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Argentina Education
Universities I
Colleges
I
Schools
I
Private Training I
English
Schools
Argentina
Education
Primary education is free and compulsory from ages 6 to 14. In
the mid-1980s about 4.8 million pupils attended primary schools;
1.9 million attended secondary and vocational schools. More than
900,000 were enrolled in colleges and universities. Argentina's
literacy rate of about 95 percent is one of the highest in Latin
America.
Argentina has 24 national universities and many state and
private universities. The principal institution is the
University of Buenos Aires (1821). Other major national
universities are the Catholic University of Argentina (1958),
National Technological University (1959), National University of
Córdoba (1613), and other universities located in Bahia Blanca
(1956), La Plata (1905), Mendoza (1939), San Miguel de Tucumán
(1914), and Rosario (1968).
Argentina or Argentine Republic, federal republic, southern
South America, bounded on the north by Bolivia and Paraguay; on
the east by Brazil, Uruguay, and the Atlantic Ocean; on the
south by the Atlantic Ocean and Chile; and on the west by Chile.
The country occupies most of the southern portion of the
continent of South America and is somewhat triangular in shape,
with the base in the north and the apex at Punta Dungeness, the
southeastern extremity of the continental mainland. The length
of Argentina in a northern to southern direction is about 3330
km (about 2070 miles); its extreme width is about 1384 km (about
860 miles). The country includes the Tierra del Fuego territory,
which comprises the eastern half of the Isla Grande de Tierra
del Fuego and a number of adjacent islands to the east,
including Isla de los Estados. The area of Argentina is
2,766,889 sq km (1,068,302 sq miles); it is the second largest
South American country, Brazil ranking first in area. Argentina,
however, claims a total of 2,808,602 sq km (1,084,120 sq miles),
including the Falkland Islands, or Islas Malvinas, and other
sparsely settled southern Atlantic islands, as well as part of
Antarctica. The Argentine coastline measures 2665 km (1656
miles) in length. The capital and largest city is Buenos Aires
(population, 1991 metropolitan area, 11, 382,002).
Land and Resources
Argentina comprises a diverse territory of mountains, upland
areas, and plains. The western boundaries of the country fall
entirely within the Andes, the great mountain system of the
South American continent. For considerable stretches the
continental divide demarcates the Argentine-Chilean frontier.
The Patagonian Andes, which form a natural boundary between
Argentina and Chile, are one of the lesser ranges, seldom
exceeding about 3660 m (about 12,000 ft) in elevation. From the
northern extremity of this range to the Bolivian frontier, the
western part of Argentina is occupied by the main Andean
cordillera, with a number of peaks above about 6400 m (about
21,000 ft). Aconcagua (6959 m/22,831 ft), the highest of these
peaks, is the greatest elevation in the world outside Central
Asia. Other noteworthy peaks are Ojos del Salado (6893 m/22,615
ft) and Tupungato (6800 m/22,310 ft), on the border between
Argentina and Chile, and Mercedario (6770 m/22,211 ft). Several
parallel ranges and spurs of the Andes project deeply into
northwestern Argentina. The only other highlands of consequence
in Argentina is the Sierra de Córdoba, situated in the central
portion of the country. Its highest peak is Champaquí (2850
m/9350 ft).
Eastward from the base of the Andean system, the terrain of
Argentina consists almost entirely of a flat or gently
undulating plain. This plain slopes gradually from an elevation
of about 610 m (about 2000 ft) to sea level. In the north the
Argentine plains consist of the southern portion of the South
American region known as the Chaco. The Pampas, treeless plains
that include the most productive agricultural sections of the
country, extend nearly 1600 km (about 1000 miles) south from the
Chaco. In Patagonia, south of the Pampas, the terrain consists
largely of arid, desolate steppes.
Rivers and Lakes
The chief rivers of Argentina are the Parana, which traverses
the north central portion of the country; the Uruguay, which
forms part of the boundary with Uruguay; the Paraguay, which is
the main affluent of the Paraná; and the Río de la Plata (see
PLATA, RIO DE LA), the great estuary formed by the confluence of
the Paraná and the Uruguay rivers. The Paraná-Uruguay system is
navigable for nearly 3200 km (about 2000 miles). A famed scenic
attraction, the Iguaçu Falls (see IGUACU), is on the river of
the same name, a tributary of the Paraná. Other important rivers
of Argentina are the Río Colorado, the Río Salado, and the Río
Negro. In the area between the Río Salado and the Río Colorado
and in the Chaco region, some large rivers empty into swamps and
marshes or disappear into sinks. The hydrography of the country
includes numerous lakes, particularly among the foothills of the
Patagonian Andes. The best known are those in the alpine lake
country around the resort town of Bariloche.
Climate
Temperate climatic conditions prevail throughout most of
Argentina, except for a small tropical area in the northeast and
the subtropical Chaco in the north. In the vicinity of Buenos
Aires the average annual temperature is a mild 16.1° C (61° F).
The January and July averages for this area are, respectively,
23.3° C (74° F) and 10° C (50° F). In San Miguel de Tucumán the
average January temperature is 26.1° C (79° F) and the average
July temperature is 13.3° C (56° F). Considerably higher
temperatures prevail near the tropic of Capricorn in the north,
where extremes as high as 45° C (113° F) are occasionally
recorded. Climatic conditions are generally cold in the higher
Andes, Patagonia, and Tierra del Fuego. In the western section
of Patagonia winter temperatures average about 0° C (32° F). In
most coastal areas, however, the ocean exerts a moderating
influence on temperatures.
Precipitation in Argentina is marked by wide regional
variations. More than 152 cm (60 in) fall annually in the
extreme north, but conditions gradually become semiarid to the
south and west. In the vicinity of Buenos Aires annual rainfall
is about 950 mm (about 37 in). In the vicinity of San Miguel de
Tucumán annual rainfall is about 970 mm (38 in).
Natural Resources
The traditional wealth of Argentina lies in the vast Pampas,
which are used for extensive grazing and grain production; but
Argentine mineral resources, especially offshore deposits of
petroleum and natural gas, have assumed increasing importance in
recent decades.
Plants and Animals
The indigenous vegetation of Argentina varies greatly with the
different climate and topographical regions of the country. The
warm and moist northeastern area supports tropical plants,
including such trees as the palm, rosewood, lignum vitae,
jacaranda, and red quebracho (a source of tannin). Grasses are
the principal variety of indigenous vegetation in the Pampas.
Trees, excluding such imported drought-resistant varieties as
the eucalyptus, sycamore, and acacia, are practically
nonexistent in this region and in most of Patagonia. The chief
types of vegetation in Patagonia are herbs, shrubs, grasses, and
brambles. The Andean foothills of Patagonia and parts of Tierra
del Fuego, however, possess flourishing growths of conifers,
notably fir, cypress, pine, and cedar. Cacti and other thorny
plants predominate in the arid Andean regions of northwestern
Argentina.
In the north the fauna is most diverse and abundant. The mammals
in these regions include the monkey (several species), jaguar,
puma, ocelot, anteater, tapir, peccary, and raccoon. Indigenous
birds include the flamingo and various hummingbirds and parrots.
In the Pampas are the armadillo, fox, marten, wildcat, hare,
deer, American ostrich or rhea, hawk, falcon, heron, plover, and
partridge; some of these animals are also found in Patagonia.
The cold Andean regions are the habitat of the llama, guanaco,
vicuña, alpaca, and condor. Fish abound in coastal waters,
lakes, and streams.
Soils
The soils of Argentina vary greatly in fertility and suitability
for agriculture, and water is scarce in many areas outside the
northeast and the humid Pampas. The Pampas, which are largely
made up of a fine sand, clay, and silt almost wholly free from
pebbles and rocks, are ideal for the cultivation of cereal. In
contrast, the gravelly soil of most of Patagonia, in southern
Argentina, is useless for growing crops. The natural grasslands
of this region are used primarily as pasture for sheep. Most of
the northern Andean foothill region is unsuitable for farming,
but several oases favor fruit culture. In part of the Chaco an
unusually saline soil is believed to be responsible for the
abundance of the tannin-rich quebracho trees.
Population
About 85 percent of the population is of European origin. Unlike
most Latin American countries, Argentina has relatively few
mestizos (persons of mixed European and Native American
ancestry), although their number has increased in recent times.
European immigration continues to be officially encouraged; from
1850 to 1940, some 6,608,700 Europeans settled in the country.
Spanish and Italian immigrants have predominated, with
significant numbers of French, British, German, Russian, Polish,
Syrian, and other South American immigrants. More than one-third
of the population lives in or around Buenos Aires; about 85
percent of the people live in urban areas.
Population Characteristics
In 1993 the estimated population of Argentina was 33,533,256.
The overall population density was about 12 persons per sq km
(about 31 per sq miles).
Political Divisions
Argentina comprises 22 provinces; the self-governing Federal
District, which consists of the city of Buenos Aires and several
suburbs; and the national territory of the Argentine part of
Tierra del Fuego, the Argentine-claimed sector of Antarctica,
and several South Atlantic islands. The national territory of
Tierra del Fuego was in the process of becoming a province in
1993.
The provinces are grouped into five major areas: the Atlantic
Coastal, or Littoral, provinces, comprising Buenos Aires
(excluding the city of Buenos Aires), Chaco, Corrientes, Entre
Ríos, Formosa, Misiones, and Santa Fe; the Northern provinces,
comprising Jujuy, Salta, Santiago del Estero, and Tucumán; the
Central provinces, comprising Córdoba, La Pampa, and San Luis;
the provinces of the Andes, or Andina, comprising Catamarca, La
Rioja, Mendoza, Neuquén, and San Juan; and the Patagonian
provinces, comprising Chubut, Río Negro, and Santa Cruz.
A number of nations, including the United States, do not
recognize the Argentine claim to the vast sector of Antarctica,
between longitude 25° West and 74° West, and to a number of
South Atlantic islands.
Principal Cities
Important cities include Cordoba (population, 1990 estimate,
1,134,086), a major manufacturing and university city; the river
port of Rosario (1,071,384); La Plata (644,155), capital of
Buenos Aires Province; Mar del Plata (523,178), a resort city at
the mouth of the Rio de la Plata; San Miguel de Tucuman
(626,143), a diversified manufacturing center; Salta (265,632),
famous for its colonial architecture; and Mendoza (728,966), hub
of an important agricultural and wine-growing region.
Language
Spanish is the official language and is spoken by the
overwhelming majority of Argentines. Italian and a number of
Native American languages are still spoken as well.
Religion
Roman Catholics make up more than 92 percent of the population.
Judaism, Protestantism, and a number of other Christian and
non-Christian religions are practiced, but several faiths and
sects are banned as “injurious to public order.” By law, the
president and vice president of Argentina must be Roman
Catholic.
Education and Culture
Argentina is a nation with a rich Spanish heritage, strongly
influenced since the 19th century by European, notably Italian,
immigration. A lively interest is maintained in the nation's
history, particularly as symbolized by the gaucho (cowboy). In
the fine arts, the most important model has been France; only in
folk art has there been significant influence from Native
American cultures.
Libraries and Museums
The leading library of Argentina is the National Library (1810)
in Buenos Aires, which has about 1.9 million volumes. Prominent
among the many museums in Buenos Aires are the Argentine Museum
of Natural Sciences, the National Museum of Fine Arts, and such
private collections as the International Art Gallery. The Museum
of La Plata is famous for its collections of reptile fossils.
Literature
Argentine literature, originally a derivative form of Spanish
literature, took on a markedly nationalistic flavor in the 19th
century. The poem Fausto (1866), by Estanisláo del Campo, is a
gaucho version of the Faust legend; Martín Fierro (1872), a
narrative poem on gaucho life by José Hernández, is considered
by many the national epic of Argentina; and finally, the
sociological essay Facundo (1845; translated 1868), by Domingo
Faustino Sarmiento, is a study of how the rural life of the
Argentine Pampas helped shape the national character.
Twentieth-century Argentine literature has produced the
celebrated Shadows in the Pampas (1926; translated 1935), a
novel by Ricardo Guiraldes; Hopscotch (1963; translated 1966), a
novel by Julio Cortazar; The Kiss of the Spider Woman (1976;
translated 1979), a novel by Manuel Puig; and the stories of
Ernesto Sábato. Eduardo Mallea, a novelist who wrote on
existentialist themes, and Jorge Luis Borges, internationally
renowned for his fantasies, are major contemporary figures. The
best-known poet is Leopoldo Lugones, who wrote both symbolist
and naturalist verse.
Art
Painting in the 19th century was dominated by gaucho themes and
scenes of town life. Prilidiano Pueyrredón was the principal
artist of the period. Painters of the 20th century include the
realist Cesareo Bernaldo de Quirós; Benito Quintela Martín,
painter of port life in Buenos Aires; the cubist Emilio
Pettoruti; and Raul Soldi. The works of the sculptor Rogelio
Yrurtia are widely known.
Music
The most important components of traditional Argentine music are
the gaucho folk song and folk dance; Native American music from
the northern provinces; European influences; and, to a minor
extent, African music. The tango, which developed in Buenos
Aires and became a favorite ballroom dance throughout much of
the world, is perhaps Argentina's most famous contribution to
modern music. Astor Piazzolla, a prolific 20th-century tango
composer, bandleader, and performer, incorporated jazz and
classical influences in his works.
Symphonic music and opera are important features of cultural
activity. The National Symphony Orchestra is based in Buenos
Aires, and the opera company of the city is housed in the Colón
Theater, built in 1908. The Colón opera has achieved an
international reputation for excellence. Leading figures in the
classical music field are three brothers, José María Castro,
Juan José Castro, and Washington Castro, all conductors and
composers. Alberto Williams, the founder of the Buenos Aires
Conservatory, was the best known of all Argentine composers.
Alberto Ginastera is well known for his symphonic, ballet,
operatic, and piano music, which is popular throughout the
world.
Communications
A postal service extending to the entire country is maintained
by the government. More than 3.6 million telephones are in use.
In the late 1980s some 21.6 million radio receivers were in use
in Argentina, and television receivers numbered about 7.2
million.
More than 200 daily newspapers are published in Argentina,
although the principal ones are published in Buenos Aires and
circulate throughout the country. La Prensa and La Nación, with
circulations of about 65,000 and 211,000, respectively, are
famed internationally for their independent views and
objectivity. Other leading Buenos Aires papers are Clarín (daily
circulation 480,000) and La Razón (180,000). The provincial
capitals and other secondary centers all have daily papers with
strong local followings. A number of magazines containing both
news and features are published in Buenos Aires and circulate
throughout the country.
Economy
The Argentine economy is based primarily on the production of
agricultural products and the raising of livestock, but
manufacturing and mining industries have shown marked growth in
recent decades. Argentina is one of the world's leading cattle-
and grain-producing regions; the country's main manufacturing
enterprises are meat-packing and flour-milling plants.
Argentina's estimated national budget in 1987 called for revenue
of about $7.1 billion and expenditure of $9.5 billion.
Agriculture
In normal years, Argentina raises enough agricultural products
not only to fill domestic needs but also to export surpluses to
foreign markets. Of Argentina's land area of about 280 million
ha (about 692 million acres), slightly more than 50 percent is
used for pasturing cattle and sheep herds, less than 22 percent
for woodland, and about 4 percent for permanent crops; about 13
percent of the country's land area is arable. The Pampas is the
most important agricultural zone of the country, producing wheat
and cereal grains. Irrigated areas, from the Río Negro north
through Mendoza, San Juan, Tucumán, and Jujuy, are rich sources
of fruit, sugarcane, and wine grapes.
Livestock raising and slaughtering are major enterprises in
Argentina, as are the refrigeration and processing of meat and
animal products; total annual meat production exceeds 3.4
million metric tons. In the late 1980s there were some 50.8
million head of cattle, 29.2 million sheep, and 4.1 million pigs
in Argentina. In addition, there were about 3.1 million horses;
Argentine horses have won an international reputation as
racehorses and polo ponies.
Despite declines during the 1980s, livestock export still plays
an important role in foreign trade. Earnings from meat, hides,
and skins in 1989 were about $1.1 billion, or about 11 percent
of total export earnings. Argentina has long ranked as the world
leader in the export of raw meat. Cooked and canned meats are
increasingly important exports.
Large quantities of wool are produced and exported; in the late
1980s, about 138,000 metric tons of wool were produced per year,
out of a world total of about 3.12 million metric tons. About 40
percent of all sheep in Argentina are raised in the Patagonia
region.
Wheat is the most important crop. Argentina is among the major
producers of wheat in the world. In the late 1980s, the annual
wheat crop totaled about 7.8 million metric tons. Other major
crops were maize (9.2 million metric tons), oats (620,000), and
barley (266,000).
Other major field crops include soybeans, sorghum, flaxseed,
sunflower seeds, sugarcane, cotton, potatoes, rice, maté,
peanuts, and tobacco, as well as a considerable crop of grapes,
oranges, lemons, and grapefruit.
Forestry and Fishing
Situated mainly in mountain areas distant from centers of
population, the 59,500,000 hectares (147,027,000 acres) of
woodland are relatively unused. Among the most exploited woods
are elm and willow, for cellulose production; white quebracho,
for fuel; red quebracho, for tannin (used for tanning leather);
and cedar, for the manufacture of furniture. Other economically
important woods are oak, araucaria, pine, and cypress.
Argentina's fisheries, potentially highly productive, have not
been fully exploited, although production increased steadily in
the 1960s and 1970s. In the late 1980s the annual catch was
about 560,000 metric tons—mostly hake, anchovy, mackerel, and
dorado.
Mining
Although the country has a variety of mineral deposits,
including petroleum, coal, and a number of metals, mining has
been relatively unimportant in the economy. In recent decades,
however, production of petroleum and coal, in particular, has
increased significantly. In terms of value, the chief mineral
product is petroleum. In the late 1980s annual production of
crude petroleum was 157.3 million barrels, furnishing virtually
all of the country's needs; offshore reserves are expected to
boost production levels. The country also produces significant
amounts of natural gas. Relatively small quantities of gold,
silver, copper, lead, zinc, iron, tin, tungsten, mica, uranium,
and limestone are mined.
Manufacturing
Most industry is centered in Buenos Aires. About 20 percent of
the national labor force is employed by manufacturing
establishments. The country's oldest and largest industry is the
processing and packaging of foodstuffs. The textile industry
ranks second. Other major industries produce rubber goods (both
natural and synthetic), cement, chemicals, paper, plastic, and
petroleum products. Steel production is rapidly expanding; in
the late 1980s yearly steel production totaled about 3.5 million
metric tons, and the automotive industry produced 175,000 motor
vehicles.
Energy
Most rivers and falls with potential energy are located far from
industrial centers, but despite these technical limitations
water resources are being developed in Argentina at a rapid
rate. Major hydroelectric projects undertaken in the 1970s and
1980s were located in northern Patagonia, the Yocreta Dam and
other sites on the Paraná River, and on the Uruguay River (in
cooperation with Uruguay). Overall, 52.2 billion kwh of
electricity were produced yearly in Argentina in the late 1980s,
of which 42 percent came from hydroelectric installations.
Nuclear power accounted for 12 percent, and conventional thermal
plants for the remaining 46 percent.
Currency and Banking
Formerly, Argentina's monetary system was based on the peso oro
(Spanish “gold peso”), although no gold coins actually
circulated. The peso moneda nacional (called the paper peso and
consisting of 100 centavos) was the currency in use. Rampant
inflation in the 1970s and early 1980s rapidly depreciated the
value of the peso, and in June 1985 a new currency, the austral
(equal to 1000 pesos), was introduced as part of an ambitious
program to control inflation. When this failed, the nuevo peso
argentino (now Argentine peso, equal to 10,000 australs) was
introduced in January 1992, at an exchange rate of 1 peso =
U.S.$1.
The Central Bank, which was established in 1935 and came under
government control in 1949, functions as the national bank and
has the sole right to issue currency. In the mid-1980s, 30 other
banks were government owned, and about 160 commercial banks were
in the private sector.
Commerce and Trade
The trade balance tends to be favorable to Argentina when world
demand for food is high. In the late 1980s, Argentina's balance
of trade continued to be strongly favorable; annual imports were
about $3.9 billion and exports were about $9.6 billion. The
United States was the leading supplier of imports and a major
outlet for Argentine exports. Other major trading partners
included Brazil, the Netherlands, Germany, Italy, and Japan.
Regional trade with other Latin American countries is governed
by the Latin American Integration Association (LAIA), of which
Argentina is a member. Principal imports are machinery and
electrical equipment; iron, iron manufactures, and other metals;
chemicals; mineral fuels and oils; and paper and food products.
The major exports are cereals, oilseeds, meat, iron, steel,
wool, hides, dairy products, transportation equipment, and
forest products (notably tannin and tung oil).
Transportation
The Argentine railroad system was owned and operated by the
government from 1948 until 1992, when portions of the rail
system were privatized. The system has a total length of about
34,500 km (about 21,435 miles). Two different gauges are used.
Two lines crossing the Andes provide a connection with points in
Chile; railroad links also connect Argentina with Bolivia,
Paraguay, Uruguay, and Brazil. As a result of privatization,
service to some areas of the country is unavailable.
The national airline, Aerolíneas Argentinas, was privatized in
1990. There are also several smaller, internal airlines. About
3100 km (about 1900 miles) of waterways are provided by
navigable rivers, especially those in the Río de la Plata
region. The combined length of all roads and highways is about
211,370 km (about 131,340 miles). A railroad tunnel through the
Andes has provided facilities for motor vehicles since its
expansion in 1940. In the late 1980s some 4.3 million passenger
cars and 1.4 million commercial vehicles were registered.
Labour
In the late 1980s the total labor force numbered about 11.8
million. Most of Argentina's 1100 labor unions are affiliated
with the Confederación General del Trabajo (General Labor
Confederation), known as the CGT. The right to unionize,
suspended in 1976, was restored in 1982, and the labor movement
embraced some 3 million workers by the late 1980s. By the early
1990s President Menem's privatization programs had resulted in
the loss of several hundred thousand jobs and an unemployment
rate of 9.9 percent (1.3 million unemployed).
Government
According to the constitution of 1853, Argentina is a federal
republic headed by a president, who is assisted by a council of
ministers. Legislative powers are vested in a national congress
consisting of a Senate and a House of Deputies. A new
constitution was passed in 1949, only to be rescinded in 1956.
All constitutional provisions were suspended in 1966 following a
military takeover. After another military coup in 1976, the
constitution of 1853 was again suspended, but it was reinstated
when Argentina returned to civilian rule in 1983.
Central Government
The constitution of 1853, in the preamble and in much of the
text, reflects the ideals and aims of the Constitution of the
United States. The president and vice president each serve for a
single six-year term. From 1976 through 1983, when
constitutional government resumed, the Junta Militar, comprising
the military chiefs of staff, was the supreme organ of state,
with the power of appointing and dismissing the president.
The constitution of 1853 permits the suspension of parliamentary
government and civil liberties should the president deem that a
national emergency requires a “state of siege.” This provision
has been invoked frequently in Argentine history.
Health and Welfare
The National Institute of Social Welfare has administered most
Argentine welfare programs since its founding in 1944. Health
services are provided to workers by the various unions and to
others by free hospital clinics. Medical standards are
relatively high in the cities, and efforts are constantly being
made to improve medical facilities located in outlying rural
areas.
Legislature
The organization of the legislature of Argentina is similar to
that of the United States. The Argentine national congress
consists of a lower chamber, the 254-member House of Deputies,
and an upper chamber, the 46-member Senate. Deputies are
directly elected to four-year terms; senators are chosen by
provincial legislatures for terms of nine years. All citizens 18
years of age or older are entitled to vote. Proportional
representation in national elections was initiated in 1962.
Local Government
Under the constitution, the provinces of Argentina elect their
own governors and legislatures. During periods when the
constitution has been suspended, provincial governors have been
appointed by the central government.
Judiciary
Federal courts include the supreme court, 17 appellate courts,
and district and territorial courts on the local levels. The
provincial court systems are similarly organized, comprising
supreme, appellate, and lower courts.
Defense
The Argentine military establishment is one of the most modern
and best equipped in Latin America and has historically played a
prominent part in national affairs. The army is a national
militia, with service compulsory for all able-bodied male
citizens between the ages of 20 and 45. Up to 14 months of
full-time duty are required. The army has a strength of about
40,400 men. The navy consists of an aircraft carrier, six
missile-equipped destroyers, and a number of lighter ships and
submarines; it has a strength of about 21,500 men. The air
force, with 8900 men, has about 200 combat aircraft, including
jet fighters and bombers.
History
In February 1516, the Spanish navigator Juan Díaz de Solís, then
engaged in search of a southwest passage to the East Indies,
piloted his vessel into the great estuary now known as the Río
de la Plata and claimed the surrounding region in the name of
Spain. Sebastian Cabot, an Italian navigator in the service of
Spain, visited the estuary in 1526. In search of food and
supplies, Cabot and his men ascended the river later called the
Paraná to a point near the site of modern Rosario. They
constructed a fort and then pushed up the river as far as the
region now occupied by Paraguay. Cabot, who remained in the
river basin for nearly four years, obtained from the natives
quantities of silver (Spanish la plata), a name that was soon
applied to the river system and most of the region watered by
it.
Early Settlements
Colonization of the region was begun in 1535 by the Spanish
soldier Pedro de Mendoza. In February 1536, Mendoza, who had
been appointed military governor of the entire continent south
of the Río de la Plata, founded Buenos Aires. In its efforts to
establish a permanent colony, the Mendoza expedition encountered
severe hardships, chiefly because of difficulties in obtaining
food. Hostile natives forced the abandonment of this settlement
five years later.
In 1538 Domingo Martínez de Irala, one of Mendoza's lieutenants,
founded Asunción (now the capital of Paraguay), which was the
first permanent settlement in the La Plata region. From their
base at Asunción, the Spanish gradually won control over the
territory between the Paraná and Paraguay rivers. The small
herds of livestock brought from Spain had meanwhile multiplied
and spread over the Pampas, creating the conditions for a stable
agricultural economy.
Santiago del Estero, the first permanent settlement on what is
now Argentine soil, was established in 1553 by Spanish settlers
from Peru. Santa Fe was founded in 1573, and in 1580 the
resettlement of Buenos Aires was begun. In 1620 the entire La
Plata region was attached to the viceroyalty of Peru for
administrative purposes. Because of the restrictive commercial
policies of the Spanish government, colonization of the La Plata
region proceeded slowly during the next 100 years. Buenos Aires,
the center of a flourishing trade in smuggled goods, grew
steadily. By the middle of the 18th century, its population
numbered close to 20,000. In 1776 the territory occupied by
present-day Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay, and Uruguay was
separated from Peru and incorporated as the viceroyalty of La
Plata.
Patriotic Awakening
In June 1806, Buenos Aires was attacked by a British fleet under
the command of Admiral Home Riggs Popham. The viceroy offered no
defense against the attack, which was made without authorization
by the British government. The invaders occupied the city but
were expelled by a citizen army the following August. An
expeditionary force subsequently dispatched by the British
government against Buenos Aires was compelled to capitulate in
1807. These events had far-reaching consequences: the colonial
patriots, imbued with confidence in their fighting ability, soon
became active in the independence movement that had begun to
develop in Spanish South America.
Revolutionary sentiment in La Plata reached its peak in the
period following the deposing of King Ferdinand VII of Spain by
Napoleon in 1808. The people of Buenos Aires refused to
recognize Joseph Bonaparte, Napoleon's brother, who was then
installed on the Spanish throne. On May 25, 1810, they overthrew
the viceregal government and installed a provisional governing
council in the name of Ferdinand VII. The provisional government
shortly broke with the representatives of Ferdinand and launched
an energetic campaign to revolutionize the La Plata hinterland.
This campaign ended in failure. Several signal victories,
however, were won over invading royalist armies in 1812 and
1813. The liberated part of the viceroyalty was divided into 14
provinces in 1813. In 1814 the brilliant military leader Jose de
San Martin took command of the northern army, which later struck
decisive blows against Spanish rule in Chile and Peru.
The United Provinces
During 1814 and 1815 sentiment crystallized in the liberated
area, which was nominally still subject to the Spanish crown, in
favor of absolute independence. Representatives of the various
provinces convened at Tucumán in March 1816. On the following
July 9 the delegates proclaimed independence from Spanish rule
and declared the formation of the United Provinces of South
America (later United Provinces of the Río de la Plata).
Although a so-called supreme director was appointed to head the
new state, the congress was unable to reach agreement on a form
of government. Many of the delegates, particularly those from
the city and province of Buenos Aires, favored the creation of a
constitutional monarchy. This position, which was later modified
in favor of a highly centralized republican system, met vigorous
opposition from the delegates of the other provinces, who
favored a federal system of government. Friction between the two
factions mounted steadily, culminating in a civil war in 1819.
Peace was restored in 1820, but the central issue, formation of
a stable government, remained unresolved. Throughout most of the
following decade a state of anarchy, further compounded by war
with Brazil from 1825 to 1827, prevailed in the United
Provinces. Brazil was defeated in the conflict, a result of
rival claims to Uruguay, which emerged as an independent state.
The national political turmoil lessened appreciably after the
1829 election of General Juan Manuel de Rosas as governor of
Buenos Aires Province. A federalist, Rosas cemented friendly
relations with other provinces, thereby winning broad popular
support. He rapidly extended his authority over the United
Provinces, which became known as the Argentine Confederation,
and during his rule all opposition groups were crushed or driven
underground.
Republican Government
The dictatorial regime of Rosas was overthrown in 1852 by a
revolutionary group led by General Justo Urquiza, a former
governor of Entre Ríos Province, who received assistance from
Uruguay and Brazil. In 1853 a federal constitution was adopted,
and Urquiza became first president of the Argentine Republic.
Buenos Aires Province, refusing to adhere to the new
constitution, proclaimed independence in 1854. The mutual
hostility of the two states flared into war in 1859. The
Argentine Republic won a quick victory in this conflict, and in
October 1859, Buenos Aires agreed to join the federation. The
province was, however, the center of another rebellion against
the central government in 1861. Headed by General Bartolome
Mitre, the rebels defeated the national army in September of
that year. The president of the republic resigned on November 5.
In May of the next year a national convention elected Mitre to
the presidency and designated the city of Buenos Aires as the
national capital. With these events, Buenos Aires Province, the
wealthiest and most populous in the union, achieved temporary
control over the remainder of the nation.
Turmoil in Uruguay brought on a Paraguayan invasion of Argentine
territory in 1865, beginning the bloody War of the Triple
Alliance, which ended in complete victory for Argentina, Brazil,
and Uruguay in 1870. During the next decade the conquest of the
Pampas as far as the Río Negro was completed, and the threat of
hostile Native Americans from that direction was eliminated.
This so-called War of the Desert (1879-1880), directed by
General Julio A. Roca, opened up vast new areas for grazing and
farming. In 1880 Roca, who opposed the ascendency of Buenos
Aires in national affairs, was elected to the presidency. In the
aftermath of his victory, the city of Buenos Aires was separated
from the province and established as a federal district and
national capital. A long-standing boundary dispute with Chile
was settled in 1881; through this agreement Argentina acquired
the title to the eastern half of Tierra del Fuego. In 1895 a
boundary dispute with Brazil was submitted to arbitration by the
United States, which awarded about 65,000 sq km (about 25,000 sq
miles) of territory to Argentina. The country became involved in
a serious controversy with Chile regarding the Patagonian
frontier in 1899. This dispute was finally settled in 1902, with
Great Britain acting as arbitrator.
In the half century following 1880, Argentina made remarkable
economic and social progress. During the first decade of the
20th century the country emerged as one of the leading nations
of South America. It began to figure prominently in hemispheric
affairs and, in 1914, helped to mediate a serious dispute
between the United States and Mexico. Argentina remained neutral
during World War I but played a major role as supplier of
foodstuffs to the Allies.
Depression and Turmoil
The world economic crisis that began in 1929 had serious
repercussions in Argentina. Unemployment and other hardships
caused profound social and political unrest. Economic conditions
improved substantially during the administration of General
Augustín Justo, but political turbulence intensified,
culminating in an unsuccessful Radical uprising in 1933 and
1934. In the period preceding the presidential elections of
1937, Fascist organizations became increasingly active. In May
1936, following the organization of a left-wing Popular Front,
the Argentine right-wing parties united in a so-called National
Front. This organization, which openly advocated establishment
of a dictatorship, successfully supported the finance minister,
Roberto M. Ortiz, for the presidency. Contrary to the
expectations and demands of his supporters, however, Ortiz took
vigorous steps to strengthen democracy in Argentina.
Countermeasures were adopted against the subversive activities
of German agents, who had become extremely active after the
victory of National Socialism in Germany. The corrupt electoral
machinery of the country was overhauled. Ortiz proclaimed
neutrality after the outbreak of World War II, but he
subsequently cooperated closely with the other American
republics on matters of hemispheric defense.
World War II
In July 1940, President Ortiz, unable to function because of
illness, designated Vice President Ramón S. Castillo as acting
president. A Conservative, Castillo broke with the foreign and
domestic policies of his predecessor. At the Pan-American
Defense Conference, held at Rio de Janeiro in January 1942,
shortly after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Argentina and
Chile were the only American nations to refuse to sever
relations with the Axis powers.
Castillo, who had officially succeeded to the presidency
following the resignation of Ortiz in June 1942, was removed
from office one year later by a military group headed by General
Arturo Rawson, who favored severance of relations with Germany
and Japan. On the eve of his assumption of office as provisional
president, however, Rawson's associates forced him to resign.
The provisional presidency went to General Pedro Ramírez, one of
the leaders of the revolt. Ramírez shortly abolished all
political parties, suppressed opposition newspapers, and
generally stifled the remnants of democracy in Argentina. In
January 1944, in a complete reversal of foreign policy, his
government broke diplomatic relations with Japan and Germany.
Fearful that war with Germany was imminent, a military junta,
the so-called Colonels, forced Ramírez from office on February
24, 1944. The central figure in the junta was Colonel Juan
Domingo Peron, chief of labor relations in the Ramírez regime.
Despite protestations of sympathy with the Allied cause, the
government continued the policy of suppression of democratic
activity and of harboring German agents. In July the U.S.
government accused Argentina of aiding the Axis powers. Finally,
on March 27, 1945, when Allied victory in Europe was assured,
the country declared war on Germany and Japan. In the following
month the government signed the Act of Chapultepec, a compact
among American nations for mutual aid against aggressors.
Argentina, with U.S. sponsorship, became a charter member of the
United Nations in June. Shortly afterward, it was announced that
elections would be held early in 1946.
The Perón Era
Revival of political activity in Argentina was marked by the
appearance of a new grouping, the Peronistas. Formally organized
as the Labor party, with Perón as its candidate for the
presidency, this group found its main support among the most
depressed sections of the agricultural and industrial working
class. The Peronistas campaigned among these workers, popularly
known as descamisados (Spanish, “shirtless ones”), with promises
of land, higher wages, and social security. The elections, held
on February 24, resulted in a decisive victory for Perón over
his opponent, the candidate of a progressive coalition.
In October 1945, Perón married the former actress Eva Duarte,
who, as first lady of Argentina, managed labor relations and
social services for her husband's government until her death in
1952. Adored by the masses, whom she manipulated with consummate
skill, she was, as much as anyone, responsible for the popular
following of the Perón regime. In October 1946, President Perón
promulgated an ambitious five-year plan for the expansion of the
economy. During 1947 he deported a number of German agents and
expropriated about 60 German firms. After these moves, relations
between Argentina and the United States improved steadily.
New constitution
In March 1949, Perón promulgated a new constitution permitting
the president of the republic to succeed himself in office.
Taking advantage of the new law, the Peronista party in July
1949 renominated Perón as its presidential candidate for 1952.
As a result, the opposition parties and press became
increasingly critical of the government. The Peronista majority
in the congress retaliated in September of that year with
legislation providing prison terms for persons who showed
“disrespect” for government leaders. Many opponents of the
regime were jailed in subsequent months. The congress shortly
instituted other retaliatory measures, notably suppression of
the opposition press.
La Prensa, a leading independent daily newspaper, was suppressed
in March 1951. In the following month, congress approved
legislation expropriating the paper. Severe restrictions were
imposed on the anti-Peronista parties in the campaign preceding
the national elections, which took place in November 1951,
instead of in February 1952, the originally scheduled date.
President Perón was reelected by a large majority, and Peronista
candidates won 135 of the 149 seats in the house of deputies.
Second term
In January 1953 the government inaugurated a second five-year
plan. The plan emphasized increased agricultural output instead
of all-out industrialization, which had been the goal of the
first five-year plan. During 1953 Argentina concluded important
economic and trade agreements with several countries, notably
Great Britain, the Soviet Union, and Chile. Foreign commercial
transactions in 1953 produced a favorable balance of trade, the
first since 1950; but inflationary pressures, which had resulted
in an increase in the cost of living of more than 200 percent
since 1948, did not lessen.
In November 1954, Perón accused a group of Roman Catholic
clergymen of “fostering agitation” against the government.
Despite church opposition, the government proposed and secured
enactment during the next two months of legislation legalizing
absolute divorce, granting all benefits of legitimacy to
children borne out of wedlock, and legalizing prostitution. The
schism between church and state widened steadily in the
succeeding months.
Overthrow
On June 16, 1955, dissident elements of the Argentine navy and
its air arm launched a rebellion in Buenos Aires. The army
remained loyal, however, and the uprising was quickly crushed.
Tension increased during the next few weeks, as factions within
the government and the military maneuvered for position.
Finally, on September 16, insurgent groupings in all three
branches of the armed forces staged a concerted rebellion; after
three days of civil war, during which approximately 4000 persons
were killed, Perón resigned and took refuge on a Paraguayan
gunboat in Buenos Aires Harbor. On September 20 the insurgent
leader Major General Eduardo Lonardi took office as provisional
president, promising to restore democratic government. Perón
went into exile, first in Paraguay and later in Spain.
Provisional Presidents
In less than two months the Lonardi government was itself
overthrown in a bloodless coup d'état led by Major General Pedro
Eugenio Aramburu. The announced reason for the revolt was the
unwillingness of Lonardi to suppress Peronism, especially in the
army and among the workers. Aramburu abrogated the 1949
constitution and restored the liberal charter of 1853. Under the
latter, a president may not succeed himself. A Peronist revolt
was crushed in June 1956. Thousands were arrested, and 38
alleged Peronistas were executed. Scores of persons were
subsequently imprisoned on charges of plotting to overthrow the
new regime.
Elections to a constitutional assembly were held in July. The
moderate Radical party, headed by Ricardo Balbín, received the
most votes, closely followed by the somewhat leftist
Intransigent Radical party under Arturo Frondizi. The Peronistas,
forbidden to function as a party, were instructed by their
exiled leader to cast blank ballots. Blanks, which were
encouraged also by some minor groups, exceeded the votes of any
single party and constituted about one-fourth of the total cast.
Elected Presidents
The constituent assembly, which opened in Santa Fe in September,
unanimously readopted the constitution of 1853 after the
Intransigent Radicals and some others withdrew. When general
elections were held in February 1958, Frondizi won the
presidency with Peronist and Communist support, and his
Intransigent Radical party won a majority in the legislature.
Representative government was restored on May 1.
Despite labor unrest and continual rises in living costs, a
degree of economic stability was achieved in early 1959 with the
aid of substantial foreign loans and credits; by 1960, loans
from U.S. public and private agencies alone amounted to $1
billion. Argentina's participation in the Latin American Free
Trade Association (LAFTA), founded in 1960, helped foster a
growing trade with other countries in the region from 1960 to
1980.
Frondizi's popularity declined markedly throughout 1961. In
elections held in March 1962, Peronistas, again permitted
electoral participation, polled about 35 percent of the total
vote. Although Frondizi forbade five successful Peronist
candidates from assuming the provincial governorships they had
won, he was deposed at the end of the month by military leaders
critical of his leniency toward Peronism. José María Guido, as
president of the Senate, became Frondizi's constitutional
successor.
His government, however, was dominated by the armed forces. Both
Peronistas and Communists were barred from the national
elections of July 1963, in which Arturo Illía, a moderate of the
People's Radical party, was elected president. Illía announced a
program of national recovery and regulation of foreign
investment and tried to control rising prices, shortages, and
labor unrest by fixing prices and setting minimum-wage laws.
Military Rule
In elections in 1965, Peronist candidates made significant
gains, although Illía's party retained a 71-seat plurality in
the lower house. Labor unrest continued into 1966, and the
Peronistas continued to win victories in by-elections. The
result was a military coup in June 1966. The junta that then
took control named succeeding presidents, the third of whom,
General Alejandro Augustín Lanusse, took office in 1971.
In the early months of his regime, Lanusse began moving toward a
return to civilian rule. He announced an economic program
designed to hold down the inflationary spiral, and scheduled
national elections for March 1973. In 1972, however, the country
became increasingly torn by violence, including strikes, student
riots, and terrorist activities. The economy too was headed for
a new crisis. The Peronistas had grown increasingly vocal, and
they now nominated Perón for the presidency. He remained in
Spain until after the date set for candidates to be resident in
Argentina, however, and Hector J. Cámpora was nominated in his
place.
Return and Death of Perón
Peronistas swept the elections in March 1973, and Cámpora was
inaugurated as president on May 25. Terrorism escalated, now
joined by rightist vigilantes, with numerous kidnappings,
soaring ransom demands, and killings. Divisions between moderate
and leftist Peronistas also brought widespread violence. On June
20, when Perón returned to Buenos Aires, a riot resulted in
approximately 380 casualties.
A month later Cámpora resigned, and in September Perón was
elected president, with more than 61 percent of the votes. His
third wife, Isabel de Peron, was elected vice president.
The strain, however, proved too much for the aging Perón. He
died on July 1, 1974, and his wife succeeded him, becoming the
first woman chief executive of a modern Latin American state.
During her presidency, political and economic conditions
deteriorated rapidly. In 1975 terrorist activities by right- and
left-wing groups resulted in the deaths of more than 700 people.
The cost of living increased by 335 percent, and strikes and
demonstrations for higher wages were frequent. After repeated
cabinet crises and an abortive air force rebellion in December
1975, a military junta led by the army commander, Lieutenant
General Jorge Rafael Videla, seized power on March 24, 1976. The
junta dissolved the legislature, imposed martial law, and ruled
by decree.
Military Rule and the Falklands War
For the first few months after the military takeover, terrorism
remained rampant, but it waned somewhat after the Videla
government launched its own terror campaign against political
opponents. In 1977 the Argentine Commission for Human Rights, in
Geneva, blamed the regime for 2300 political murders, some
10,000 political arrests, and 20,000 to 30,000 disappearances.
The economy remained chaotic. Videla was succeeded as president
in March 1981 by Field Marshal Roberto Viola, himself deposed in
December 1981 by the commander in chief of the army, General
Leopoldo Galtieri. Galtieri's government rallied the country
behind it in April 1982 by forcibly occupying the British-held
Falkland Islands (called Islas Malvinas by the Argentines).
After a brief war Great Britain recaptured the islands in June,
and the discredited Galtieri was replaced by Major General
Reynaldo Bignone.
The Latin American Integration Association (LAIA), founded in
1980, replaced LAFTA as a more loosely defined entity for
reducing tariffs on intracontinental trade. Between 1986 and
1990, Argentina signed a number of integration treaties designed
to further reduce trade barriers between Latin American
countries.
With an unprecedented international debt, and inflation at more
than 900 percent, Argentina held its first presidential election
in a decade in October 1983. The winner was the candidate of the
Radical party, Raúl Alfonsín. Under Alfonsín, the armed forces
were reorganized; former military and political leaders were
charged with human rights abuses; the foreign debt was
restructured; fiscal reforms (including a new currency) were
introduced; and a treaty to resolve a dispute with Chile over
three Beagle Channel islands was approved. Inflation remained
unchecked, however, and in May 1989 the Peronist candidate,
Carlos Saul Menem, was elected president. With Argentina's
economy deteriorating rapidly, Menem imposed an austerity
program. During the early 1990s, his government curbed
inflation, balanced the budget, sold off state enterprises to
private investors, and rescheduled the nation's debts to
commercial banks. In 1992 full diplomatic relations with Britain
were restored, helping to heal the wounds of the Falklands War.
In 1993 President Menem reached an agreement with former
President Alfonsín to amend the constitution to allow
presidential reelection and to shorten the presidential term
from six to four years. The measure passed in both legislative
houses. In elections held to determine which groups would
participate in drafting the amendment, Menem's party won a
majority. In January 1994, the country signed the Treaty of
Tlatelolco, making Argentina a nuclear weapons-free state. Also
in 1994, leaders from Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay
signed the Asunción treaty, which confirmed those countries'
intention to create the Southern Cone Common Market by the end
of 1994.
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