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PRINCIPAL
INFORMACIÓN
NOTICIAS
INFORMES
RECURSOS
FOTOS
PAÍSES
ENLACES
ENGLISH |

Courtesy of the
University of Texas Libraries, The University of
Texas at Austin.
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Comité Nacional: |
Eduardo & Sandra Ramirez, Genyor Chacon,
Evelio Mejia, Kimberly Solano, Eddy Valle, Rosibeth
Salazar, Cristian Alpezar |
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Capital: |
San Jose |
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Populación: |
4,250,000 |
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Populación menos de 15
años de edad: |
29% |
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Grupos
Étnicos: |
white (including
mestizo) 94%, black 3%, Amerindian 1%, Chinese 1%,
other 1% |
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Productos
Nacionales: |
coffee, pineapples,
bananas, sugar, microprocessors, food processing,
textiles and clothing, construction materials |
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GDP (Per capita gross domestic product): |
$4,189 |
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Currency: |
Costa Rican colon (CRC) |
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Life Expectancy at Birth: |
77 years |
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Infant Mortality: |
10 deaths/1000 live
births |
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Iglesias Evangélicas: |
3,500 |
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Icthus Web: |
Click here |
History of Country: Before
the Spanish's invasion, five groups of Indians - Chorotega,
Carib, Boruca, Corobici, and Nahua - lived in Costa Rica.
Christopher Columbus reached the territory on September 18,
1502, but the indigenous residents fiercely resisted his party's
attempts to take over. It was not until 1561 that Juan de
Cavallon succeeded in colonizing the Caribbean coast of Costa
Rica, establishing a permanent settlement in Cartago in 1563.
The number of indigenous people decreased tremendously due to
continued tribal warfare, diseases, and starvation by the
Spanish. Many of the remaining Indians became
Christians, and were allowed to remain in their own villages or
move into the Hispanic settlements, where they quickly fit into
the Mestizo population through intermarriage. Costa Rica
declared itself independent from Spain in 1821 and became part of Mexican
Empire of Augustin de Iturbide from 1822 to 1823. It then
was a part of the Central American Federation until 1832 and
proclaimed itself a separate republic in 1857.
Coffee was introduced in the late 18th century and became the
country's primary source of foreign exchange. It was
highly promoted and free land was offered to those who agreed to
plant coffee. In 1891, a railroad was built from the Meseta
Central to the Caribbean coast. This contributed greatly
to Costa Rica's economic development. Banana plantations quickly
sprouted up alongside the railroad.
In 1949, the ninth constitution was drawn up, abolishing the
military. Costa Rica is one of the few countries in the
world to have eliminated its military. Unlike many
neighboring countries, it has not had as much political and
social conflict and has the highest literacy
rate.
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