Timeline of Argentine history

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

History of Argentina
Map of Argentina colored by Argentina's flag
Pre-Columbian
Indigenous peoples
Spanish rule
Viceroyalty
of the Río de la Plata

British invasions
An independent nation
May Revolution
War of Independence
Congress of Tucumán
Building a nation
1853 Constitution
Conquest of the Desert
Generation of '80
Immigration
Age of the Peróns
Juan Perón
Eva Perón
Eva Perón Foundation
Partido Feminista
Evita Perón's
European Rainbow Tour
Military government
Dirty War
Falklands War
(Guerra de las Malvinas)
Democracy and crisis
Mothers
of the Plaza de Mayo

Trial of the Juntas
Carapintadas
The Argentinazo
Present-day Argentina
History by topic
Military
Nationality
Timeline

This is a timeline of Argentine history. To read about the background to these events, see History of Argentina. See also List of Presidents of Argentina, Lists of office-holders and Category:Years in Argentina.

This timeline is incomplete; some important events may be missing. Please help add to it.

Contents

[edit] 5000 BC–1500 AD

Río de la Plata aboriginals, as pictured by Hendrick Ottsen (1603)
Río de la Plata aboriginals, as pictured by Hendrick Ottsen (1603)
  • 4000 BC Distinct nomadic cultures such as the Yámana emerged in the far south
  • 500 BC Irrigation permitted development of sedentary agriculture of staple crops in western and northwestern Andean region
  • 1 AD Several corn-based civilizations developed in the western and northwestern Andean region (Ansilta, Condorhuasi, Cienaga, Aguada, Santa Maria, Huarpes, Diaguitas, Sanavirones, among others)
  • 600 Development of metallurgical technologies, permitting elaborate bronzeworks
  • 850 Emergence of fortified urban settlements
  • 1480 The Inca Empire, under the rule of emperor Pachacutec, launched an offensive and conquered present-day northwestern Argentina, integrating it into a region called Collasuyu

[edit] 1500s

Buenos Aires in 1536
Buenos Aires in 1536

[edit] 1600s

Ruins of San Ignacio Mini Jesuit missions in Misiones Province
Ruins of San Ignacio Mini Jesuit missions in Misiones Province

[edit] 1700s

[edit] 1800–1825

Declaration of Independence of the United Provinces of South America, in Spanish and Quechua
Declaration of Independence of the United Provinces of South America, in Spanish and Quechua

[edit] 1825–1900

A watercolour by HMS Beagle artist Conrad Martens painted during the survey of Tierra del Fuego shows the Beagle being hailed by native Fuegians.
A watercolour by HMS Beagle artist Conrad Martens painted during the survey of Tierra del Fuego shows the Beagle being hailed by native Fuegians.

[edit] 1900s

[edit] Since 2000

  • 2000 Hitech company INVAP is chosen by Australia to design and construct the OPAL nuclear reactor
  • 2000 Vice-President Carlos Álvarez resigned in protest political bribes scandal, precipitating crisis in ruling alliance
  • 2001 In March, the remaining FrePaSo ministers resigned from government in protest at economic and labour reforms
  • 2001 In November, the government responded to a run on banks by limiting access to bank deposits in the corralito
  • 2001 In December, events that have become known as the Argentinazo took place:
    • middle classes, exasperated with constraints of corralito, took to streets in protest in the Cacerolazo
    • Trade unions and piqueteros began protests, and shops and businesses were ransacked
    • Violent protests and mass demonstrations in the Plaza de Mayo; 26 die in protests nationwide
    • Finance minister Domingo Cavallo and President de la Rúa resigned in quick succession on 19 and 20 December
    • Provincial governor Adolfo Rodríguez Saá appointed president by Argentine Congress on 22 December
    • Rodríguez Saá declared a short-lived debt moratorium. After a few days, Argentina officially defaulted on $93 billion of its debt to the International Monetary Fund and creditors
    • Rodríguez Saá resigned after a week following lack of support from colleagues
    • Eduardo Duhalde, losing candidate in the 1999 presidential elections, appointed president with broad cross-party support
  • 2002 Duhalde imposes further financial measures, including converting dollar accounts to pesos, scrapping 1:1 parity with the dollar, and social measures to bring economy under control
  • 2003 Former President Carlos Menem wins first round of presidential election but pulls out facing certain defeat, handing victory to fellow Peronist Néstor Kirchner
  • 2004 In April more than 100,000 people demonstrated in Buenos Aires in support of Juan Carlos Blumberg, father of murdered student Axel Blumberg, demanding harsher criminal laws
  • 2004 Kirchner pursued Argentine debt restructuring
  • 2004 Natural gas supply shortage produced tension with Chile
  • 2004 Antarctic Treaty Secretariat established in Buenos Aires
  • 2004 A fire in the República Cromagnon nightclub in Buenos Aires kills 194 people and injures 714
  • 2005 Relations between Catholic Church and government broke down in February row between military chaplain and minister over abortion
  • 2005 Supreme Court overruled 'Laws of Pardon' that were used to pardon military figures of the Dirty War
  • 2005 First disputes of the Cellulose plant conflict between Argentina and Uruguay
  • 2005 Mid-term elections in October saw a massive split in the Justicialist Party between Kirchner's centre-left Front for Victory faction and the rump of his former patron Duhalde and other provincial leaders; Front for Victory wins by large margin
  • 2005 Massive demonstrations against U.S. President George W. Bush at the Fourth Summit of the Americas in Mar del Plata
  • 2005 In December, Kirchner announced cancellation of IMF debt with single, final payment
  • 2006 Buenos Aires mayor Aníbal Ibarra removed from office following accusations of negligence regarding the República Cromagnon nightclub fire of 2004
  • 2007 Catholic priest Christian Von Wernich is found guilty of involvement in seven murders and 42 cases of kidnapping and torture related to the state-sponsored Dirty War. Von Wernich is sentenced to life imprisonment.
  • 2007 Cristina Kirchner assumes as new president of Argentina.

[edit] See also

[edit] References