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Nicaragua

Nicaragua,[b] officially the Republic of Nicaragua,[c] is the geographically largest country in Central America, comprising 130,370 km2 (50,340 sq mi). With a population of 6,850,540 as of 2021, it is the third-most populous country in Central America after Guatemala and Honduras. Nicaragua is bordered by Honduras to the north, the Caribbean Sea to the east, Costa Rica to the south, and the Pacific Ocean and a shared maritime border with El Salvador to the west. The country's largest city and national capital is Managua, the fourth-largest city in Central America with a population of 1,055,247 as of 2020. Nicaragua's multiethnic population includes people of mestizo, indigenous, European, and African heritage. The country's most spoken language is Spanish, though indigenous tribes on the Mosquito Coast speak their own languages and English.

Republic of Nicaragua
República de Nicaragua (Spanish)
Motto: En Dios confiamos (Spanish)
"In God We Trust"[a]
Anthem: Salve a ti, Nicaragua (Spanish)
"Hail to Thee, Nicaragua"
Capital
and largest city
Managua
12°6′N 86°14′W / 12.100°N 86.233°W / 12.100; -86.233
Official languagesSpanish
Recognised regional languages
Ethnic groups
(2023[2])
Religion
(2015)[3][4]
  • 14.7% no religion
  • 0.9% other
Demonym(s)
GovernmentUnitary presidential republic under an authoritarian dictatorship[5][6][7]
• President
Daniel Ortega
Rosario Murillo
LegislatureNational Assembly
Independence from Spain, Mexico and the Federal Republic of Central America
• Declared
15 September 1821
• Recognized
25 July 1850
• from the First Mexican Empire
1 July 1823
31 May 1838
• Revolution
19 July 1979
• Current constitution
9 January 1987[8]
Area
• Total
130,375 km2 (50,338 sq mi) (96th)
• Water (%)
7.14
Population
• 2023 estimate
6,359,689[9] (110th)
• Density
51/km2 (132.1/sq mi) (155th)
GDP (PPP)2023 estimate
• Total
$51.022 billion[10] (115th)
• Per capita
$7,642[10] (129th)
GDP (nominal)2023 estimate
• Total
$17.353 billion[10] (127th)
• Per capita
$2,599[10] (134th)
Gini (2014)46.2[11]
high
HDI (2021) 0.667[12]
medium (126th)
CurrencyCórdoba (NIO)
Time zoneUTC−6 (CST)
Driving sideright
Calling code+505
ISO 3166 codeNI
Internet TLD.ni

Originally inhabited by various indigenous cultures since ancient times, the region was conquered by the Spanish Empire in the 16th century. Nicaragua gained independence from Spain in 1821. The Mosquito Coast followed a different historical path, being colonized by the English in the 17th century and later coming under British rule. It became an autonomous territory of Nicaragua in 1860 and its northernmost part was transferred to Honduras in 1960. Since its independence, Nicaragua has undergone periods of political unrest, dictatorship, occupation and fiscal crisis, including the Nicaraguan Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s and the Contra War of the 1980s.

The mixture of cultural traditions has generated substantial diversity in folklore, cuisine, and music, and literature, including contributions by Nicaraguan poets and writers such as Rubén Darío. Known as the "land of lakes and volcanoes",[13][14] Nicaragua is also home to the Bosawás Biosphere Reserve, the second-largest rainforest of the Americas.[15] The biological diversity, warm tropical climate and active volcanoes make Nicaragua an increasingly popular tourist destination.[16][17] Nicaragua co-founded the United Nations[18] and is also a member of the Non-Aligned Movement,[19] Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America,[20] and Community of Latin American and Caribbean States.[21]

Etymology edit

There are two prevailing theories on how the name Nicaragua came to be. The first is that the name was coined by Spanish colonists based on the name Nicarao,[22] who was the chieftain or cacique of a powerful indigenous tribe encountered by the Spanish conquistador Gil González Dávila during his entry into southwestern Nicaragua in 1522. This theory holds that the name Nicaragua was formed from Nicarao and agua (Spanish for 'water'), to reference the fact that there are two large lakes and several other bodies of water within the country.[23] However, as of 2002, it was determined that the cacique's real name was Macuilmiquiztli, which meant 'Five Deaths' in the Nahuatl language, rather than Nicarao.[24][25][26][27]

The second theory is that the country's name comes from any of the following Nahuatl words: nic-anahuac, which meant 'Anahuac reached this far', or 'the Nahuas came this far', or 'those who come from Anahuac came this far'; nican-nahua, which meant 'here are the Nahuas'; or nic-atl-nahuac, which meant 'here by the water' or 'surrounded by water'.[22][23][28][29]

History edit

Pre-Columbian history edit

 
An ancient petroglyph on Ometepe Island

Paleo-Indians first inhabited what is now known as Nicaragua as far back as 12,000 BCE.[30] In later pre-Columbian times, Nicaragua's indigenous people were part of the Intermediate Area,[31]: 33  between the Mesoamerican and Andean cultural regions, and within the influence of the Isthmo-Colombian Area. Nicaragua's central region and its Caribbean coast were inhabited by Macro-Chibchan language ethnic groups such as the Miskito, Rama, Mayangna, and Matagalpas.[31]: 20  They had coalesced in Central America and migrated both to and from present-day northern Colombia and nearby areas.[32] Their food came primarily from hunting and gathering, but also fishing and slash-and-burn agriculture.[31]: 33 [33][34]: 65 

At the end of the 15th century, western Nicaragua was inhabited by several indigenous peoples related by culture to the Mesoamerican civilizations of the Aztec and Maya, and by language to the Mesoamerican language area.[35] The Chorotegas were Mangue language ethnic groups who had arrived in Nicaragua from what is now the Mexican state of Chiapas sometime around 800 CE.[28][34]: 26–33  The Nicarao people were a branch of Nahuas who spoke the Nawat dialect and also came from Chiapas, around 1200 CE.[36] Prior to that, the Nicaraos had been associated with the Toltec civilization.[34]: 26–33 [36][37][38][39] Both Chorotegas and Nicaraos originated in Mexico's Cholula valley,[36] and migrated south.[34]: 26–33  A third group, the Subtiabas, were an Oto-Manguean people who migrated from the Mexican state of Guerrero around 1200 CE.[40]: 159  Additionally, there were trade-related colonies in Nicaragua set up by the Aztecs starting in the 14th century.[34]: 26–33 

Spanish era (1523–1821) edit

 
The Colonial city of León
 
The colonial city of Granada near Lake Nicaragua, one of the most visited sites in Central America

In 1502, on his fourth voyage, Christopher Columbus became the first European known to have reached what is now Nicaragua as he sailed southeast toward the Isthmus of Panama.[31]: 193 [34]: 92  Columbus explored the Mosquito Coast on the Atlantic side of Nicaragua[41] but did not encounter any indigenous people. 20 years later, the Spaniards returned to Nicaragua, this time to its southwestern part. The first attempt to conquer Nicaragua was by the conquistador Gil González Dávila,[42] who had arrived in Panama in January 1520. In 1522, González Dávila ventured to the area that later became the Rivas Department of Nicaragua.[31]: 35 [34]: 92  There he encountered an indigenous Nahua tribe led by chief Macuilmiquiztli, whose name has sometimes been erroneously referred to as "Nicarao" or "Nicaragua". The tribe's capital was Quauhcapolca.[27][43][44] González Dávila conversed with Macuilmiquiztli thanks to two indigenous interpreters who had learned Spanish, whom he had brought along.[26] After exploring and gathering gold[27][31]: 35 [34]: 55  in the fertile western valleys, González Dávila and his men were attacked and driven off by the Chorotega, led by chief Diriangén.[27][45] The Spanish tried to convert the tribes to Christianity; Macuilmiquiztli's tribe was baptized,[27][34]: 86  but Diriangén was openly hostile to the Spaniards. Western Nicaragua, at the Pacific Coast, became a port and shipbuilding facility for the Galleons plying the waters between Manila, Philippines and Acapulco, Mexico.[46]

The first Spanish permanent settlements were founded in 1524.[42] That year, the conquistador Francisco Hernández de Córdoba founded two of Nicaragua's main cities: Granada on Lake Nicaragua, and then León, west of Lake Managua.[31]: 35, 193 [34]: 92  Córdoba soon built defenses for the cities and fought against incursions by other conquistadors.[34]: 92  Córdoba was later publicly beheaded for having defied his superior, Pedro Arias Dávila.[31]: 35  Córdoba's tomb and remains were discovered in 2000 in the ruins of León Viejo.[47]

The clashes among Spanish forces did not impede their destruction of the indigenous people and their culture. The series of battles came to be known as the "War of the Captains".[48] Pedro Arias Dávila was a winner;[31]: 35  although he lost control of Panama, he moved to Nicaragua and established his base in León.[49] In 1527, León became the capital of the colony.[34]: 93 [49] Through diplomacy, Arias Dávila became the colony's first governor.[47]

Without women in their parties,[34]: 123  the Spanish conquerors took Nahua and Chorotega wives and partners, beginning the multiethnic mix of indigenous and European stock now known as "mestizo", which constitutes the great majority of the population in western Nicaragua.[35] Many indigenous people were killed by European infectious diseases, compounded by neglect by the Spaniards, who controlled their subsistence.[42] Many other indigenous peoples were captured and transported as slaves to Panama and Peru between 1526 and 1540.[31]: 193 [34]: 104–105 

In 1610, the Momotombo volcano erupted, destroying the city of León.[50] The city was rebuilt northwest of the original,[49][50] which is now known as the ruins of León Viejo. During the American Revolutionary War, Central America was subject to conflict between Britain and Spain. British navy admiral Horatio Nelson led expeditions in the Battle of San Fernando de Omoa in 1779 and on the San Juan River in 1780, the latter of which had temporary success before being abandoned due to disease.

Independent Nicaragua from 1821 to 1909 edit

 
The Mosquito Coast in 1830
 
A portrait of the Battle of San Jacinto during the Filibuster War

The Act of Independence of Central America dissolved the Captaincy General of Guatemala in September 1821, and Nicaragua soon became part of the First Mexican Empire. In July 1823, after the overthrow of the Mexican monarchy in March of the same year, Nicaragua joined the newly formed United Provinces of Central America, country later known as the Federal Republic of Central America. Nicaragua definitively became an independent republic in 1838.[51]

The early years of independence were characterized by rivalry between the Liberal elite of León and the Conservative elite of Granada, which often degenerated into civil war, particularly during the 1840s and 1850s. Managua rose to undisputed preeminence as the nation's capital in 1852 to allay the rivalry between the two feuding cities.[52][53] Following the start (1848) of the California Gold Rush, Nicaragua provided a route for travelers from the eastern United States to journey to California by sea, via the San Juan River and Lake Nicaragua.[31]: 81  Invited by the Liberals in 1855 to join their struggle against the Conservatives, the American adventurer and filibuster William Walker set himself up as President of Nicaragua after conducting a farcical election in 1856; his presidency lasted less than a year.[54] Military forces from Costa Rica, Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, and Nicaragua itself united to drive Walker out of Nicaragua in 1857,[55][56][57] bringing three decades of Conservative rule.

Great Britain, which had claimed the Mosquito Coast as a protectorate since 1655, delegated the area to Honduras in 1859 before transferring it to Nicaragua in 1860. The Mosquito Coast remained an autonomous area until 1894. José Santos Zelaya, President of Nicaragua from 1893 to 1909, negotiated the integration of the Mosquito Coast into Nicaragua. In his honor, the region became "Zelaya Department".

Throughout the late 19th-century, the United States and several European powers considered various schemes to link the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic by building a canal across Nicaragua.[58]

United States occupation (1909–1933) edit

In 1909, the United States supported the forces rebelling against President Zelaya. U.S. motives included differences over the proposed Nicaragua Canal, Nicaragua's potential to destabilize the region, and Zelaya's attempts to regulate foreign access to Nicaraguan natural resources. On November 18, 1909, U.S. warships were sent to the area after 500 revolutionaries (including two Americans) were executed by order of Zelaya. The U.S. justified the intervention by claiming to protect U.S. lives and property. Zelaya resigned later that year.

In August 1912, the President of Nicaragua, Adolfo Díaz, requested the secretary of war, General Luis Mena, to resign for fear he was leading an insurrection. Mena fled Managua with his brother, the chief of police of Managua, to start an insurrection. After Mena's troops captured steam boats of an American company, the U.S. delegation asked President Díaz to ensure the safety of American citizens and property during the insurrection. He replied he could not, and asked the U.S. to intervene in the conflict.[59][60]

U.S. Marines occupied Nicaragua from 1912 to 1933,[31]: 111, 197 [61] except for a nine-month period beginning in 1925. In 1914, the Bryan–Chamorro Treaty was signed, giving the U.S. control over a proposed canal through Nicaragua, as well as leases for potential canal defenses.[62] After the U.S. Marines left, another violent conflict between Liberals and Conservatives in 1926 resulted in the return of U.S. Marines.[63]

 
Rebel leader Augusto César Sandino (center) in June 1929

From 1927 to 1933, rebel general Augusto César Sandino led a sustained guerrilla war against the regime and then against the U.S. Marines, whom he fought for over five years.[64] When the Americans left in 1933, they set up the Guardia Nacional (national guard),[65] a combined military and police force trained and equipped by the Americans and designed to be loyal to U.S. interests.

After the U.S. Marines withdrew from Nicaragua in January 1933, Sandino and the newly elected administration of President Juan Bautista Sacasa reached an agreement that Sandino would cease his guerrilla activities in return for amnesty, a land grant for an agricultural colony, and retention of an armed band of 100 men for a year.[66] However, due to a growing hostility between Sandino and National Guard director Anastasio Somoza García and a fear of armed opposition from Sandino, Somoza García ordered his assassination.[65][67][68] Sacasa invited Sandino for dinner and to sign a peace treaty at the Presidential House on the night of February 21, 1934. After leaving the Presidential House, Sandino's car was stopped by National Guard soldiers and they kidnapped him. Later that night, Sandino was assassinated by National Guard soldiers. Later, hundreds of men, women, and children from Sandino's agricultural colony were murdered.[69]

Somoza dynasty (1927–1979) edit

 
President Anastasio Somoza García (left) with Dominican President Rafael Trujillo in 1952
 
Anastasio Somoza Debayle (center) with U.S. president Richard Nixon in 1971

Nicaragua has experienced several military dictatorships, the longest being the hereditary dictatorship of the Somoza family, who ruled for 43 nonconsecutive years during the 20th century.[70] The Somoza family came to power as part of a U.S.-engineered pact in 1927 that stipulated the formation of the Guardia Nacional to replace the marines who had long reigned in the country.[71] Somoza García slowly eliminated officers in the national guard who might have stood in his way, and then deposed Sacasa and became president on January 1, 1937, in a rigged election.[65]

In 1941, during the Second World War, Nicaragua declared war on Japan (8 December), Germany (11 December), Italy (11 December), Bulgaria (19 December), Hungary (19 December) and Romania (19 December). Only Romania reciprocated, declaring war on Nicaragua on the same day (19 December 1941).[72] No soldiers were sent to the war, but Somoza García confiscated properties held by German Nicaraguan residents.[73] In 1945, Nicaragua was among the first countries to ratify the United Nations Charter.[74]

On September 29, 1956,[75] Somoza García was shot to death by Rigoberto López Pérez, a 27-year-old Liberal Nicaraguan poet. Luis Somoza Debayle, the eldest son of the late president, was appointed president by the congress and officially took charge of the country.[65] He is remembered by some as moderate, but after only a few years in power died of a heart attack. His successor as president was René Schick Gutiérrez, whom most Nicaraguans viewed "as nothing more than a puppet of the Somozas".[76] Somoza García's youngest son, Anastasio Somoza Debayle, often referred to simply as "Somoza", became president in 1967.

An earthquake in 1972 destroyed nearly 90% of Managua, including much of its infrastructure.[77] Instead of helping to rebuild the city, Somoza siphoned off relief money. The mishandling of relief money also prompted Pittsburgh Pirates star Roberto Clemente to personally fly to Managua on December 31, 1972, but he died en route in an airplane accident.[78][79] Even the economic elite were reluctant to support Somoza, as he had acquired monopolies in industries that were key to rebuilding the nation.[80]

The Somoza family was among a few families or groups of influential firms which reaped most of the benefits of the country's growth from the 1950s to the 1970s. When Somoza was deposed by the Sandinistas in 1979, the family's worth was estimated to be between $500 million and $1.5 billion.[81]

Nicaraguan Revolution (1960s–1990) edit

 
The U.S.–supported Contra rebels in 1987
 
Celebrations of the 10th anniversary of the Nicaraguan Revolution in Managua in 1989

In 1961, Carlos Fonseca looked back to the historical figure of Sandino, and along with two other people, one of whom was believed to be Casimiro Sotelo, who was later assassinated, founded the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN).[65] After the 1972 earthquake and Somoza's apparent corruption, the ranks of the Sandinistas were flooded with young disaffected Nicaraguans who no longer had anything to lose.[82]

In December 1974, a group of the FSLN, in an attempt to kidnap U.S. ambassador Turner Shelton, held some Managuan partygoers hostage after killing the party's host, former agriculture minister, Jose Maria Castillo, until the Somoza government met their demands for a large ransom and free transport to Cuba. Somoza granted the demand, and then subsequently sent his national guard out into the countryside to look for the kidnappers, who were described by opponents as terrorists.[83]

On January 10, 1978, Pedro Joaquín Chamorro Cardenal, the editor of the national newspaper La Prensa and ardent opponent of Somoza, was assassinated.[84] It is alleged that the planners and perpetrators of the murder were at the highest echelons of the Somoza regime.[84]

The Sandinistas forcefully took power in July 1979, ousting Somoza, and prompting the exodus of the majority of Nicaragua's middle class, wealthy landowners, and professionals, many of whom settled in the United States.[85][86][87] The Carter administration decided to work with the new government, while attaching a provision for aid forfeiture if it was found to be assisting insurgencies in neighboring countries.[88] Somoza fled the country, and eventually ended up in Paraguay, where he was assassinated in September 1980, allegedly by members of the Argentinian Revolutionary Workers' Party.[89]

In 1980, the Carter administration provided $60 million in aid to Nicaragua under the Sandinistas, but the aid was suspended when the administration obtained evidence of Nicaraguan shipment of arms to El Salvadoran rebels.[90] Most people sided with Nicaragua against the Sandinistas.[91]

Contras edit

In response to the Sandinistas, various rebel groups collectively known as the "Contras" were formed to oppose the new government. The Reagan administration ultimately authorized the CIA to help the Contra rebels with funding, weapons, and training.[92] The Contras operated from camps in the neighboring countries of Honduras to the north and Costa Rica to the south.[92]

They engaged in a systematic campaign of terror among rural Nicaraguans to disrupt the social reform projects of the Sandinistas. Several historians have criticized the Contra campaign and the Reagan administration's support for the Contras, citing the brutality and numerous human rights violations of the Contras, alleging that health centers, schools, and cooperatives were destroyed by rebels,[93] and that murder, rape, and torture occurred on a large scale in Contra-dominated areas.[94] The U.S. also carried out a campaign of economic sabotage, and disrupted shipping by planting underwater mines in Nicaragua's port of Corinto,[95] an action condemned by the International Court of Justice as illegal.[96] The court also found that the U.S. encouraged acts contrary to humanitarian law by producing the manual Psychological Operations in Guerrilla Warfare and disseminating it to the Contras.[97] The manual, among other things, advised on how to rationalize killings of civilians.[98] The U.S. also sought to place economic pressure on the Sandinistas, and the Reagan administration imposed a full trade embargo.[99]

The Sandinistas were also accused of human rights abuses including torture, disappearances and mass executions.[100][101] The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights investigated abuses by Sandinista forces, including an execution of 35 to 40 Miskitos in December 1981,[102] and an execution of 75 people in November 1984.[103]

In the Nicaraguan general elections of 1984, which were judged by at least one visiting 30-person delegation of NGO representatives to have been free and fair,[104] the Sandinistas won the parliamentary election and their leader Daniel Ortega won the presidential election.[105] The Reagan administration criticized the elections as a "sham" based on the claim that Arturo Cruz, the candidate nominated by the Coordinadora Democrática Nicaragüense, comprising three right wing political parties, did not participate in the elections. However, the administration privately argued against Cruz's participation for fear that his involvement would legitimize the elections, and thus weaken the case for American aid to the Contras.[106] According to Martin Kriele, the results of the election were rigged.[107][108][109][110]

In 1983 the U.S. Congress prohibited federal funding of the Contras, but the Reagan administration illegally continued to back them by covertly selling arms to Iran and channeling the proceeds to the Contras in the Iran–Contra affair, for which several members of the Reagan administration were convicted of felonies.[111] The International Court of Justice, in regard to the case of Nicaragua v. United States in 1986, found, "the United States of America was under an obligation to make reparation to the Republic of Nicaragua for all injury caused to Nicaragua by certain breaches of obligations under customary international law and treaty-law committed by the United States of America".[112] During the war between the Contras and the Sandinistas, 30,000 people were killed.[113]

Post-war (1990–present) edit

 
In 1990, after the Contra war, Violeta Chamorro became the first woman president democratically elected in the history of the Americas.
 
Flooding in Lake Managua after Hurricane Mitch in 1998
 
Nicaraguan protests in May 2018

In the Nicaraguan general election, 1990, a coalition of anti-Sandinista parties from both the left and right of the political spectrum led by Violeta Chamorro, the widow of Pedro Joaquín Chamorro Cardenal, defeated the Sandinistas. The defeat shocked the Sandinistas, who had expected to win.[114]

Exit polls of Nicaraguans reported Chamorro's victory over Ortega was achieved with a 55% majority.[115] Chamorro was the first woman president of Nicaragua. Ortega vowed he would govern desde abajo (from below).[116] Chamorro came to office with an economy in ruins, primarily because of the financial and social costs of the Contra War with the Sandinista-led government.[117] In the next election, the Nicaraguan general election, 1996, Daniel Ortega and the Sandinistas of the FSLN lost again, this time to Arnoldo Alemán of the Constitutional Liberal Party (PLC).

In the 2001 elections, the PLC again defeated the FSLN, with Alemán's Vice President Enrique Bolaños succeeding him as president. However, Alemán was convicted and sentenced in 2003 to 20 years in prison for embezzlement, money laundering, and corruption;[118] liberal and Sandinista parliament members combined to strip the presidential powers of President Bolaños and his ministers, calling for his resignation and threatening impeachment. The Sandinistas said they no longer supported Bolaños after U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell told Bolaños to distance from the FSLN.[119] This "slow motion coup d'état" was averted partially by pressure from the Central American presidents, who vowed not to recognize any movement that removed Bolaños; the U.S., the OAS, and the European Union also opposed the action.[120]

Nicaragua briefly participated in the Iraq War in 2004 as part of the Plus Ultra Brigade, a military contingent of mixed personnel.[121]

Before the general elections on November 5, 2006, the National Assembly passed a bill further restricting abortion in Nicaragua.[122] As a result, Nicaragua is one of five countries in the world where abortion is illegal with no exceptions.[123] Legislative and presidential elections took place on November 5, 2006. Ortega returned to the presidency with 37.99% of the vote. This percentage was enough to win the presidency outright, because of a change in electoral law which lowered the percentage requiring a runoff election from 45% to 35% (with a 5% margin of victory).[124] Nicaragua's 2011 general election resulted in re-election of Ortega, with a landslide victory and 62.46% of the vote. In 2014 the National Assembly approved changes to the constitution allowing Ortega to run for a third successive term.[125]

In November 2016, Ortega was elected for his third consecutive term (his fourth overall). International monitoring of the elections was initially prohibited, and as a result the validity of the elections has been disputed, but observation by the OAS was announced in October.[126][127] Ortega was reported by Nicaraguan election officials as having received 72% of the vote. However, the Broad Front for Democracy (FAD), having promoted boycotts of the elections, claimed that 70% of voters had abstained (while election officials claimed 65.8% participation).[128]

In April 2018, demonstrations opposed a decree increasing taxes and reducing benefits in the country's pension system. Local independent press organizations had documented at least 19 dead and over 100 missing in the ensuing conflict.[129] A reporter from NPR spoke to protestors who explained that while the initial issue was about the pension reform, the uprisings that spread across the country reflected many grievances about the government's time in office, and that the fight is for President Ortega and his vice president wife to step down.[130] April 24, 2018 marked the day of the greatest march in opposition of the Sandinista party. On May 2, 2018, university-student leaders publicly announced that they give the government seven days to set a date and time for a dialogue that was promised to the people due to the recent events of repression. The students also scheduled another march on that same day for a peaceful protest. As of May 2018, estimates of the death toll were as high as 63, many of them student protesters, and the wounded totalled more than 400.[131] Following a working visit from May 17 to 21, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights adopted precautionary measures aimed at protecting members of the student movement and their families after testimonies indicated the majority of them had suffered acts of violence and death threats for their participation.[132] In the last week of May, thousands who accuse Mr. Ortega and his wife of acting like dictators joined in resuming anti-government rallies after attempted peace talks have remained unresolved.[133] Open suppression of political dissent and more militarized policing began in April 2018, but the onset of repression was gradual.[134]

Geography and climate edit

 
A map of Nicaragua's Köppen climate classification

Nicaragua occupies a landmass of 130,967 km2 (50,567 sq mi), which makes it slightly larger than England. Nicaragua has three distinct geographical regions: the Pacific lowlands – fertile valleys which the Spanish colonists settled, the Amerrisque Mountains (North-central highlands), and the Mosquito Coast (Atlantic lowlands/Caribbean lowlands).

The low plains of the Atlantic Coast are 97 km (60 mi) wide in areas. They have long been exploited for their natural resources.

On the Pacific side of Nicaragua are the two largest freshwater lakes in Central America—Lake Managua and Lake Nicaragua. Surrounding these lakes and extending to their northwest along the rift valley of the Gulf of Fonseca are fertile lowland plains, with soil highly enriched by ash from nearby volcanoes of the central highlands. Nicaragua's abundance of biologically significant and unique ecosystems contribute to Mesoamerica's designation as a biodiversity hotspot. Nicaragua has made efforts to become less dependent on fossil fuels, and it expects to acquire 90% of its energy from renewable resources by 2020.[135][136] Nicaragua was one of the few countries that did not enter an INDC at COP21.[137][138] Nicaragua initially chose not to join the Paris Climate Accord because it felt that "much more action is required" by individual countries on restricting global temperature rise.[135] However, in October 2017, Nicaragua made the decision to join the agreement.[139][140][141] It ratified this agreement on November 22, 2017.[142]

Nearly one fifth of Nicaragua is designated as protected areas like national parks, nature reserves, and biological reserves. The country had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 3.63/10, ranking it 146th globally out of 172 countries.[143] Geophysically, Nicaragua is surrounded by the Caribbean Plate, an oceanic tectonic plate underlying Central America and the Cocos Plate. Since Central America is a major subduction zone, Nicaragua hosts most of the Central American Volcanic Arc. On 9 June 2021, Nicaragua launched a new volcanic supersite research in strengthening the monitoring and surveillance of the country's 21 active volcanoes.

Pacific lowlands edit

 
Nicaragua is known as "the land of lakes and volcanoes"; pictured is Concepción volcano, seen from Maderas volcano.
 
Peñas Blancas, part of the Bosawás Biosphere Reserve and located northeast of Jinotega in northeastern Nicaragua, is the second-largest rainforest in the Western Hemisphere after the Amazonian Rainforest in Brazil

In the west of the country, these lowlands consist of a broad, hot, fertile plain. Punctuating this plain are several large volcanoes of the Cordillera Los Maribios mountain range, including Mombacho just outside Granada, and Momotombo near León. The lowland area runs from the Gulf of Fonseca to Nicaragua's Pacific border with Costa Rica south of Lake Nicaragua. Lake Nicaragua is the largest freshwater lake in Central America (20th largest in the world),[144] and is home to some of the world's rare freshwater sharks (Nicaraguan shark).[145] The Pacific lowlands region is the most populous, with over half of the nation's population.

The eruptions of western Nicaragua's 40 volcanoes, many of which are still active, have sometimes devastated settlements but also have enriched the land with layers of fertile ash. The geologic activity that produces vulcanism also breeds powerful earthquakes. Tremors occur regularly throughout the Pacific zone, and earthquakes have nearly destroyed the capital city, Managua, more than once.[146]


Most of the Pacific zone is tierra caliente, the "hot land" of tropical Spanish America at elevations under 610 metres (2,000 ft). Temperatures remain virtually constant throughout the year, with highs ranging between 29.4 and 32.2 °C (85 and 90 °F). After a dry season lasting from November to April, rains begin in May and continue to October, giving the Pacific lowlands 1,016 to 1,524 millimetres (40 to 60 in) of precipitation. Good soils and a favourable climate combine to make western Nicaragua the country's economic and demographic centre. The southwestern shore of Lake Nicaragua lies within 24 kilometres (15 mi) of the Pacific Ocean. Thus the lake and the San Juan River were often proposed in the 19th century as the longest part of a canal route across the Central American isthmus. Canal proposals were periodically revived in the 20th and 21st centuries.[146][147] Roughly a century after the opening of the Panama Canal, the prospect of a Nicaraguan ecocanal remains a topic of interest.[148][149][150][151]

In addition to its beach and resort communities, the Pacific lowlands contains most of Nicaragua's Spanish colonial architecture and artifacts. Cities such as León and Granada abound in colonial architecture; founded in 1524, Granada is the oldest colonial city in the Americas.[152][needs update]

North central highlands edit

 
The Somoto Canyon National Monument in Somoto in the Madriz Department in northern Nicaragua

Northern Nicaragua is the most diversified region producing coffee, cattle, milk products, vegetables, wood, gold, and flowers. Its extensive forests, rivers and geography are suited for ecotourism.

The central highlands are a significantly less populated and economically developed area in the north, between Lake Nicaragua and the Caribbean. Forming the country's tierra templada, or "temperate land", at elevations between 610 and 1,524 metres (2,000 and 5,000 ft), the highlands enjoy mild temperatures with daily highs of 23.9 to 26.7 °C (75 to 80 °F). This region has a longer, wetter rainy season than the Pacific lowlands, making erosion a problem on its steep slopes. Rugged terrain, poor soils, and low population density characterize the area as a whole, but the northwestern valleys are fertile and well settled.[146]

The area has a cooler climate than the Pacific lowlands. About a quarter of the country's agriculture takes place in this region, with coffee grown on the higher slopes. Oaks, pines, moss, ferns and orchids are abundant in the cloud forests of the region.

Bird life in the forests of the central region includes resplendent quetzals, goldfinches, hummingbirds, jays and toucanets.

Caribbean lowlands edit

This large rainforest region is irrigated by several large rivers and is sparsely populated. The area has 57% of the territory of the nation and most of its mineral resources. It has been heavily exploited, but much natural diversity remains. The Rio Coco is the largest river in Central America; it forms the border with Honduras. The Caribbean coastline is much more sinuous than its generally straight Pacific counterpart; lagoons and deltas make it very irregular.[citation needed]

Nicaragua's Bosawás Biosphere Reserve is in the Atlantic lowlands, part of which is located in the municipality of Siuna; it protects 7,300 square kilometres (1,800,000 acres) of La Mosquitia forest – almost 7% of the country's area – making it the largest rainforest north of the Amazon in Brazil.[153]

The municipalities of Siuna, Rosita, and Bonanza, known as the "Mining Triangle", are located in the region known as the North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region, in the Caribbean lowlands. Bonanza still contains an active gold mine owned by HEMCO. Siuna and Rosita do not have active mines but panning for gold is still very common in the region.[citation needed]

Nicaragua's tropical east coast is very different from the rest of the country. The climate is predominantly tropical, with high temperature and high humidity. Around the area's principal city of Bluefields, English is widely spoken along with the official Spanish. The population more closely resembles that found in many typical Caribbean ports than the rest of Nicaragua.[154]

A great variety of birds can be observed including eagles, toucans, parakeets and macaws. Other animal life in the area includes different species of monkeys, anteaters, white-tailed deer and tapirs.[155]

Flora and fauna edit

 
Guardabarranco ("ravine-guard") is Nicaragua's national bird.

Nicaragua is home to a rich variety of plants and animals. Nicaragua is located in the middle of the Americas and this privileged location has enabled the country to serve as host to a great biodiversity. This factor, along with the weather and light altitudinal variations, allows the country to harbor 248 species of amphibians and reptiles, 183 species of mammals, 705 bird species, 640 fish species, and about 5,796 species of plants.

The region of great forests is located on the eastern side of the country. Rainforests are found in the Río San Juan Department and in the autonomous regions of RAAN and RAAS. This biome groups together the greatest biodiversity in the country and is largely protected by the Indio Maíz Biological Reserve in the south and the Bosawás Biosphere Reserve in the north. The Nicaraguan jungles, which represent about 9,700 square kilometres (2.4 million acres), are considered the lungs of Central America and comprise the second largest-sized rainforest of the Americas.[156][157]

There are currently 78 protected areas in Nicaragua, covering more than 22,000 square kilometres (8,500 sq mi), or about 17% of its landmass. These include wildlife refuges and nature reserves that shelter a wide range of ecosystems. There are more than 1,400 animal species classified thus far in Nicaragua. Some 12,000 species of plants have been classified thus far in Nicaragua, with an estimated 5,000 species not yet classified.[158]

The bull shark is a species of shark that can survive for an extended period of time in fresh water. It can be found in Lake Nicaragua and the San Juan River, where it is often referred to as the "Nicaragua shark".[159] Nicaragua has recently banned freshwater fishing of the Nicaragua shark and the sawfish in response to the declining populations of these animals.[160]

Government edit

 
Nicaraguan president Daniel Ortega with then Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in Moscow in 2008

Politics of Nicaragua takes place in a framework of a presidential representative democratic republic, whereby the President of Nicaragua is both head of state and head of government, and of a multi-party system. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in both the government and the national assembly. The judiciary makes up the third branch of government.

Between 2007 and 2009, Nicaragua's major political parties discussed the possibility of going from a presidential system to a parliamentary system. Their reason: there would be a clear differentiation between the head of government (prime minister) and the head of state (president). Nevertheless, it was argued that the true reason for this proposal was to find a legal way for President Ortega to stay in power after January 2012, when his second and last government period was expected to end. Ortega was reelected to a third term in November 2016, and a fourth in 2021; both elections were tainted by credible reports of large-scale fraud, voter intimidation, and politically motivated arrests of opposition party leaders. Independent observers were barred from the polls. The OAS, United States, and European Union all described the 2021 election as a "sham" due to these issues.[161][162]

Since Daniel Ortega's election in 2006, liberal democratic norms and individual rights in practice have deteriorated. Parties other than the ruling FSLN have been repressed through arbitrary arrest and detention of opposition candidates and activists. Most government jobs de facto require membership in the FSLN. Opposition media has been repressed through arrests of journalists and seizure of broadcasting and printing materials.[163]

Foreign relations edit

Nicaragua pursues an independent foreign policy. Nicaragua is in territorial disputes with Colombia over the Archipelago de San Andrés y Providencia and Quita Sueño Bank and with Costa Rica over a boundary dispute involving the San Juan River.

On 12 October 2022, Nicaragua voted against condemning Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.[164]

Military edit

 
AN-26 and Mi-17, both used by the Nicaraguan Air Force

The Nicaraguan Armed Forces consist of various military contingents. Nicaragua has an army, navy and an air force. There are roughly 14,000 active duty personnel, which is much less compared to the numbers seen during the Nicaraguan Revolution. Although the army has had a rough military history, a portion of its forces, which were known as the national guard, became integrated with what is now the National Police of Nicaragua. In essence, the police became a gendarmerie. The National Police of Nicaragua are rarely, if ever, labeled as a gendarmerie. The other elements and manpower that were not devoted to the national police were sent over to cultivate the new Army of Nicaragua.

The age to serve in the armed forces is 17 and conscription is not imminent. As of 2006, the military budget was roughly 0.7% of Nicaragua's expenditures.

In 2017, Nicaragua signed the UN treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.[165]

Law enforcement edit

 
National Police of Nicaragua

The National Police of Nicaragua Force (in Spanish: La Policía Nacional Nicaragüense) is the national police of Nicaragua. The force is in charge of regular police functions and, at times, works in conjunction with the Nicaraguan military, making it an indirect and rather subtle version of a gendarmerie.[citation needed] However, the Nicaraguan National Police work separately and have a different established set of norms than the nation's military.[citation needed] According to a recent US Department of State report, corruption is endemic, especially within law enforcement and the judiciary, and arbitrary arrests, torture, and harsh prison conditions are the norm.[166]

Nicaragua is the safest country in Central America and one of the safest in Latin America, according to the United Nations Development Program, with a homicide rate of 8.7 per 100,000 inhabitants.[167]

Administrative divisions edit

Nicaragua is a unitary republic. For administrative purposes it is divided into 15 departments (departamentos) and two self-governing regions (autonomous communities) based on the Spanish model. The departments are then subdivided into 153 municipios (municipalities). The two autonomous regions are the North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region and South Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region, often referred to as RACCN and RACCS, respectively.[168]

Economy edit

 
Historical GDP per capita in Nicaragua
 
Coffee is one of the Nicaragua's largest exports. It is grown in Jinotega, Esteli, Nueva Segovia, Matagalpa, and Madriz, and exported worldwide through North America, Latin America, Europe, Asia, and Australia. Nestlé and Starbucks buy Nicaraguan coffee.

Nicaragua is one of poorest countries in the Americas.[169][170][171] Its gross domestic product (GDP) in purchasing power parity (PPP) in 2008 was estimated at US$17.37 billion.[8] Agriculture represents 15.5% of GDP, the highest percentage in Central America.[172] Remittances account for over 15% of the Nicaraguan GDP. Close to one billion dollars are sent to the country by Nicaraguans living abroad.[173] The economy grew at a rate of about 4% in 2011.[8] By 2019, given restrictive taxes and a civil conflict, it recorded a negative growth of - 3.9%; the International Monetary Fund forecast for 2020 is a further decline of 6% due to COVID-19.[174]

The restrictive tax measures put in place in 2019 and a political crisis over social security negatively affected the country's weak public spending and investor confidence in sovereign debt. According to the update IMF forecasts from 14 April 2020, due to the COVID-19 outbreak, GDP growth is expected to fall to -6% in 2020.[citation needed][needs update]

According to the United Nations Development Programme, 48% of the population of Nicaragua live below the poverty line,[175] 79.9% of the population live with less than $2 per day,[176] According to UN figures, 80% of the indigenous people (who make up 5% of the population) live on less than $1 per day.[177]

According to the World Bank, Nicaragua ranked as the 123rd out of 190 best economy for starting a business.[178] In 2007, Nicaragua's economy was labelled "62.7% free" by the conservative think tank Heritage Foundation, with high levels of fiscal, government, labor, investment, financial, and trade freedom.[179] It ranked as the 61st freest economy, and 14th (of 29) in the Americas. Nicaragua was ranked 115th in the Global Innovation Index in 2023.[180]

In March 2007, Poland and Nicaragua signed an agreement to write off 30.6 million dollars, which was borrowed by the Nicaraguan government in the 1980s.[181] Inflation reduced from 33,500% in 1988 to 9.45% in 2006, and the foreign debt was cut in half.[182]

Nicaragua is primarily an agricultural country; agriculture constitutes 60% of its total exports which annually yield approximately US$300 million.[183] Nearly two-thirds of the coffee crop comes from the northern part of the central highlands, in the area north and east of the town of Estelí.[146] Tobacco, grown in the same northern highlands region as coffee, has become an increasingly important cash crop since the 1990s, with annual exports of leaf and cigars in the neighborhood of $200 million per year.[184] Soil erosion and pollution from the heavy use of pesticides have become serious concerns in the cotton district. Yields and exports have both been declining since 1985.[146] Today most of Nicaragua's bananas are grown in the northwestern part of the country near the port of Corinto; sugarcane is also grown in the same district.[146] Cassava, a root crop somewhat similar to the potato, is an important food in tropical regions. Cassava is also the main ingredient in tapioca pudding.[146] Nicaragua's agricultural sector has benefited because of the country's strong ties to Venezuela. It is estimated that Venezuela will import approximately $200 million in agricultural goods.[185] In the 1990s, the government initiated efforts to diversify agriculture. Some of the new export-oriented crops were peanuts, sesame, melons, and onions.[146]

Fishing boats on the Caribbean side bring shrimp as well as lobsters into processing plants at Puerto Cabezas, Bluefields, and Laguna de Perlas.[146] A turtle fishery thrived on the Caribbean coast before it collapsed from overexploitation.[146]

Mining is becoming a major industry in Nicaragua,[186] contributing less than 1% of gross domestic product (GDP). Restrictions are being placed on lumbering due to increased environmental concerns about destruction of the rain forests. But lumbering continues despite these obstacles; indeed, a single hardwood tree may be worth thousands of dollars.[146]

During the war between the US-backed Contras and the government of the Sandinistas in the 1980s, much of the country's infrastructure was damaged or destroyed.[187] Transportation throughout the nation is often inadequate. For example, it was until recently impossible to travel all the way by highway from Managua to the Caribbean coast. A new road between Nueva Guinea and Bluefields was completed in 2019 and allows regular bus service to the capital.[188] The Centroamérica power plant on the Tuma River in the Central highlands has been expanded, and other hydroelectric projects have been undertaken to help provide electricity to the nation's newer industries.[146] Nicaragua has long been considered as a possible site for a new canal that could supplement the Panama Canal, connecting the Caribbean Sea (and therefore the Atlantic Ocean) with the Pacific Ocean.

Nicaragua's minimum wage is among the lowest in the Americas and in the world.[189][190][191][192] Remittances are equivalent to roughly 15% of the country's gross domestic product.[8] Growth in the maquila sector slowed in the first decade of the 21st century with rising competition from Asian markets, particularly China.[146] Land is the traditional basis of wealth in Nicaragua, with great fortunes coming from the export of staples such as coffee, cotton, beef, and sugar. Almost all of the upper class and nearly a quarter of the middle class are substantial landowners.

A 1985 government study classified 69.4 percent of the population as poor on the basis that they were unable to satisfy one or more of their basic needs in housing, sanitary services (water, sewage, and garbage collection), education, and employment. The defining standards for this study were very low; housing was considered substandard if it was constructed of discarded materials with dirt floors or if it was occupied by more than four persons per room.

Rural workers are dependent on agricultural wage labor, especially in coffee and cotton. Only a small fraction hold permanent jobs. Most are migrants who follow crops during the harvest period and find other work during the off-season. The "lower" peasants are typically smallholders without sufficient land to sustain a family; they also join the harvest labor force. The "upper" peasants have sufficient resources to be economically independent. They produce enough surplus, beyond their personal needs, to allow them to participate in the national and world markets.

 
The capital city Managua at night

The urban lower class is characterized by the informal sector of the economy. The informal sector consists of small-scale enterprises that utilize traditional technologies and operate outside the legal regime of labor protections and taxation. Workers in the informal sector are self-employed, unsalaried family workers or employees of small-enterprises, and they are generally poor.

Nicaragua's informal sector workers include tinsmiths, mattress makers, seamstresses, bakers, shoemakers, and carpenters; people who take in laundry and ironing or prepare food for sale in the streets; and thousands of peddlers, owners of small businesses (often operating out of their own homes), and market stall operators. Some work alone, but others labor in the small talleres (workshops/factories) that are responsible for a large share of the country's industrial production. Because informal sector earnings are generally very low, few families can subsist on one income.[193] Like most Latin American nations Nicaragua is also characterized by a very small upper-class, roughly 2% of the population, that is very wealthy and wields the political and economic power in the country that is not in the hands of foreign corporations and private industries. These families are oligarchical in nature and have ruled Nicaragua for generations and their wealth is politically and economically horizontally and vertically integrated.

Nicaragua is currently a member of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas, also known as ALBA. ALBA has proposed creating a new currency, the Sucre, for use among its members. In essence, this means that the Nicaraguan córdoba will be replaced with the Sucre. Other nations that will follow a similar pattern include: Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, Honduras, Cuba, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Dominica and Antigua and Barbuda.[194]

Nicaragua is considering construction of a canal linking the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean, which President Daniel Ortega has said will give Nicaragua its "economic independence".[195] Scientists have raised concerns about environmental impacts, but the government has maintained that the canal will benefit the country by creating new jobs and potentially increasing its annual growth to an average of 8% per year.[196] The project was scheduled to begin construction in December 2014,[197] however the Nicaragua Canal has yet to be started.[198]

Tourism edit

 
A Royal Caribbean cruise ship docked near the beach at San Juan del Sur in southern Nicaragua
 
2,100-year-old human footprints, called "Huellas de Acahualinca" and preserved in volcanic mud near Lake Managua
 
Apoyo Lagoon Natural Reserve, a nature reserve located between the departments of Masaya and Granada
 
The Solentiname Islands, tropical islands in Lake Nicaragua, which are home to 76 bird species and are a growing ecotourism destination

By 2006, tourism became the second-largest industry in Nicaragua.[199] Previously, tourism had grown about 70% nationwide during a period of 7 years, with rates of 10%–16% annually.[200] The increase and growth led to the income from tourism to rise more than 300% over a period of 10 years.[201] The growth in tourism has also positively affected the agricultural, commercial, and finance industries, as well as the construction industry. President Daniel Ortega has stated his intention to use tourism to combat poverty throughout the country.[202] The results for Nicaragua's tourism-driven economy have been significant, with the nation welcoming one million tourists in a calendar year for the first time in its history in 2010.[203]

Every year about 60,000 U.S. citizens visit Nicaragua, primarily business people, tourists, and those visiting relatives.[204] Some 5,300 people from the U.S. reside in Nicaragua. The majority of tourists who visit Nicaragua are from the U.S., Central or South America, and Europe. According to the Ministry of Tourism of Nicaragua (INTUR),[205] the colonial cities of León and Granada are the preferred spots for tourists. Also, the cities of Masaya, Rivas and the likes of San Juan del Sur, El Ostional, the Fortress of the Immaculate Conception, Ometepe Island, the Mombacho volcano, and the Corn Islands among other locations are the main tourist attractions. In addition, ecotourism, sport fishing and surfing attract many tourists to Nicaragua.

According to the TV Noticias news program, the main attractions in Nicaragua for tourists are the beaches, the scenic routes, the architecture of cities such as León and Granada, ecotourism, and agritourism particularly in northern Nicaragua.[200] As a result of increased tourism, Nicaragua has seen its foreign direct investment increase by 79.1% from 2007 to 2009.[206]

Nicaragua is referred to as "the land of lakes and volcanoes" due to the number of lagoons and lakes, and the chain of volcanoes that runs from the north to the south along the country's Pacific side.[13][14][207] Today, only 7 of the 50 volcanoes in Nicaragua are considered active. Many of these volcanoes offer some great possibilities for tourists with activities such as hiking, climbing, camping, and swimming in crater lakes.

The Apoyo Lagoon Natural Reserve was created by the eruption of the Apoyo Volcano about 23,000 years ago, which left a huge 7 km-wide crater that gradually filled with water. It is surrounded by the old crater wall.[208] The rim of the lagoon is lined with restaurants, many of which have kayaks available. Besides exploring the forest around it, many water sports are practiced in the lagoon, most notably kayaking.[209]

Sand skiing has become a popular attraction at the Cerro Negro volcano in León. Both dormant and active volcanoes can be climbed. Some of the most visited volcanoes include the Masaya Volcano, Momotombo, Mombacho, Cosigüina and Ometepe's Maderas and Concepción.

Ecotourism aims to be ecologically and socially conscious; it focuses on local culture, wilderness, and adventure. Nicaragua's ecotourism is growing with every passing year.[210] It boasts a number of ecotourist tours and perfect places for adventurers. Nicaragua has three eco-regions (the Pacific, Central, and Atlantic) which contain volcanoes, tropical rainforests, and agricultural land.[211] The majority of the eco-lodges and other environmentally-focused touristic destinations are found on Ometepe Island,[212] located in the middle of Lake Nicaragua just an hour's boat ride from Granada. While some are foreign-owned, others are owned by local families.

Demographics edit

Population[213][214]
Year Million
1950 1.3
2000 5.0
2021 6.9
 
Nicaraguan high school students at the American Nicaraguan School

According to a 2014 research published in the journal Genetics and Molecular Biology, European ancestry predominates in 69% of Nicaraguans, followed by African ancestry in 20%, and lastly indigenous ancestry in 11%.[215] A Japanese research of "Genomic Components in America's demography" demonstrated that, on average, the ancestry of Nicaraguans is 58–62% European, 28% Native American, and 14% African, with a very small Near Eastern contribution.[216] Non-genetic data from the CIA World Factbook establish that from Nicaragua's 2016 population of 5,966,798, around 69% are mestizo, 17% white, 5% Native American, and 9% black and other races.[8] This fluctuates with changes in migration patterns. The population is 58% urban as of 2013.[217]

The capital Managua is the biggest city, with an estimated population of 1,042,641 in 2016.[218] In 2005, over 5 million people lived in the Pacific, Central and North regions, and 700,000 in the Caribbean region.[219]

There is a growing expatriate community,[220] the majority of whom move for business, investment or retirement from across the world, such as from the US, Canada, Taiwan, and European countries; the majority have settled in Managua, Granada and San Juan del Sur.

Many Nicaraguans live abroad, particularly in Costa Rica, the United States, Spain, Canada, and other Central American countries.[221][failed verification]

Nicaragua has a population growth rate of 1.5% as of 2013.[222] This is the result of one of the highest birth rates in the Western Hemisphere:[citation needed] 17.7 per 1,000 as of 2017.[223] The death rate was 4.7 per 1,000 during the same period according to the United Nations.[224]

Ethnic groups edit

 
Afro-Nicaraguans

The majority of the Nicaraguan population is composed of mestizos, roughly 69%, while 17% of Nicaragua's population is white,[225] with the majority of them being of Spanish descent, while others are of German, Italian, English, Turkish, Danish or French ancestry.

Black Creoles edit

About 9% of Nicaragua's population is black and mainly resides on the country's Caribbean (or Atlantic) coast. The black population is mostly composed of black English-speaking Creoles who are the descendants of escaped or shipwrecked slaves; many carry the name of Scottish settlers who brought slaves with them, such as Campbell, Gordon, Downs, and Hodgson. Although many Creoles supported Somoza because of his close association with the United States, they rallied to the Sandinista cause in July 1979, only to reject the revolution soon afterwards in response to a new phase of "westernization" and imposition of central rule from Managua.[226] There is a smaller number of Garifuna, a people of mixed West African, Carib and Arawak descent. In the mid-1980s, the government divided the Zelaya Department – consisting of the eastern half of the country – into two autonomous regions and granted the black and indigenous people of this region limited self-rule within the republic.

Indigenous population edit

The remaining 5% of Nicaraguans are indigenous, the descendants of the country's original inhabitants. Nicaragua's pre-Columbian population consisted of many indigenous groups. In the western region, the Nahuas (Nicarao people) were present along with other groups such as the Chorotega people and the Subtiabas (also known as Maribios or Hokan Xiu). The central region and the Caribbean coast of Nicaragua were inhabited by indigenous peoples who were Macro-Chibchan language groups that had migrated to and from South America in ancient times, primarily what is now Colombia and Venezuela.[227][228] These groups include the present-day Matagalpas, Miskitos, Ramas, as well as Mayangnas and Ulwas who are also known as Sumos.[229][31]: 20  In the 19th century, there was a substantial indigenous minority, but this group was largely assimilated culturally into the mestizo majority. The Garifuna are also present, mainly on the Caribbean Coast. They are a people of mixed African and Indigenous descent.[230]

Languages edit

 
A sign in Bluefields in English (top), Nicaraguan Spanish (middle), and Miskito (bottom)

Nicaraguan Spanish has many indigenous influences and several distinguishing characteristics. For example, some Nicaraguans have a tendency to replace /s/ with /h/ when speaking. Although Spanish is spoken throughout, the country has great variety: vocabulary, accents and colloquial language can vary between towns and departments.[231] Nicaraguan Sign Language emerged in the 1970s and 1980s among deaf children as the first special education schools brought them together, and its emergence became of particular interest to linguists as an opportunity to directly observe the creation of a language.[232][233][234]

On the Caribbean coast, indigenous languages, English-based creoles, and Spanish are spoken. The Miskito language, spoken by the Miskito people as a first language and some other indigenous and Afro-descendants people as a second, third, or fourth language, is the most commonly spoken indigenous language. The indigenous Misumalpan languages of Mayangna and Ulwa are spoken by the respective peoples of the same names. Many Miskito, Mayangna, and Sumo people also speak Miskito Coast Creole, and a large majority also speak Spanish. Fewer than three dozen of nearly 2,000 Rama people speak their Chibchan language fluently, with nearly all Ramas speaking Rama Cay Creole and the vast majority speaking Spanish. Linguists have attempted to document and revitalize the language over the past three decades.[235]

The Garifuna people, descendants of indigenous and Afro-descendant people who came to Nicaragua from Honduras in the early twentieth century, have recently attempted to revitalize their Arawakan language. The majority speak Miskito Coast Creole as their first language and Spanish as their second. The Creole or Kriol people, descendants of enslaved Africans brought to the Mosquito Coast during the British colonial period and European, Chinese, Arab, and British West Indian immigrants, also speak Miskito Coast Creole as their first language and Spanish as their second.[236]

Largest cities edit

 
 
Largest municipalities in Nicaragua
Anuario Estadístico 2015, pp. 50–53 (2016 projections)
Rank Name Department Pop.
 
Managua
 
León
1 Managua Managua 1,042,641  
Masaya
 
Matagalpa
2 León León 206,264
3 Masaya Masaya 176,344
4 Matagalpa Matagalpa 158,095
5 Tipitapa Managua 140,569
6 Chinandega Chinandega 135,154
7 Jinotega Jinotega 133,705
8 Granada Granada 127,892
9 Estelí Estelí 126,290
10 Puerto Cabezas RACCN 113,534

Religion edit

 
León Cathedral, one of Nicaragua's World Heritage Sites

Religion plays a significant role in Nicaraguan culture and is afforded special protections in its constitution. Religious freedom (which has been guaranteed since 1939) and religious tolerance are officially promoted by the government, but, in recent years, the Catholic Church and the regime led by Daniel Ortega have been in open conflict. The latter has been accused of using the police to harass clergy (including bishops),[237] closing down Catholic media outlets, and arresting members of the clergy (including Bishop Rolando Alvarez of the Diocese of Matagalpa).

Nicaragua has no official state religion. Catholic bishops are expected to lend their authority to important state occasions, and their pronouncements on national issues are closely followed. They can be called upon to mediate between contending parties at moments of political crisis.[238] In 1979, Miguel D'Escoto Brockman, a priest who had embraced Liberation Theology, served in the government as foreign minister when the Sandinistas came to power. The largest denomination, and traditionally the religion of the majority, is the Roman Catholic Church. It came to Nicaragua in the 16th century with the Spanish conquest and remained, until 1939, the established faith.

The number of practicing Roman Catholics has been declining, while membership of evangelical Protestant groups and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) has been growing rapidly since the 1990s. There is a significant LDS missionary effort in Nicaragua. There are two missions and 95,768 members of the LDS Church (1.54% of the population).[239] There are also strong Anglican and Moravian communities on the Caribbean coast in what once constituted the sparsely populated Mosquito Coast colony. It was under British influence for nearly three centuries. Protestantism was brought to the Mosquito Coast mainly by British and German colonists in forms of Anglicanism and the Moravian Church. Other kinds of Protestant and other Christian denominations were introduced to the rest of Nicaragua during the 19th century.

Popular religion revolves around the saints, who are perceived as intercessors between human beings and God. Most localities, from the capital of Managua to small rural communities, honor patron saints, selected from the Roman Catholic calendar, with annual fiestas. In many communities, a rich lore has grown up around the celebrations of patron saints, such as Managua's Saint Dominic (Santo Domingo), honored in August with two colorful, often riotous, day-long processions through the city. The high point of Nicaragua's religious calendar for the masses is neither Christmas nor Easter, but La Purísima, a week of festivities in early December dedicated to the Immaculate Conception, during which elaborate altars to the Virgin Mary are constructed in homes and workplaces.[238]

Buddhism has increased with a steady influx of immigration.[240]

Although Jews have been living in Nicaragua since the 18th century, the Jewish population is small, numbering less than 200 people in 2017. Of these, 112 were recent converts who claimed Sephardic Jewish ancestry.[241]

As of 2007, approximately 1,200 to 1,500 Nicaraguan residents practiced Islam, most of them Sunnis who are resident aliens or naturalized citizens from Palestine, Libya, and Iran or natural-born Nicaraguan descendants of the two groups.[242]

Immigration edit

Relative to its population, Nicaragua has not experienced large waves of immigration. The number of immigrants in Nicaragua, from other Latin American countries or other countries, never surpassed 1% of its total population before 1995. The 2005 census showed the foreign-born population at 1.2%, having risen a mere 0.06% in 10 years.[219]

In the 19th century, Nicaragua experienced modest waves of immigration from Europe. In particular, families from Germany, Italy, Spain, France and Belgium immigrated to Nicaragua, particularly the departments in the Central and Pacific region.

Also present is a small Middle Eastern-Nicaraguan community of Syrians, Armenians, Jewish Nicaraguans, and Lebanese people in Nicaragua. This community numbers about 30,000. There is an East Asian community mostly consisting of Chinese. The Chinese Nicaraguan population is estimated at 12,000.[243] The Chinese arrived in the late 19th century but were unsubstantiated until the 1920s.

Diaspora edit

The Civil War forced many Nicaraguans to start lives outside of their country. Many people emigrated during the 1990s and the first decade of the 21st century due to the lack of employment opportunities and poverty. The majority of the Nicaraguan Diaspora migrated to the United States and Costa Rica. Today one in six Nicaraguans live in these two countries.[244]

The diaspora has seen Nicaraguans settling around in smaller communities in other parts of the world, particularly Western Europe. Small communities of Nicaraguans are found in France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom. Communities also exist in Australia and New Zealand. Canada, Brazil and Argentina host small groups of these communities. In Asia, Japan hosts a small Nicaraguan community.

Due to extreme poverty at home, many Nicaraguans are now living and working in neighboring El Salvador, a country that has the US dollar as its currency.[245][246]

Healthcare edit

Although Nicaragua's health outcomes have improved over the past few decades with the efficient utilization of resources relative to other Central American nations, healthcare in Nicaragua still confronts challenges responding to its populations' diverse healthcare needs.[247]

The Nicaraguan government guarantees universal free health care for its citizens.[248] However, limitations of current delivery models and unequal distribution of resources and medical personnel contribute to the persistent lack of quality care in more remote areas of Nicaragua, especially among rural communities in the Central and Atlantic region.[247] To respond to the dynamic needs of localities, the government has adopted a decentralized model that emphasizes community-based preventive and primary medical care.[249]

Education edit

The adult literacy rate in 2005 was 78.0%, the lowest literacy rate in Central America.[250]

Primary education is free in Nicaragua. A system of private schools exists, many of which are religiously affiliated and often have more robust English programs.[251] As of 1979, the educational system was one of the poorest in Latin America.[252] One of the first acts of the newly elected Sandinista government in 1980 was an extensive and successful literacy campaign, using secondary school students, university students and teachers as volunteer teachers: it reduced the overall illiteracy rate from 50.3% to 12.9% within only five months.[253] This was one of a number of large-scale programs which received international recognition for their gains in literacy, health care, education, childcare, unions, and land reform.[254][255] The Sandinistas also added a leftist ideological content to the curriculum, which was removed after 1990.[146] In September 1980, UNESCO awarded Nicaragua the Soviet Union sponsored Nadezhda Krupskaya award for the literacy campaign.[256]

Gender equality edit

Nicaragua's gender equality ranks high among countries in Latin America.[257] When it came to global rankings regarding gender equality, the World Economic Forum ranked Nicaragua at number twelve in 2015,[257] and in its 2020 report Nicaragua ranked number five, behind only northern European countries.[258]

Nicaragua was among the many countries in Latin America and the Caribbean to ratify the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, which aimed to promote women's rights.[259]

In 2009, a Special Ombudsman for Sexual Diversity position was created within its Office of the Human Rights Ombudsman. And, in 2014, the Health Ministry in 2014 banned discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation.[260] Nevertheless, discrimination against LGBTQ individuals is common, particularly in housing, education, and the workplace.[166]

The Human Development Report ranked Nicaragua 106 out of 160 countries in the Gender Inequality Index (GII) in 2017. It reflects gender-based inequalities in three dimensions - reproductive health, empowerment, and economic activity.[261]

Culture edit

 
El Güegüense, a drama, was the first literary work of post-Columbian Nicaragua and is regarded as one of Latin America's most distinctive colonial-era expressions and as Nicaragua's signature folkloric masterpiece combining music, dance, and theatre.

Nicaraguan culture has strong folklore, music and religious traditions, deeply influenced by European culture but also including Native American sounds and flavors. Nicaraguan culture can further be defined in several distinct strands. The Pacific coast has strong folklore, music and religious traditions, deeply influenced by Europeans. It was colonized by Spain and has a similar culture to other Spanish-speaking Latin American countries. The indigenous groups that historically inhabited the Pacific coast have largely been assimilated into the mestizo culture.

The Caribbean coast of Nicaragua was once a British protectorate. English is still predominant in this region and spoken domestically along with Spanish and indigenous languages. Its culture is similar to that of Caribbean nations that were or are British possessions, such as Jamaica, Belize, the Cayman Islands, etc. Unlike on the west coast, the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean coast have maintained distinct identities, and some still speak their native languages as first languages.

Music edit

 
Nicaraguan women wearing the Mestizaje costume, which is a traditional costume worn to dance the Mestizaje dance. The costume demonstrates the Spanish influence upon Nicaraguan clothing.[262]

Nicaraguan music is a mixture of indigenous and Spanish influences. Musical instruments include the marimba and others common across Central America. The marimba of Nicaragua is played by a sitting performer holding the instrument on his knees. He is usually accompanied by a bass fiddle, guitar and guitarrilla (a small guitar like a mandolin). This music is played at social functions as a sort of background music.

The marimba is made with hardwood plates placed over bamboo or metal tubes of varying lengths. It is played with two or four hammers. The Caribbean coast of Nicaragua is known for a lively, sensual form of dance music called Palo de Mayo which is popular throughout the country. It is especially loud and celebrated during the Palo de Mayo festival in May. The Garifuna community (Afro-Native American) is known for its popular music called Punta.

Nicaragua has international influence in music. Bachata, Merengue, Salsa and Cumbia have gained prominence in cultural centres such as Managua, Leon and Granada. Cumbia dancing has grown popular with the introduction of Nicaraguan artists, including Gustavo Leyton, on Ometepe Island and in Managua. Salsa dancing has become extremely popular in Managua's nightclubs. With various influences, the form of salsa dancing varies in Nicaragua. New York style and Cuban Salsa (Salsa Casino) elements have gained popularity across the country.

Dance edit

Dance in Nicaragua varies depending upon the region. Rural areas tend to have a stronger focus on movement of the hips and turns. The dance style in cities focuses primarily on more sophisticated footwork in addition to movement and turns. Combinations of styles from the Dominican Republic and the United States can be found throughout Nicaragua. Bachata dancing is popular in Nicaragua. A considerable amount of Bachata dancing influence comes from Nicaraguans living abroad, in cities that include Miami, Los Angeles and, to a much lesser extent, New York City. Tango has also surfaced recently in cultural cities and ballroom dance occasions.

Literature edit

 
Rubén Darío, founder of Latin America's modernismo literary movement

The origin of Nicaraguan literature can arguably be traced to pre-Columbian times. The myths and oral literature formed the cosmogenic view of the world of the indigenous people. Some of these stories are still known in Nicaragua. Like many Latin American countries, the Spanish conquerors have had the most effect on both the culture and the literature. Nicaraguan literature has historically been an important source of poetry in the Spanish-speaking world, with internationally renowned contributors such as Rubén Darío who is regarded as the most important literary figure in Nicaragua. He is called the "Father of Modernism" for leading the modernismo literary movement at the end of the 19th century.[263] Other literary figures include Carlos Martinez Rivas, Pablo Antonio Cuadra, Alberto Cuadra Mejia, Manolo Cuadra, Pablo Alberto Cuadra Arguello, Orlando Cuadra Downing, Alfredo Alegría Rosales, Sergio Ramirez Mercado, Ernesto Cardenal, Gioconda Belli, Claribel Alegría and José Coronel Urtecho, among others.[264]

The satirical drama El Güegüense was the first literary work of post-Columbian Nicaragua. It was written in both Nicarao and Spanish.[40]: 21  It's regarded as one of Latin America's most distinctive colonial-era expressions and as Nicaragua's signature folkloric masterpiece. El Güegüense is a work of resistance to Spanish colonialism that combined music, dance and theatre.[263] The theatrical play was written by an anonymous author in the 16th century, making it one of the oldest indigenous theatrical/dance works of the Western Hemisphere. In 2005 it was recognized by UNESCO as "a patrimony of humanity".[265] After centuries of popular performance, the play was first published in a book in 1942.[266]

Cuisine edit

 
Vigorón, a Nicaraguan dish served with boiled yuca and chicharrones (fried pork with skin) and topped with a cabbage salad
 
Gallo pinto, a traditional Nicaraguan dish made with rice and beans

Nicaraguan cuisine is a mixture of Spanish food and dishes of a pre-Columbian origin.[267] Traditional cuisine changes from the Pacific to the Caribbean coast. The Pacific coast's main staple revolves around local fruits and corn, the Caribbean coast cuisine makes use of seafood and the coconut.

As in many other Latin American countries, maize is a staple food and is used in many of the widely consumed dishes, such as the nacatamal, güirila, and indio viejo. Maize is also an ingredient for drinks such as pinolillo and chicha as well as sweets and desserts. In addition to corn, rice and beans are eaten very often.

Gallo pinto, Nicaragua's national dish, is made with white rice and small red beans that are cooked individually and then fried together. The dish has several variations including the addition of coconut milk or grated coconut on the Caribbean coast. Most Nicaraguans begin their day with gallo pinto. Gallo pinto is most usually served with carne asada, a salad, fried cheese, plantains or maduros.

Many of Nicaragua's dishes include indigenous fruits and vegetables such as jocote, mango, papaya, tamarindo, pipian, banana, avocado, yuca, and herbs such as cilantro, oregano and achiote.[267]

Traditional street food snacks found in Nicaragua include "quesillo", a thick tortilla with soft cheese and cream, "tajadas" (deep-fried plantain chips), "maduros" (a sautéed ripe plantain), and "fresco" (fresh juices such as hibiscus and tamarind commonly served in a plastic bag with a straw).[268]

Nicaraguans have been known to eat guinea pigs,[269] known as cuy. Tapirs, iguanas, turtle eggs, armadillos and boas are also sometimes eaten, but because of extinction threats to these wild creatures, there are efforts to curb this custom.[267]

Media edit

For most Nicaraguans radio and TV are the main sources of news. There are more than 100 radio stations and several TV networks. Cable TV is available in most urban areas.[270]

The Nicaraguan print media are varied and partisan, representing pro and anti-government positions. Publications include La Prensa, El Nuevo Diario, Confidencial, Hoy, and Mercurio. Online news publications include Confidencial and The Nicaragua Dispatch.

Sports edit

 
Dennis Martínez National Stadium, Nicaragua's main outdoor stadium

Baseball is the most popular sport in Nicaragua. Although some professional Nicaraguan baseball teams have recently folded, the country still enjoys a strong tradition of American-style baseball.

Baseball was introduced to Nicaragua during the 19th century. In the Caribbean coast, locals from Bluefields were taught how to play baseball in 1888 by Albert Addlesberg, a retailer from the United States.[271] Baseball did not catch on in the Pacific coast until 1891 when a group of mostly college students from the United States formed "La Sociedad de Recreo" (Society of Recreation) where they played various sports, baseball being the most popular.[271]

Nicaragua has had its share of MLB players, including shortstop Everth Cabrera, pitcher Vicente Padilla, and pitcher Jonathan Loáisiga, but the most notable is Dennis Martínez, who was the first baseball player from Nicaragua to play in Major League Baseball.[272] He became the first Latin-born pitcher to throw a perfect game, and the 13th in the major league history, when he played with the Montreal Expos against the Dodgers at Dodger Stadium in 1991.[273]

Boxing is the second most popular sport in Nicaragua.[274] The country has had world champions such as Alexis Argüello and Ricardo Mayorga as well as Román González. Recently, football has gained popularity. The Dennis Martínez National Stadium has served as a venue for both baseball and football. The first ever national football-only stadium in Managua, the Nicaragua National Football Stadium, was completed in 2011.[275]

Nicaragua's national basketball team had some recent success as it won the silver medal at the 2017 Central American Games.[276] They will be taking part in the FIBA AmeriCup for the first time when Nicaragua hosts in 2025.

Nicaragua featured national teams in beach volleyball that competed at the 2018–2020 NORCECA Beach Volleyball Continental Cup in both the women's and the men's sections.[277]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ As shown on the Córdoba (bank notes and coins).[1]
  2. ^ /ˌnɪkəˈrɑːɡwə, -ˈræɡ-, -ɡjuə/ ; Spanish: [nikaˈɾaɣwa]
  3. ^ Spanish: República de Nicaragua

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nicaragua, officially, republic, geographically, largest, country, central, america, comprising, with, population, 2021, third, most, populous, country, central, america, after, guatemala, honduras, bordered, honduras, north, caribbean, east, costa, rica, sout. Nicaragua b officially the Republic of Nicaragua c is the geographically largest country in Central America comprising 130 370 km2 50 340 sq mi With a population of 6 850 540 as of 2021 it is the third most populous country in Central America after Guatemala and Honduras Nicaragua is bordered by Honduras to the north the Caribbean Sea to the east Costa Rica to the south and the Pacific Ocean and a shared maritime border with El Salvador to the west The country s largest city and national capital is Managua the fourth largest city in Central America with a population of 1 055 247 as of 2020 Nicaragua s multiethnic population includes people of mestizo indigenous European and African heritage The country s most spoken language is Spanish though indigenous tribes on the Mosquito Coast speak their own languages and English Republic of NicaraguaRepublica de Nicaragua Spanish Flag Coat of armsMotto En Dios confiamos Spanish In God We Trust a Anthem Salve a ti Nicaragua Spanish Hail to Thee Nicaragua source source track track track track Capitaland largest cityManagua12 6 N 86 14 W 12 100 N 86 233 W 12 100 86 233Official languagesSpanishRecognised regional languagesEnglishMiskitoRamaSumoMiskito Coast CreoleGarifunaRama Cay CreoleEthnic groups 2023 2 69 Mestizo mixed White and Indigenous 17 White9 Black5 IndigenousReligion 2015 3 4 84 4 Christianity 55 0 Catholicism 27 2 Protestantism 2 2 other Christian14 7 no religion0 9 otherDemonym s NicaraguanPinolero Pinolera colloquial GovernmentUnitary presidential republic under an authoritarian dictatorship 5 6 7 PresidentDaniel Ortega Vice PresidentRosario MurilloLegislatureNational AssemblyIndependence from Spain Mexico and the Federal Republic of Central America Declared15 September 1821 Recognized25 July 1850 from the First Mexican Empire1 July 1823 from the Federal Republic of Central America31 May 1838 Revolution19 July 1979 Current constitution9 January 1987 8 Area Total130 375 km2 50 338 sq mi 96th Water 7 14Population 2023 estimate6 359 689 9 110th Density51 km2 132 1 sq mi 155th GDP PPP 2023 estimate Total 51 022 billion 10 115th Per capita 7 642 10 129th GDP nominal 2023 estimate Total 17 353 billion 10 127th Per capita 2 599 10 134th Gini 2014 46 2 11 highHDI 2021 0 667 12 medium 126th CurrencyCordoba NIO Time zoneUTC 6 CST Driving siderightCalling code 505ISO 3166 codeNIInternet TLD ni Originally inhabited by various indigenous cultures since ancient times the region was conquered by the Spanish Empire in the 16th century Nicaragua gained independence from Spain in 1821 The Mosquito Coast followed a different historical path being colonized by the English in the 17th century and later coming under British rule It became an autonomous territory of Nicaragua in 1860 and its northernmost part was transferred to Honduras in 1960 Since its independence Nicaragua has undergone periods of political unrest dictatorship occupation and fiscal crisis including the Nicaraguan Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s and the Contra War of the 1980s The mixture of cultural traditions has generated substantial diversity in folklore cuisine and music and literature including contributions by Nicaraguan poets and writers such as Ruben Dario Known as the land of lakes and volcanoes 13 14 Nicaragua is also home to the Bosawas Biosphere Reserve the second largest rainforest of the Americas 15 The biological diversity warm tropical climate and active volcanoes make Nicaragua an increasingly popular tourist destination 16 17 Nicaragua co founded the United Nations 18 and is also a member of the Non Aligned Movement 19 Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America 20 and Community of Latin American and Caribbean States 21 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Pre Columbian history 2 2 Spanish era 1523 1821 2 3 Independent Nicaragua from 1821 to 1909 2 4 United States occupation 1909 1933 2 5 Somoza dynasty 1927 1979 2 6 Nicaraguan Revolution 1960s 1990 2 7 Contras 2 8 Post war 1990 present 3 Geography and climate 3 1 Pacific lowlands 3 2 North central highlands 3 3 Caribbean lowlands 3 4 Flora and fauna 4 Government 4 1 Foreign relations 4 2 Military 4 3 Law enforcement 4 4 Administrative divisions 5 Economy 5 1 Tourism 6 Demographics 6 1 Ethnic groups 6 1 1 Black Creoles 6 1 2 Indigenous population 6 2 Languages 6 3 Largest cities 6 4 Religion 6 5 Immigration 6 6 Diaspora 6 7 Healthcare 6 8 Education 6 9 Gender equality 7 Culture 7 1 Music 7 2 Dance 7 3 Literature 7 4 Cuisine 7 5 Media 7 6 Sports 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Additional sources 12 External links 12 1 Government 12 2 OtherEtymology editThere are two prevailing theories on how the name Nicaragua came to be The first is that the name was coined by Spanish colonists based on the name Nicarao 22 who was the chieftain or cacique of a powerful indigenous tribe encountered by the Spanish conquistador Gil Gonzalez Davila during his entry into southwestern Nicaragua in 1522 This theory holds that the name Nicaragua was formed from Nicarao and agua Spanish for water to reference the fact that there are two large lakes and several other bodies of water within the country 23 However as of 2002 it was determined that the cacique s real name was Macuilmiquiztli which meant Five Deaths in the Nahuatl language rather than Nicarao 24 25 26 27 The second theory is that the country s name comes from any of the following Nahuatl words nic anahuac which meant Anahuac reached this far or the Nahuas came this far or those who come from Anahuac came this far nican nahua which meant here are the Nahuas or nic atl nahuac which meant here by the water or surrounded by water 22 23 28 29 History editMain article History of Nicaragua Pre Columbian history edit nbsp An ancient petroglyph on Ometepe Island Paleo Indians first inhabited what is now known as Nicaragua as far back as 12 000 BCE 30 In later pre Columbian times Nicaragua s indigenous people were part of the Intermediate Area 31 33 between the Mesoamerican and Andean cultural regions and within the influence of the Isthmo Colombian Area Nicaragua s central region and its Caribbean coast were inhabited by Macro Chibchan language ethnic groups such as the Miskito Rama Mayangna and Matagalpas 31 20 They had coalesced in Central America and migrated both to and from present day northern Colombia and nearby areas 32 Their food came primarily from hunting and gathering but also fishing and slash and burn agriculture 31 33 33 34 65 At the end of the 15th century western Nicaragua was inhabited by several indigenous peoples related by culture to the Mesoamerican civilizations of the Aztec and Maya and by language to the Mesoamerican language area 35 The Chorotegas were Mangue language ethnic groups who had arrived in Nicaragua from what is now the Mexican state of Chiapas sometime around 800 CE 28 34 26 33 The Nicarao people were a branch of Nahuas who spoke the Nawat dialect and also came from Chiapas around 1200 CE 36 Prior to that the Nicaraos had been associated with the Toltec civilization 34 26 33 36 37 38 39 Both Chorotegas and Nicaraos originated in Mexico s Cholula valley 36 and migrated south 34 26 33 A third group the Subtiabas were an Oto Manguean people who migrated from the Mexican state of Guerrero around 1200 CE 40 159 Additionally there were trade related colonies in Nicaragua set up by the Aztecs starting in the 14th century 34 26 33 Spanish era 1523 1821 edit Further information Spanish colonization of the Americas and Spanish conquest of Nicaragua nbsp The Colonial city of Leon nbsp The colonial city of Granada near Lake Nicaragua one of the most visited sites in Central America In 1502 on his fourth voyage Christopher Columbus became the first European known to have reached what is now Nicaragua as he sailed southeast toward the Isthmus of Panama 31 193 34 92 Columbus explored the Mosquito Coast on the Atlantic side of Nicaragua 41 but did not encounter any indigenous people 20 years later the Spaniards returned to Nicaragua this time to its southwestern part The first attempt to conquer Nicaragua was by the conquistador Gil Gonzalez Davila 42 who had arrived in Panama in January 1520 In 1522 Gonzalez Davila ventured to the area that later became the Rivas Department of Nicaragua 31 35 34 92 There he encountered an indigenous Nahua tribe led by chief Macuilmiquiztli whose name has sometimes been erroneously referred to as Nicarao or Nicaragua The tribe s capital was Quauhcapolca 27 43 44 Gonzalez Davila conversed with Macuilmiquiztli thanks to two indigenous interpreters who had learned Spanish whom he had brought along 26 After exploring and gathering gold 27 31 35 34 55 in the fertile western valleys Gonzalez Davila and his men were attacked and driven off by the Chorotega led by chief Diriangen 27 45 The Spanish tried to convert the tribes to Christianity Macuilmiquiztli s tribe was baptized 27 34 86 but Diriangen was openly hostile to the Spaniards Western Nicaragua at the Pacific Coast became a port and shipbuilding facility for the Galleons plying the waters between Manila Philippines and Acapulco Mexico 46 The first Spanish permanent settlements were founded in 1524 42 That year the conquistador Francisco Hernandez de Cordoba founded two of Nicaragua s main cities Granada on Lake Nicaragua and then Leon west of Lake Managua 31 35 193 34 92 Cordoba soon built defenses for the cities and fought against incursions by other conquistadors 34 92 Cordoba was later publicly beheaded for having defied his superior Pedro Arias Davila 31 35 Cordoba s tomb and remains were discovered in 2000 in the ruins of Leon Viejo 47 The clashes among Spanish forces did not impede their destruction of the indigenous people and their culture The series of battles came to be known as the War of the Captains 48 Pedro Arias Davila was a winner 31 35 although he lost control of Panama he moved to Nicaragua and established his base in Leon 49 In 1527 Leon became the capital of the colony 34 93 49 Through diplomacy Arias Davila became the colony s first governor 47 Without women in their parties 34 123 the Spanish conquerors took Nahua and Chorotega wives and partners beginning the multiethnic mix of indigenous and European stock now known as mestizo which constitutes the great majority of the population in western Nicaragua 35 Many indigenous people were killed by European infectious diseases compounded by neglect by the Spaniards who controlled their subsistence 42 Many other indigenous peoples were captured and transported as slaves to Panama and Peru between 1526 and 1540 31 193 34 104 105 In 1610 the Momotombo volcano erupted destroying the city of Leon 50 The city was rebuilt northwest of the original 49 50 which is now known as the ruins of Leon Viejo During the American Revolutionary War Central America was subject to conflict between Britain and Spain British navy admiral Horatio Nelson led expeditions in the Battle of San Fernando de Omoa in 1779 and on the San Juan River in 1780 the latter of which had temporary success before being abandoned due to disease Independent Nicaragua from 1821 to 1909 edit nbsp The Mosquito Coast in 1830 nbsp A portrait of the Battle of San Jacinto during the Filibuster War The Act of Independence of Central America dissolved the Captaincy General of Guatemala in September 1821 and Nicaragua soon became part of the First Mexican Empire In July 1823 after the overthrow of the Mexican monarchy in March of the same year Nicaragua joined the newly formed United Provinces of Central America country later known as the Federal Republic of Central America Nicaragua definitively became an independent republic in 1838 51 The early years of independence were characterized by rivalry between the Liberal elite of Leon and the Conservative elite of Granada which often degenerated into civil war particularly during the 1840s and 1850s Managua rose to undisputed preeminence as the nation s capital in 1852 to allay the rivalry between the two feuding cities 52 53 Following the start 1848 of the California Gold Rush Nicaragua provided a route for travelers from the eastern United States to journey to California by sea via the San Juan River and Lake Nicaragua 31 81 Invited by the Liberals in 1855 to join their struggle against the Conservatives the American adventurer and filibuster William Walker set himself up as President of Nicaragua after conducting a farcical election in 1856 his presidency lasted less than a year 54 Military forces from Costa Rica Honduras El Salvador Guatemala and Nicaragua itself united to drive Walker out of Nicaragua in 1857 55 56 57 bringing three decades of Conservative rule Great Britain which had claimed the Mosquito Coast as a protectorate since 1655 delegated the area to Honduras in 1859 before transferring it to Nicaragua in 1860 The Mosquito Coast remained an autonomous area until 1894 Jose Santos Zelaya President of Nicaragua from 1893 to 1909 negotiated the integration of the Mosquito Coast into Nicaragua In his honor the region became Zelaya Department Throughout the late 19th century the United States and several European powers considered various schemes to link the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic by building a canal across Nicaragua 58 United States occupation 1909 1933 edit See also United States occupation of Nicaragua In 1909 the United States supported the forces rebelling against President Zelaya U S motives included differences over the proposed Nicaragua Canal Nicaragua s potential to destabilize the region and Zelaya s attempts to regulate foreign access to Nicaraguan natural resources On November 18 1909 U S warships were sent to the area after 500 revolutionaries including two Americans were executed by order of Zelaya The U S justified the intervention by claiming to protect U S lives and property Zelaya resigned later that year In August 1912 the President of Nicaragua Adolfo Diaz requested the secretary of war General Luis Mena to resign for fear he was leading an insurrection Mena fled Managua with his brother the chief of police of Managua to start an insurrection After Mena s troops captured steam boats of an American company the U S delegation asked President Diaz to ensure the safety of American citizens and property during the insurrection He replied he could not and asked the U S to intervene in the conflict 59 60 U S Marines occupied Nicaragua from 1912 to 1933 31 111 197 61 except for a nine month period beginning in 1925 In 1914 the Bryan Chamorro Treaty was signed giving the U S control over a proposed canal through Nicaragua as well as leases for potential canal defenses 62 After the U S Marines left another violent conflict between Liberals and Conservatives in 1926 resulted in the return of U S Marines 63 nbsp Rebel leader Augusto Cesar Sandino center in June 1929 From 1927 to 1933 rebel general Augusto Cesar Sandino led a sustained guerrilla war against the regime and then against the U S Marines whom he fought for over five years 64 When the Americans left in 1933 they set up the Guardia Nacional national guard 65 a combined military and police force trained and equipped by the Americans and designed to be loyal to U S interests After the U S Marines withdrew from Nicaragua in January 1933 Sandino and the newly elected administration of President Juan Bautista Sacasa reached an agreement that Sandino would cease his guerrilla activities in return for amnesty a land grant for an agricultural colony and retention of an armed band of 100 men for a year 66 However due to a growing hostility between Sandino and National Guard director Anastasio Somoza Garcia and a fear of armed opposition from Sandino Somoza Garcia ordered his assassination 65 67 68 Sacasa invited Sandino for dinner and to sign a peace treaty at the Presidential House on the night of February 21 1934 After leaving the Presidential House Sandino s car was stopped by National Guard soldiers and they kidnapped him Later that night Sandino was assassinated by National Guard soldiers Later hundreds of men women and children from Sandino s agricultural colony were murdered 69 Somoza dynasty 1927 1979 edit nbsp President Anastasio Somoza Garcia left with Dominican President Rafael Trujillo in 1952 nbsp Anastasio Somoza Debayle center with U S president Richard Nixon in 1971 Nicaragua has experienced several military dictatorships the longest being the hereditary dictatorship of the Somoza family who ruled for 43 nonconsecutive years during the 20th century 70 The Somoza family came to power as part of a U S engineered pact in 1927 that stipulated the formation of the Guardia Nacional to replace the marines who had long reigned in the country 71 Somoza Garcia slowly eliminated officers in the national guard who might have stood in his way and then deposed Sacasa and became president on January 1 1937 in a rigged election 65 In 1941 during the Second World War Nicaragua declared war on Japan 8 December Germany 11 December Italy 11 December Bulgaria 19 December Hungary 19 December and Romania 19 December Only Romania reciprocated declaring war on Nicaragua on the same day 19 December 1941 72 No soldiers were sent to the war but Somoza Garcia confiscated properties held by German Nicaraguan residents 73 In 1945 Nicaragua was among the first countries to ratify the United Nations Charter 74 On September 29 1956 75 Somoza Garcia was shot to death by Rigoberto Lopez Perez a 27 year old Liberal Nicaraguan poet Luis Somoza Debayle the eldest son of the late president was appointed president by the congress and officially took charge of the country 65 He is remembered by some as moderate but after only a few years in power died of a heart attack His successor as president was Rene Schick Gutierrez whom most Nicaraguans viewed as nothing more than a puppet of the Somozas 76 Somoza Garcia s youngest son Anastasio Somoza Debayle often referred to simply as Somoza became president in 1967 An earthquake in 1972 destroyed nearly 90 of Managua including much of its infrastructure 77 Instead of helping to rebuild the city Somoza siphoned off relief money The mishandling of relief money also prompted Pittsburgh Pirates star Roberto Clemente to personally fly to Managua on December 31 1972 but he died en route in an airplane accident 78 79 Even the economic elite were reluctant to support Somoza as he had acquired monopolies in industries that were key to rebuilding the nation 80 The Somoza family was among a few families or groups of influential firms which reaped most of the benefits of the country s growth from the 1950s to the 1970s When Somoza was deposed by the Sandinistas in 1979 the family s worth was estimated to be between 500 million and 1 5 billion 81 Nicaraguan Revolution 1960s 1990 edit Main article Nicaraguan Revolution nbsp The U S supported Contra rebels in 1987 nbsp Celebrations of the 10th anniversary of the Nicaraguan Revolution in Managua in 1989 In 1961 Carlos Fonseca looked back to the historical figure of Sandino and along with two other people one of whom was believed to be Casimiro Sotelo who was later assassinated founded the Sandinista National Liberation Front FSLN 65 After the 1972 earthquake and Somoza s apparent corruption the ranks of the Sandinistas were flooded with young disaffected Nicaraguans who no longer had anything to lose 82 In December 1974 a group of the FSLN in an attempt to kidnap U S ambassador Turner Shelton held some Managuan partygoers hostage after killing the party s host former agriculture minister Jose Maria Castillo until the Somoza government met their demands for a large ransom and free transport to Cuba Somoza granted the demand and then subsequently sent his national guard out into the countryside to look for the kidnappers who were described by opponents as terrorists 83 On January 10 1978 Pedro Joaquin Chamorro Cardenal the editor of the national newspaper La Prensa and ardent opponent of Somoza was assassinated 84 It is alleged that the planners and perpetrators of the murder were at the highest echelons of the Somoza regime 84 The Sandinistas forcefully took power in July 1979 ousting Somoza and prompting the exodus of the majority of Nicaragua s middle class wealthy landowners and professionals many of whom settled in the United States 85 86 87 The Carter administration decided to work with the new government while attaching a provision for aid forfeiture if it was found to be assisting insurgencies in neighboring countries 88 Somoza fled the country and eventually ended up in Paraguay where he was assassinated in September 1980 allegedly by members of the Argentinian Revolutionary Workers Party 89 In 1980 the Carter administration provided 60 million in aid to Nicaragua under the Sandinistas but the aid was suspended when the administration obtained evidence of Nicaraguan shipment of arms to El Salvadoran rebels 90 Most people sided with Nicaragua against the Sandinistas 91 Contras edit Main article Contras In response to the Sandinistas various rebel groups collectively known as the Contras were formed to oppose the new government The Reagan administration ultimately authorized the CIA to help the Contra rebels with funding weapons and training 92 The Contras operated from camps in the neighboring countries of Honduras to the north and Costa Rica to the south 92 They engaged in a systematic campaign of terror among rural Nicaraguans to disrupt the social reform projects of the Sandinistas Several historians have criticized the Contra campaign and the Reagan administration s support for the Contras citing the brutality and numerous human rights violations of the Contras alleging that health centers schools and cooperatives were destroyed by rebels 93 and that murder rape and torture occurred on a large scale in Contra dominated areas 94 The U S also carried out a campaign of economic sabotage and disrupted shipping by planting underwater mines in Nicaragua s port of Corinto 95 an action condemned by the International Court of Justice as illegal 96 The court also found that the U S encouraged acts contrary to humanitarian law by producing the manual Psychological Operations in Guerrilla Warfare and disseminating it to the Contras 97 The manual among other things advised on how to rationalize killings of civilians 98 The U S also sought to place economic pressure on the Sandinistas and the Reagan administration imposed a full trade embargo 99 The Sandinistas were also accused of human rights abuses including torture disappearances and mass executions 100 101 The Inter American Commission on Human Rights investigated abuses by Sandinista forces including an execution of 35 to 40 Miskitos in December 1981 102 and an execution of 75 people in November 1984 103 In the Nicaraguan general elections of 1984 which were judged by at least one visiting 30 person delegation of NGO representatives to have been free and fair 104 the Sandinistas won the parliamentary election and their leader Daniel Ortega won the presidential election 105 The Reagan administration criticized the elections as a sham based on the claim that Arturo Cruz the candidate nominated by the Coordinadora Democratica Nicaraguense comprising three right wing political parties did not participate in the elections However the administration privately argued against Cruz s participation for fear that his involvement would legitimize the elections and thus weaken the case for American aid to the Contras 106 According to Martin Kriele the results of the election were rigged 107 108 109 110 In 1983 the U S Congress prohibited federal funding of the Contras but the Reagan administration illegally continued to back them by covertly selling arms to Iran and channeling the proceeds to the Contras in the Iran Contra affair for which several members of the Reagan administration were convicted of felonies 111 The International Court of Justice in regard to the case of Nicaragua v United States in 1986 found the United States of America was under an obligation to make reparation to the Republic of Nicaragua for all injury caused to Nicaragua by certain breaches of obligations under customary international law and treaty law committed by the United States of America 112 During the war between the Contras and the Sandinistas 30 000 people were killed 113 Post war 1990 present edit nbsp In 1990 after the Contra war Violeta Chamorro became the first woman president democratically elected in the history of the Americas nbsp Flooding in Lake Managua after Hurricane Mitch in 1998 nbsp Nicaraguan protests in May 2018 In the Nicaraguan general election 1990 a coalition of anti Sandinista parties from both the left and right of the political spectrum led by Violeta Chamorro the widow of Pedro Joaquin Chamorro Cardenal defeated the Sandinistas The defeat shocked the Sandinistas who had expected to win 114 Exit polls of Nicaraguans reported Chamorro s victory over Ortega was achieved with a 55 majority 115 Chamorro was the first woman president of Nicaragua Ortega vowed he would govern desde abajo from below 116 Chamorro came to office with an economy in ruins primarily because of the financial and social costs of the Contra War with the Sandinista led government 117 In the next election the Nicaraguan general election 1996 Daniel Ortega and the Sandinistas of the FSLN lost again this time to Arnoldo Aleman of the Constitutional Liberal Party PLC In the 2001 elections the PLC again defeated the FSLN with Aleman s Vice President Enrique Bolanos succeeding him as president However Aleman was convicted and sentenced in 2003 to 20 years in prison for embezzlement money laundering and corruption 118 liberal and Sandinista parliament members combined to strip the presidential powers of President Bolanos and his ministers calling for his resignation and threatening impeachment The Sandinistas said they no longer supported Bolanos after U S Secretary of State Colin Powell told Bolanos to distance from the FSLN 119 This slow motion coup d etat was averted partially by pressure from the Central American presidents who vowed not to recognize any movement that removed Bolanos the U S the OAS and the European Union also opposed the action 120 Nicaragua briefly participated in the Iraq War in 2004 as part of the Plus Ultra Brigade a military contingent of mixed personnel 121 Before the general elections on November 5 2006 the National Assembly passed a bill further restricting abortion in Nicaragua 122 As a result Nicaragua is one of five countries in the world where abortion is illegal with no exceptions 123 Legislative and presidential elections took place on November 5 2006 Ortega returned to the presidency with 37 99 of the vote This percentage was enough to win the presidency outright because of a change in electoral law which lowered the percentage requiring a runoff election from 45 to 35 with a 5 margin of victory 124 Nicaragua s 2011 general election resulted in re election of Ortega with a landslide victory and 62 46 of the vote In 2014 the National Assembly approved changes to the constitution allowing Ortega to run for a third successive term 125 In November 2016 Ortega was elected for his third consecutive term his fourth overall International monitoring of the elections was initially prohibited and as a result the validity of the elections has been disputed but observation by the OAS was announced in October 126 127 Ortega was reported by Nicaraguan election officials as having received 72 of the vote However the Broad Front for Democracy FAD having promoted boycotts of the elections claimed that 70 of voters had abstained while election officials claimed 65 8 participation 128 In April 2018 demonstrations opposed a decree increasing taxes and reducing benefits in the country s pension system Local independent press organizations had documented at least 19 dead and over 100 missing in the ensuing conflict 129 A reporter from NPR spoke to protestors who explained that while the initial issue was about the pension reform the uprisings that spread across the country reflected many grievances about the government s time in office and that the fight is for President Ortega and his vice president wife to step down 130 April 24 2018 marked the day of the greatest march in opposition of the Sandinista party On May 2 2018 university student leaders publicly announced that they give the government seven days to set a date and time for a dialogue that was promised to the people due to the recent events of repression The students also scheduled another march on that same day for a peaceful protest As of May 2018 estimates of the death toll were as high as 63 many of them student protesters and the wounded totalled more than 400 131 Following a working visit from May 17 to 21 the Inter American Commission on Human Rights adopted precautionary measures aimed at protecting members of the student movement and their families after testimonies indicated the majority of them had suffered acts of violence and death threats for their participation 132 In the last week of May thousands who accuse Mr Ortega and his wife of acting like dictators joined in resuming anti government rallies after attempted peace talks have remained unresolved 133 Open suppression of political dissent and more militarized policing began in April 2018 but the onset of repression was gradual 134 Geography and climate editMain articles Geography of Nicaragua and Climate of Nicaragua See also Volcanoes of Nicaragua nbsp A map of Nicaragua s Koppen climate classification Nicaragua occupies a landmass of 130 967 km2 50 567 sq mi which makes it slightly larger than England Nicaragua has three distinct geographical regions the Pacific lowlands fertile valleys which the Spanish colonists settled the Amerrisque Mountains North central highlands and the Mosquito Coast Atlantic lowlands Caribbean lowlands The low plains of the Atlantic Coast are 97 km 60 mi wide in areas They have long been exploited for their natural resources On the Pacific side of Nicaragua are the two largest freshwater lakes in Central America Lake Managua and Lake Nicaragua Surrounding these lakes and extending to their northwest along the rift valley of the Gulf of Fonseca are fertile lowland plains with soil highly enriched by ash from nearby volcanoes of the central highlands Nicaragua s abundance of biologically significant and unique ecosystems contribute to Mesoamerica s designation as a biodiversity hotspot Nicaragua has made efforts to become less dependent on fossil fuels and it expects to acquire 90 of its energy from renewable resources by 2020 135 136 Nicaragua was one of the few countries that did not enter an INDC at COP21 137 138 Nicaragua initially chose not to join the Paris Climate Accord because it felt that much more action is required by individual countries on restricting global temperature rise 135 However in October 2017 Nicaragua made the decision to join the agreement 139 140 141 It ratified this agreement on November 22 2017 142 Nearly one fifth of Nicaragua is designated as protected areas like national parks nature reserves and biological reserves The country had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 3 63 10 ranking it 146th globally out of 172 countries 143 Geophysically Nicaragua is surrounded by the Caribbean Plate an oceanic tectonic plate underlying Central America and the Cocos Plate Since Central America is a major subduction zone Nicaragua hosts most of the Central American Volcanic Arc On 9 June 2021 Nicaragua launched a new volcanic supersite research in strengthening the monitoring and surveillance of the country s 21 active volcanoes Pacific lowlands edit nbsp Nicaragua is known as the land of lakes and volcanoes pictured is Concepcion volcano seen from Maderas volcano nbsp Penas Blancas part of the Bosawas Biosphere Reserve and located northeast of Jinotega in northeastern Nicaragua is the second largest rainforest in the Western Hemisphere after the Amazonian Rainforest in Brazil In the west of the country these lowlands consist of a broad hot fertile plain Punctuating this plain are several large volcanoes of the Cordillera Los Maribios mountain range including Mombacho just outside Granada and Momotombo near Leon The lowland area runs from the Gulf of Fonseca to Nicaragua s Pacific border with Costa Rica south of Lake Nicaragua Lake Nicaragua is the largest freshwater lake in Central America 20th largest in the world 144 and is home to some of the world s rare freshwater sharks Nicaraguan shark 145 The Pacific lowlands region is the most populous with over half of the nation s population The eruptions of western Nicaragua s 40 volcanoes many of which are still active have sometimes devastated settlements but also have enriched the land with layers of fertile ash The geologic activity that produces vulcanism also breeds powerful earthquakes Tremors occur regularly throughout the Pacific zone and earthquakes have nearly destroyed the capital city Managua more than once 146 Most of the Pacific zone is tierra caliente the hot land of tropical Spanish America at elevations under 610 metres 2 000 ft Temperatures remain virtually constant throughout the year with highs ranging between 29 4 and 32 2 C 85 and 90 F After a dry season lasting from November to April rains begin in May and continue to October giving the Pacific lowlands 1 016 to 1 524 millimetres 40 to 60 in of precipitation Good soils and a favourable climate combine to make western Nicaragua the country s economic and demographic centre The southwestern shore of Lake Nicaragua lies within 24 kilometres 15 mi of the Pacific Ocean Thus the lake and the San Juan River were often proposed in the 19th century as the longest part of a canal route across the Central American isthmus Canal proposals were periodically revived in the 20th and 21st centuries 146 147 Roughly a century after the opening of the Panama Canal the prospect of a Nicaraguan ecocanal remains a topic of interest 148 149 150 151 In addition to its beach and resort communities the Pacific lowlands contains most of Nicaragua s Spanish colonial architecture and artifacts Cities such as Leon and Granada abound in colonial architecture founded in 1524 Granada is the oldest colonial city in the Americas 152 needs update North central highlands edit nbsp The Somoto Canyon National Monument in Somoto in the Madriz Department in northern Nicaragua Northern Nicaragua is the most diversified region producing coffee cattle milk products vegetables wood gold and flowers Its extensive forests rivers and geography are suited for ecotourism The central highlands are a significantly less populated and economically developed area in the north between Lake Nicaragua and the Caribbean Forming the country s tierra templada or temperate land at elevations between 610 and 1 524 metres 2 000 and 5 000 ft the highlands enjoy mild temperatures with daily highs of 23 9 to 26 7 C 75 to 80 F This region has a longer wetter rainy season than the Pacific lowlands making erosion a problem on its steep slopes Rugged terrain poor soils and low population density characterize the area as a whole but the northwestern valleys are fertile and well settled 146 The area has a cooler climate than the Pacific lowlands About a quarter of the country s agriculture takes place in this region with coffee grown on the higher slopes Oaks pines moss ferns and orchids are abundant in the cloud forests of the region Bird life in the forests of the central region includes resplendent quetzals goldfinches hummingbirds jays and toucanets Caribbean lowlands edit This large rainforest region is irrigated by several large rivers and is sparsely populated The area has 57 of the territory of the nation and most of its mineral resources It has been heavily exploited but much natural diversity remains The Rio Coco is the largest river in Central America it forms the border with Honduras The Caribbean coastline is much more sinuous than its generally straight Pacific counterpart lagoons and deltas make it very irregular citation needed Nicaragua s Bosawas Biosphere Reserve is in the Atlantic lowlands part of which is located in the municipality of Siuna it protects 7 300 square kilometres 1 800 000 acres of La Mosquitia forest almost 7 of the country s area making it the largest rainforest north of the Amazon in Brazil 153 The municipalities of Siuna Rosita and Bonanza known as the Mining Triangle are located in the region known as the North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region in the Caribbean lowlands Bonanza still contains an active gold mine owned by HEMCO Siuna and Rosita do not have active mines but panning for gold is still very common in the region citation needed Nicaragua s tropical east coast is very different from the rest of the country The climate is predominantly tropical with high temperature and high humidity Around the area s principal city of Bluefields English is widely spoken along with the official Spanish The population more closely resembles that found in many typical Caribbean ports than the rest of Nicaragua 154 A great variety of birds can be observed including eagles toucans parakeets and macaws Other animal life in the area includes different species of monkeys anteaters white tailed deer and tapirs 155 Flora and fauna edit Main article Fauna of Nicaragua nbsp Guardabarranco ravine guard is Nicaragua s national bird Nicaragua is home to a rich variety of plants and animals Nicaragua is located in the middle of the Americas and this privileged location has enabled the country to serve as host to a great biodiversity This factor along with the weather and light altitudinal variations allows the country to harbor 248 species of amphibians and reptiles 183 species of mammals 705 bird species 640 fish species and about 5 796 species of plants The region of great forests is located on the eastern side of the country Rainforests are found in the Rio San Juan Department and in the autonomous regions of RAAN and RAAS This biome groups together the greatest biodiversity in the country and is largely protected by the Indio Maiz Biological Reserve in the south and the Bosawas Biosphere Reserve in the north The Nicaraguan jungles which represent about 9 700 square kilometres 2 4 million acres are considered the lungs of Central America and comprise the second largest sized rainforest of the Americas 156 157 There are currently 78 protected areas in Nicaragua covering more than 22 000 square kilometres 8 500 sq mi or about 17 of its landmass These include wildlife refuges and nature reserves that shelter a wide range of ecosystems There are more than 1 400 animal species classified thus far in Nicaragua Some 12 000 species of plants have been classified thus far in Nicaragua with an estimated 5 000 species not yet classified 158 The bull shark is a species of shark that can survive for an extended period of time in fresh water It can be found in Lake Nicaragua and the San Juan River where it is often referred to as the Nicaragua shark 159 Nicaragua has recently banned freshwater fishing of the Nicaragua shark and the sawfish in response to the declining populations of these animals 160 Government editMain article Politics of Nicaragua This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Nicaragua news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Nicaraguan president Daniel Ortega with then Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in Moscow in 2008 Politics of Nicaragua takes place in a framework of a presidential representative democratic republic whereby the President of Nicaragua is both head of state and head of government and of a multi party system Executive power is exercised by the government Legislative power is vested in both the government and the national assembly The judiciary makes up the third branch of government Between 2007 and 2009 Nicaragua s major political parties discussed the possibility of going from a presidential system to a parliamentary system Their reason there would be a clear differentiation between the head of government prime minister and the head of state president Nevertheless it was argued that the true reason for this proposal was to find a legal way for President Ortega to stay in power after January 2012 when his second and last government period was expected to end Ortega was reelected to a third term in November 2016 and a fourth in 2021 both elections were tainted by credible reports of large scale fraud voter intimidation and politically motivated arrests of opposition party leaders Independent observers were barred from the polls The OAS United States and European Union all described the 2021 election as a sham due to these issues 161 162 Since Daniel Ortega s election in 2006 liberal democratic norms and individual rights in practice have deteriorated Parties other than the ruling FSLN have been repressed through arbitrary arrest and detention of opposition candidates and activists Most government jobs de facto require membership in the FSLN Opposition media has been repressed through arrests of journalists and seizure of broadcasting and printing materials 163 Foreign relations edit Main article Foreign relations of Nicaragua Nicaragua pursues an independent foreign policy Nicaragua is in territorial disputes with Colombia over the Archipelago de San Andres y Providencia and Quita Sueno Bank and with Costa Rica over a boundary dispute involving the San Juan River On 12 October 2022 Nicaragua voted against condemning Russia for its invasion of Ukraine 164 Military edit Main article Nicaraguan Armed Forces nbsp AN 26 and Mi 17 both used by the Nicaraguan Air Force The Nicaraguan Armed Forces consist of various military contingents Nicaragua has an army navy and an air force There are roughly 14 000 active duty personnel which is much less compared to the numbers seen during the Nicaraguan Revolution Although the army has had a rough military history a portion of its forces which were known as the national guard became integrated with what is now the National Police of Nicaragua In essence the police became a gendarmerie The National Police of Nicaragua are rarely if ever labeled as a gendarmerie The other elements and manpower that were not devoted to the national police were sent over to cultivate the new Army of Nicaragua The age to serve in the armed forces is 17 and conscription is not imminent As of 2006 update the military budget was roughly 0 7 of Nicaragua s expenditures In 2017 Nicaragua signed the UN treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons 165 Law enforcement edit Main article Law enforcement in Nicaragua nbsp National Police of Nicaragua The National Police of Nicaragua Force in Spanish La Policia Nacional Nicaraguense is the national police of Nicaragua The force is in charge of regular police functions and at times works in conjunction with the Nicaraguan military making it an indirect and rather subtle version of a gendarmerie citation needed However the Nicaraguan National Police work separately and have a different established set of norms than the nation s military citation needed According to a recent US Department of State report corruption is endemic especially within law enforcement and the judiciary and arbitrary arrests torture and harsh prison conditions are the norm 166 Nicaragua is the safest country in Central America and one of the safest in Latin America according to the United Nations Development Program with a homicide rate of 8 7 per 100 000 inhabitants 167 Administrative divisions edit Main article Departments of Nicaragua Nicaragua is a unitary republic For administrative purposes it is divided into 15 departments departamentos and two self governing regions autonomous communities based on the Spanish model The departments are then subdivided into 153 municipios municipalities The two autonomous regions are the North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region and South Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region often referred to as RACCN and RACCS respectively 168 Department Capital city 1 nbsp Boaco Boaco 2 nbsp Carazo Jinotepe 3 nbsp Chinandega Chinandega 4 nbsp Chontales Juigalpa 5 nbsp Esteli Esteli 6 nbsp Granada Granada 7 nbsp Jinotega Jinotega 8 nbsp Leon Leon 9 nbsp Madriz Somoto 10 nbsp Managua Managua 11 nbsp Masaya Masaya 12 nbsp Matagalpa Matagalpa 13 nbsp Nueva Segovia Ocotal 14 nbsp Rivas Rivas 15 nbsp Rio San Juan San Carlos 16 nbsp North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region Bilwi 17 nbsp South Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region BluefieldsEconomy editMain article Economy of Nicaragua nbsp Historical GDP per capita in Nicaragua nbsp Coffee is one of the Nicaragua s largest exports It is grown in Jinotega Esteli Nueva Segovia Matagalpa and Madriz and exported worldwide through North America Latin America Europe Asia and Australia Nestle and Starbucks buy Nicaraguan coffee Nicaragua is one of poorest countries in the Americas 169 170 171 Its gross domestic product GDP in purchasing power parity PPP in 2008 was estimated at US 17 37 billion 8 Agriculture represents 15 5 of GDP the highest percentage in Central America 172 Remittances account for over 15 of the Nicaraguan GDP Close to one billion dollars are sent to the country by Nicaraguans living abroad 173 The economy grew at a rate of about 4 in 2011 8 By 2019 given restrictive taxes and a civil conflict it recorded a negative growth of 3 9 the International Monetary Fund forecast for 2020 is a further decline of 6 due to COVID 19 174 The restrictive tax measures put in place in 2019 and a political crisis over social security negatively affected the country s weak public spending and investor confidence in sovereign debt According to the update IMF forecasts from 14 April 2020 due to the COVID 19 outbreak GDP growth is expected to fall to 6 in 2020 citation needed needs update According to the United Nations Development Programme 48 of the population of Nicaragua live below the poverty line 175 79 9 of the population live with less than 2 per day 176 According to UN figures 80 of the indigenous people who make up 5 of the population live on less than 1 per day 177 According to the World Bank Nicaragua ranked as the 123rd out of 190 best economy for starting a business 178 In 2007 Nicaragua s economy was labelled 62 7 free by the conservative think tank Heritage Foundation with high levels of fiscal government labor investment financial and trade freedom 179 It ranked as the 61st freest economy and 14th of 29 in the Americas Nicaragua was ranked 115th in the Global Innovation Index in 2023 180 In March 2007 Poland and Nicaragua signed an agreement to write off 30 6 million dollars which was borrowed by the Nicaraguan government in the 1980s 181 Inflation reduced from 33 500 in 1988 to 9 45 in 2006 and the foreign debt was cut in half 182 Nicaragua is primarily an agricultural country agriculture constitutes 60 of its total exports which annually yield approximately US 300 million 183 Nearly two thirds of the coffee crop comes from the northern part of the central highlands in the area north and east of the town of Esteli 146 Tobacco grown in the same northern highlands region as coffee has become an increasingly important cash crop since the 1990s with annual exports of leaf and cigars in the neighborhood of 200 million per year 184 Soil erosion and pollution from the heavy use of pesticides have become serious concerns in the cotton district Yields and exports have both been declining since 1985 146 Today most of Nicaragua s bananas are grown in the northwestern part of the country near the port of Corinto sugarcane is also grown in the same district 146 Cassava a root crop somewhat similar to the potato is an important food in tropical regions Cassava is also the main ingredient in tapioca pudding 146 Nicaragua s agricultural sector has benefited because of the country s strong ties to Venezuela It is estimated that Venezuela will import approximately 200 million in agricultural goods 185 In the 1990s the government initiated efforts to diversify agriculture Some of the new export oriented crops were peanuts sesame melons and onions 146 Fishing boats on the Caribbean side bring shrimp as well as lobsters into processing plants at Puerto Cabezas Bluefields and Laguna de Perlas 146 A turtle fishery thrived on the Caribbean coast before it collapsed from overexploitation 146 Mining is becoming a major industry in Nicaragua 186 contributing less than 1 of gross domestic product GDP Restrictions are being placed on lumbering due to increased environmental concerns about destruction of the rain forests But lumbering continues despite these obstacles indeed a single hardwood tree may be worth thousands of dollars 146 During the war between the US backed Contras and the government of the Sandinistas in the 1980s much of the country s infrastructure was damaged or destroyed 187 Transportation throughout the nation is often inadequate For example it was until recently impossible to travel all the way by highway from Managua to the Caribbean coast A new road between Nueva Guinea and Bluefields was completed in 2019 and allows regular bus service to the capital 188 The Centroamerica power plant on the Tuma River in the Central highlands has been expanded and other hydroelectric projects have been undertaken to help provide electricity to the nation s newer industries 146 Nicaragua has long been considered as a possible site for a new canal that could supplement the Panama Canal connecting the Caribbean Sea and therefore the Atlantic Ocean with the Pacific Ocean Nicaragua s minimum wage is among the lowest in the Americas and in the world 189 190 191 192 Remittances are equivalent to roughly 15 of the country s gross domestic product 8 Growth in the maquila sector slowed in the first decade of the 21st century with rising competition from Asian markets particularly China 146 Land is the traditional basis of wealth in Nicaragua with great fortunes coming from the export of staples such as coffee cotton beef and sugar Almost all of the upper class and nearly a quarter of the middle class are substantial landowners A 1985 government study classified 69 4 percent of the population as poor on the basis that they were unable to satisfy one or more of their basic needs in housing sanitary services water sewage and garbage collection education and employment The defining standards for this study were very low housing was considered substandard if it was constructed of discarded materials with dirt floors or if it was occupied by more than four persons per room Rural workers are dependent on agricultural wage labor especially in coffee and cotton Only a small fraction hold permanent jobs Most are migrants who follow crops during the harvest period and find other work during the off season The lower peasants are typically smallholders without sufficient land to sustain a family they also join the harvest labor force The upper peasants have sufficient resources to be economically independent They produce enough surplus beyond their personal needs to allow them to participate in the national and world markets nbsp The capital city Managua at night The urban lower class is characterized by the informal sector of the economy The informal sector consists of small scale enterprises that utilize traditional technologies and operate outside the legal regime of labor protections and taxation Workers in the informal sector are self employed unsalaried family workers or employees of small enterprises and they are generally poor Nicaragua s informal sector workers include tinsmiths mattress makers seamstresses bakers shoemakers and carpenters people who take in laundry and ironing or prepare food for sale in the streets and thousands of peddlers owners of small businesses often operating out of their own homes and market stall operators Some work alone but others labor in the small talleres workshops factories that are responsible for a large share of the country s industrial production Because informal sector earnings are generally very low few families can subsist on one income 193 Like most Latin American nations Nicaragua is also characterized by a very small upper class roughly 2 of the population that is very wealthy and wields the political and economic power in the country that is not in the hands of foreign corporations and private industries These families are oligarchical in nature and have ruled Nicaragua for generations and their wealth is politically and economically horizontally and vertically integrated Nicaragua is currently a member of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas also known as ALBA ALBA has proposed creating a new currency the Sucre for use among its members In essence this means that the Nicaraguan cordoba will be replaced with the Sucre Other nations that will follow a similar pattern include Venezuela Ecuador Bolivia Honduras Cuba Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Dominica and Antigua and Barbuda 194 Nicaragua is considering construction of a canal linking the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean which President Daniel Ortega has said will give Nicaragua its economic independence 195 Scientists have raised concerns about environmental impacts but the government has maintained that the canal will benefit the country by creating new jobs and potentially increasing its annual growth to an average of 8 per year 196 The project was scheduled to begin construction in December 2014 197 however the Nicaragua Canal has yet to be started 198 Tourism edit Main article Tourism in Nicaragua nbsp A Royal Caribbean cruise ship docked near the beach at San Juan del Sur in southern Nicaragua nbsp 2 100 year old human footprints called Huellas de Acahualinca and preserved in volcanic mud near Lake Managua nbsp Apoyo Lagoon Natural Reserve a nature reserve located between the departments of Masaya and Granada nbsp The Solentiname Islands tropical islands in Lake Nicaragua which are home to 76 bird species and are a growing ecotourism destination By 2006 tourism became the second largest industry in Nicaragua 199 Previously tourism had grown about 70 nationwide during a period of 7 years with rates of 10 16 annually 200 The increase and growth led to the income from tourism to rise more than 300 over a period of 10 years 201 The growth in tourism has also positively affected the agricultural commercial and finance industries as well as the construction industry President Daniel Ortega has stated his intention to use tourism to combat poverty throughout the country 202 The results for Nicaragua s tourism driven economy have been significant with the nation welcoming one million tourists in a calendar year for the first time in its history in 2010 203 Every year about 60 000 U S citizens visit Nicaragua primarily business people tourists and those visiting relatives 204 Some 5 300 people from the U S reside in Nicaragua The majority of tourists who visit Nicaragua are from the U S Central or South America and Europe According to the Ministry of Tourism of Nicaragua INTUR 205 the colonial cities of Leon and Granada are the preferred spots for tourists Also the cities of Masaya Rivas and the likes of San Juan del Sur El Ostional the Fortress of the Immaculate Conception Ometepe Island the Mombacho volcano and the Corn Islands among other locations are the main tourist attractions In addition ecotourism sport fishing and surfing attract many tourists to Nicaragua According to the TV Noticias news program the main attractions in Nicaragua for tourists are the beaches the scenic routes the architecture of cities such as Leon and Granada ecotourism and agritourism particularly in northern Nicaragua 200 As a result of increased tourism Nicaragua has seen its foreign direct investment increase by 79 1 from 2007 to 2009 206 Nicaragua is referred to as the land of lakes and volcanoes due to the number of lagoons and lakes and the chain of volcanoes that runs from the north to the south along the country s Pacific side 13 14 207 Today only 7 of the 50 volcanoes in Nicaragua are considered active Many of these volcanoes offer some great possibilities for tourists with activities such as hiking climbing camping and swimming in crater lakes The Apoyo Lagoon Natural Reserve was created by the eruption of the Apoyo Volcano about 23 000 years ago which left a huge 7 km wide crater that gradually filled with water It is surrounded by the old crater wall 208 The rim of the lagoon is lined with restaurants many of which have kayaks available Besides exploring the forest around it many water sports are practiced in the lagoon most notably kayaking 209 Sand skiing has become a popular attraction at the Cerro Negro volcano in Leon Both dormant and active volcanoes can be climbed Some of the most visited volcanoes include the Masaya Volcano Momotombo Mombacho Cosiguina and Ometepe s Maderas and Concepcion Ecotourism aims to be ecologically and socially conscious it focuses on local culture wilderness and adventure Nicaragua s ecotourism is growing with every passing year 210 It boasts a number of ecotourist tours and perfect places for adventurers Nicaragua has three eco regions the Pacific Central and Atlantic which contain volcanoes tropical rainforests and agricultural land 211 The majority of the eco lodges and other environmentally focused touristic destinations are found on Ometepe Island 212 located in the middle of Lake Nicaragua just an hour s boat ride from Granada While some are foreign owned others are owned by local families Demographics editMain articles Nicaraguans and Demographics of Nicaragua Population 213 214 Year Million 1950 1 3 2000 5 0 2021 6 9 nbsp Nicaraguan high school students at the American Nicaraguan School According to a 2014 research published in the journal Genetics and Molecular Biology European ancestry predominates in 69 of Nicaraguans followed by African ancestry in 20 and lastly indigenous ancestry in 11 215 A Japanese research of Genomic Components in America s demography demonstrated that on average the ancestry of Nicaraguans is 58 62 European 28 Native American and 14 African with a very small Near Eastern contribution 216 Non genetic data from the CIA World Factbook establish that from Nicaragua s 2016 population of 5 966 798 around 69 are mestizo 17 white 5 Native American and 9 black and other races 8 This fluctuates with changes in migration patterns The population is 58 urban as of 2013 update 217 The capital Managua is the biggest city with an estimated population of 1 042 641 in 2016 218 In 2005 over 5 million people lived in the Pacific Central and North regions and 700 000 in the Caribbean region 219 There is a growing expatriate community 220 the majority of whom move for business investment or retirement from across the world such as from the US Canada Taiwan and European countries the majority have settled in Managua Granada and San Juan del Sur Many Nicaraguans live abroad particularly in Costa Rica the United States Spain Canada and other Central American countries 221 failed verification Nicaragua has a population growth rate of 1 5 as of 2013 update 222 This is the result of one of the highest birth rates in the Western Hemisphere citation needed 17 7 per 1 000 as of 2017 223 The death rate was 4 7 per 1 000 during the same period according to the United Nations 224 Ethnic groups edit nbsp Afro Nicaraguans The majority of the Nicaraguan population is composed of mestizos roughly 69 while 17 of Nicaragua s population is white 225 with the majority of them being of Spanish descent while others are of German Italian English Turkish Danish or French ancestry Black Creoles edit About 9 of Nicaragua s population is black and mainly resides on the country s Caribbean or Atlantic coast The black population is mostly composed of black English speaking Creoles who are the descendants of escaped or shipwrecked slaves many carry the name of Scottish settlers who brought slaves with them such as Campbell Gordon Downs and Hodgson Although many Creoles supported Somoza because of his close association with the United States they rallied to the Sandinista cause in July 1979 only to reject the revolution soon afterwards in response to a new phase of westernization and imposition of central rule from Managua 226 There is a smaller number of Garifuna a people of mixed West African Carib and Arawak descent In the mid 1980s the government divided the Zelaya Department consisting of the eastern half of the country into two autonomous regions and granted the black and indigenous people of this region limited self rule within the republic Indigenous population edit The remaining 5 of Nicaraguans are indigenous the descendants of the country s original inhabitants Nicaragua s pre Columbian population consisted of many indigenous groups In the western region the Nahuas Nicarao people were present along with other groups such as the Chorotega people and the Subtiabas also known as Maribios or Hokan Xiu The central region and the Caribbean coast of Nicaragua were inhabited by indigenous peoples who were Macro Chibchan language groups that had migrated to and from South America in ancient times primarily what is now Colombia and Venezuela 227 228 These groups include the present day Matagalpas Miskitos Ramas as well as Mayangnas and Ulwas who are also known as Sumos 229 31 20 In the 19th century there was a substantial indigenous minority but this group was largely assimilated culturally into the mestizo majority The Garifuna are also present mainly on the Caribbean Coast They are a people of mixed African and Indigenous descent 230 Languages edit Main article Languages of Nicaragua nbsp A sign in Bluefields in English top Nicaraguan Spanish middle and Miskito bottom Nicaraguan Spanish has many indigenous influences and several distinguishing characteristics For example some Nicaraguans have a tendency to replace s with h when speaking Although Spanish is spoken throughout the country has great variety vocabulary accents and colloquial language can vary between towns and departments 231 Nicaraguan Sign Language emerged in the 1970s and 1980s among deaf children as the first special education schools brought them together and its emergence became of particular interest to linguists as an opportunity to directly observe the creation of a language 232 233 234 On the Caribbean coast indigenous languages English based creoles and Spanish are spoken The Miskito language spoken by the Miskito people as a first language and some other indigenous and Afro descendants people as a second third or fourth language is the most commonly spoken indigenous language The indigenous Misumalpan languages of Mayangna and Ulwa are spoken by the respective peoples of the same names Many Miskito Mayangna and Sumo people also speak Miskito Coast Creole and a large majority also speak Spanish Fewer than three dozen of nearly 2 000 Rama people speak their Chibchan language fluently with nearly all Ramas speaking Rama Cay Creole and the vast majority speaking Spanish Linguists have attempted to document and revitalize the language over the past three decades 235 The Garifuna people descendants of indigenous and Afro descendant people who came to Nicaragua from Honduras in the early twentieth century have recently attempted to revitalize their Arawakan language The majority speak Miskito Coast Creole as their first language and Spanish as their second The Creole or Kriol people descendants of enslaved Africans brought to the Mosquito Coast during the British colonial period and European Chinese Arab and British West Indian immigrants also speak Miskito Coast Creole as their first language and Spanish as their second 236 Largest cities edit Largest municipalities in Nicaragua Anuario Estadistico 2015 pp 50 53 2016 projections Rank Name Department Pop nbsp Managua nbsp Leon 1 Managua Managua 1 042 641 nbsp Masaya nbsp Matagalpa 2 Leon Leon 206 264 3 Masaya Masaya 176 344 4 Matagalpa Matagalpa 158 095 5 Tipitapa Managua 140 569 6 Chinandega Chinandega 135 154 7 Jinotega Jinotega 133 705 8 Granada Granada 127 892 9 Esteli Esteli 126 290 10 Puerto Cabezas RACCN 113 534 Religion edit Main article Religion in Nicaragua nbsp Leon Cathedral one of Nicaragua s World Heritage Sites Religion plays a significant role in Nicaraguan culture and is afforded special protections in its constitution Religious freedom which has been guaranteed since 1939 and religious tolerance are officially promoted by the government but in recent years the Catholic Church and the regime led by Daniel Ortega have been in open conflict The latter has been accused of using the police to harass clergy including bishops 237 closing down Catholic media outlets and arresting members of the clergy including Bishop Rolando Alvarez of the Diocese of Matagalpa Nicaragua has no official state religion Catholic bishops are expected to lend their authority to important state occasions and their pronouncements on national issues are closely followed They can be called upon to mediate between contending parties at moments of political crisis 238 In 1979 Miguel D Escoto Brockman a priest who had embraced Liberation Theology served in the government as foreign minister when the Sandinistas came to power The largest denomination and traditionally the religion of the majority is the Roman Catholic Church It came to Nicaragua in the 16th century with the Spanish conquest and remained until 1939 the established faith The number of practicing Roman Catholics has been declining while membership of evangelical Protestant groups and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church has been growing rapidly since the 1990s There is a significant LDS missionary effort in Nicaragua There are two missions and 95 768 members of the LDS Church 1 54 of the population 239 There are also strong Anglican and Moravian communities on the Caribbean coast in what once constituted the sparsely populated Mosquito Coast colony It was under British influence for nearly three centuries Protestantism was brought to the Mosquito Coast mainly by British and German colonists in forms of Anglicanism and the Moravian Church Other kinds of Protestant and other Christian denominations were introduced to the rest of Nicaragua during the 19th century Popular religion revolves around the saints who are perceived as intercessors between human beings and God Most localities from the capital of Managua to small rural communities honor patron saints selected from the Roman Catholic calendar with annual fiestas In many communities a rich lore has grown up around the celebrations of patron saints such as Managua s Saint Dominic Santo Domingo honored in August with two colorful often riotous day long processions through the city The high point of Nicaragua s religious calendar for the masses is neither Christmas nor Easter but La Purisima a week of festivities in early December dedicated to the Immaculate Conception during which elaborate altars to the Virgin Mary are constructed in homes and workplaces 238 Buddhism has increased with a steady influx of immigration 240 Although Jews have been living in Nicaragua since the 18th century the Jewish population is small numbering less than 200 people in 2017 Of these 112 were recent converts who claimed Sephardic Jewish ancestry 241 As of 2007 approximately 1 200 to 1 500 Nicaraguan residents practiced Islam most of them Sunnis who are resident aliens or naturalized citizens from Palestine Libya and Iran or natural born Nicaraguan descendants of the two groups 242 Immigration edit Main article Immigration to Nicaragua Relative to its population Nicaragua has not experienced large waves of immigration The number of immigrants in Nicaragua from other Latin American countries or other countries never surpassed 1 of its total population before 1995 The 2005 census showed the foreign born population at 1 2 having risen a mere 0 06 in 10 years 219 In the 19th century Nicaragua experienced modest waves of immigration from Europe In particular families from Germany Italy Spain France and Belgium immigrated to Nicaragua particularly the departments in the Central and Pacific region Also present is a small Middle Eastern Nicaraguan community of Syrians Armenians Jewish Nicaraguans and Lebanese people in Nicaragua This community numbers about 30 000 There is an East Asian community mostly consisting of Chinese The Chinese Nicaraguan population is estimated at 12 000 243 The Chinese arrived in the late 19th century but were unsubstantiated until the 1920s Diaspora edit Main article Nicaraguan diaspora The Civil War forced many Nicaraguans to start lives outside of their country Many people emigrated during the 1990s and the first decade of the 21st century due to the lack of employment opportunities and poverty The majority of the Nicaraguan Diaspora migrated to the United States and Costa Rica Today one in six Nicaraguans live in these two countries 244 The diaspora has seen Nicaraguans settling around in smaller communities in other parts of the world particularly Western Europe Small communities of Nicaraguans are found in France Germany Italy Spain Norway Sweden and the United Kingdom Communities also exist in Australia and New Zealand Canada Brazil and Argentina host small groups of these communities In Asia Japan hosts a small Nicaraguan community Due to extreme poverty at home many Nicaraguans are now living and working in neighboring El Salvador a country that has the US dollar as its currency 245 246 Healthcare edit Main article Healthcare in NicaraguaAlthough Nicaragua s health outcomes have improved over the past few decades with the efficient utilization of resources relative to other Central American nations healthcare in Nicaragua still confronts challenges responding to its populations diverse healthcare needs 247 The Nicaraguan government guarantees universal free health care for its citizens 248 However limitations of current delivery models and unequal distribution of resources and medical personnel contribute to the persistent lack of quality care in more remote areas of Nicaragua especially among rural communities in the Central and Atlantic region 247 To respond to the dynamic needs of localities the government has adopted a decentralized model that emphasizes community based preventive and primary medical care 249 Education edit Main article Education in Nicaragua The adult literacy rate in 2005 was 78 0 the lowest literacy rate in Central America 250 Primary education is free in Nicaragua A system of private schools exists many of which are religiously affiliated and often have more robust English programs 251 As of 1979 the educational system was one of the poorest in Latin America 252 One of the first acts of the newly elected Sandinista government in 1980 was an extensive and successful literacy campaign using secondary school students university students and teachers as volunteer teachers it reduced the overall illiteracy rate from 50 3 to 12 9 within only five months 253 This was one of a number of large scale programs which received international recognition for their gains in literacy health care education childcare unions and land reform 254 255 The Sandinistas also added a leftist ideological content to the curriculum which was removed after 1990 146 In September 1980 UNESCO awarded Nicaragua the Soviet Union sponsored Nadezhda Krupskaya award for the literacy campaign 256 Gender equality edit Main article Gender equality in Nicaragua Nicaragua s gender equality ranks high among countries in Latin America 257 When it came to global rankings regarding gender equality the World Economic Forum ranked Nicaragua at number twelve in 2015 257 and in its 2020 report Nicaragua ranked number five behind only northern European countries 258 Nicaragua was among the many countries in Latin America and the Caribbean to ratify the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women which aimed to promote women s rights 259 In 2009 a Special Ombudsman for Sexual Diversity position was created within its Office of the Human Rights Ombudsman And in 2014 the Health Ministry in 2014 banned discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation 260 Nevertheless discrimination against LGBTQ individuals is common particularly in housing education and the workplace 166 The Human Development Report ranked Nicaragua 106 out of 160 countries in the Gender Inequality Index GII in 2017 It reflects gender based inequalities in three dimensions reproductive health empowerment and economic activity 261 Culture editMain article Culture of Nicaragua nbsp El Gueguense a drama was the first literary work of post Columbian Nicaragua and is regarded as one of Latin America s most distinctive colonial era expressions and as Nicaragua s signature folkloric masterpiece combining music dance and theatre Nicaraguan culture has strong folklore music and religious traditions deeply influenced by European culture but also including Native American sounds and flavors Nicaraguan culture can further be defined in several distinct strands The Pacific coast has strong folklore music and religious traditions deeply influenced by Europeans It was colonized by Spain and has a similar culture to other Spanish speaking Latin American countries The indigenous groups that historically inhabited the Pacific coast have largely been assimilated into the mestizo culture The Caribbean coast of Nicaragua was once a British protectorate English is still predominant in this region and spoken domestically along with Spanish and indigenous languages Its culture is similar to that of Caribbean nations that were or are British possessions such as Jamaica Belize the Cayman Islands etc Unlike on the west coast the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean coast have maintained distinct identities and some still speak their native languages as first languages Music edit Main article Music of Nicaragua nbsp Nicaraguan women wearing the Mestizaje costume which is a traditional costume worn to dance the Mestizaje dance The costume demonstrates the Spanish influence upon Nicaraguan clothing 262 Nicaraguan music is a mixture of indigenous and Spanish influences Musical instruments include the marimba and others common across Central America The marimba of Nicaragua is played by a sitting performer holding the instrument on his knees He is usually accompanied by a bass fiddle guitar and guitarrilla a small guitar like a mandolin This music is played at social functions as a sort of background music The marimba is made with hardwood plates placed over bamboo or metal tubes of varying lengths It is played with two or four hammers The Caribbean coast of Nicaragua is known for a lively sensual form of dance music called Palo de Mayo which is popular throughout the country It is especially loud and celebrated during the Palo de Mayo festival in May The Garifuna community Afro Native American is known for its popular music called Punta Nicaragua has international influence in music Bachata Merengue Salsa and Cumbia have gained prominence in cultural centres such as Managua Leon and Granada Cumbia dancing has grown popular with the introduction of Nicaraguan artists including Gustavo Leyton on Ometepe Island and in Managua Salsa dancing has become extremely popular in Managua s nightclubs With various influences the form of salsa dancing varies in Nicaragua New York style and Cuban Salsa Salsa Casino elements have gained popularity across the country Dance edit Further information Dance in Nicaragua Dance in Nicaragua varies depending upon the region Rural areas tend to have a stronger focus on movement of the hips and turns The dance style in cities focuses primarily on more sophisticated footwork in addition to movement and turns Combinations of styles from the Dominican Republic and the United States can be found throughout Nicaragua Bachata dancing is popular in Nicaragua A considerable amount of Bachata dancing influence comes from Nicaraguans living abroad in cities that include Miami Los Angeles and to a much lesser extent New York City Tango has also surfaced recently in cultural cities and ballroom dance occasions Literature edit Main article Literature of Nicaragua nbsp Ruben Dario founder of Latin America s modernismo literary movement The origin of Nicaraguan literature can arguably be traced to pre Columbian times The myths and oral literature formed the cosmogenic view of the world of the indigenous people Some of these stories are still known in Nicaragua Like many Latin American countries the Spanish conquerors have had the most effect on both the culture and the literature Nicaraguan literature has historically been an important source of poetry in the Spanish speaking world with internationally renowned contributors such as Ruben Dario who is regarded as the most important literary figure in Nicaragua He is called the Father of Modernism for leading the modernismo literary movement at the end of the 19th century 263 Other literary figures include Carlos Martinez Rivas Pablo Antonio Cuadra Alberto Cuadra Mejia Manolo Cuadra Pablo Alberto Cuadra Arguello Orlando Cuadra Downing Alfredo Alegria Rosales Sergio Ramirez Mercado Ernesto Cardenal Gioconda Belli Claribel Alegria and Jose Coronel Urtecho among others 264 The satirical drama El Gueguense was the first literary work of post Columbian Nicaragua It was written in both Nicarao and Spanish 40 21 It s regarded as one of Latin America s most distinctive colonial era expressions and as Nicaragua s signature folkloric masterpiece El Gueguense is a work of resistance to Spanish colonialism that combined music dance and theatre 263 The theatrical play was written by an anonymous author in the 16th century making it one of the oldest indigenous theatrical dance works of the Western Hemisphere In 2005 it was recognized by UNESCO as a patrimony of humanity 265 After centuries of popular performance the play was first published in a book in 1942 266 Cuisine edit Main article Nicaraguan cuisine nbsp Vigoron a Nicaraguan dish served with boiled yuca and chicharrones fried pork with skin and topped with a cabbage salad nbsp Gallo pinto a traditional Nicaraguan dish made with rice and beans Nicaraguan cuisine is a mixture of Spanish food and dishes of a pre Columbian origin 267 Traditional cuisine changes from the Pacific to the Caribbean coast The Pacific coast s main staple revolves around local fruits and corn the Caribbean coast cuisine makes use of seafood and the coconut As in many other Latin American countries maize is a staple food and is used in many of the widely consumed dishes such as the nacatamal guirila and indio viejo Maize is also an ingredient for drinks such as pinolillo and chicha as well as sweets and desserts In addition to corn rice and beans are eaten very often Gallo pinto Nicaragua s national dish is made with white rice and small red beans that are cooked individually and then fried together The dish has several variations including the addition of coconut milk or grated coconut on the Caribbean coast Most Nicaraguans begin their day with gallo pinto Gallo pinto is most usually served with carne asada a salad fried cheese plantains or maduros Many of Nicaragua s dishes include indigenous fruits and vegetables such as jocote mango papaya tamarindo pipian banana avocado yuca and herbs such as cilantro oregano and achiote 267 Traditional street food snacks found in Nicaragua include quesillo a thick tortilla with soft cheese and cream tajadas deep fried plantain chips maduros a sauteed ripe plantain and fresco fresh juices such as hibiscus and tamarind commonly served in a plastic bag with a straw 268 Nicaraguans have been known to eat guinea pigs 269 known as cuy Tapirs iguanas turtle eggs armadillos and boas are also sometimes eaten but because of extinction threats to these wild creatures there are efforts to curb this custom 267 Media edit Main article Media of Nicaragua For most Nicaraguans radio and TV are the main sources of news There are more than 100 radio stations and several TV networks Cable TV is available in most urban areas 270 The Nicaraguan print media are varied and partisan representing pro and anti government positions Publications include La Prensa El Nuevo Diario Confidencial Hoy and Mercurio Online news publications include Confidencial and The Nicaragua Dispatch Sports edit nbsp Dennis Martinez National Stadium Nicaragua s main outdoor stadium Baseball is the most popular sport in Nicaragua Although some professional Nicaraguan baseball teams have recently folded the country still enjoys a strong tradition of American style baseball Baseball was introduced to Nicaragua during the 19th century In the Caribbean coast locals from Bluefields were taught how to play baseball in 1888 by Albert Addlesberg a retailer from the United States 271 Baseball did not catch on in the Pacific coast until 1891 when a group of mostly college students from the United States formed La Sociedad de Recreo Society of Recreation where they played various sports baseball being the most popular 271 Nicaragua has had its share of MLB players including shortstop Everth Cabrera pitcher Vicente Padilla and pitcher Jonathan Loaisiga but the most notable is Dennis Martinez who was the first baseball player from Nicaragua to play in Major League Baseball 272 He became the first Latin born pitcher to throw a perfect game and the 13th in the major league history when he played with the Montreal Expos against the Dodgers at Dodger Stadium in 1991 273 Boxing is the second most popular sport in Nicaragua 274 The country has had world champions such as Alexis Arguello and Ricardo Mayorga as well as Roman Gonzalez Recently football has gained popularity The Dennis Martinez National Stadium has served as a venue for both baseball and football The first ever national football only stadium in Managua the Nicaragua National Football Stadium was completed in 2011 275 Nicaragua s national basketball team had some recent success as it won the silver medal at the 2017 Central American Games 276 They will be taking part in the FIBA AmeriCup for the first time when Nicaragua hosts in 2025 Nicaragua featured national teams in beach volleyball that competed at the 2018 2020 NORCECA Beach Volleyball Continental Cup in both the women s and the men s sections 277 See also edit nbsp Nicaragua portal nbsp Latin America portal Nicaraguan nationality law Bibliography of Nicaragua Index of Nicaragua related articles Outline of NicaraguaNotes edit As shown on the Cordoba bank notes and coins 1 ˌ n ɪ k e ˈ r ɑː ɡ w e ˈ r ae ɡ ɡ j u e Spanish nikaˈɾaɣwa Spanish Republica de Nicaragua References edit Banco Central de Nicaragua Archived 24 September 2010 at the Wayback Machine Nicaragua The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency 19 June 2023 Archived from the original on 20 March 2021 Retrieved 4 July 2023 The Latin American Socio Religious Studies Program Programa Latinoamericano de Estudios Sociorreligiosos PROLADES Archived 12 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine PROLADES Religion in America by country CENSO DE POBLACIoN 2005 PDF 2015 Retrieved 4 April 2015 permanent dead link Awadalla Cristina 23 March 2023 Authoritarian Populism and Patriarchal Logics Nicaragua s Engendered Politics Social Politics International 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