Tarapacá Province
Tarapacá Province Provincia de Tarapacá | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Province of Chile | |||||||
1884–1974 | |||||||
Map of Tarapacá Province (1895) | |||||||
Capital | Iquique | ||||||
Demonym | Tarapaqueño, a | ||||||
Area | |||||||
• 1884 | 50,000 km2 (19,000 sq mi) | ||||||
• 1929 | 58,072 km2 (22,422 sq mi) | ||||||
Historical era | War of the Pacific aftermath | ||||||
• Established | 31 October 1884 | ||||||
• Disestablished | 1974 | ||||||
| |||||||
Today part of | Chile |
Tarapacá was a province in Chile, from 1883[1] to 1928. It was ceded to Chile under the Treaty of Ancón, formerly being part of the Peruvian province of the same name.
History
[edit]The province was created in 1883, having been awarded to Chile under the Treaty of Ancón, along with Tacna.
Administrative divisions
[edit]The original administrative divisions in 1884 were as follows:
Department | Capital | Sub-delegations | Districts |
---|---|---|---|
Pisagua | Pisagua | 5 | 18 |
Tarapacá | Iquique | 13 | 34 |
On December 30, 1927, Tarapacá Province was renamed to Iquique Province, creating the following:
Department | Capital |
---|---|
Pisagua | Pisagua |
Iquique | Iquique |
After the Treaty of Lima, in 1929, Tacna Province, along with Tacna Department, are dissolved and returned to Peru, with Arica Department going to Tarapacá Province, with a new area of 58.072 km².
Department | Capital |
---|---|
Arica | Arica |
Pisagua | Pisagua, Chile |
Iquique | Iquique |
En 1974, the Tarapacá Region is created out of the former Tarapacá Province, as well as the Antofagasta Province.
See also
[edit]- War of the Pacific
- Treaty of Ancón
- Consequences of the War of the Pacific
- Chilenization of Tacna, Arica and Tarapacá
- Tacna Province (Chile)
- Litoral Department
- Arica Province (Peru)
- Tarapacá Department (Peru)
- Tarapacá Department (Chile)
References
[edit]- ^ Cohoon, William (2013). "Constructing the Norte Grande: Chilean Infrastructure in the Northern Border Region, 1915-1929".