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Nicaragua
Nicaragua
Nicaragua The largest country in Central America, bounded on the north by Honduras and on the south by Costa Rica.
Physical
Nicaragua has a south-western-facing coast on the Pacific Ocean and a longer, eastward-facing one on the Caribbean Sea, the Mosquito Coast. In the west are fertile plains and volcanic mountains.
Economy
The civil war has devastated the economy, which has also suffered from US attempts to enact a trade blockade and suspend foreign aid. There have been shortages of most goods and very high inflation. The economy is principally agricultural.
History
The first inhabitants of Nicaragua were Indians from South America who settled on the coast. From the 10th century AD peoples from Mexico began to immigrate into the region. The first Spanish colonization was undertaken by Francisco Hernándes de Córdoba, who founded the towns of Granada on Lake Nicaragua and León on Lake Managua in 1524. One of the main Indian tribes converted to Christianity, which enabled the Spanish to take control of the area with ease. Administratively part of the viceroyalty of New Spain and the captaincy-general of Guatemala, Nicaragua grew slowly. It depended upon agriculture, which developed substantially in the 18th century. The country achieved its independence from Spain in 1821. Nicaragua was briefly annexed into the Mexican empire of Agustín de Iturbide, and with the collapse of that experiment formed part of the United Province of Central America until becoming independent again in 1838. In 1848 the British seized San Juan del Norte, known as the Mosquito Coast, after a tribe of American Indians, the Miskito. In 1855 a US adventurer, William Walker, seized control of the country and made himself President (1856–57). His ousting helped unite the country, which made peace with Britain and recognized a separate Mosquito kingdom. The 20th century opened with the country under the vigorous control of the dictator José Santos Zelaya, who extended Nicaraguan authority over the Mosquito kingdom. The USA, apprehensive of his financial dealings with Britain, supported the revolution which overthrew him in 1907. The US presence, including two occupations by the marines, dominated the country until 1933. In 1937 Nicaragua fell under the control of Anastasio
SOMOZA, who ruled until his assassination in 1956. He was succeeded by his son Luis (1957–63), and then by the latter's brother, General Anastasio Debayle Somoza (1967–72, 1974–79). In 1962 a guerrilla group, the Sandinista National Liberation Front, was formed. It gained increasing support from the landless peasantry and engaged in numerous clashes with the National Guard, ending in civil war (1976–79). Once established as a ruling party, the Sandinistas, led by Daniel Ortega, expropriated large estates for landless peasants. The dispossessed and exiled owners of the estates then organized opposition to the regime, recruiting a ‘Contra’ rebel army, funded and organized by the CIA. Mines and forests were nationalized and relations with the USA deteriorated. In 1981 US aid ended and the regime was accused of receiving aid from Cuba and the Soviet Union. The
REAGAN administration sought increasing support from the US Congress to give aid to the exiled Contra forces in Honduras and Miami, but was seriously embarrassed by exposure in 1986–87 of illegal diversion of money to the Contras from US sale of arms to Iran. When President Bush took office in 1989 direct military funding to the Contras ended. Elections were held in 1990 with opposition groups generously funded by the USA. The Sandinistas lost to a coalition group led by Violeta Chamorro. Although she succeeded in winning a $300 million loan from the USA, severe economic recession followed, with the GNP falling by 5.5% and some 1.5 million unemployed, causing great hardship. President Chamorro only narrowly succeeded in resisting right-wing pressure for
HACIENDAS, confiscated by the Sandinistas, to be returned to their former owners. In 1992 there were violent clashes between re-armed Contras and Sandinista ‘re-Compas’. A ceasefire agreement was reached in 1994. In 1996 Chamorro resigned, and the conservative Arnaldo Alemán defeated Ortega in presidential elections. The country suffered severe damage in 1998 caused by Hurricane Mitch.
Capital: | Managua |
Area: | 130,700 sq km (50,464 sq miles) |
Population: | 4,763,000 (1998 est) |
Currency: | 1 cordoba = 100 centavos |
Religions: | Roman Catholic 88.3%; other (mostly Baptist, Moravian, and Pentecostal) 11.7% |
Ethnic Groups: | Mestizo 77.0%; White 10.0%; Black 9.0%; Amerindian 4.0% |
Languages: | Spanish (official); Amerindian languages |
International Organizations: | UN; OAS |
Cite this article
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Nicaragua brightens as prospect for U.S. export growth.
Magazine article from: AgExporter; 12/1/1996; ; 700+ words
; Don't forget about Nicaragua - the roots of democracy have taken...is 4.5 percent. Improvement in Nicaragua's GDP, along with a jump in its...U.S. agricultural exports to Nicaragua nearly doubled in 1995 to a record...
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COLOMBIA-NICARAGUA: DISPUTED OFFSHORE AREA RICH IN OIL RESERVES
News Wire article from: Inter Press Service English News Wire; 7/20/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...that it would send a formal protest over Nicaragua's decision to allow foreign companies...s Pastrana most emphatically rejects Nicaragua's plans, which he described as a provocation...Colombia's Caracol radio station that Nicaragua had invited multinational companies to...
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NICARAGUA: GOVERNMENT & DONOR COUNTRIES ARE IN CONFLICT REGARDING TRANSPARENCY & UPCOMING ELECTIONS.
Newspaper article from: NotiCen: Central American & Caribbean Affairs; 8/3/2000; 700+ words
; ...interest loans. That amount is greater than Nicaragua's export earnings. Private-sector...association Union of Agricultural Producers of Nicaragua (UPANEC), said Aleman's attitude...The G-5 comprises the ambassadors in Nicaragua from Canada, France, Spain, Sweden...
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Nicaragua's First Cultural Series to Debut in South Florida and Washington, D.C.; Showcasing Nicaragua's Folkloric Masterpiece - El Gueguense - and Other Performing and Visual Arts.
Business Wire; 9/6/2006; 700+ words
; MANAGUA, Nicaragua -- The Nicaragua Tourism Board today announced the country's first Nicaragua Cultural Series, with a variety of performances and exhibits being presented during the months of October and November in South Florida and Washington...
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NICARAGUA: HONDURAS AND COLOMBIA CLAIM NICARAGUA'S PLANNED OIL EXPLORATION IN CARIBBEAN VIOLATES TERRITORIAL BOUNDARIES.
Newspaper article from: NotiCen: Central American & Caribbean Affairs; 8/8/2002; 700+ words
; ...exploration also encroaches upon its territory. Nicaragua's territorial dispute with Honduras and Colombia...can be traced back to the US occupation of Nicaragua in the 1920s. In 1928, Nicaragua signed a treaty recognizing the 15th parallel...
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Nicaragua's complaint of aggression discussed by Security Council.
Magazine article from: UN Chronicle; 3/1/1984; 700+ words
; ...Acting Minister for Foreign Affairs of Nicaragua to the Minister for Foreign Affairs of...several fuel depots were destroyed". Nicaragua assigned responsibility to "those who...of aggression and provocation against Nicaragua". In letters to the Security Council...
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Nicaragua hopes ship comes in: Backers say building a canal to rival Panama's would fulfill the nation's `destiny,' but skeptics fear disappointing history is doomed to repeat itself.
Newspaper article from: Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL); 12/23/2006; 700+ words
; Byline: Oscar Avila Dec. 23--RIVAS, Nicaragua -- When Nicaragua's president unveiled a plan for an $18 billion...in the way of the Grand Inter-Oceanic Canal of Nicaragua, as it would be called. And they're concerned...
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Nicaragua Says It Will Destroy Missiles
News Wire article from: AP Online; 11/13/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...11-13-2004 Dateline: MANAGUA, Nicaragua US. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld...and Enrique Bolanos, President of Nicaragua at a press conference in the Presidential House of Managua, Nicaragua, Friday, 12, Nov. 2004. Rumsfeld...
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Nicaragua pursues growth creatively.
Newspaper article from: Market Latin America; 4/1/2006; 700+ words
; Something important is happening in Nicaragua. Amid the talk in the region of left...democracies, scandal, waste and corruption, Nicaragua-of all places-has embarked on a promising...humanism, and-economic opportunity. Nicaragua's economy has been in awful shape since...
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Nicaragua.(doing business in Nicaragua)
Newspaper article from: Caribbean Update; 1/1/2007; 700+ words
; DOING BUSINESS IN NICARAGUA. The U.S. Dept. of Commerce has...information on doing business in or with Nicaragua. Excerpts follow. If you wish to...attachment. Market Overview: The US is Nicaragua's largest trading partner--the...
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Nicaragua
Encyclopedia entry from: Worldmark Encyclopedia of the Nations
NICARAGUA Republic of Nicaragua Rep ú blica de Nicaragua CAPITAL: Managua FLAG: The national flag consists of a white horizontal stripe between two stripes of cobalt blue, with the national coat of arms centered in the white band. ANTHEM...
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Nicaragua, Relations with
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
NICARAGUA, RELATIONS WITH NICARAGUA, RELATIONS WITH. Nicaragua's 1838 declaration of independence from the United Provinces of Central America was originally of little interest to U.S. officials. Yet by the late 1840s, growing interest...
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Nicaragua, U.S. Military Involvement in
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to American Military History
Nicaragua, U.S. Military Involvement in. The...has directly intervened militarily in Nicaragua three times, 1909–10, 1912...European intervention in the Caribbean. Nicaragua first gained importance to the United...
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Creoles of Nicaragua
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Cultures
Creoles of Nicaragua ETHNONYMS: Criollos, Miskito Coast...Orientation Identification. The Creoles of Nicaragua are an Afro-Caribbean population of...European ancestry, most of whom live in Nicaragua. The Nicaraguan Creoles' distinctive...
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Nicaragua, Intelligence and Security
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of Espionage, Intelligence, and Security
Nicaragua, Intelligence and Security Nicaragua gained independence from Spain in 1821, and became a republic...end of 1989, the Sandinistas had lost control of much of Nicaragua, but not before continued violence, rampant corruption...
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