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Potosí

Potosí, known as Villa Imperial de Potosí in the colonial period, is the capital city and a municipality of the Department of Potosí in Bolivia. It is one of the highest cities in the world at a nominal 4,090 m (13,420 ft).[3] For centuries, it was the location of the Spanish colonial silver mint. A considerable amount of the city's colonial architecture has been preserved in the historic center of the city, which - along with the globally important Cerro Rico de Potosí - are part of a designated UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Potosí
City & Municipality
From the top, left to right: National Mint of Bolivia, Church of San Lorenzo de Carangas, View of Potosí with the Cathedral of the Villa Imperial de Potosí, Panoramic view of the Plaza de Armas, Church of San Francisco viewed from a balconied street, Spanish colonial architecture, Casa de La Moneda
Nickname: 
Villa Imperial
Potosí
Location in Bolivia
Potosí
Potosí (South America)
Coordinates: 19°35′21″S 65°45′12″W / 19.58917°S 65.75333°W / -19.58917; -65.75333
CountryBolivia
DepartmentPotosí
ProvinceTomás Frías
MunicipalityPotosí Municipality
FoundedApril 1, 1545
Government
 • MayorJhonny Llally (MPC)[1]
Area
 • City & Municipality118.218 km2 (45.6 sq mi)
Elevation
4,090 m (13,420 ft)
Population
 (2020 Estimate)[2]
 • Urban
264,402
Time zoneUTC-4
Websitewww.potosy.com.bo
Official nameCity of Potosí
TypeCultural
Criteriaii, iv, vi
Designated1987 (11th session)
Reference no.420
RegionLatin America and the Caribbean
Endangered2014 (2014)–present

Potosí lies at the foot of the Cerro de Potosí[4] —sometimes referred to as the Cerro Rico ("rich mountain")— a mountain popularly conceived of as being "made of" silver ore that dominates the city. The Cerro Rico is the reason for Potosí's historical importance since it was the major supply of silver for the Spanish Empire until Guanajuato in Mexico surpassed it in the 18th century.[5]

The silver was taken by llama and mule train to the Pacific coast, shipped north to Panama City, and carried by mule train across the isthmus of Panama to Nombre de Dios or Portobelo, whence it was taken to Spain on the Spanish treasure fleets. Some of the silver also made its way east to Buenos Aires, via the Rio de la Plata.[6] Some of the silver was also transported to Acapulco, Mexico where they were sent via the Manila Galleons to buy Asian products.[7] Cerro de Potosí's peak is 4,824 m (15,827 ft) above sea level.[8]: 376 

Today, Potosí continues to be an important mining center, and is the largest urban center in the Department of Potosí. A growing city, Potosí is now famous for its well-preserved colonial architecture, and unusual geographic setting as one of the highest cities in the world. It features a rare cold highland climate, and is marked by its long dry period, and short but strong wet season. While famous for its dominance as a mining center in early Spanish colonial history, Potosí still sits at one of the largest silver deposit systems in the world.

Geology Edit

Located in the Bolivian Tin Belt, Cerro Rico de Potosí is the world's largest silver deposit and has been mined since the sixteenth century, producing up to 60,000 tonnes by 1996. Estimates are that much silver still remains in the mines. Potosí became the second largest city, and the site of the first mint, in the Americas. By 1891, low silver prices prompted the change to mining tin, which continued until 1985. At peak production in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the ore contained up to 40% silver.[8]: 374 

The ore deposits reside in veins present in the dacite volcanic dome. The hill is "honeycombed" with underground workings, reaching from the summit to depths of 1,150 m (3,770 ft). The conical hill has a reddish-brown gossan cap of iron-oxides and quartz, with grayish-blue altered dacite and many mine dumps below.[8]: 374–376 

Basement rocks consist of Ordovician clastic sediments consisting of phyllite with some sandstone interbedding. At about 13.8 Ma, the dome was extruded. During the explosive process, the Venus breccia formed when the ascending dacite magma reacted with groundwater to produce a phreatic eruption. The released pressure allowed the formation of the Caracoles tuff ring on top of the breccia. The magma then extruded outward from a dike to form a volcanic dome over the tuff. The dacite dome is 1,700 m (5,600 ft) by 1,200 m (3,900 ft) at the surface and narrows down to the 100 m (330 ft) wide dike at depth. Hydrothermal circulation and fracturing soon followed, altering the dacite and depositing ore minerals and gangue in the veins.[8]: 375, 381, 384 

History Edit

 
Cerro Rico del Potosí, the first image in Europe. Pedro Cieza de León, 1553
 
View of the imperial city of Potosí in 1758 by Gaspar Miguel de Berrío. Museum of Charcas.[9]
 
Entrance of Archbishop Viceroy Morcillo in Potosí by Melchor Pérez de Holguín in 1716. Painting located at Museo of the Americas (Spain).[10][11]
 
'The Virgin of the Cerro of Potosí, 18th century painting, currently located at the National Mint of Bolivia.[12][13]
 
Miners at work
 
Potosí, aerial photo
 
City of Potosí and the Church of San Lorenzo de Carangas at background, photo of 1911 by U.S. Senator Hiram Bingham III.[14]

Colonial silver boom Edit

Founded in 1545 as a mining town, it soon produced fabulous wealth, and the population eventually exceeded 200,000 people. The city gave rise to a Spanish expression, still in use: valer un Potosí ("to be worth a Potosí"), meaning "to be of great value". The rich mountain, Cerro Rico, produced an estimated 60% of all silver mined in the world during the second half of the 16th century.[15]

Potosí miners at first mined the rich oxidized ores with native silver and silver chloride (cerargyrite) that could be fed directly into smelting furnaces.[16] Especially successful were the small clay "flower pot" furnaces called guayras, which had been used by the Incas. But by 1565, the miners had exhausted the direct-smelting ore, and silver production plummeted. Silver production was revived by the introduction of the patio process, invented in Mexico in 1554. The patio process used mercury amalgamation to extract silver from lower-grade ores, and those containing silver sulfide (argentite), as was typical of the unoxidized ores found deeper in the mountain. In 1609, another mercury amalgamation method, the pan amalgamation process was invented in Potosí, and proved better-adapted to the conditions at Potosí.[17]

Spanish American mines were the world's most abundant sources of silver during this time period. Spanish America's ability to supply a great amount of silver and China's strong demand for this commodity which the Spanish supplied via Latin American trade with the Philippines using the Manila Galleons,[7] resulted in a spectacular mining boom. The true champion of this boom in the silver industry was indeed the Spanish crown. By allowing private-sector entrepreneurs to operate mines under license and placing high taxes on mining profits, the Spanish empire was able to extract the greatest benefits. An example of a tax that was levied includes the quinto, a 20% severance tax on gross value.[15] From the raw materials extracted from the mines, coins called pieces of eight were fashioned at the Potosí mint.

For Europeans, Peru–Bolivia was located in the Viceroyalty of Peru and was known as Alto Perú before becoming independent as part of Bolivia. Potosí was a mythical land of riches, it is mentioned in Miguel de Cervantes' famous novel, Don Quixote (second part, chap. LXXI) as a land of "extraordinary richness". One theory holds that the mint mark of Potosí (the letters "PTSI" superimposed on one another) is the origin of the dollar sign.

The urban complex in the remote Andes was important enough to be designated a Villa Imperial in the hierarchy of Spanish urban settlements. Although in mountainous terrain, the core of Potosí was laid out in the standard Spanish grid pattern, where by 1610 some 3,000 Spaniards and 35,000 creoles, mostly male, were resident. Indigenous settlements outside the core were more haphazard. The villa was governed by a Spanish corregidor and town council. Some 40 notaries documented and recorded commercial transactions as well as last wills and testaments. Since Potosí was of such economic importance to the Spanish Empire, the crown bureaucracy was a significant presence. Large churches, lavishly decorated inside, were built, and friars from the Dominican, Franciscans, Augustinians, Mercederians, and Jesuits were present, but no convent for women. There was an ecclesiastical court for legal issues regarding the clergy.[18]

Labor Edit

Indigenous laborers were required to work in Potosí's silver mines through the Spanish mita system of forced labor, based on an analogous mit'a system traditional to pre-Hispanic Andean society (though the mit'a directed labor for public works and collective agricultural projects).[19] Laborers were drawn from the native population of an area that encompassed almost 200,000 square miles.[20] Thirteen thousand men were conscripted each year, constituting about one out of every seven adult males in the indigenous population.[21] These mitayos faced harsh conditions in the mines, where they were often given the least desirable jobs. While more skilled laborers extracted the ore, mitayos were tasked with carrying it back to the surface in baskets, leather bags, or cloth sacks. These loads often weighed between 100 and 300 lbs, and the workers had to carry them up rickety ladders in steep, narrow shafts lit only by a candle tied to their foreheads.[22][23] Many of them died or were seriously injured due to falls, accidents, and the harsh conditions of the mine life. Illness was another danger: at such a high altitude, pneumonia was always a concern, especially given the extreme and rapid changes of temperature experienced by workers climbing from the heat of the deep shafts to the freezing elements of the surface at 16,000 feet, and mercury poisoning took the lives of many involved in the refining process.[24][23]

The Potosí mita caused dramatic demographic shifts in the local indigenous population as wives and children moved with workers to Potosí while thousands more fled their traditional villages, forfeiting their ayllu land rights in order to escape the labor draft. By the late 17th century, upper Peru had lost nearly 50% of its indigenous population compared to a little over a century earlier.[25] This only increased the burden on the remaining natives, and at some point in the 1600s, up to half of the eligible male population might find themselves working at Potosí. Nevertheless, the number of mitayos dropped to about 4,000 by 1689, prompting the Viceroy Duke of Palata to raise the number again through a new census and inclusion of new populations not subject to the mita (forasteros).[26] The reform failed, and the Duke's successor set the official number to 4,108 mitayos (1,367 active each week). In reality, the number of mitayos was even lower due to the increasing practice of buying oneself out of the obligation. For the remaining mita workforce, however, conditions remained harsh. Mine and mill owners notoriously ignored official regulations on provisions and especially withheld the money the Indians should receive as recompensation for their travel. Just the cost of traveling to Potosí and back could be more than a mitayo was paid in a year, and so many of them chose to remain in Potosí as wage workers when their mita was finished.[27] Former mitayos living in Potosí were not only exempt from the draft, but usually earned considerably more due to the valuable skills they had gained in permanent services.[28]

According to historian Noble David Cook, "A key factor in understanding the impact of the Potosi mita on the Indians is that mita labor was only one form of work at the mines. A 1603 report stated that of 58,800 Indians working at Potosi, 5100 were mitayos, or fewer than one in ten. In addition to the mitayos there were 10,500 mingas (contractual workers) and 43,200 free wage earners."[29] However, historian Peter Bakewell emphasizes the role of mita labor in Potosí to a greater extent. According to his research, though as few as 4500 mitayos were actively laboring in the mines at any given time, this was due to the mita ordinaria system, in which the up to 13,500 men conscripted per year were divided into three parts, each working one out of every three weeks.[27] In addition, many of the remaining mingas and wage workers were either mita ordinaria workers on their off weeks or former mitayos who remained in Potosí.[30]

Colonial-era society Edit

Potosí was a multiracial society, with native Andeans, Spanish settlers, and black slaves.[16] The largest sector of the population were native men, forced to labor underground mining the silver ore, but there were considerable opportunities for merchants and native traders, who became wealthy. Suppliers of food as well as holders of urban and rural real estate prospered in Potosí. Women, particularly widows, held property, since they were guaranteed a portion of their husband's estate under Spanish law. Small-scale female vendors dominated street markets and stalls, selling food, coca leaves, and chicha (maize beer).[31] A portion of the female population were sex workers, which is a typical phenomenon in mining towns generally.

By the early 17th century, Basques were well established in the city and made up for a substantial number of the inhabitants in Potosí. They gathered in a confederation opposed to another one, the Vicuñas, a melting pot of natives and non-Basque Spanish and Portuguese colonists, fighting for control over ore extraction from the mines and its management. Eventually, tension among both factions came to a head, resulting in the eruption of overt armed conflict starting 1622 up to 1625. The Spanish Crown intervened, siding at one point with the Basques. Finally, both factions reached a settlement sealed with a wedding between the son and daughter of the leaders in either side, the Basque Francisco Oyanume and the Vicuña general Castillo. One of the most famous Basque residents in Potosí (1617–19) was Catalina de Erauso, a nun who escaped her convent and dressed as a man, becoming a driver of llamas and a soldier.[32]

Independence era Edit

During the Bolivian War of Independence (1809–1825), Potosí frequently passed between the control of Royalist and Patriot forces. Major leadership mistakes came when the First Auxiliary Army arrived from Buenos Aires (under the command of Juan José Castelli), which led to an increased sense that Potosí required its own independent government.

Later,[when?] the Second Auxiliary Army (under the command of Manuel Belgrano) was forced to retreat, Belgrano made the decision to blow up the Casa de la Moneda. The natives undid the fuse, as many refused to evacuate and would have lost their lives. Two more expeditions from Buenos Aires would seize Potosí.

Modern era Edit

Potosí continues to be an important administrative center, mining town, tourist attraction, and population center in modern Bolivia.

Origin of the name Edit

 
A Spanish colonial two-reales piece ("two bits") from the Potosí Mint

There is no authoritative etymology for the word Potosí. According to legend, in about 1462, Huayna Capac, the eleventh Sapa Inca of what by then was known as the Inca Empire "set out for Ccolque Porco and Andaccaua, the location of his mines from which were taken innumerable arrobas of silver" (an arroba is a Spanish unit of weight equivalent to approximately 25 lb (11 kg)). Before leaving there, he saw Potosí, and admiring its beauty and grandeur, he said (speaking to those of his Court):

"This doubtless must have much silver in its heart"; whereby he subsequently ordered his vassals to go to Ccolque Porco ... and work the mines and remove from them all the rich metal. They did so, and having brought their tools of flint and reinforced wood, they climbed the hill; and after having probed for its veins, they were about to open those veins when they heard a frightening thunderous noise which shook the whole hill, and after this, they heard a voice which said: "Do not take the silver from this hill, because it is destined for other masters." Amazed at hearing this reasoning, the Incan vassals desisted in their purpose and returned to Porco and told the king what had happened; relating the occurrence in their own language, on coming to the word noise, they said "Potocsí" which means there was a great thunderous noise, and from that later was derived (corrupting a letter) the name of potosí.[citation needed]

It is believed[who?] that Potosí is a Quechua word.[citation needed] However, in Quechua the root p'otoj does not refer to a thunderous noise, whereas it does in Aymara. Thus, if Potosí encompasses the idea of a thunderous noise, the location would have an Aymaran root rather than a Quechuan.[citation needed]

The actual sharp structure of the term is contrary to the nature of both Aymara and Quechua. Another explanation, given by several Quechua speakers,[specify] is that potoq is an onomatopoeic word that reproduces the sound of the hammer against the ore, and oral tradition has it that the town derived its name from this word.

 
Potosí with Cerro Rico in the background.

Climate Edit

Potosí features a rare climate for a city of its size, due to its extreme elevation at over 4000m. Semi-arid and with average temperatures in its warmest month sitting right on the 10 °C threshold, the city's climate straddles that of the subtropical highland climate (Cwc, according to the Köppen climate classification), with subpolar oceanic characteristics and an alpine climate (E). Summers are cool and wet with daily highs rarely rising above 20 °C, while winters feature cooler days with much colder nights averaging −4 °C. These low temperatures are a result of the extreme precipitation deficit during the winter months with the resulting aridity leading to an increased diurnal temperature variation.

Climate data for Potosí, Bolivia (2000−2012)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 15
(59)
15
(59)
16
(61)
17
(63)
15
(59)
14
(57)
14
(57)
15
(59)
16
(61)
18
(64)
18
(64)
17
(63)
15.8
(60.4)
Daily mean °C (°F) 9
(48)
9
(48)
9
(48)
8.5
(47.3)
6.5
(43.7)
5.5
(41.9)
5
(41)
6
(43)
6.5
(43.7)
9.5
(49.1)
10
(50)
10
(50)
7.9
(46.2)
Average low °C (°F) 3
(37)
3
(37)
2
(36)
0
(32)
−2
(28)
−3
(27)
−4
(25)
−3
(27)
−1
(30)
1
(34)
2
(36)
3
(37)
0.1
(32.2)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 107.9
(4.25)
97.9
(3.85)
60.0
(2.36)
18.3
(0.72)
3.2
(0.13)
0.7
(0.03)
3.4
(0.13)
3.8
(0.15)
8.9
(0.35)
28.6
(1.13)
32.2
(1.27)
65.8
(2.59)
430.7
(16.96)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 17 16 12 5 1 0 0 1 2 5 7 14 80
Mean daily sunshine hours 6 6 7 8 9 9 9 9 8 8 7 7 7.75
Source: WeatherWorld[33]

Neighborhoods Edit

  • Old Town
  • San Gerardo
  • La Chacra
  • Cervecería
  • Alto Potosí
  • Nuevo Potosí
  • San Martín
  • Pampa Ingenio
  • Nacional Potosí
  • San Juan
  • Concepción
  • San Cristóbal
  • Pailaviri
  • Cachi Rancho
  • El Calvario
  • San Pedro
  • San Roque
  • Mercado Uyuni
  • San Benito
  • Villa España
  • Huachacalla
  • Cantumarca
  • San Clemente
  • Ciudad Satélite
  • Plan 40
  • Las Delicias
  • Los Pinos-Cordepo
  • Las Lecherías
  • Villa Mecànicos
  • Villa Copacabana
  • Villa Venezuela
  • Villa Nazaret

Villages Edit

Sports Edit

Potosí is home to football teams Real and Nacional, which play their matches at the 32,000-capacity multi-purpose stadium Estadio Víctor Agustín Ugarte, one of the highest stadiums in the world.

Transportation Edit

The city is served by Aeropuerto Capitán Nicolas Rojas, with commercial airline flights by Boliviana de Aviación, Bolivia's flag air carrier. There is also a railroad, the Rio Mulatos-Potosí line.

Legacy Edit

The city of San Luis Potosí in Mexico was named after Potosí in Bolivia. In the United States, the name Potosi was optimistically given to lead-mining towns of Potosi, Wisconsin,[34] and Potosi, Missouri, and also to the silver-mining town of Potosi, Nevada.

Twin towns – sister cities Edit

Gallery Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Jhonny Llally es el nuevo alcalde de Potosí". www.paginasiete.bo (in Spanish). from the original on 2021-09-10. Retrieved 2021-05-09.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-06-14. Retrieved 2012-12-14.
  3. ^ Bolivia & Main Cities / Potosí 2008-12-06 at the Wayback Machine from boliviaweb.com. Retrieved 2010-09-27.
  4. ^ Not to be mistaken with Cerro Potosí, Mexico
  5. ^ Tutino, John (2017). The Mexican Heartland: How Communities Shaped Capitalism, a Nation, and World History, 1500-2000. Princeton University Press.
  6. ^ Kritzler, Edward (2008). Jewish Pirates of the Caribbean. Anchor Books. p. 151. ISBN 978-0-7679-1952-4.
  7. ^ a b Schurz, William Lytle. The Manila Galleon, 1939. P 193.
  8. ^ a b c d Cunningham, C.G., Zartman, R.E., McKee, E.H., Rye, R.O., Naeser, C.W., Sanjines V., O., Ericksen, G.E., Tavera V., F., 1996, The age and thermal history of Cerro rico de Potosi, Bolivia, Mineralium Deposita, 31, 374-385
  9. ^ Béatrice Perez, Sonia V. Rose, Jean-Pierre Clément (2007). Des marchands entre deux mondes: pratiques et représentations en Espagne et en Amérique, XVe-XVIIIe siècles. Presses Paris Sorbonne. p. 40. ISBN 978-2840505136.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Pérez de Holguín, Melchor (1716). "Entrada del Virrey Morcillo en Potosí". Museo de América website. Spain.
  11. ^ "Entrada del Virrey Morcillo en Potosí". Google Arts and Culture.
  12. ^ Jean-François Lejeune (2005). Cruelty and Utopia: Cities and Landscapes of Latin America. Princeton Architectural Press. p. 77. ISBN 9781568984896.
  13. ^ Kellen Kee McIntyre, Richard E. Phillips (2007). Woman and Art in Early Modern Latin America. Brill Publishers. p. 80. ISBN 9789004153929.
  14. ^ Hiram Bingham III (1911). Across South America; an account of a journey from Buenos Aires to Lima by way of Potosí, with notes on Brazil, Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, and Peru. Houghton Mifflin Company. p. 128.
  15. ^ a b Flynn, Dennis; Giráldez, Arturo (1995). "Born with a 'Silver Spoon': The Origin of World Trade in 1571". Journal of World History. University of Hawai'i Press.
  16. ^ a b Lockhart, James; Otte, Enrique (1976). Letters and people of the Spanish Indies, sixteenth century. Internet Archive. Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-20883-3.
  17. ^ Ronald D. Crozier, “Silver processing in Spanish America; the patio process and beyond,” CIM Bulletin, July-Aug. 1993, v.86 n.972 p.86-91.
  18. ^ Lane, Potosí, pp. 94-96
  19. ^ Canseco, María Rostworowski de Díez (1999). History of the Inca realm (Transferred to digital printing 2006. ed.). Cambridge New York Melbourne: Cambridge Univ. Pr. p. 63. ISBN 978-0521637596. from the original on 2022-10-17. Retrieved 2021-03-18.
  20. ^ Bakewell, Peter (1984), Bethell, Leslie (ed.), "Mining in colonial Spanish America", The Cambridge History of Latin America: Volume 2: Colonial Latin America, The Cambridge History of Latin America, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2, pp. 105–152, doi:10.1017/chol9780521245166.005, ISBN 978-0-521-24516-6
  21. ^ Burkholder, Mark A.; Johnson, Lyman L. (2019). Colonial Latin America (Tenth ed.). New York, Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 83. ISBN 9780190642402.
  22. ^ Burkholder and Johnson, 155.
  23. ^ a b Bakewell, 130.
  24. ^ "BBC - A History of the World - About: Transcripts - Episode 80 - Pieces of eight". from the original on 2019-12-24. Retrieved 2016-05-07.
  25. ^ Burkholder and Johnson, 125-126.
  26. ^ Barragán Romano, R. (2016). Dynamics of Continuity and Change: Shifts in Labour Relations in the Potosí Mines (1680–1812). International Review of Social History, 61(S24), 93-114. doi:10.1017/S0020859016000511
  27. ^ a b Bakewell, 125.
  28. ^ Tutino, John (2018). "Silver Capitalism and Indigenous Republics: Rebuilding Communities, 1500-1700". The Mexican Heartland: How Communities Shaped Capitalism, a Nation, and World History, 1500-2000. Princeton; Oxford: Princeton University Press. p. 75. ISBN 978-0-691-17436-5.
  29. ^ Cook, Noble David (1981). Demographic collapse, Indian Perú, 1520-1620. Cambridge University Press. p. 237. ISBN 0-521-23995-8.
  30. ^ Bakewell, 128.
  31. ^ J.H. Elliott, "The Silver Rush" https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2019/11/21/potosi-silver-rush/ 2019-12-14 at the Wayback Machine
  32. ^ Lane, Potosí, pp. 100-101
  33. ^ "Climate Data and Activities". WeatherWorldOnline. from the original on 18 February 2020. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
  34. ^ "Potosi [origin of place name]". Wisconsinhistory.org. 1941-10-10. from the original on 2016-03-11. Retrieved 2010-04-13.
  35. ^ "Ciudades Hermanas de Cusco". aatccusco.com (in Spanish). Asociación de Agencias de Turismo del Cusco. from the original on 2022-03-29. Retrieved 2021-12-20.

Further reading Edit

  • Angola Maconde, Juan. "Raíces de un pueblo: cultura afroboliviana." La Paz: Producciones CIMA, 1999.
  • Arzáns de Orsúa y Vela, Bartolomé. Historia de la Villa Imperial de Potosí. Edición de Lewis Hanke y Gunnar Mendoza. Providence, R.I.: Brown University Press, 1965.
  • Bakewell, Peter. "Miners of the Red Mountain: Indian Labor in Potosi, 1545-1650". University of New Mexico Press 2010.
  • Bakewell, Peter. "Silver and Entrepreneurship in Seventeenth-Century Potosí: The Life and Times of Antonio López de Quiroga". Southern Methodist University Press 1995.
  • Cobb, Gwendolin Ballantine. "Potosí, a South American Mining Frontier." Greater America: Essays in Honor of Herbert Eugene Bolton. Freeport, N.Y.: Books for Libraries Press, 1968, © 1945, pp. 39–58. 1999. ISBN 978-1580930284
  • Gil Montero, Raquel. "Ciudades efimeras. El ciclo minero de la plata en Lipez (Bolivia), siglos XVI - XIX". Instituto Frances de Estudios Andinos - IFEA- Plural Editores, 2014.
  • Hanke, Lewis (writer) and Jean-Claude Wicky (photographer). The Imperial City of Potosí. The Hague: Nijhoff, 1956.
  • Lane, Kris. Potosí: The Silver City That Changed the World. Berkeley: University of California Press 2019. ISBN 978-0520280847 online review
  • Ross, John F. Mountains of Pain Smithsonian Magazine, November 2000.
  • Tandeter, Enrique. "Coaccion y mercado. La mineria de plata en el Potosí colonial, 1692-1826". Siglo XXI Editores 2001.

External links Edit

potosí, other, uses, potosi, known, villa, imperial, colonial, period, capital, city, municipality, department, bolivia, highest, cities, world, nominal, centuries, location, spanish, colonial, silver, mint, considerable, amount, city, colonial, architecture, . For other uses see Potosi Potosi known as Villa Imperial de Potosi in the colonial period is the capital city and a municipality of the Department of Potosi in Bolivia It is one of the highest cities in the world at a nominal 4 090 m 13 420 ft 3 For centuries it was the location of the Spanish colonial silver mint A considerable amount of the city s colonial architecture has been preserved in the historic center of the city which along with the globally important Cerro Rico de Potosi are part of a designated UNESCO World Heritage Site PotosiCity amp MunicipalityFrom the top left to right National Mint of Bolivia Church of San Lorenzo de Carangas View of Potosi with the Cathedral of the Villa Imperial de Potosi Panoramic view of the Plaza de Armas Church of San Francisco viewed from a balconied street Spanish colonial architecture Casa de La MonedaFlagCoat of armsNickname Villa ImperialPotosiLocation in BoliviaShow map of BoliviaPotosiPotosi South America Show map of South AmericaCoordinates 19 35 21 S 65 45 12 W 19 58917 S 65 75333 W 19 58917 65 75333CountryBoliviaDepartmentPotosiProvinceTomas FriasMunicipalityPotosi MunicipalityFoundedApril 1 1545Government MayorJhonny Llally MPC 1 Area City amp Municipality118 218 km2 45 6 sq mi Elevation4 090 m 13 420 ft Population 2020 Estimate 2 Urban264 402Time zoneUTC 4Websitewww wbr potosy wbr com wbr boUNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameCity of PotosiTypeCulturalCriteriaii iv viDesignated1987 11th session Reference no 420RegionLatin America and the CaribbeanEndangered2014 2014 presentPotosi lies at the foot of the Cerro de Potosi 4 sometimes referred to as the Cerro Rico rich mountain a mountain popularly conceived of as being made of silver ore that dominates the city The Cerro Rico is the reason for Potosi s historical importance since it was the major supply of silver for the Spanish Empire until Guanajuato in Mexico surpassed it in the 18th century 5 The silver was taken by llama and mule train to the Pacific coast shipped north to Panama City and carried by mule train across the isthmus of Panama to Nombre de Dios or Portobelo whence it was taken to Spain on the Spanish treasure fleets Some of the silver also made its way east to Buenos Aires via the Rio de la Plata 6 Some of the silver was also transported to Acapulco Mexico where they were sent via the Manila Galleons to buy Asian products 7 Cerro de Potosi s peak is 4 824 m 15 827 ft above sea level 8 376 Today Potosi continues to be an important mining center and is the largest urban center in the Department of Potosi A growing city Potosi is now famous for its well preserved colonial architecture and unusual geographic setting as one of the highest cities in the world It features a rare cold highland climate and is marked by its long dry period and short but strong wet season While famous for its dominance as a mining center in early Spanish colonial history Potosi still sits at one of the largest silver deposit systems in the world Contents 1 Geology 2 History 2 1 Colonial silver boom 2 2 Labor 2 3 Colonial era society 2 4 Independence era 2 5 Modern era 3 Origin of the name 4 Climate 5 Neighborhoods 6 Villages 7 Sports 8 Transportation 9 Legacy 10 Twin towns sister cities 11 Gallery 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksGeology EditLocated in the Bolivian Tin Belt Cerro Rico de Potosi is the world s largest silver deposit and has been mined since the sixteenth century producing up to 60 000 tonnes by 1996 Estimates are that much silver still remains in the mines Potosi became the second largest city and the site of the first mint in the Americas By 1891 low silver prices prompted the change to mining tin which continued until 1985 At peak production in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the ore contained up to 40 silver 8 374 The ore deposits reside in veins present in the dacite volcanic dome The hill is honeycombed with underground workings reaching from the summit to depths of 1 150 m 3 770 ft The conical hill has a reddish brown gossan cap of iron oxides and quartz with grayish blue altered dacite and many mine dumps below 8 374 376 Basement rocks consist of Ordovician clastic sediments consisting of phyllite with some sandstone interbedding At about 13 8 Ma the dome was extruded During the explosive process the Venus breccia formed when the ascending dacite magma reacted with groundwater to produce a phreatic eruption The released pressure allowed the formation of the Caracoles tuff ring on top of the breccia The magma then extruded outward from a dike to form a volcanic dome over the tuff The dacite dome is 1 700 m 5 600 ft by 1 200 m 3 900 ft at the surface and narrows down to the 100 m 330 ft wide dike at depth Hydrothermal circulation and fracturing soon followed altering the dacite and depositing ore minerals and gangue in the veins 8 375 381 384 History EditSee also National Mint of Bolivia nbsp Cerro Rico del Potosi the first image in Europe Pedro Cieza de Leon 1553 nbsp View of the imperial city of Potosi in 1758 by Gaspar Miguel de Berrio Museum of Charcas 9 nbsp Entrance of Archbishop Viceroy Morcillo in Potosi by Melchor Perez de Holguin in 1716 Painting located at Museo of the Americas Spain 10 11 nbsp The Virgin of the Cerro of Potosi 18th century painting currently located at the National Mint of Bolivia 12 13 nbsp Miners at work nbsp Potosi aerial photo nbsp City of Potosi and the Church of San Lorenzo de Carangas at background photo of 1911 by U S Senator Hiram Bingham III 14 Colonial silver boom Edit See also Real Situado and Global silver trade from the 16th to 18th centuries Founded in 1545 as a mining town it soon produced fabulous wealth and the population eventually exceeded 200 000 people The city gave rise to a Spanish expression still in use valer un Potosi to be worth a Potosi meaning to be of great value The rich mountain Cerro Rico produced an estimated 60 of all silver mined in the world during the second half of the 16th century 15 Potosi miners at first mined the rich oxidized ores with native silver and silver chloride cerargyrite that could be fed directly into smelting furnaces 16 Especially successful were the small clay flower pot furnaces called guayras which had been used by the Incas But by 1565 the miners had exhausted the direct smelting ore and silver production plummeted Silver production was revived by the introduction of the patio process invented in Mexico in 1554 The patio process used mercury amalgamation to extract silver from lower grade ores and those containing silver sulfide argentite as was typical of the unoxidized ores found deeper in the mountain In 1609 another mercury amalgamation method the pan amalgamation process was invented in Potosi and proved better adapted to the conditions at Potosi 17 Spanish American mines were the world s most abundant sources of silver during this time period Spanish America s ability to supply a great amount of silver and China s strong demand for this commodity which the Spanish supplied via Latin American trade with the Philippines using the Manila Galleons 7 resulted in a spectacular mining boom The true champion of this boom in the silver industry was indeed the Spanish crown By allowing private sector entrepreneurs to operate mines under license and placing high taxes on mining profits the Spanish empire was able to extract the greatest benefits An example of a tax that was levied includes the quinto a 20 severance tax on gross value 15 From the raw materials extracted from the mines coins called pieces of eight were fashioned at the Potosi mint For Europeans Peru Bolivia was located in the Viceroyalty of Peru and was known as Alto Peru before becoming independent as part of Bolivia Potosi was a mythical land of riches it is mentioned in Miguel de Cervantes famous novel Don Quixote second part chap LXXI as a land of extraordinary richness One theory holds that the mint mark of Potosi the letters PTSI superimposed on one another is the origin of the dollar sign The urban complex in the remote Andes was important enough to be designated a Villa Imperial in the hierarchy of Spanish urban settlements Although in mountainous terrain the core of Potosi was laid out in the standard Spanish grid pattern where by 1610 some 3 000 Spaniards and 35 000 creoles mostly male were resident Indigenous settlements outside the core were more haphazard The villa was governed by a Spanish corregidor and town council Some 40 notaries documented and recorded commercial transactions as well as last wills and testaments Since Potosi was of such economic importance to the Spanish Empire the crown bureaucracy was a significant presence Large churches lavishly decorated inside were built and friars from the Dominican Franciscans Augustinians Mercederians and Jesuits were present but no convent for women There was an ecclesiastical court for legal issues regarding the clergy 18 Labor Edit Indigenous laborers were required to work in Potosi s silver mines through the Spanish mita system of forced labor based on an analogous mit a system traditional to pre Hispanic Andean society though the mit a directed labor for public works and collective agricultural projects 19 Laborers were drawn from the native population of an area that encompassed almost 200 000 square miles 20 Thirteen thousand men were conscripted each year constituting about one out of every seven adult males in the indigenous population 21 These mitayos faced harsh conditions in the mines where they were often given the least desirable jobs While more skilled laborers extracted the ore mitayos were tasked with carrying it back to the surface in baskets leather bags or cloth sacks These loads often weighed between 100 and 300 lbs and the workers had to carry them up rickety ladders in steep narrow shafts lit only by a candle tied to their foreheads 22 23 Many of them died or were seriously injured due to falls accidents and the harsh conditions of the mine life Illness was another danger at such a high altitude pneumonia was always a concern especially given the extreme and rapid changes of temperature experienced by workers climbing from the heat of the deep shafts to the freezing elements of the surface at 16 000 feet and mercury poisoning took the lives of many involved in the refining process 24 23 The Potosi mita caused dramatic demographic shifts in the local indigenous population as wives and children moved with workers to Potosi while thousands more fled their traditional villages forfeiting their ayllu land rights in order to escape the labor draft By the late 17th century upper Peru had lost nearly 50 of its indigenous population compared to a little over a century earlier 25 This only increased the burden on the remaining natives and at some point in the 1600s up to half of the eligible male population might find themselves working at Potosi Nevertheless the number of mitayos dropped to about 4 000 by 1689 prompting the Viceroy Duke of Palata to raise the number again through a new census and inclusion of new populations not subject to the mita forasteros 26 The reform failed and the Duke s successor set the official number to 4 108 mitayos 1 367 active each week In reality the number of mitayos was even lower due to the increasing practice of buying oneself out of the obligation For the remaining mita workforce however conditions remained harsh Mine and mill owners notoriously ignored official regulations on provisions and especially withheld the money the Indians should receive as recompensation for their travel Just the cost of traveling to Potosi and back could be more than a mitayo was paid in a year and so many of them chose to remain in Potosi as wage workers when their mita was finished 27 Former mitayos living in Potosi were not only exempt from the draft but usually earned considerably more due to the valuable skills they had gained in permanent services 28 According to historian Noble David Cook A key factor in understanding the impact of the Potosi mita on the Indians is that mita labor was only one form of work at the mines A 1603 report stated that of 58 800 Indians working at Potosi 5100 were mitayos or fewer than one in ten In addition to the mitayos there were 10 500 mingas contractual workers and 43 200 free wage earners 29 However historian Peter Bakewell emphasizes the role of mita labor in Potosi to a greater extent According to his research though as few as 4500 mitayos were actively laboring in the mines at any given time this was due to the mita ordinaria system in which the up to 13 500 men conscripted per year were divided into three parts each working one out of every three weeks 27 In addition many of the remaining mingas and wage workers were either mita ordinaria workers on their off weeks or former mitayos who remained in Potosi 30 Colonial era society Edit Potosi was a multiracial society with native Andeans Spanish settlers and black slaves 16 The largest sector of the population were native men forced to labor underground mining the silver ore but there were considerable opportunities for merchants and native traders who became wealthy Suppliers of food as well as holders of urban and rural real estate prospered in Potosi Women particularly widows held property since they were guaranteed a portion of their husband s estate under Spanish law Small scale female vendors dominated street markets and stalls selling food coca leaves and chicha maize beer 31 A portion of the female population were sex workers which is a typical phenomenon in mining towns generally By the early 17th century Basques were well established in the city and made up for a substantial number of the inhabitants in Potosi They gathered in a confederation opposed to another one the Vicunas a melting pot of natives and non Basque Spanish and Portuguese colonists fighting for control over ore extraction from the mines and its management Eventually tension among both factions came to a head resulting in the eruption of overt armed conflict starting 1622 up to 1625 The Spanish Crown intervened siding at one point with the Basques Finally both factions reached a settlement sealed with a wedding between the son and daughter of the leaders in either side the Basque Francisco Oyanume and the Vicuna general Castillo One of the most famous Basque residents in Potosi 1617 19 was Catalina de Erauso a nun who escaped her convent and dressed as a man becoming a driver of llamas and a soldier 32 Independence era Edit During the Bolivian War of Independence 1809 1825 Potosi frequently passed between the control of Royalist and Patriot forces Major leadership mistakes came when the First Auxiliary Army arrived from Buenos Aires under the command of Juan Jose Castelli which led to an increased sense that Potosi required its own independent government Later when the Second Auxiliary Army under the command of Manuel Belgrano was forced to retreat Belgrano made the decision to blow up the Casa de la Moneda The natives undid the fuse as many refused to evacuate and would have lost their lives Two more expeditions from Buenos Aires would seize Potosi Modern era Edit Potosi continues to be an important administrative center mining town tourist attraction and population center in modern Bolivia Origin of the name EditThis section includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this section by introducing more precise citations September 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp A Spanish colonial two reales piece two bits from the Potosi MintThere is no authoritative etymology for the word Potosi According to legend in about 1462 Huayna Capac the eleventh Sapa Inca of what by then was known as the Inca Empire set out for Ccolque Porco and Andaccaua the location of his mines from which were taken innumerable arrobas of silver an arroba is a Spanish unit of weight equivalent to approximately 25 lb 11 kg Before leaving there he saw Potosi and admiring its beauty and grandeur he said speaking to those of his Court This doubtless must have much silver in its heart whereby he subsequently ordered his vassals to go to Ccolque Porco and work the mines and remove from them all the rich metal They did so and having brought their tools of flint and reinforced wood they climbed the hill and after having probed for its veins they were about to open those veins when they heard a frightening thunderous noise which shook the whole hill and after this they heard a voice which said Do not take the silver from this hill because it is destined for other masters Amazed at hearing this reasoning the Incan vassals desisted in their purpose and returned to Porco and told the king what had happened relating the occurrence in their own language on coming to the word noise they said Potocsi which means there was a great thunderous noise and from that later was derived corrupting a letter the name of potosi citation needed It is believed who that Potosi is a Quechua word citation needed However in Quechua the root p otoj does not refer to a thunderous noise whereas it does in Aymara Thus if Potosi encompasses the idea of a thunderous noise the location would have an Aymaran root rather than a Quechuan citation needed The actual sharp structure of the term is contrary to the nature of both Aymara and Quechua Another explanation given by several Quechua speakers specify is that potoq is an onomatopoeic word that reproduces the sound of the hammer against the ore and oral tradition has it that the town derived its name from this word nbsp Potosi with Cerro Rico in the background Climate EditPotosi features a rare climate for a city of its size due to its extreme elevation at over 4000m Semi arid and with average temperatures in its warmest month sitting right on the 10 C threshold the city s climate straddles that of the subtropical highland climate Cwc according to the Koppen climate classification with subpolar oceanic characteristics and an alpine climate E Summers are cool and wet with daily highs rarely rising above 20 C while winters feature cooler days with much colder nights averaging 4 C These low temperatures are a result of the extreme precipitation deficit during the winter months with the resulting aridity leading to an increased diurnal temperature variation Climate data for Potosi Bolivia 2000 2012 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 15 59 15 59 16 61 17 63 15 59 14 57 14 57 15 59 16 61 18 64 18 64 17 63 15 8 60 4 Daily mean C F 9 48 9 48 9 48 8 5 47 3 6 5 43 7 5 5 41 9 5 41 6 43 6 5 43 7 9 5 49 1 10 50 10 50 7 9 46 2 Average low C F 3 37 3 37 2 36 0 32 2 28 3 27 4 25 3 27 1 30 1 34 2 36 3 37 0 1 32 2 Average precipitation mm inches 107 9 4 25 97 9 3 85 60 0 2 36 18 3 0 72 3 2 0 13 0 7 0 03 3 4 0 13 3 8 0 15 8 9 0 35 28 6 1 13 32 2 1 27 65 8 2 59 430 7 16 96 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 17 16 12 5 1 0 0 1 2 5 7 14 80Mean daily sunshine hours 6 6 7 8 9 9 9 9 8 8 7 7 7 75Source WeatherWorld 33 Neighborhoods EditOld Town San Gerardo La Chacra Cerveceria Alto Potosi Nuevo Potosi San Martin Pampa Ingenio Nacional Potosi San Juan Concepcion San Cristobal Pailaviri Cachi Rancho El Calvario San Pedro San Roque Mercado Uyuni San Benito Villa Espana Huachacalla Cantumarca San Clemente Ciudad Satelite Plan 40 Las Delicias Los Pinos Cordepo Las Lecherias Villa Mecanicos Villa Copacabana Villa Venezuela Villa NazaretVillages EditBelen Cuchu IngenioSports EditPotosi is home to football teams Real and Nacional which play their matches at the 32 000 capacity multi purpose stadium Estadio Victor Agustin Ugarte one of the highest stadiums in the world Transportation EditThe city is served by Aeropuerto Capitan Nicolas Rojas with commercial airline flights by Boliviana de Aviacion Bolivia s flag air carrier There is also a railroad the Rio Mulatos Potosi line Legacy EditThe city of San Luis Potosi in Mexico was named after Potosi in Bolivia In the United States the name Potosi was optimistically given to lead mining towns of Potosi Wisconsin 34 and Potosi Missouri and also to the silver mining town of Potosi Nevada Twin towns sister cities Edit nbsp Cusco Peru 35 nbsp Lhasa China citation needed Gallery Edit nbsp Central Potosi street nbsp Panoramic of Potosi nbsp Potosi surface mining nbsp Laguna Verde Bolivia nbsp A street in Potosi with Cerro Rico in the background nbsp Salar de Chalviri Potosi nbsp National Mint of Bolivia Casa de la Moneda nbsp Potosi Mountains nbsp A figure of El Tio in Potosi mines 1993 nbsp Church of San Lorenzo de Carangas nbsp Downtown Potosi Bolivia nbsp Potosi Cathedral nbsp Potosi BoliviaSee also EditGeology of Bolivia San Cristobal mine Bolivia Pari Urqu Potosi mountain range Potosi barque Tinku A local combat ritual and agricultural fertility rite El Tio Mapuche silver finery Cerveceria Potosina One of few Bolivian breweries The Devil s Miner documentary film 2005 follows a fourteen year old boy who along with his twelve year old brother work in the mines near Potosi Great Potosi Mint Fraud of 1649 Corregimiento de PotosiReferences Edit Jhonny Llally es el nuevo alcalde de Potosi www paginasiete bo in Spanish Archived from the original on 2021 09 10 Retrieved 2021 05 09 World Gazetteer Archived from the original on 2013 06 14 Retrieved 2012 12 14 Bolivia amp Main Cities Potosi Archived 2008 12 06 at the Wayback Machine from boliviaweb com Retrieved 2010 09 27 Not to be mistaken with Cerro Potosi Mexico Tutino John 2017 The Mexican Heartland How Communities Shaped Capitalism a Nation and World History 1500 2000 Princeton University Press Kritzler Edward 2008 Jewish Pirates of the Caribbean Anchor Books p 151 ISBN 978 0 7679 1952 4 a b Schurz William Lytle The Manila Galleon 1939 P 193 a b c d Cunningham C G Zartman R E McKee E H Rye R O Naeser C W Sanjines V O Ericksen G E Tavera V F 1996 The age and thermal history of Cerro rico de Potosi Bolivia Mineralium Deposita 31 374 385 Beatrice Perez Sonia V Rose Jean Pierre Clement 2007 Des marchands entre deux mondes pratiques et representations en Espagne et en Amerique XVe XVIIIe siecles Presses Paris Sorbonne p 40 ISBN 978 2840505136 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Perez de Holguin Melchor 1716 Entrada del Virrey Morcillo en Potosi Museo de America website Spain Entrada del Virrey Morcillo en Potosi Google Arts and Culture Jean Francois Lejeune 2005 Cruelty and Utopia Cities and Landscapes of Latin America Princeton Architectural Press p 77 ISBN 9781568984896 Kellen Kee McIntyre Richard E Phillips 2007 Woman and Art in Early Modern Latin America Brill Publishers p 80 ISBN 9789004153929 Hiram Bingham III 1911 Across South America an account of a journey from Buenos Aires to Lima by way of Potosi with notes on Brazil Argentina Bolivia Chile and Peru Houghton Mifflin Company p 128 a b Flynn Dennis Giraldez Arturo 1995 Born with a Silver Spoon The Origin of World Trade in 1571 Journal of World History University of Hawai i Press a b Lockhart James Otte Enrique 1976 Letters and people of the Spanish Indies sixteenth century Internet Archive Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 20883 3 Ronald D Crozier Silver processing in Spanish America the patio process and beyond CIM Bulletin July Aug 1993 v 86 n 972 p 86 91 Lane Potosi pp 94 96 Canseco Maria Rostworowski de Diez 1999 History of the Inca realm Transferred to digital printing 2006 ed Cambridge New York Melbourne Cambridge Univ Pr p 63 ISBN 978 0521637596 Archived from the original on 2022 10 17 Retrieved 2021 03 18 Bakewell Peter 1984 Bethell Leslie ed Mining in colonial Spanish America The Cambridge History of Latin America Volume 2 Colonial Latin America The Cambridge History of Latin America Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2 pp 105 152 doi 10 1017 chol9780521245166 005 ISBN 978 0 521 24516 6 Burkholder Mark A Johnson Lyman L 2019 Colonial Latin America Tenth ed New York Oxford Oxford University Press p 83 ISBN 9780190642402 Burkholder and Johnson 155 a b Bakewell 130 BBC A History of the World About Transcripts Episode 80 Pieces of eight Archived from the original on 2019 12 24 Retrieved 2016 05 07 Burkholder and Johnson 125 126 Barragan Romano R 2016 Dynamics of Continuity and Change Shifts in Labour Relations in the Potosi Mines 1680 1812 International Review of Social History 61 S24 93 114 doi 10 1017 S0020859016000511 a b Bakewell 125 Tutino John 2018 Silver Capitalism and Indigenous Republics Rebuilding Communities 1500 1700 The Mexican Heartland How Communities Shaped Capitalism a Nation and World History 1500 2000 Princeton Oxford Princeton University Press p 75 ISBN 978 0 691 17436 5 Cook Noble David 1981 Demographic collapse Indian Peru 1520 1620 Cambridge University Press p 237 ISBN 0 521 23995 8 Bakewell 128 J H Elliott The Silver Rush https www nybooks com articles 2019 11 21 potosi silver rush Archived 2019 12 14 at the Wayback Machine Lane Potosi pp 100 101 Climate Data and Activities WeatherWorldOnline Archived from the original on 18 February 2020 Retrieved 15 October 2013 Potosi origin of place name Wisconsinhistory org 1941 10 10 Archived from the original on 2016 03 11 Retrieved 2010 04 13 Ciudades Hermanas de Cusco aatccusco com in Spanish Asociacion de Agencias de Turismo del Cusco Archived from the original on 2022 03 29 Retrieved 2021 12 20 Further reading EditAngola Maconde Juan Raices de un pueblo cultura afroboliviana La Paz Producciones CIMA 1999 Arzans de Orsua y Vela Bartolome Historia de la Villa Imperial de Potosi Edicion de Lewis Hanke y Gunnar Mendoza Providence R I Brown University Press 1965 Bakewell Peter Miners of the Red Mountain Indian Labor in Potosi 1545 1650 University of New Mexico Press 2010 Bakewell Peter Silver and Entrepreneurship in Seventeenth Century Potosi The Life and Times of Antonio Lopez de Quiroga Southern Methodist University Press 1995 Cobb Gwendolin Ballantine Potosi a South American Mining Frontier Greater America Essays in Honor of Herbert Eugene Bolton Freeport N Y Books for Libraries Press 1968 c 1945 pp 39 58 1999 ISBN 978 1580930284 Gil Montero Raquel Ciudades efimeras El ciclo minero de la plata en Lipez Bolivia siglos XVI XIX Instituto Frances de Estudios Andinos IFEA Plural Editores 2014 Hanke Lewis writer and Jean Claude Wicky photographer The Imperial City of Potosi The Hague Nijhoff 1956 Lane Kris Potosi The Silver City That Changed the World Berkeley University of California Press 2019 ISBN 978 0520280847 online review Ross John F Mountains of Pain Smithsonian Magazine November 2000 Tandeter Enrique Coaccion y mercado La mineria de plata en el Potosi colonial 1692 1826 Siglo XXI Editores 2001 External links EditJ H Elliott The Silver Rush https www nybooks com articles 2019 11 21 potosi silver rush Cerro Rico The Greatest of the Great Part 1 Geology for Investors last updated October 17 2019 Cerro Rico Part 2 Geology by Andrew Watson updated 2019 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Potosi nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Potosi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Potosi amp oldid 1178358156, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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