Difference between revisions of "Potosí" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{Infobox Settlement
 
{{Infobox Settlement
 
<!--See the Table at Infobox Settlement for all fields and descriptions of usage—>
 
<!--See the Table at Infobox Settlement for all fields and descriptions of usage—>
<!-- Basic info  ---------------->
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|official_name          = Potosí
|official_name          =Potosí
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|nickname              = Empire Ville ( Villa Imperial in espanish)
|other_name            =
 
|native_name            =  <!-- for cities whose native name is not in English —>
 
|nickname              =  
 
 
|settlement_type        = <!--For Town or Village (Leave blank for the default City)—>
 
|settlement_type        = <!--For Town or Village (Leave blank for the default City)—>
|motto                  =
 
 
<!-- images and maps  ----------->
 
<!-- images and maps  ----------->
 
|image_skyline          = Potosi1.jpg
 
|image_skyline          = Potosi1.jpg
|imagesize              = 300px
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|imagesize              = 250px
|image_caption          =  
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|image_caption          =
|image_flag            =  
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|image_flag            = Flag of potosi.svg
|flag_size              =
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|flag_size              = 100px
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|seal_size              =
 
 
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|image_map              =
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|pushpin_label_position = bottom
|mapsize                =
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|pushpin_map_caption    = Location in Bolivia
|map_caption            =
 
|image_map1            =
 
|mapsize1              =
 
|map_caption1          =  
 
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|dot_x =  |dot_y =
 
|pushpin_map            = Bolivia<!-- the name of a location map as per http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Location_map —>
 
|pushpin_label_position =bottom
 
|pushpin_map_caption    =Location in Bolivia
 
 
<!-- Location ------------------>
 
<!-- Location ------------------>
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|coordinates_region    = BO
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|coordinates_display    = inline,title
 
|subdivision_type      = Country
 
|subdivision_type      = Country
|subdivision_name      = [[Image:Flag of Bolivia.svg|25px]] [[Bolivia]]
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|subdivision_name      = [[Bolivia]]
 
|subdivision_type1      = [[Departments of Bolivia|Department]]
 
|subdivision_type1      = [[Departments of Bolivia|Department]]
|subdivision_name1      = [[Potosí Department]]
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|subdivision_name1      = [[Potosí Department|Potosí]]
 
|subdivision_type2      = [[Provinces of Bolivia|Province]]
 
|subdivision_type2      = [[Provinces of Bolivia|Province]]
|subdivision_name2      =  
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|subdivision_name2      = [[Tomás Frías Province|Tomás Frías]]
|subdivision_type3      =  
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|subdivision_type3      = [[Municipalities of Bolivia|Municipality]]
|subdivision_name3      =  
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|subdivision_name3      = [[Potosí Municipality]]
|subdivision_type4      =
 
|subdivision_name4      =
 
 
<!-- Politics ----------------->
 
<!-- Politics ----------------->
 
|government_footnotes  =
 
|government_footnotes  =
 
|government_type        =
 
|government_type        =
|leader_title          =
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|leader_title          = Mayor
|leader_name            =
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|leader_name            = [[René Joaquino]]
|leader_title1          =  <!-- for places with, say, both a mayor and a city manager —>
 
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|leader_title4          =
 
|leader_name4          =
 
 
|established_title      = Founded
 
|established_title      = Founded
|established_date      = April 1 1545
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|established_date      = April 1, 1545
|established_title2    =  <!-- Incorporated (town) —>
 
|established_date2      =
 
|established_title3    =  <!-- Incorporated (city) —>
 
|established_date3      =
 
 
<!-- Area    --------------------->
 
<!-- Area    --------------------->
|area_magnitude        =  
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|area_magnitude        =
|unit_pref               =Imperial <!--Enter: Imperial, if Imperial (metric) is desired—>
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|unit_pref             = Imperial <!--Enter: Imperial, if Imperial (metric) is desired—>
|area_footnotes          =
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|area_total_km2         = 118.218
|area_total_km2           = <!-- ALL fields dealing with a measurements are subject to automatic unit conversion—>
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|area_land_km2            =
|area_land_km2            = <!--See table @ Template:Infobox Settlement for details on automatic unit conversion—>
 
 
|area_water_km2          =
 
|area_water_km2          =
|area_total_sq_mi        =
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|area_total_sq_mi        = 45.6
 
|area_land_sq_mi          =
 
|area_land_sq_mi          =
 
|area_water_sq_mi        =
 
|area_water_sq_mi        =
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|area_blank1_sq_mi        =
 
|area_blank1_sq_mi        =
 
<!-- Population  ----------------------->
 
<!-- Population  ----------------------->
|population_as_of               =2005
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|population_as_of       = 2007
|population_footnotes           =
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|population_footnotes   =
|population_note               =
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|population_note       =
|population_total               = 134,281
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|population_total       = 164481
|population_density_km2         =
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|population_density_km2 = <!--auto—>
|population_density_sq_mi      =
 
|population_metro              =
 
|population_density_metro_km2  =
 
|population_density_metro_sq_mi =
 
|population_urban              =
 
|population_density_urban_km2  =
 
|population_density_urban_sq_mi =
 
|population_blank1_title        =Ethnicities
 
|population_blank1              =
 
|population_blank2_title        =
 
|population_blank2              =
 
|population_density_blank1_km2 = 
 
|population_density_blank1_sq_mi =
 
 
<!-- General information  --------------->
 
<!-- General information  --------------->
|timezone              =
 
|utc_offset            =
 
|timezone_DST          =
 
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|latd=19|latm=35 |lats= |latNS=S
 
|longd=65|longm=35 |longs= |longEW=W
 
 
|elevation_footnotes    =  <!--for references: use <ref> </ref> tags—>
 
|elevation_footnotes    =  <!--for references: use <ref> </ref> tags—>
|elevation_m            =  
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|elevation_m            = 4067
|elevation_ft          =
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|timezone              = [[UTC]]-4
<!-- Area/postal codes & others -------->
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|utc_offset             =
|postal_code_type      =  <!-- enter ZIP code, Postcode, Post code, Postal code... —>
 
|postal_code            =
 
|area_code              =
 
|blank_name            =
 
|blank_info             =
 
|blank1_name            =
 
|blank1_info            =
 
|website                =  
 
 
|footnotes              =  
 
|footnotes              =  
}}  
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|website                = [http://www.potosi.bo/ www.potosi.bo]
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}}
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'''Potosí''' is a city in southern [[Bolivia]], 56 miles (90 km) southwest of [[Sucre]], the national capital. It is one of the world's highest cities, at an elevation of 13,290 feet (4,050 meters). It sits on a barren plateau in the shadow of the Cerro de Potosí—sometimes referred to as the Cerro Rico ("rich mountain")—a [[mountain]] of silver ore, which has always dominated the city. Cerro de Potosí's peak is 15,827 feet (4,824 meters) above sea level.
  
'''Potosí''' is a city, the capital of the [[Potosí Department|department of Potosí]] in [[Bolivia]]. It is claimed to be the [[List of highest towns by country|highest''' city]] in the world. It lies beneath the Cerro de Potosí—sometimes referred to as the Cerro Rico ("rich mountain")—a [[mountain]] of [[silver]] ore, which has always dominated the city. Cerro de Potosí's peak is 4,824 meters (15,827 feet) above sea level.
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Potosí is a city deeply reflective of the pain of [[colonialism]]. From the discovery of [[silver]] there in 1545 until today, it has been a city of suffering for the [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|indigenous population]], while for Europeans, it was a mythical land of riches. While European powers claimed the riches of Potosi's mountain, indigenous laborers died by the thousands. Today it is a city of [[poverty]].  
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{{toc}}
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Once known as the "Imperial City of Potosi," the baroque [[architecture]] which incorporated Native influences was one criteria which qualified the old city as a [[World Heritage Site]] in 1987. Another criteria was the incredible impact that the riches of this mountain town offered in its role as one of the "invisible pivots of world trade."
  
 
== Origin of name ==
 
== Origin of name ==
[[Image:Ciudad de Potosí Bolivia.jpg|left|250px]]
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There is no satisfactory etymological study of the word Potosí. According to legend, circa 1462, [[Huayna Capac]], the eleventh monarch of [[Peru]], "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 pounds.) "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 potosi."
 
There is no satisfactory etymological study of the word Potosí. According to legend, circa 1462, [[Huayna Capac]], the eleventh monarch of [[Peru]], "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 pounds.) "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 potosi."
  
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== History ==
 
== History ==
 
{{Infobox World Heritage Site
 
{{Infobox World Heritage Site
| WHS         = City of Potosí
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| WHS     = City of Potosí
| Image       =  
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| Image   = [[Image:Potosi Décembre 2007 - Panorama 1.jpg|250px|Potosi, Bolivia]]
 
| State '''Party = {{BOL}}
 
| State '''Party = {{BOL}}
| Type       = Cultural
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| Type   = Cultural
| Criteria   = ii, iv, vi
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| Criteria = ii, iv, vi
| ID         = 420
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| ID     = 420
| Region     = [[List of World Heritage Sites in the Americas|Latin America and the Caribbean]]
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| Region   = [[List of World Heritage Sites in the Americas|Latin America and the Caribbean]]
| Year       = 1987
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| Year   = 1987
| Session     = 11th''| Link       = http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/420
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| Session   = 11th''| Link   = http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/420
 
}}
 
}}
  
{{seealso|National Mint of Bolivia}}
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[[Silver]] was discovered in Potosí in 1545, prompting the founding of the town the following year. Within 30 years its population exceeded 150,000, making it the largest city in the New World. Within 100 years of its founding it approached 200,000 inhabitants.  
Founded in 1546 as a mining town, it soon produced fabulous wealth, becoming one of the largest cities in the Americas and the world with a population exceeding 200,000 people.
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[[Image:Miners at Work Potosi (pixinn.net).jpg|left|thumbnail|300px|Miners at work.]]
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In [[Spanish language|Spanish]] there is still a saying, ''valer un potosí,'' "to be worth a potosí" (that is, "a fortune"). For Europeans, [[Peru]] (Bolivia was part of the Viceroyalty of Perú and was known as ''Alto Perú'' before becoming independent) was a mythical land of riches. Potosí appears as an idiom for "extraordinary richness" in [[Miguel de Cervantes]]' famous novel satirizing chivalry, ''[[Don Quixote]]'' (second part, cap. LXXI). One theory holds that the [[mint mark]] of Potosí (the letters "PTSI" superimposed on one another) is the origin of the [[Dollar sign#History|dollar sign]].
In [[Spanish language|Spanish]] there is still a saying, ''valer un potosí,'' "to be worth a potosí" (that is, "a fortune"). For Europeans, Peru &mdash; [[Bolivia]] was part of the Viceroyalty of Perú and was known as ''Alto Perú'' before becoming independent &mdash; was a mythical land of riches. Potosí appears as an idiom for "extraordinary richness" in [[Miguel de Cervantes]]' famous novel satirizing chivalry, ''[[Don Quixote]]'' (second part, cap. LXXI). One theory holds that the [[mint mark]] of Potosí (the letters "PTSI" superimposed on one another) is the origin of the [[Dollar sign#History|dollar sign]].
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It is from Potosí that most of the silver shipped through the [[Spanish Main]] came. According to official records, 45,000 tons of pure silver were mined from Cerro Rico from 1556 to 1783. Of this total, 7,000 tons went to the Spanish monarchy. [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Indigenous]] labor, forced by [[Francisco de Toledo, Count of Oropesa]] through the traditional [[Inca]]n ''mita'' institution of contributed labor, came to die by the thousands, not simply from exposure and brutal labor, but by [[mercury poisoning]]: in the ''patio process'' the silver-ore, having been crushed to powder by hydraulic machinery, was cold-mixed with [[mercury]] and trodden to an [[amalgam]] by the native workers with their bare feet.<ref> Fernand Braudel (1982), ''The Wheels of Commerce'' vol. II of ''Civilization and Capitalism'' illustrates the process (p. 326) in an eighteenth-century drawing in the library of the Hispanic Society of New York. </ref> The mercury was then driven off by heating, producing deadly vapors.
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To compensate for the diminishing indigenous labor force, the colonists made a request in 1608 to the Crown in Madrid to begin allowing for the importation of 1,500 to 2,000 [[Africa]]n [[Slavery|slaves]] per year. An estimated total of 30,000 African slaves were taken to Potosí throughout the colonial era. African slaves were also forced to work in the Casa de la Moneda as ''acémilas humanas'' (human mules). Since mules would die following a few months of pushing the mills, the colonists replaced every four mules with twenty African slaves. (Angola Maconde 1999)
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A [[typhus]] epidemic in 1719 claimed the lives of some 22,000 residents. By the early nineteenth century, the silver mines became depleted and the population dwindled to fewer than 20,000 inhabitants. The subsequent rise of tin mining spurred growth, though the town never regained its former glory. Still, the mountain continues to be mined for silver to this day.
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Due to poor worker conditions, such as lack of protective equipment from the constant inhalation of dust, the miners still have a short life expectancy, with most of them contracting [[silicosis]] and dying around 40 years of age. It is estimated that, in the past years of indigenous labor, roughly eight million Indians died, "eaten" by the Rich Hill.<ref> K. Davidson and R. Ladkani (2005), Directors and Producers of ''The Devil's Miner'' (film). </ref>
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[[Image:Ciudad de Potosí Bolivia.jpg|left||thumb|230px|Potosi, Bolivia.]]
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During the War of Independence (1809–1825) Potosi frequently passed between the control of Royalist and Patriot forces. During occupation there was [[anarchy]] and martial excess, and Potosi became unfriendly to the point where it could not be defended. As Spanish royal authority weakened during the Napoleonic wars, sentiment against colonial rule grew.
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Bolivia claimed its independence in 1809 as [[Spain]] was losing its power in the world. Sixteen years of struggle followed. On August 6, 1825, the republic was established and named for [[Venezuela]]n general and leader of [[South America]]n independence, Simón Bolívar. In 1829, Andres Santa Cruz, one of Bolivar's generals, became Bolivia's first president. During his administration Bolivia enjoyed the most glorious period of her history with great social and economic advancement. But Santa Cruz was overthrown in 1839, beginning a period of successive corrupt dictatorships that ruled Bolivia until the late 1800s. Rebellions against them were frequent.
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During this period, Bolivia became embroiled in several debilitating regional conflicts, which resulted in the loss of over half of its territory. During the War of the Pacific (1879 – 1983), Bolivia lost its seacoast, and the adjoining rich [[nitrate]] fields, together with the port of Antofagasta, to [[Chile]]. An increase in the world price of [[silver]] brought the country a measure of relative prosperity and political stability again in the late 1800s. During the early part of the twentieth century, with the silver mines depleted, the sale of [[tin]], largely from Potosi, became the country's most important source of wealth.
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==Present day Potosi==
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[[Image:Miners at Work Potosi (pixinn.net).jpg||thumb|250px|Miners at work.]]
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The city which essentially supported the splendor of [[Spain]] from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries while its own native peoples suffered the hardships of slavery, today is a city of [[poverty]]. There are a few mines in operation, with mining methods changed little over the centuries.
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The historic center of the city, once occupied by Spanish settlers, is home to a small middle class. This area is surrounded by a poverty belt whose residents are miners who work in the co-operatives. This area is surrounded by an even wider belt of poverty, home to those who have fled the countryside and come to Potosi to hire themselves out as unskilled laborers in the mines.<ref name=Tears>Amalia Barron, [http://www.unesco.org/courier/2000_03/uk/dici/txt1.htm Potosi's Silver Tears] ''The UNESCO Courier''. Retrieved June 14, 2008.</ref>
  
It is from Potosí that most of the silver shipped through the [[Spanish Main]] came. According to official records, 45,000 tons of pure silver were mined from Cerro Rico from 1556 to 1783. Of this total, 7,000 tons went to the Spanish monarchy. Indian labour, forced by [[Francisco de Toledo, Count of Oropesa]] through the traditional Incan ''[[Mita (Inca)|mita]]'' institution of contributed labor, came to die by the thousands, not simply from exposure and brutal labor, but by [[mercury poisoning]]: in the ''[[patio process]]'' the silver-ore, having been crushed to powder by hydraulic machinery, was cold-mixed with mercury and trodden to an [[amalgam]] by the native workers with their bare feet. <ref>Fernand Braudel, ''The Wheels of Commerce'' 1982, vol. II of ''Civilization and Capitalism'' illustrates the process (p. 326) in an eighteenth-century drawing in the library of the Hispanic Society of New York.</ref>  The mercury was then driven off by heating, producing deadly vapors.  
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[[Mining]] activity in Potosi slowed down only after the country's independence in 1825. The remains of this mining era includes numerous dams that controlled the ore-grinding mills and the Royal Mine Complex. Monuments of the once colonial city, 22 parish or monastic churches, patrician homes and the Royal Mint also remain, along with the contrasting humble 'rancherias' of the native quarters.  
  
To compensate for the diminishing indigenous labor force, the colonists made a request in 1608 to the Crown in Madrid to begin allowing for the importation of 1500 to 2000 African slaves per year. An estimated total of 30,000 African slaves were taken to Potosí throughout the colonial era. African slaves were also forced to work in the Casa de la Moneda as ''acémilas humanas'' (human mules). Since mules would die after couple of months pushing the mills, the colonists replaced the four mules with twenty African slaves. (Angola Maconde 1999)
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Once known as the "Imperial City of Potosi," the baroque [[architecture]] which incorporated Native influences, was one criteria which qualified the old city as a [[World Heritage Site]] in 1987. Another criteria was the incredible impact that the riches of this mountain town offered in its role as one of the "invisible pivots of world trade."<ref>''UNESCO'', [http://whc.unesco.org/archive/advisory_body_evaluation/420.pdf World Heritage Nomination] Retrieved June 14, 2008.</ref>
  
After 1800 the silver mines became depleted, making [[tin]] the main product. This eventually led to a slow economic decline. Still, the mountain continues to be mined for silver to this day. Due to poor worker conditions (lack of protective equipment from the constant inhalation of dust), the miners still have a short life expectancy with most of them contracting [[silicosis]] and dying around 40 years of age. It is estimated that, in the past years of indigenous labour, roughly 8 million Indians died, "eaten" by the Rich Hill.<ref> Davidson, K. and Ladkani, R. (Directors; Producers). (2005). [[The Devil's Miner]] [Film].</ref>
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UNESCO is backing restoration projects for about 2,000 colonial buildings and is monitoring the conservation of the Cerro Rico, where the mining installations dating from colonial times are historic monuments.<ref name=Tears/>
[[Image:Potosi air.jpg|left|thumb|340px|Potosí, aerial photo]]
 
During the War of Independence (1809&ndash;1825, see [[History of Bolivia#Struggle for Independence|History of Bolivia]]) Potosi frequently passed between the control of Royalist and Patriot forces. Major blunders by the First Auxiliary Army from [[Buenos Aires]] (under the command of [[Juan José Castelli]]) led to an increased sense that independence was needed and fostered resentment towards him. During that occupation there was anarchy and martial excess, and Potosi became unfriendly to the point where it could not be defended.
 
[[Image:Potosi2.jpg|thumb|right|300px|A narrow street in Potosi]]
 
When the second auxiliary army arrived it was received well, and the commander, [[Manuel Belgrano]] did much to heal the past wounds inflicted by the tyrannical minded Castelli. When that army was forced to retreat, Belgrano took the calculated decision to blow up the Casa de Moneda. Since the locals refused to evacuate this explosion would have resulted in many casualties, but by then the fuse was already lit. Disaster was averted not by the Argentinians who at that time were fleeing, but by locals who put the fuse out. Two more expeditions from Buenos Aires would seize Potosí.
 
  
The city of [[San Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí|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]][http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/dictionary/index.asp?action=view&term_id=3777&keyword=potosi] and [[Potosi, Missouri]], and also to the silver-mining town of [[Potosi, Nevada]].
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<center><gallery>
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Image:Cerro Rico Potosi (pixinn.net).jpg|The Cerro Rico forms the backdrop of Potosi.
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Image:Potosi2.jpg|A narrow street in Potosi.
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Image:Potosì 8 reales 1768 131206.jpg|Coins minted in Potosi between 1760-1788.
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Image:Puerta de la Iglesia San Lorenzo Potosí Bolivia.jpg|Entrance to Iglesia San Lorenzo.
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</gallery></center>
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
[[Image:Cerro Rico Potosi (pixinn.net).jpg|thumb|right|300px|The Cerro Rico in the background]]
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<references/>
{{Reflist}}
 
 
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
 
* Angola Maconde, Juan. 2000. ''Raíces de un pueblo: cultura afroboliviana''. La Paz, Bolivia: Producciones CIMA. ISBN 9990500355 and ISBN 9789990500356
 
* Angola Maconde, Juan. 2000. ''Raíces de un pueblo: cultura afroboliviana''. La Paz, Bolivia: Producciones CIMA. ISBN 9990500355 and ISBN 9789990500356
 
* Arzans De Orsua Y Vela, Bartolome. 1965. ''Historia de la Villa Imperial de Potosi: Edicion de L.Hanke y G.Mendoza''. Brown University bicentennial publications. Providence, Rhode Island: Brown U.P.
 
* Arzans De Orsua Y Vela, Bartolome. 1965. ''Historia de la Villa Imperial de Potosi: Edicion de L.Hanke y G.Mendoza''. Brown University bicentennial publications. Providence, Rhode Island: Brown U.P.
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== External links ==
 
== External links ==
All links Retrieved May 12, 2008.
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All links retrieved November 30, 2022.
{{commonscat|Potosi}}
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* [http://www.boliviaweb.com/cities/potosi.htm Potosí History]  
 
* [http://www.boliviaweb.com/cities/potosi.htm Potosí History]  
* [http://gerdbreitenbach.de/anden/bolivia_1/potosi_en.html Potosí, flight from the Cerro Rico]
 
 
* [http://volker.umpfenbach.de/en/reisen/2003suedamerika/2003suedamerika05c.htm Travelogue Bolivia 2003 Potosi]
 
* [http://volker.umpfenbach.de/en/reisen/2003suedamerika/2003suedamerika05c.htm Travelogue Bolivia 2003 Potosi]
 
* [http://www.slate.com/id/2149482/ The Mountain That Eats Men]
 
* [http://www.slate.com/id/2149482/ The Mountain That Eats Men]
* [http://www.docsonline.tv/Grito%20di%20piedra/index.htm Scene taken from “Grito de piedra”]
 
  
{{World Heritage Sites in Bolivia}}
 
 
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[[Category:History]]
 
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[[Category:Geography]]
 
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Latest revision as of 05:55, 30 November 2022

Potosí
Potosi1.jpg
Flag of Potosí
Flag
Nickname: Empire Ville ( Villa Imperial in espanish)
Potosí (Bolivia)
Potosí
Potosí
Location in Bolivia
Coordinates: 19°35′S 65°45′W
Country Bolivia
Department Potosí
Province Tomás Frías
Municipality Potosí Municipality
Founded April 1, 1545
Government
 - Mayor René Joaquino
Area
 - Total 45.6 sq mi (118.218 km²)
Elevation 13,343 ft (4,067 m)
Population (2007)
 - Total 164,481
Time zone UTC-4 (UTC)
Website: www.potosi.bo


Potosí is a city in southern Bolivia, 56 miles (90 km) southwest of Sucre, the national capital. It is one of the world's highest cities, at an elevation of 13,290 feet (4,050 meters). It sits on a barren plateau in the shadow of the Cerro de Potosí—sometimes referred to as the Cerro Rico ("rich mountain")—a mountain of silver ore, which has always dominated the city. Cerro de Potosí's peak is 15,827 feet (4,824 meters) above sea level.

Potosí is a city deeply reflective of the pain of colonialism. From the discovery of silver there in 1545 until today, it has been a city of suffering for the indigenous population, while for Europeans, it was a mythical land of riches. While European powers claimed the riches of Potosi's mountain, indigenous laborers died by the thousands. Today it is a city of poverty.

Once known as the "Imperial City of Potosi," the baroque architecture which incorporated Native influences was one criteria which qualified the old city as a World Heritage Site in 1987. Another criteria was the incredible impact that the riches of this mountain town offered in its role as one of the "invisible pivots of world trade."

Origin of name

There is no satisfactory etymological study of the word Potosí. According to legend, circa 1462, Huayna Capac, the eleventh monarch of Peru, "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 pounds.) "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 potosi."

It is currently believed that the etymology of Potosí is Quechua. However, in Quechua the phoneme 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 locution would have an Aymaran root rather than a Quechuan. The actual sharp structure of the term is contrary to the nature of both Aymara and Quechua.

History

City of Potosí*
UNESCO World Heritage Site

Potosi, Bolivia
Type Cultural
Criteria ii, iv, vi
Reference 420
Region** Latin America and the Caribbean
Inscription history
Inscription 1987  (11th Session)
* Name as inscribed on World Heritage List.
** Region as classified by UNESCO.

Silver was discovered in Potosí in 1545, prompting the founding of the town the following year. Within 30 years its population exceeded 150,000, making it the largest city in the New World. Within 100 years of its founding it approached 200,000 inhabitants.

In Spanish there is still a saying, valer un potosí, "to be worth a potosí" (that is, "a fortune"). For Europeans, Peru (Bolivia was part of the Viceroyalty of Perú and was known as Alto Perú before becoming independent) was a mythical land of riches. Potosí appears as an idiom for "extraordinary richness" in Miguel de Cervantes' famous novel satirizing chivalry, Don Quixote (second part, cap. LXXI). One theory holds that the mint mark of Potosí (the letters "PTSI" superimposed on one another) is the origin of the dollar sign.

It is from Potosí that most of the silver shipped through the Spanish Main came. According to official records, 45,000 tons of pure silver were mined from Cerro Rico from 1556 to 1783. Of this total, 7,000 tons went to the Spanish monarchy. Indigenous labor, forced by Francisco de Toledo, Count of Oropesa through the traditional Incan mita institution of contributed labor, came to die by the thousands, not simply from exposure and brutal labor, but by mercury poisoning: in the patio process the silver-ore, having been crushed to powder by hydraulic machinery, was cold-mixed with mercury and trodden to an amalgam by the native workers with their bare feet.[1] The mercury was then driven off by heating, producing deadly vapors.

To compensate for the diminishing indigenous labor force, the colonists made a request in 1608 to the Crown in Madrid to begin allowing for the importation of 1,500 to 2,000 African slaves per year. An estimated total of 30,000 African slaves were taken to Potosí throughout the colonial era. African slaves were also forced to work in the Casa de la Moneda as acémilas humanas (human mules). Since mules would die following a few months of pushing the mills, the colonists replaced every four mules with twenty African slaves. (Angola Maconde 1999)

A typhus epidemic in 1719 claimed the lives of some 22,000 residents. By the early nineteenth century, the silver mines became depleted and the population dwindled to fewer than 20,000 inhabitants. The subsequent rise of tin mining spurred growth, though the town never regained its former glory. Still, the mountain continues to be mined for silver to this day.

Due to poor worker conditions, such as lack of protective equipment from the constant inhalation of dust, the miners still have a short life expectancy, with most of them contracting silicosis and dying around 40 years of age. It is estimated that, in the past years of indigenous labor, roughly eight million Indians died, "eaten" by the Rich Hill.[2]

Potosi, Bolivia.

During the War of Independence (1809–1825) Potosi frequently passed between the control of Royalist and Patriot forces. During occupation there was anarchy and martial excess, and Potosi became unfriendly to the point where it could not be defended. As Spanish royal authority weakened during the Napoleonic wars, sentiment against colonial rule grew.

Bolivia claimed its independence in 1809 as Spain was losing its power in the world. Sixteen years of struggle followed. On August 6, 1825, the republic was established and named for Venezuelan general and leader of South American independence, Simón Bolívar. In 1829, Andres Santa Cruz, one of Bolivar's generals, became Bolivia's first president. During his administration Bolivia enjoyed the most glorious period of her history with great social and economic advancement. But Santa Cruz was overthrown in 1839, beginning a period of successive corrupt dictatorships that ruled Bolivia until the late 1800s. Rebellions against them were frequent.

During this period, Bolivia became embroiled in several debilitating regional conflicts, which resulted in the loss of over half of its territory. During the War of the Pacific (1879 – 1983), Bolivia lost its seacoast, and the adjoining rich nitrate fields, together with the port of Antofagasta, to Chile. An increase in the world price of silver brought the country a measure of relative prosperity and political stability again in the late 1800s. During the early part of the twentieth century, with the silver mines depleted, the sale of tin, largely from Potosi, became the country's most important source of wealth.

Present day Potosi

Miners at work.

The city which essentially supported the splendor of Spain from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries while its own native peoples suffered the hardships of slavery, today is a city of poverty. There are a few mines in operation, with mining methods changed little over the centuries.

The historic center of the city, once occupied by Spanish settlers, is home to a small middle class. This area is surrounded by a poverty belt whose residents are miners who work in the co-operatives. This area is surrounded by an even wider belt of poverty, home to those who have fled the countryside and come to Potosi to hire themselves out as unskilled laborers in the mines.[3]

Mining activity in Potosi slowed down only after the country's independence in 1825. The remains of this mining era includes numerous dams that controlled the ore-grinding mills and the Royal Mine Complex. Monuments of the once colonial city, 22 parish or monastic churches, patrician homes and the Royal Mint also remain, along with the contrasting humble 'rancherias' of the native quarters.

Once known as the "Imperial City of Potosi," the baroque architecture which incorporated Native influences, was one criteria which qualified the old city as a World Heritage Site in 1987. Another criteria was the incredible impact that the riches of this mountain town offered in its role as one of the "invisible pivots of world trade."[4]

UNESCO is backing restoration projects for about 2,000 colonial buildings and is monitoring the conservation of the Cerro Rico, where the mining installations dating from colonial times are historic monuments.[3]

Notes

  1. Fernand Braudel (1982), The Wheels of Commerce vol. II of Civilization and Capitalism illustrates the process (p. 326) in an eighteenth-century drawing in the library of the Hispanic Society of New York.
  2. K. Davidson and R. Ladkani (2005), Directors and Producers of The Devil's Miner (film).
  3. 3.0 3.1 Amalia Barron, Potosi's Silver Tears The UNESCO Courier. Retrieved June 14, 2008.
  4. UNESCO, World Heritage Nomination Retrieved June 14, 2008.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Angola Maconde, Juan. 2000. Raíces de un pueblo: cultura afroboliviana. La Paz, Bolivia: Producciones CIMA. ISBN 9990500355 and ISBN 9789990500356
  • Arzans De Orsua Y Vela, Bartolome. 1965. Historia de la Villa Imperial de Potosi: Edicion de L.Hanke y G.Mendoza. Brown University bicentennial publications. Providence, Rhode Island: Brown U.P.
  • Cobb, Gwendolyn Ballantine. 1960. Potosí, a South American mining frontier. [Berkeley, Calif.]: University of California Press.
  • Hanke, Lewis. 1956. The imperial city of Potosí; an unwritten chapter in the history of Spanish America. The Hague: Nijhoff.

External links

All links retrieved November 30, 2022.

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