
Walk Baquedano
'Iquique' (
IPA /i'kike/) is a city in northern
Chile, capital of
Tarapacá Region, on the
Pacific coast, just west of the
Atacama Desert. It is located at and had a population of 216,419 as of the
2002 census
[1]. The city's name comes from the
Aymara word "Ique-ique", which translates to "laziness", but can also mean "sleep" or "bed."
Iquique has one of the largest commercial port centers (or ''Zona Franca'') of
South America and has been traditionally called ''Zofri''. There are around 2.4 km² of warehouses, banking branches, and restaurants.
History

Municipal Theater of Iquique
Although the city was founded in the
sixteenth century, there is evidence of habitation in the area by the
Chango people as early as 7000 BC. During colonial times, Iquique was part of the
Viceroyalty of Peru as much of
South America was at the time and remained part of
Peruvian territory until the end of the
19th century. Iquique's early development was due in large part to the discovery of mineral riches, particularly the presence of large deposits of
sodium nitrate (Chilean saltpeter, locally called ''salitre'') in the
Atacama Desert (then part of Bolivian territory). Some of the greatest Peruvian heroes were neighbors in Iquique, namely
Alfonso Ugarte (who was elected Mayor in 1876),
Ramon Zavala, a rich saltpeter entrepreneur;
Guillermo Billinghurst, later President of Peru (who after being overthown in 1914 came to Iquique - then already under Chilean rule - to live out his last years).
Later
territorial disputes between Bolivia and Chile triggered the
War of the Pacific in 1879. The outcome of the war gave
Chile this portion of the Peruvian territory. Over the years there was much emigration from other parts of
Chile to the area which they called the ''Norte Grande''. In subsequent years the further exportation of Chilean saltpeter (mainly to European countries) significantly helped in the development of the city, attracting foreigners and rapidly expanding housing projects.
In
1907, the city was marred by a
massacre when the army, under the command of Gen. Roberto Silva-Renard, opened fire on thousands of saltpeter miners, their wives and children, assembled inside the Santa María School. The workers had marched into town to protest their working conditions and wages. Somewhere between 500 and 2,000 were killed. The folk group
Quilapayún recorded an album in remembrance of the event (
Cantata Santa María de Iquique) in
1970.
Trivia

Iquique Municipal Theatre at night
In
1835,
Charles Darwin, during his voyage on the ''Beagle'', travelled to Iquique and described a town very much in want of everyday necessities, such as water and firewood. These had to be brought in from a considerable distance. Darwin also visited the
saltpeter works.
In
1868 and again in
1877, the former
peruvian city was devastated by
earthquakes. The
13 June 2005 there was yet another earthquake, with an 8.1 on the
Richter Scale.
The
Battle of Iquique was fought in the harbour of Iquique on
May 21,
1879, now commemorated as
Navy Day, an annual
public holiday in Chile.
The most recent accident involving a spacecraft
RTG was the failure of the Russian Mars 96 probe launch on 16 November 1996. The two RTGs onboard carried in total 200 g of plutonium and are assumed to have survived reentry (as they were designed to do). They are thought to now lie somewhere in a northeast-southwest running oval 320 km long by 80 km wide which is centred 32 km east of Iquique, Chile.
References
1. Instituto Nacional de Estadísticas, Censos 2002, accessed 10 July 2007
External links
★
Iquique's CityHall (in Spanish)
★
Digital Newspaper Iquique On Line (in English)
★
Somos Iquique Blog (in Spanish)
★
Iquique's photos on Flickr
★
Zona Franca de Iquique (in Spanish)