Nicaragua, country of Central America. It
is the largest of the Central American republics. Nicaragua can be
characterized by its agricultural economy, its history of autocratic
government, and its imbalance of regional development—almost all settlement and
economic activity are concentrated in the western half of the country.
The
country’s name is derived from Nicarao, chief of the indigenous tribe that
lived around present-day Lake Nicaragua during the late 15th and early 16th centuries.
Nicaragua has a unique history in that it was the only country in Latin America to be colonized by both the Spanish and the British.
Nicaragua’s
population is made up mostly of mestizos (people of mixed
European and Indian ancestry). The national capital is Managua, which also is the country’s largest city and home to about
one-sixth of the population.
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The family of Anastasio Somoza García dominated Nicaragua from 1936 to 1979, when it
was toppled by an insurrection led by the Sandinista National Liberation Front (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional;
FSLN). The land, economic, and educational reforms initiated by the
socialist-oriented Sandinista regime were negated when it became embroiled in guerrilla warfare with a U.S.-backed insurgency beginning in the
early 1980s.
The Sandinista-dominated government was finally defeated by
the U.S.-funded National Opposition
Union, a coalition of
parties, in the 1990 presidential elections. The election results, which were
deemed free and fair by the international community, signaled an end to the armed conflict
in Nicaragua. The Sandinistas returned to power after winning a national election in 2006 but promised to uphold many of the
economic reforms of their predecessors.
Present-day Nicaragua is
still recovering from its legacy of dictatorship and civil war. There are
ongoing disputes over land ownership, and Nicaragua continues to be dependent
on foreign aid, mainly from the United States.
Moreover, the
country’s infrastructure was severely damaged in 1998 by Hurricane Mitch, which killed more than 1,800 Nicaraguans and destroyed several
villages. On the other hand, the country has been home to many prominent
artists, writers, and intellectuals, and it began to attract a
significant income from tourism in the early 21st century.