The History of Costa Rica
Recently, the University of Costa Rica published its third edition
of “The History of Costa Rica”, the first of its kind to be translated and
printed in the English language. Written by Ivan Molina and Steven Palmer, two
of the leading and most recognized Costa Rican historians, the book is concise
yet thorough and current, spanning this country’s rich history from the arrival
of human beings, at around 12,000 B.C., to the beginning of the Twenty-First
Century, including the bulk of Arias’ term as president of the country.
This is the fifth
book to be written in collaboration by these two authors. Palmer has a Ph.D. in
Latin American History from Colombia University in New York
and Molina received his Masters degree in History at the University of Costa Rica,
where both men have taught. Their books have won many prestigious awards,
including the Aquileo Echeverria National Prize in History, the Cleto Gonzalez
Viquez Prize in History and the Ancora Prize from La Nacion, Costa Rica’s
premier newspaper. The book comes armed with eight different maps, more than
eighty photographs, paintings and drawings, a comprehensive bibliography and an
index that offers its readers a handy, thorough reference and complete
chronicle of key events in Costa
Rica’s history.
It is important
to note the “The History of Costa Rica” is not published by the Tourism Agency.
Rather, it covers the essential background and characteristics of the country
that the reader is living in or visiting. There are no descriptions of menus
from restaurants that have paid to be mentioned or phone numbers to make
reservations at a hotel near a volcano or the beach. What the reader does get
in this publication is a ringside seat on a safari with prehistoric hunters,
their means of domesticating local vegetation and the subsequent formation of
tribal societies, their cultural practices and how they progressed. One is
allowed to witness the arrival of Cristoforo Colombo at Puerto Limon, then
called Cariari, in 1502, and Ponce de Leon’s visit to Golfo de Nicoya seventeen
years later. The reader is given privy to view the “civilized” diseases from
Europe, such as typhoid, influenza and slavery, reduce the population of
indigenous peoples from an estimated 400,000 to a mere 10,000 in less than a
century. It would then take Costa
Rica more than three hundred years to
replenish this original population. You will also learn how San Jose’
flourished due to the tobacco cultivation there; and you can watch the
establishment of the United Fruit Company and their systematic deforestation of
surrounding terrain in order to plant groves of bananas, sugar cane and coffee
– the “Golden Bean”.
The reader is
also invited to mingle with the cultural swell of the 1930s and watch the
social reform and flirtation with communism during the ‘40s. You will also
learn how the Civil War in 1948 abolished the military here. It also gave women
and all black people the right to vote and implemented the formation of
everyone’s good friend, ICE (the Costa Rican national electric power company).
The reader is there when then-president Oscar Arias Sanchez receives his Nobel
Peace prize in 1987 for refusing to allow then-president Ronald Reagan to bring
in the U.S.
militia. Indeed, the Costa Rican people have a lot to be proud of in their
lengthy fight to establish and preserve democracy in their Jewel of Central
America.
“The History of
Costa Rica” is available at Jaime Peligro book shops in Playa Tamarindo, Nuevo
Arenal and Quepos.All comments concerning this article are gladly welcome.
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