Guatemala

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


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    The territory of what is now known as Guatemala was once inhabitated by the Maya civilization until around 900 AD, when their civilization collapsed[1] and was replaced by local kingdoms. These kingdoms were eventually conquered by the Spanish conqueror army, who established the Captaincy General of Guatemala (composed by Guatemala, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras and the Mexican state of Chiapas).

    In 1821, the Captaincy proclaimed its independence and subsequent incorporation into the Mexican Empire. However, when the empire collapsed a couple of years later, the countries separated (Chiapas remained part of Mexico) and formed the United Provinces of Central America, at least until 1840 when the provinces had all declared themselves independent.

    In 1898 the country fell for the first time into a dictatorship, and would pass almost the entire twentieth century alternating between political unstability, coup d’etats, military governments and guerrilla operations. As a result of that, the country fell into a civil war between the various revolutionary armies and the government that lasted thirty six years and ended only in 1996. Since then, it has recovered the political stability and democratic institutions, but the problems of the long war (including poverty, crime rates, scorched earth and ethnic clashes) still linger today. As an additional consequence of the war, Guatemala has one of the lowest average age of the Western Hemisphere (18.9 years for men and 20 for women).

    The official language is Spanish, though not everyone on the country speaks it. Actually, there’s a good size of the population that speaks the indigenous languages (23 Mayan languages, not counting some dialects and other non-Mayan languages).

    Guatemala has some kind of feud with Belize and, by extension, the United Kingdom. Turns out the territory of Belize was once part of the Spanish colony, something for which they have made a claim; actually, they only recognized the country in 1990, but the dispute, though civil, still remains active.


    Famous Guatemalans:

    • Manuel Estrada, dictator from 1898 to 1920, infamous for allowing the entry of the United Fruit Company to the country (the Trope Namer of the Banana Republic) and for trying to install a cult of Minerva (yes, that Minerva).
    • General Miguel Ydígoras, dictator from 1958 to 1963, who is notorious mainly because he once challenged the Mexican president to a duel because of a fishing issue (of course, it didn’t come to fruiction).
    • Miguel Ángel Asturias, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1967. His most famous book is El Señor Presidente (Mister President), where he analyses the usual characteristics of a Latin American dictator (though his main inspiration was the aforementioned Manuel Estrada).
    • Rigoberta Menchú, an indigenous woman of K’iche’ ethnicy (the same ethnicy detailed on the Popol Vuh), who won the Nobel Peace prize in 1992 for her work helping refugees of the Guatemalan Civil War.

    The Guatemalan flag

    1. nobody knows for sure the reasons, but common theories include Toltec invasion, collapse of trade routes, revolutions, diseases and a massive drought