Fruit geography in Chile and Cuyo (1700-1850)

Authors

  • Pablo Lacoste Universidad de Santiago
  • José Antonio Yuri
  • Marcela Aranda
  • Amalia Castro
  • Katherine Quinteros
  • Mario Solar
  • Natalia Soto
  • Javier Rivas
  • Cristián Chávez

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15448/1980-864X.2011.1.6765

Keywords:

Fruit production, Intensive agriculture, Chilean economic history

Abstract

Different from other regions of the Spanish Empire, the kingdom of Chile developed an intensive agriculture that included fruit production. The article discusses which, where, and how intense different species were cultivated. Four main regions were examined: North, Center, South and East (Argentina’s Cuyo province). Twenty species were investigated in these jurisdictions: pomes (apple, pear, and quince), stone fruit (peach, apricot, plum, tart cherry, and sweet cherry), nuts (walnut, almond, and chestnut), citrus (orange, lemon, citron, and lime), and others such as olive, fig, passion fruit, lucuma, and cherimoya. A database with more than 190,000 fruit species were elaborated from goods inventories and other notary and judges archives. Subsequently, geographical mapping of these species were elaborated.

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Author Biography

Pablo Lacoste, Universidad de Santiago

Licenciado en Historia (Universidad Nacional de Cuyo), Doctor en Historia (Universidad de Buenos Aires), Doctor en Estudios Americanos (Universidad de Santiago), Investigador Asociado del Instituto de Estudios Avanzados de la Universidad de Santiago.

Published

2011-09-26

How to Cite

Lacoste, P., Yuri, J. A., Aranda, M., Castro, A., Quinteros, K., Solar, M., … Chávez, C. (2011). Fruit geography in Chile and Cuyo (1700-1850). Estudos Ibero-Americanos, 37(1). https://doi.org/10.15448/1980-864X.2011.1.6765

Issue

Section

Miscellaneous