Valparaíso Region Explained

Official Name:Valparaíso Region
Native Name:Región de Valparaíso
Native Name Lang:es
Settlement Type:Region of Chile
Seat Type:Capital
Seat:Valparaíso
Named For:Valparaíso de Arriba, Spain
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Chile
Parts Type:Provinces
Parts:Petorca, Los Andes, San Felipe de Aconcagua, Quillota, Quilpué, Valparaíso, San Antonio,
Leader Title:Governor
Leader Name:Rodrigo Mundaca
Leader Party:FA
Flag Size:120px
Flag Alt:Flag of Valparaíso Region
Shield Alt:Coat of Arms of Valparaíso Region
Mapsize:250px
Area Total Km2:16396.1
Area Footnotes:[1]
Area Rank:13
Elevation Min M:0
Population Total:1790219
Population As Of:2017 census
Population Rank:2
Population Density Km2:auto
Demographics Type1:GDP (PPP)
Demographics1 Footnotes:[2]
Demographics1 Title1:Total
Demographics1 Info1:$30.758 billion (2014)
Demographics1 Title2:Per capita
Demographics1 Info2:$17,009 (2014)
Blank Name Sec1:HDI (2019)
Blank Info Sec1:0.867[3]
Iso Code:CL-VS
Website:Official website

The Valparaíso Region (Spanish; Castilian: Región de Valparaíso|links=no, pronounced as /es/) is one of Chile's 16 first order administrative divisions.[4] With the country's second-highest population of 1,790,219, and fourth-smallest area of, the region is Chile's second most densely populated after the Santiago Metropolitan Region to the southeast.[1] The region also includes Chile's remote islands of the Pacific Ocean, including Rapa Nui and the Juan Fernandez Islands.

Its capital is the port city of Valparaíso; other important cities include Viña del Mar, Quillota, San Felipe, Quilpué, Villa Alemana, and San Antonio.

Administration

As a region, Valparaíso is a first-level administrative division. Since 2021, the region is governed by the governor, who is elected by popular vote. The current governor is Rodrigo Mundaca (Broad Front).

Geography and natural features

The region is on the same latitude as the Santiago Metropolitan Region. Its capital is Valparaíso, which is the site for the National Congress of Chile and an important commercial port. Also in this region is the top resort city of Viña del Mar. Additionally, the Pacific islands of Easter Island, Isla Salas y Gómez, the Juan Fernández Islands and the Desventuradas Islands fall under the Valparaíso Region's administration.

The Valparaíso Region is part of the very restricted range of the endangered Chilean wine palm (Jubaea chilensis); in prehistoric times, this endemic Chilean tree had a significantly larger range.[5]

Demographics

The Valparaíso Region is populated by 1.71 million inhabitants. The population density reached 94.1 inhabitants/km2. 91.6% of the population lives in urban areas and only 8.4% of the population lives in rural areas.

The most populous municipalities in the region are Valparaíso, with 308,000 inhabitants and Viña del Mar, with 287,000 inhabitants, which together with Villa Alemana, Quilpué and Concón form the Greater Valparaíso, a continuum of 1.75 million people. There are also Quillota, with about 201,000 inhabitants and San Antonio with more than 200,000 inhabitants with estimates at 250,000 to be the region's second-largest city.

Immigration and culture

Valparaíso developed as a trans-oceanic rest stop for fishing ships, sea cruise-liners, and international naval ships. Therefore, a large proportion of residents have a variety of national origins, ethnic groups, and cultures.[6] The 16th-century colonial population was founded by male settlers from the Spanish regions of Andalusia, Asturia and León, and the large Basque contingent has given rise to a substantial Basque Chilean population. Large numbers came from other countries of Latin America from Mexico to Uruguay, esp. came during colonial rule in the 17th century. And in the late 18th–early 19th centuries came a small wave of Galician settlers from the Spanish region of Galicia.

It is thought the majority of Valparaíso's people have some non-Spanish European background, such as: British and Irish, Australians and New Zealanders, North Americans (U.S. or Canadian), Croats and Bosnians, Dutch and Belgians, French, Germans, Greeks, Italians, Portuguese and Scandinavians. Also, there are more or less assimilated groups of Chilean Jews (mostly Ashkenazi), as well as Christians from the Ottoman Empire, primarily Syro-Lebanese and a large Palestinian community in the town of La Calera.

In racial terms, the majority of Valparaíso's inhabitants are castizos, meaning that their paternal origins are overwhelmingly from white whalers, settlers and traders of various European nationalities, including colonial Spanish settlers, while their maternal origins usually stems from unions between colonial Spanish men and local indigenous women, including those of Mapuche, Inca, Aymara and North American Indian descent (transplanted Cherokees are reported to come in the late 19th century, though it could well be a myth). Smaller numbers of East Asians, mostly Chinese, Japanese or Korean, minuscule numbers of Afro-Chileans, as well as a component of Polynesians whose ancestors were kidnapped from Easter Island and the Marquesas Islands, further added to the region's Hispanicized melting pot.

Economics and industry

The Valparaíso Region is a host of agricultural lands, wine producers, and industrial activity such as copper mining and cement. Chile's largest oil refinery is located in Concón (on the mouth of the Aconcagua River and about north of Valparaíso) and there are two important copper ore refineries: the state-owned Ventanas (on the coast and north of Concón) and the private works in Chagres, about inland.

The region also is a hub for chemicals and gas storage near the port of Quintero. In the interior valleys, there is a booming export industry, mainly around the avocado (palta), chirimoyas and flowers. The most striking recent development has been the cultivation of hillsides using high-tech drip feed irrigation. This has allowed otherwise dry and unproductive land to bear high yields.

Provinces and communes

Region! scope="col"
ProvinceCommuneArea
(km2)[7] [8]
2002
Population
Website[9]
Valparaíso
Isla de Pascua
164 3,791 link
Los Andes
1,362 14,400 link
123 6,692 link
1,248 60,198 link
322 10,393 link
Marga Marga
97 95,623 link
537 128,578 link
294 39,219 link
232 14,105 link
Petorca
288 5,659 link
1,517 9,440 link
166 4,608 link
1,163 31,987 link
1,455 18,916 link
Quillota
302 75,916 link
405 21,633 link
78 12,851 link
61 49,503 link
267 16,014 link
San Antonio
536 7,418 link
405 87,205 link
99 7,028 link
51 9,467 link
346 16,875 link
176 8,601 link
San Felipe
166 12,813 link
186 64,126 link
1,474 14,649 link
122 6,567 link
349 21,644 link
362 12,112 link
Valparaíso
122 286,931 link
402 275,982 link
148 21,174 link
300 12,954 link
76 32,273 link
953 21,874 link
148 633link

References

Citations

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Valparaíso Region . https://web.archive.org/web/20201103141653/http://www.cinver.cl/english/chile/valparaiso.asp . dead . 3 November 2020 . 13 March 2010 . Government of Chile Foreign Investment Committee.
  2. http://stats.oecd.org/ Regions and Cities > Regional Statistics > Regional Economy > Regional GDP per Capita
  3. Web site: Sub-national HDI – Area Database – Global Data Lab . hdi.globaldatalab.org . en . 26 October 2021 . 15 October 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211015014737/https://globaldatalab.org/shdi/shdi/?levels=1%2B4&interpolation=1&extrapolation=0&nearest_real=0 . live .
  4. Valparaíso Region, 2006
  5. C. Michael Hogan, 2008
  6. Web site: Valparaíso (1820–1920) – Memoria Chilena . 4 April 2020 . 30 April 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200430100215/http://www.memoriachilena.gob.cl/602/w3-article-7670.html . live .
  7. Web site: National Statistics Institute . 30 December 2010 . es . 6 January 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190106234357/http://www.ine.cl/404.html?aspxerrorpath=%2Fcanales%2Fchile_estadistico%2Fcensos_poblacion_vivienda%2Fcenso_pobl_vivi.php . live .
  8. Web site: Territorial division of Chile . 30 December 2010 . 11 June 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080611061154/http://www.ine.cl/canales/chile_estadistico/territorio/division_politico_administrativa/pdf/dpa_completa.pdf . live .
  9. Web site: Asociacion Chilena de Municipalidades . 7 February 2011 . es . https://web.archive.org/web/20110419202659/http://www.munitel.cl/ . 19 April 2011 . dead.