, Captain Carlos (April 2002). (PDF). International Journal of Naval History. 1 (1). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-07-27. Retrieved 2014-10-29.
  22. ^ Sater 1990, p. 52.
  23. ^ a b Sater 1990, p. 53.
  24. ^ a b c Bernard Eccleston, Michael Dawson. 1998. The Asia-Pacific Profile. Routledge. p. 250.
  25. ^ a b c Barros 1970, p. 497.
  26. ^ Saavedra-Rivano 1993, p. 193.
  27. ^ Barros 1970, pp. 213–214.
  28. ^ Barros 1970, p. 213.
  29. ^ Barros 1970, p. 214.
  30. ^ Delsing 2012, p. 56.
  31. ^ See:
  32. ^ a b c Vargas Sáez, Juan Francisco (2000). Historial del Mar de Chile: Algunos Siniestros Marítimos Acaecidos en el Siglo XX (in Spanish). Valparaíso, Chile. pp. 391–398. ISBN 978-956-288-739-7.

Bibliography edit

  • Barros, Mario (1970). Historia Diplomática de Chile (in Spanish) (2 ed.). Santiago: Editorial Andres Bello. ISBN 956-13-0776-6.
  • Bengoa, José (2003). Historia de los antiguos mapuches del sur (in Spanish). Santiago: Catalonia. ISBN 978-956-8303-02-0.
  • Delsing, Riet (2012). "Issues of Land and Sovereignty: The Uneasy Relationship Between Chile and Rapa Nui". In Mallon, Florencia (ed.). Decolonizing Native Histories. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. ISBN 9780822351528.
  • Farcau, Bruce W. (2000). The Ten Cents War, Chile, Peru and Bolivia in the War of the Pacific, 1879–1884. Westport, Connecticut, London: Praeger Publishers. ISBN 978-0-275-96925-7. Retrieved January 17, 2010.
  • Guarda, Gabriel (1973). La economía de Chile Austral antes de la colonización alemana. Valdivia: Universidad Austral de Chile.
  • Milla Batres, Carlos (1994). Enciclopedia biográfica e histórica del Perú: Crónica del Perú republicano : 1800-año 2000 (in Spanish). Editorial Milla Batres. ISBN 978-958-9413-11-1.
  • Saavedra-Rivano, Neantro (1993). "Chile and Japan: Opening Doors through Trade". In Stallings, Barbara; Szekely, Gabriel (eds.). Japan, the United States, and Latin America. London: The Macmillan Press Ltd. ISBN 978-1-349-13130-3.
  • Sater, William (1990). Chile and the United States: Empires in Conflict. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0-8203-1249-5.

maritime, history, chile, started, when, chile, gained, independence, traces, origin, colonial, ultimately, origin, seafaring, tradition, iberian, peninsula, europe, mediterranean, well, from, indigenous, peoples, chile, view, valparaíso, 1830, before, became,. The Maritime history of Chile started when Chile gained independence but traces it origin in the colonial era and has ultimately origin in the seafaring tradition of the Iberian Peninsula Europe and the Mediterranean as well as from indigenous peoples of Chile View of Valparaiso Bay in 1830 before it became a major commercial hub in the South Pacific Contents 1 Pre Columbian times 1 1 Polynesian seafarers 2 Colonial Chile 1520 1810 2 1 Spanish maritime policy 2 2 Shipyards in Chile 3 Independence and republic 1810 present 3 1 Chilean Navy put to test at war 1836 1883 3 1 1 War of the Confederation 1836 39 3 1 2 Chincha Islands War 1864 66 3 1 3 War of the Pacific 1879 1883 3 2 Pacific hegemony 1883 90 3 3 Polynesian trade and annexation of Easter Island 3 4 Naval arms race 1890 1914 3 5 Naval mutiny of 1931 3 6 1960 tsunami 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 BibliographyPre Columbian times edit nbsp Reconstruction of a dalca a type of pirogue that were used in Chiloe Archipelago by both Spaniads and Huilliches who adopted it from the Chono people See also Mapuche history In the Chiloe Archipelago a watercraft called dalca was of common use in Pre Columbian times Dalcas were made of planks and were mainly used for seafaring while wampus were used for navigating rivers and lakes It is not known what kind of oars early Mapuches presumably used 1 Polynesian seafarers edit See also Pre Columbian trans oceanic contact In 2007 evidence appeared to have been found that suggested pre Columbian contact between Polynesians from the western Pacific and the Mapuche people Chicken bones found at the site El Arenal in the Arauco Peninsula an area inhabited by Mapuche support a pre Columbian introduction of chicken to South America 2 The bones found in Chile were radiocarbon dated to between 1304 and 1424 before the arrival of the Spanish Chicken DNA sequences taken were matched to those of chickens in present day American Samoa and Tonga they did not match the DNA of European chickens 2 3 But a later report in the same journal assessing the same mtDNA concluded that the Chilean chicken specimen clusters with the European Indian subcontinental Southeast Asian sequences Thus it does not support a Polynesian introduction of chickens to South America 4 In December 2007 several human skulls with Polynesian features such as a pentagonal shape when viewed from behind were found lying on a shelf in a museum in Concepcion These skulls turned out to have come from people of Mocha Island an island just off the coast of Chile in the Pacific Ocean today inhabited by Mapuche Professor Lisa Matisoo Smith of the University of Otago and Jose Miguel Ramirez Aliaga of the University of Valparaiso hope to win agreement soon with the locals of Mocha Island to begin an excavation to search for Polynesian remains on the island 5 Colonial Chile 1520 1810 editSee also Coastal defence of colonial Chile In connection to the Conquest of Chile a sequence of maritime expeditions were launched the first three where Juan Bautista Pastene September 1544 Francisco de Ulloa November 1553 1554 and Juan Ladrillero 1557 1558 6 All these were exploratory expeditions aiming to reach the Strait of Magellan from the Pacific ports of Chile 6 Spanish maritime policy edit In the 16th and 17th century Spain considered the Pacific Ocean a Mare clausum a sea closed to other naval powers As the only known entrance from the Atlantic the Strait of Magellan was at times patrolled by fleets sent to prevent entrance of non Spanish ships On the western end of the Pacific Ocean the Dutch threatened the Spanish Philippines 7 Shipyards in Chile edit In the 18th century the shipbuilding industry in Valdivia one of the city s main economic activities reached its peak building numerous ships including frigates 8 9 Other shipyards of Chile included those of Concepcion and Chiloe Archipelago 10 The Chiloe shipyards constructed he bulk of the ships in Chile until the mid 18th century 10 In 1794 a new shipyards was established the mouth of Maule River present day Constitucion 10 Despite some navigators expressing that Valdivia had better conditions than Guayaquil in Ecuador this last port was the chief Spanish shipyard in the Pacific 8 10 Independence and republic 1810 present editFurther information First Chilean Navy Squadron During the later stages of Chile s independence war it was conceived that the country needed a navy to bring under Chilean control areas that could not be reached by land like Chiloe Archipelago and Valdivia The newly formed Chilean navy was put under command of Lord Cochrane who introduced British customs The Chilean navy succeeded in capturing Valdivia and landing a Chilean Argentine army in Peru for further fight against the royalists Later on the Chilean navy saw action in the War of the Confederation the Chincha Islands War the War of the Pacific and the 1891 Chilean Civil War The navy was also instrumental into bringing the Strait of Magellan and Easter Island under Chilean control in 1843 and 1888 respectively During the second half of the 19th century the Chilean navy begun a series of explorations towards the Patagonian archipelagoes These explorations where fueled by several factors including the establishment of Chilean rule in the Strait of Magellan the increased trade with Europe and border disputes with Argentina in Patagonia Chilean Navy put to test at war 1836 1883 edit War of the Confederation 1836 39 edit Further information War of the Confederation Chincha Islands War 1864 66 edit Further information Chincha Islands War War of the Pacific 1879 1883 edit nbsp The Naval Battle of Iquique of 1879 shown in the picture is remembered a public holiday each May 21 in Chile and authorities call May the month of the sea Further information War of the Pacific When the War of the Pacific between Chile and the Bolivia Peru alliance broke out the few roads and railroad lines the disputed and nearly waterless and largely unpopulated Atacama Desert turned out to be difficult to occupy From the beginning naval superiority was critical 11 Early on Chile blockaded the Peruvian port of Iquique on April 5 12 Following a first naval encounter between Chile and Peru in the indecisive Battle of Chipana April 12 1879 the Battle of Iquique May 21 1879 proved one of the war s most memorable battles of the war as Huascar engaged and sank the Esmeralda during the battle Chilean commander Arturo Prat was fatally shot while attempting to board the Huascar In the aftermath Grau ordered the rescue of the remaining Chilean sailors 13 Meanwhile the Independencia chased the schooner Covadonga until the heavier Independencia collided with a submerged rock and sank in the shallow waters near Punta Gruesa This naval battle gave a tactical victory to Peru as it stopped the blockade of Iquique Nevertheless it was a Pyrrhic victory the loss of the Independencia one of Peru s most important ships was a fatal blow 14 The Battle of Angamos on October 8 1879 proved decisive 15 In this battle the Chilean Navy managed to capture the Huascar after several hours of fierce battle despite her remaining crew s attempts to scuttle her 16 Miguel Grau died during the fighting but his deeds made him a Peruvian national hero 17 After the loss of the Huascar the Peruvian navy still had some successful actions particularly during the Naval Battle of Arica February 27 1880 and the Second Naval Battle of Arica March 17 1880 18 but its remaining units were locked in its main port during the long Blockade of Callao When the Peruvian capital of Lima fell after the battles of San Juan and Miraflores the Peruvian naval officers scuttled the entire fleet to prevent its capture by the Chilean forces 19 Pacific hegemony 1883 90 edit See also New Imperialism and Panama crisis of 1885 In March 1885 Colombia thinned its military presence in Panama by sending troops stationed there to fight rebels in Cartagena 20 21 These favourable conditions prompted an insurgency in Panama 20 The United States Navy was sent there to keep order in light of invoking its obligations according to the treaty being signed in 1846 20 gt In response to the American intervention Chile sent the protected cruiser Esmeralda to Panama City arriving on April 28 21 The Esmeralda s captain was ordered to stop by any means an eventual annexation of Panama by the United States 22 According to a U S publication in August 1885 right after the Panama events The Esmeralda could destroy our whole navy ship by ship and never be touched once 21 After navy visits to Easter Island in 1875 and 1887 Chilean navy officer Policarpo Toro managed to negotiate an incorporation of the island into Chile with native Rapanui in 1888 By occupying Easter Island Chile joined the imperial nations 23 By 1900 nearly all Pacific islands were in control of Britain France United States Germany Japan and Chile 24 Polynesian trade and annexation of Easter Island edit In Oceania France gained a leading position as imperial power after making Tahiti and New Caledonia protectorates in 1842 and 1853 respectively 24 Chile s interest in expanding into the islands of the Pacific Ocean dates to the presidency of Jose Joaquin Prieto 1831 1841 and the ideology of Diego Portales who considered that Chile s expansion into Polynesia was a natural consequence of its maritime destiny 25 A Nonetheless the first stage of the country s expansionism into the Pacific began only a decade later in 1851 when in response to an American incursion into the Juan Fernandez Islands Chile s government formally organized the islands into a subdelegation of Valparaiso 27 That same year Chile s economic interest in the Pacific were renewed after its merchant fleet briefly succeeded in creating an agricultural goods exchange market that connected the Californian port of San Francisco with Australia 28 By 1861 Chile had established a lucrative enterprise across the Pacific its national currency abundantly circulating throughout Polynesia and its merchants trading in the markets of Tahiti New Zealand Tasmania Shanghai negotiations were also made with the Spanish Philippines and altercations reportedly occurred between Chilean and American whalers in the Sea of Japan This period ended as a result of the Chilean merchant fleet s destruction by Spanish forces in 1866 during the Chincha Islands War 29 Chile s Polynesian aspirations would again be awakened in the aftermath of the country s decisive victory against Peru in the War of the Pacific which left the Chilean fleet as the dominant maritime force in the Pacific coast of the Americas 25 Valparaiso had also become the most important port in the Pacific coast of South America providing Chilean merchants with the capacity to find markets in the Pacific for its new mineral wealth acquired from the Atacama 30 During this period the Chilean intellectual and politician Benjamin Vicuna Mackenna who served as senator in the National Congress from 1876 to 1885 was an influential voice in favor of Chilean expansionism into the Pacific he considered that Spain s discoveries in the Pacific had been stolen by the British and envisioned that Chile s duty was to create an empire in the Pacific that would reach Asia 25 In the context of this imperialist fervor is that in 1886 Captain Policarpo Toro of the Chilean Navy proposed to his superiors the annexation of Easter Island a proposal which was supported by President Jose Manuel Balmaceda because of the island s apparent strategic location and economic value After Toro transferred the rights to the island s sheep ranching operations from Tahiti based businesses to the Chilean based Williamson Balfour Company in 1887 Easter Island s annexation process was culminated with the signing of the Agreement of Wills between Rapa Nui chieftains and Toro in name of the Chilean government in 1888 31 By occupying Easter Island Chile joined the imperial nations 23 By 1900 nearly all Oceania islands were in control of Britain France United States Germany Japan Mexico Ecuador and Chile 24 Naval arms race 1890 1914 edit Main articles Argentine Chilean naval arms race and South American dreadnought race Naval mutiny of 1931 edit Main article Chilean naval mutiny of 1931 1960 tsunami edit On May 22 1960 the Chilean coast from Mocha Island 38 S and to Aysen Region 45 S was devastated by a tsunami triggered by the 1960 Valdivia earthquake Further north the port of Talcahuano did not suffered any mayor damages only some flooding Some tugboats and small sailboats stranded on Rocuant Island 32 The small port of Bahia Mansa had all of its new infrastructure destroyed by the tsunami that reached heights of up to 10 m a s l in that place The boat Isabella that at was at time in the port lost its anchors 32 In Valdivia River and Corral Bay several vessels wrecked due to the earthquake among them Argentina Canelos Carlos Haverbeck Melita and the salvaged remnants of Penco Canelos was anchored at Corral and filling a cargo of wood and other products destined to northern Chile when the quake struck Canelos engine was warmed up in view of this events After hours of drifting around in Corral Bay and Valdivia River the ship wrecked and was abandoned by its crew at 18 00 PM Two men on board of Canelos died As of 2000 the remnants of Canelos are still visible Santiago another ship anchored at Corral by the time of the quake managed to leave Corral in a bad state but wrecked off the coast of Mocha Island on May 24 32 See also editList of shipyards in Chile Chilean Sea Climate of Chile Fishing in ChileNotes edit According to economist Neantro Saavedra Rivano Of all Latin American countries Chile has been the most explicit and consistent throughout its history in expressing its vocation as a Pacific nation and acting in accordance with this conception 26 References edit Bengoa 2003 pp 72 74 a b Storey A A Ramirez J M Quiroz D Burley D V Addison D J Walter R Anderson A J Hunt T L Athens J S Huynen L Matisoo Smith E A 2007 Radiocarbon and DNA evidence for a pre Columbian introduction of Polynesian chickens to Chile Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104 25 10335 10339 doi 10 1073 pnas 0703993104 PMC 1965514 PMID 17556540 Whipps Heather June 4 2007 Chicken Bones Suggest Polynesians Found Americas Before Columbus Live Science Retrieved 2007 06 05 Gongora J Rawlence N J Mobegi V A Jianlin H Alcalde J A Matus J T Hanotte O Moran C Austin J J Ulm S Anderson A J Larson G Cooper A 2008 Indo European and Asian origins for Chilean and Pacific chickens revealed by mtDNA Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 105 30 10308 10313 doi 10 1073 pnas 0801991105 PMC 2492461 PMID 18663216 Lawler Andrew 11 June 2010 Beyond Kon Tiki Did Polynesians Sail to South America Science 328 5984 1344 1347 doi 10 1126 science 328 5984 1344 PMID 20538927 a b Barros Jose Miguel 1981 Expedicion al estrecho de Magallanes en 1553 Geronimo de Vivar y Hernando Gallego PDF Anales del Instituto de la Patagonia 12 31 40 Lytle Schurz William 1922 The Spanish Lake The Hispanic American Historical Review 5 2 181 194 doi 10 2307 2506024 JSTOR 2506024 a b Guarda 1973 pp 45 47 Isabel Montt Pinto 1971 Breve Historia de Valdivia p 55 a b c d Leon Saenz Jorge 2009 Los astilleros y la indutria matitima en el Pacifico americano Siglos XVI a XIX Dialogos Revista Electronica de Historia 10 1 44 90 Farcau 2000 p 65 Lopez Urrutia Carlos 2003 La Guerra del Pacifico 1879 1884 Ristre Editorial pp 37 42 ISBN 9788493271336 Retrieved January 17 2010 Farcau 2000 p 74 Spila Benedetto 1883 Chile en la guerra del Pacifico Valparaiso Chile Impr del Nuevo Mercurio p 94 Retrieved January 17 2010 Luna Vegas Emilio 1978 Caceres genio militar Peru Libreria Editorial Minerva Miraflores p 19 Retrieved July 22 2009 Valdes Vergara Francisco 1908 Historia de Chile para la ensenanza primaria California Sociedad Imprenta y litografia Universo p 319 Retrieved July 22 2009 Milla Batres 1994 p 73 Elias Murguia Julio J 1980 Marinos peruanos en Arica Peru Instituto de Estudios Historico Maritimos del Peru p 38 Retrieved July 22 2009 Paz Soldan Juan Pedro July 1919 El hundimiento de la Escuadra Peruana 16 de enero de 1881 El Mercurio Peruano Revista Mensual de Ciencias Sociales y Letras III 13 Lima Peru 44 47 Retrieved 2011 09 24 a b c Wicks Daniel H 1980 Dress Rehearsal United States Intervention on The Isthmus of Panama 1885 Pacific Historical Review 49 4 581 605 doi 10 2307 3638968 JSTOR 3638968 a b c Tromben Captain Carlos April 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 10 29 Sater 1990 p 52 a b Sater 1990 p 53 a b c Bernard Eccleston Michael Dawson 1998 The Asia Pacific Profile Routledge p 250 a b c Barros 1970 p 497 Saavedra Rivano 1993 p 193 Barros 1970 pp 213 214 Barros 1970 p 213 Barros 1970 p 214 Delsing 2012 p 56 See Delsing 2012 p 56 Saavedra Rivano 1993 p 193 a b c Vargas Saez Juan Francisco 2000 Historial del Mar de Chile Algunos Siniestros Maritimos Acaecidos en el Siglo XX in Spanish Valparaiso Chile pp 391 398 ISBN 978 956 288 739 7 Bibliography edit Barros Mario 1970 Historia Diplomatica de Chile in Spanish 2 ed Santiago Editorial Andres Bello ISBN 956 13 0776 6 Bengoa Jose 2003 Historia de los antiguos mapuches del sur in Spanish Santiago Catalonia ISBN 978 956 8303 02 0 Delsing Riet 2012 Issues of Land and Sovereignty The Uneasy Relationship Between Chile and Rapa Nui In Mallon Florencia ed Decolonizing Native Histories Durham North Carolina Duke University Press ISBN 9780822351528 Farcau Bruce W 2000 The Ten Cents War Chile Peru and Bolivia in the War of the Pacific 1879 1884 Westport Connecticut London Praeger Publishers ISBN 978 0 275 96925 7 Retrieved January 17 2010 Guarda Gabriel 1973 La economia de Chile Austral antes de la colonizacion alemana Valdivia Universidad Austral de Chile Milla Batres Carlos 1994 Enciclopedia biografica e historica del Peru Cronica del Peru republicano 1800 ano 2000 in Spanish Editorial Milla Batres ISBN 978 958 9413 11 1 Saavedra Rivano Neantro 1993 Chile and Japan Opening Doors through Trade In Stallings Barbara Szekely Gabriel eds Japan the United States and Latin America London The Macmillan Press Ltd ISBN 978 1 349 13130 3 Sater William 1990 Chile and the United States Empires in Conflict Athens GA University of Georgia Press ISBN 0 8203 1249 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maritime history of Chile amp oldid 1221780444, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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