Circulación político-económica en Centroamérica: el Arco de Conchagua en torno a 1850

In Central America, the series of post-federal wars after 1840 showed how State politics were developed in a regional setting, in which the Arch of Conchagua was inserted. The area around the Fonseca Gulf, shared by El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua, acquired a great economic and strategic pre-em...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Clara Pérez Fabregat
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Centro de Estudios Mexicanos y Centroamericanos 2020-01-01
Series:Trace
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/trace/4757
Description
Summary:In Central America, the series of post-federal wars after 1840 showed how State politics were developed in a regional setting, in which the Arch of Conchagua was inserted. The area around the Fonseca Gulf, shared by El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua, acquired a great economic and strategic pre-eminence in those years. The dominant groups encouraged a concept of common space, seeking the support of other interregional actors based on their political mobilization and economic interests. In this paper we assert that during the mid-19th century the region of the Conchagua Arch was a space for the circulation of people, ideas, and businesses with new characteristics, under the leadership of the dominant group of San Miguel in Eastern El Salvador. To prove it we will address the historic background of the common space and later analyze the socio-political and economic factors that led it to be formed.
ISSN:0185-6286
2007-2392