
"Granada, Nicaragua: It's
Fall and Rise" New York Times
Article
History, courtesy of the
Lonely Planet
Granada Street Map
History of Nicaragua
The
earliest traces of human habitation in Nicaragua are the
10,000-year-old Footprints of the Acahualinca - prints
preserved under layers of volcanic ash of people and animals
running toward Lago de Managua. Around the 10th century AD,
indigenous people from Mexico migrated to Nicaragua's
Pacific lowlands, and Aztec culture was adopted by many
Indians when Aztecs moved south during the 15th century to
establish a trading colony.
The first contact with Europeans
came in 1502, when Columbus sailed down the Caribbean coast.
In 1522, a Spanish exploratory mission reached the southern
shores of Lago de Nicaragua. A few years later the Spanish
colonized the region and founded the cities of Granada and
Leon, subduing local tribes. Granada became a comparatively
rich colonial city; Leon became a hotbed of liberalism. The
inhabitants of the heavily populated area around Managua put
up a fierce resistance to the Spanish invaders, and their
city was destroyed. For the next three centuries Managua was
but a village.
Nicaragua gained independence
from Spain in 1821, along with the rest of Central America.
It was part of Mexico for a brief time, then part of the
Central American Federation, and finally achieved complete
independence in 1838. Soon after, Britain and the USA both
became extremely interested in Nicaragua and the
strategically important Rio San Juan navigable passage from
Lago de Nicaragua to the Caribbean. In 1848, the British
seized the port at the mouth of the Rio San Juan on the
Caribbean coast and renamed it Greytown. This became a major
transit point for hordes of hopefuls looking for the
quickest route to Californian gold.
In 1855, the liberals of Leon
invited William Walker, a self-styled filibuster intent on
taking over Latin American territory, to help seize power
from the conservatives based in Granada. Walker and his band
of mercenaries took Granada easily and he proclaimed himself
president. He was soon booted out of the country (one of his
first moves was to institutionalize slavery) but showed
almost absurd tenacity as he repeatedly tried to invade; his
efforts set a precedent for continued US interference in
Nicaragua's affairs.
In 1934, General Somoza, head of
the US-trained National Guard, engineered the assassination
of liberal opposition rebel Augusto C Sandino and, after
fraudulent elections, became president in 1937. Somoza ruled
Nicaragua as a dictator for the next 20 years, amassing huge
personal wealth and landholdings the size of El Salvador.
Although General Somoza was shot dead in 1956, his sons
upheld the reign of the Somoza dynasty until 1979.
Widespread opposition to the regime had been present for a
long time, but it was the devastating earthquake of 1972,
and more specifically the way that international aid poured
into the pockets of the Somozas while thousands of people
suffered and died, that caused opposition to spread among
all classes of Nicaraguans. Two groups were set up to
counter the regime: the FSLN (Frente Sandinista de
Liberacion Nacional, also known as the Sandinistas) and the
UDEL, led by Pedro Joaquan Chamorro, publisher of La Prensa,
the newspaper critical of the dictatorship.
When Chamorro was assassinated in
1978 the people erupted in violence and declared a general
strike. The revolt spread and former moderates joined with
the FSLN to overthrow the Somoza regime. The Sandinistas
marched victoriously into Managua on July 19, 1979. They
inherited a poverty-stricken country with high rates of
homelessness and illiteracy and insufficient health care.
The new government nationalized the lands of the Somozas and
established farming cooperatives. They waged a massive
education campaign that reduced illiteracy from 50% to 13%,
and introduced an immunization program that eliminated polio
and reduced infant mortality to a third of the rate it had
been before the revolution.
It wasn't long before the country
encountered serious problems from its 'good neighbor' to the
north. The US government, which had supported the Somozas
until the end, was alarmed that the Nicaraguans were setting
a dangerous example to the region. A successful popular
revolution was not what the US government wanted. Three
months after Ronald Reagan took office in 1981, the USA
announced that it was suspending aid to Nicaragua and
allocating US$10 million for the organization of
counter-revolutionary groups known as Contras. The
Sandinistas responded by using much of the nation's
resources to defend themselves against the US-funded
insurgency.
In 1984, elections were held in
which Daniel Ortega, the leader of the Sandinistas, won 67%
of the vote, but the USA continued its attacks on Nicaragua.
In 1985, the USA imposed a trade embargo that lasted five
years and strangled Nicaragua's economy. By this time it was
widely known that the USA was funding the Contras, often
covertly through the CIA, and Congress passed a number of
bills that called for an end to the funding. US support for
the Contras continued secretly until the so-called Irangate
scandal revealed that the CIA had illegally sold weapons to
Iran at inflated prices, and used the profits to fund the
Contras.
In 1990, Nicaraguans went to the
polls and elected Violeta Chamorro, leader of the opposition
UNO and widow of martyred La Prensa editor Pedro Chamorro.
Chamorro's failure to revive the economy, and her increasing
reliance on Sandinista support, led to US threats to
withhold aid, but the civil war was over at last. Daniel
Ortega ran for president in October 1996, apologizing for
Sandinista 'excesses' and calling himself a centrist, but he
was defeated by the ex-mayor of Managua, anticommunist
Liberal Alliance candidate, Arnoldo Aleman. President Aleman
was sworn in January 10, 1997.
In November of 1998, Hurricane
Mitch trampled the Atlantic coast of Central America,
leaving disaster in its wake. The hurricane washed out roads
and destroyed bridges throughout the region. In Nicaragua,
heavy rains following in the wake of the storm kicked off a
mudslide at Volcan Casita that buried several villages. Over
10,000 people died as a result of the hurricane, one of the
nastiest this century. The tragedy prompted several nations
to cancel Nicaragua's debt in late 1999, and the country is
slowly rebuilding.
The 2000 mayoral elections saw
the Sandinistas gain control of 11 out of 17 departmental
capitals, and popular FSLN member Herty Lewites easily won
in Managua. However, Liberal Party candidate Enrique Bolanos
came out ahead in the presidential election in 2001, beating
his Sandinista opponent, former president Ortega. Not giving
up on Ortega yet, the Sandinistas renamed him as the party's
leader in March 2002.