Where Is
Honduras?
Honduras is one
of the countries that make up Central America (C.A.). These
countries lie south of Mexico and north of Columbia. They
include El Salvador, Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, Costa
Rica, Belize, and Panama. The first five of these countries
share a common history and similar economies, based on
agriculture. Often, the phrase Central America refers only
to these five. Belize was a British colony (British
Honduras) until 1981, and Panama was a part of Columbia
until 1903. The economy of Panama is based on international
trade rather than agriculture.
What does Honduras look
like?
The second
largest country in Central America, with an area of 43,277
square miles, Honduras is shaped like a triangle. Its
dimensions are about 200 miles from North to South, and 400
miles from East to West. It has a 400 mile coast on the
Caribbean and a 40 mile coast on the Pacific. The bordering
countries are Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Guatemala. Its
main regions are:
The Highlands: This area comprises about 65% of the land
and is home to about 70% of the people. Because the area is
so mountainous, it is difficult to build roads and
communication facilities. Thus the nation's economic
development is impeded by its geography, as well as its
history and lack of education.
The Banana
Country: Located on the
shores of the Caribbean, this flat land makes up about 15%
of the land mass but supports 25% of the population with
its thriving banana agriculture. Both bananas for export
and other crops for local consumption are produced here.
The
Lowlands: Fewer than 7%
of the population lives in the two lowland areas, one near
the Caribbean coast and the other near the Pacific. The
weather in the lowlands is hot and muggy all year.
The
Islands: The Bay
Islands, which are becoming popular with tourists from all
over the world, lie 30 miles off the northern coast in the
Caribbean. The largest is Roatan, famous for its beautiful
beaches, fishing, crystal-clear water, and the world's
largest coral reef after the Great Barrier Reef in
Australia. The Swan Islands are 100 miles off the northern
coast.
The
Climate: There are two
seasons in Honduras -- the dry season and the wet season.
The dry season runs from November to April. The rest of the
year is wet, especially September and October. The coolest
time is December, the warmest is May. Of course there is
considerable variety, depending on altitude and location.
What is the history of
Honduras?
Like the rest of Central America, modern Honduras grew out
of the Spanish conquest of the indigenous people. The
history of Honduras can be divided into five major periods.
Pre-Columbian:
Before Columbus discovered this region in 1502, it was
occupied by at least six groups, including the Lencas, the
Cholutecas, the Paya, the Jicaques, the Miskitos (or
Mosquitos), the Sumos, and the Chorti Maya, descendants of
one of the Western Hemisphere's greatest and most advanced
civilizations. Near Copan and throughout the northwest
section of Honduras you can still find ruins of the great
Mayan civilization, which fell centuries before the arrival
of the Spanish. The descendants of the Maya have survived
in great numbers to this day.
Spanish
Conquest: Twenty-two
years after the arrival of Columbus, Honduras became the
object of dispute between the Spanish of Panama and the
Spanish of Mexico, both of whom were obsessed with the
natural wealth of Honduras: its gold and silver. They
brutalized and enslaved the Indians, forcing them to till
the soil or work in the mines. The last resistance against
the Spanish Conquistadors came from an Indian chief named
Lempira, who was killed while attending a peace conference
with the Spaniards. Chief Lempira is honored to this day.
Colonial
Period: In 1539,
Honduras came under the rule of the Spanish in Guatemala.
The territory was divided into the provinces of Tegucigalpa
and Comayagua. Many Indians died from exhaustion as forced
laborers in the mines around Tegucigalpa. The Spanish
brought in slaves from Africa to increase the labor supply.
Colonial development was extremely minimal. Pirates, who
specialized in plundering the merchant ships bound for
Spain with the riches of Honduras on board, often sunk the
ships and destroyed the small Spanish settlements. Eager to
get their share, Great Britain gained control over what is
now Belize and the Bay Islands. Through the intervention of
the United States, Honduras has only recently been able to
reclaim the Bay Islands.
Independence:
When Spain was in a very weak condition in 1821, Mexico and
all the Central American countries simply declared their
independence. However, the Hondurans were totally
unprepared for self-government and there was chaos for the
next 70 years. There was an attempt to form a federation
with Mexico, Guatemala, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua which
failed. There was much conflict between the political
conservatives and the Creoles (people of Spanish descent
born in the Western Hemisphere), who advocated political
reforms. Because of this ongoing conflict, as well as war
against El Salvador and Guatemala, the economic development
of Honduras suffered greatly. However, some progress was
made. In the 1870's, the first institute of higher
learning, the National Autonomous University of Honduras,
was founded, the railroad from Puerto Cortes to San Pedro
Sula was built, and the capital was moved to Tegucigalpa,
ending a long rivalry with Comayagua.
Twentieth
Century: Honduras
entered this century as the poorest and least developed
country in Central America. In spite of some liberal
reforms, it remains in this position. Political power
rested completely within the traditional oligarchy of
landowners, military leaders and foreign companies until
the 1950's, when leaders such as Ramon Villeda Morales
began the task of modernizing the country. When he took
office as president in 1958, two-thirds of Honduran adults
were illiterate, fewer than half the children enrolled in
first grade made it to the second, and fewer than one in
three wore shoes. Under Villeda the first main highway was
built, the Social Security Institute was founded, the
National Agrarian Institute was set up to redistribute the
land. Such reforms made Villeda unpopular and he was
succeeded by military rulers for the next 18 years. In
1981, international pressure led to relatively fair
elections and Honduras was returned to parliamentary
democracy.