Misiones Province

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Misiones
Province
Clockwise from top: Iguazú Falls (Iguazú National Park), Posadas, Yerba Mate plantation, Guaraní Jesuit Mission of San Ignacio Miní.
Flag of Misiones
Flag
Coat of arms of Misiones
Coat of arms
Anthem: Misionerita (The Song for the Child of Misiones)
Location of Misiones within Argentina
Location of Misiones within Argentina
Coordinates: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Country  Argentina
Departments 17
Municipalities 78
Capital Posadas
Government
 • Governor Hugo Passalacqua
 • Deputies 7
 • Senators 3
Area
Ranked 21st
 • Total 29,801 km2 (11,506 sq mi)
Population (2010[1])
 • Total 1,101,593
 • Rank 9th
 • Density 37/km2 (96/sq mi)
Demonym(s) misionero
Time zone ART (UTC−3)
ISO 3166 code AR-N
Website www.misiones.gov.ar

Misiones (Spanish pronunciation: [miˈsjones], Missions) is one of the 23 provinces of Argentina, located in the northeastern corner of the country in the Mesopotamiсa region. It is surrounded by Paraguay to the northwest, Brazil to the north, east and south, and Corrientes Province of Argentina to the southwest.

This was an early area of Roman Catholic missionary activity by the Society of Jesus in what was then called the Province of Paraguay, beginning in the early 17th century. In 1984 the ruins of four mission sites in Argentina were designated World Heritage Sites by UNESCO.[2]

History

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File:Casa de los Padres-San Ignacio Miní.jpeg
1846 impression of San Ignacio Miní, a Jesuit Reduction, abandoned following the temporary abolition of the order in 1773.

The province was populated for thousands of years by indigenous peoples of various cultures. At the time of European encounter, it was occupied by the Kaingang and Xokleng, followed by the Guarani. The first European to visit the region was Sebastian Cabot who, while navigating the Paraná River in December 1527, discovered Apipé Falls. In 1541, Álvar Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca reached the Iguazú Falls.

In the 17th century, members of the Society of Jesus came to the region as missionaries. They began to establish a string of Jesuit Reductions, that of San Ignacio being the most famous. In a few years, they managed to create 30 mission villages. They taught the Guarani western-style agriculture and crafts; the natives had subsisted in the jungle environment and suffered at the hands of European slave-drivers. Their crafts were sold and traded along the river and they shared in the Reductions' prosperity.

In 1759, the Portuguese government, at the insistence of its anti-Jesuit chancellor, the Marquis de Pombal, ordered all Reductions closed in its territory (which then included much of today's Misiones Province). The Marquis eventually prevailed in 1773 on Pope Clement XIV to have the Jesuit Order suppressed. Once the missions were abandoned, the prosperous trade surrounding these Reductions quickly vanished. Colonists imposed a brutal plantation economy in the region, forcing the Guarani to act as slave labor.

Steamer on the riverbank at Posadas, 1892.

In 1814, Gervasio Posadas, the director of United Provinces, declared Misiones annexed to Argentina's Corrientes (at this time Argentina was quasi-independent but nominally still a Spanish colony). Argentina did not exert de facto control over Misiones, which was claimed by several countries and effectively governed itself. In 1830 Argentine military forces from Corrientes Province took control of Misiones.

In 1838, Paraguay occupied Misiones, because Paraguay claimed it on the basis that the Misiones population was indigenous Guarani, the major ethnic group of Paraguay. In 1865, Paraguayan forces invaded Misiones again, in what became the War of the Triple Alliance. Following its defeat and making a peace agreement with Argentina eventually signed in 1876, Paraguay gave up its claim to the Misiones territory.

Although Argentina had claimed Misiones since 1814, academics tend to interpret Argentine possession of Misiones beginning with the defeat of Paraguay in the War of the Triple Alliance. Bethell's account is that "the treaty of alliance [i.e. against Paraguay] contained secret clauses providing for the annexation of disputed territory in northern Paraguay by Brazil and regions in the east and west of Paraguay by Argentina... After a long and harrowing war (1865-70), Argentina got it from a prostrate Paraguay territory in Misiones."[3] Scobie's analysis is that "the political status of Misiones remained vague" and that Argentina gained the region "as a by-product of the Paraguayan war in the 1860s".[4]

Ukrainian immigrants harvest yerba mate in 1920. Despite its challenging condition, Misiones attracted considerable European immigration in the early 20th century.

After the War of the Triple Alliance, Paraguay was much impoverished, so Misiones benefited economically from belonging to Argentina. In 1876, President Nicolás Avellaneda, assisted by his close friend, General Pietro Canestro (an Italian nobleman who devoted much of his life and wealth to the achievement and sustainability of the peace in the region), proclaimed the Immigration and Colonization Law. This law fostered the immigration of European colonists in order to populate the vast unspoiled Argentinian territories.

To comply with this law, several colonizing companies were created. One of them was Adolf Schwelm's Eldorado Colonización y Explotación de Bosques Ltda. S.A., which founded the city of Eldorado in 1919 with a port on the Upper Paraná. Its agricultural colonies and experimental farms, the orange and grapefruit tree plantations, and the cultivation of yerba mate, the mills and the dryers for such product are characteristic of this area. Swedish-Argentines became well known for growing yerba mate.

Misiones received many immigrants, mostly from Europe, coming mainly from Southern Brazil. Some came from Buenos Aires, and from Eastern Europe, in particular large numbers of Polish and Ukrainians. Since then, Misiones has continued to benefit economically and has developed politically within Argentina. It has been successfully integrated into the Argentine state. Today, control of the province is not contested. On December 10, 1953 the "National Territory of Misiones" gained provincial status by the Law 14.294, and its constitution was approved on April 21, 1958.

Misiones received more attention by national policy makers following an international agreement to construct the Yacyretá hydroelectric dam on a point in the Paraná River shared by Paraguay and Corrientes Province. When the dam became fully operative, Paraná waters all along the Misiones shores rose. They flooded lands that the dam's authorities had failed to clean and condition adequately, resulting in onsets of mosquito-transmitted illnesses, such as leishmaniasis, yellow fever, dengue, and malaria. The entire Misiones shores along the Paraná River is now confined by two dams, one of them Yaciretá, downstream of the river, and the other Itaipú, located in Brazil and Paraguay, upstream of the river and north of Puerto Iguazú. Currently, Argentina is pursuing an agreement with Paraguay to expand the reservoir works in order to double the facility's electric production.

Geography

View along Route 12, near Puerto Iguazu.

Misiones is the second smallest province after Tucumán.

The Misiones plateau includes a part of Brazil across the border. The rocks contain significant quantities of iron which forms a part of the soil, giving it a reddish color. At the center of the plateau rises the Sierra de Misiones, its highest peak, 843 m, near Bernardo de Irigoyen, in the Cerro Rincón.

The province is embraced by three big rivers including the Paraná, Uruguay and Iguazú. Iguazu Falls are spectacular waterfalls on the Iguazú River in the northwest corner of the province, near the city of Puerto Iguazú. Misiones shares the falls with the Brazilian state of Paraná (in that nation's Southern Region). Meanwhile, the international border with Paraguay is close by.

Climate

The subtropical climate has no dry season, which makes Misiones one of the most humid provinces in Argentina. The vegetation is the so-called "es (Selva Misionera)". Part of it has been transformed by mankind to implant cultures and ranching. The original biome is protected in Iguazú National Park, part of the Alto Paraná Atlantic forests, in turn part of the Atlantic Forest biome.

Population

There are 1,101,5593 people living in Misiones according to the national census of 2010. Most part of the population is descendant of indigenous peoples (specially guaranis) and also Spanish who reached during the colonization and mixed with natives. Another part of the residents are descendants of European immigrants. Unlike many regions of Argentina, where the immigrants came through Buenos Aires, most of the immigrants who settled in Misiones came through Southern Brazil. The ethnic groups who settled in Misiones after Spaniards are Italians, Germans, Poles, Ukrainians, Swiss, Russians, Swedes, Danes and a little number of Arabs, Japanese and, recently, Laotians (in the late 1970s) and Chinese (in the 2000s). From the 1960s, the province has also received immigrants from Brazil (mostly descendants of East Europeans) and Paraguay (mostly descendants both of indigenous peoples and Spaniards).

The literacy rate is 91.4%.

Economy

Yerba mate plantation.

Misiones' economy, like most in northern Argentina, is relatively underdeveloped yet fairly well-diversified. Its 2006 output was estimated at US$4.8 billion (which shall be around US$7.2 billion in 2011, according to Argentina's economical growing) or US$4,940 per capita (around US$6,500 in 2011), over 40% below the national average.[5]

Though its rainy, erosion-prone geography discourages intensive crop farming, agriculture makes an important contribution to the province's economy, adding about 10% to the total. Misiones' thick forests have long provided for the ample production of roundwood without excessive impact on its ecosystem. The principal exploited trees are the Paraná pine, Guatambú, Cedar, Petiribí, Incense, Cane water-pipe, Anchico, Eucalyptus and Gueycá.

Misiones' chief source of agricultural income, however, has long been the cultivation of yerba mate: Misiones is Argentina's leading producer (yielding about half a million tons, annually). Tea, citrus fruit and, in minor amounts, tobacco, sugar cane, rice and coffee are also cultivated in Misiones.[citation needed]

Light manufacturing and tourism also contribute to the local economy, each adding about 13% to the total.

Political division

Misiones Province, Political Division.
Governor's offices, Posadas.

The province is divided in 17 departments (Spanish: departamentos):

Department Capital
Apóstoles Department Apóstoles
Cainguás Department Campo Grande
Candelaria Department Santa Ana
Capital Department Posadas
Concepción de la Sierra Department Concepción de la Sierra
Eldorado Department Eldorado
General Manuel Belgrano Department Bernardo de Irigoyen
Guaraní Department El Soberbio
Iguazú Department Puerto Esperanza
Leandro N. Alem Department Leandro N. Alem
Libertador General San Martín Department Puerto Rico
Montecarlo Department Montecarlo
Oberá Department Oberá
San Ignacio San Ignacio
San Javier Department San Javier
San Pedro Department San Pedro
Veinticinco de Mayo Department Alba Posse

See also

References

  1. [1]
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Bethell Argentina since Independence Cambridge University Press, 1993, pp. 45-6
  4. Scobie Argentina Oxford University Press, 1964, pages 22-3
  5. I.A.D.E.R

External links