(Redirected from Chiloe Island)
Location of Chiloé in Chile
'Chiloé Island' (
Spanish: "Isla de Chiloé"), also known as' ''Isla Grande de Chiloé'' "Greater Island of Chiloé"', is a
South American island off the coast of
Chile, in the
Pacific Ocean. The island is located in southern Chile, in the
Los Lagos Region. It is the main island of the
Chiloé Archipelago.
Geography

Ferry used between Chilean mainland and Chiloé Island.
Chiloé Island (8,394 km², 3241 sq mi), is the second largest island in Chile (and the fifth largest in South America), after the Isla Grande de
Tierra del Fuego. It is separated from the Chilean mainland by the
Chacao Strait ("Canal de Chacao") to the north, and by the
Gulf of Ancud and the
Gulf of Corcovado to the east; the Pacific ocean lies to the west, and the
Chonos Archipelago lies to the south, across the Gulf of Corcovado. The island is 190 km (118 mi) from north to south, and averages 55-65 km wide (35 to 40 mi). The capital is
Castro, on the east side of the island; the second largest town is
Ancud, at the island's northwest corner, and there are several smaller port towns on the east side of the island, such as
Quellón,
Dalcahue and
Chonchi.
Chiloé Province includes all the Chiloé Archipelago except the
Grupo Desertores islands, plus the
Isla Guafo. The area of Chiloé province is 9181 km² (3546 sq mi). The administrative center of the province is Castro, while the episcopal see of the
Roman Catholic bishopric is Ancud. Chiloé province is part of the
Los Lagos Region (Región de los Lagos), which mainly includes the Chilean lakes region on the mainland north of Chiloé. The administrative center of the region is
Puerto Montt.

Chiloé Island
Chiloé and the Chonos Archipelago are a southern extension of the Chilean coastal range, which runs north and south, parallel to the Pacific coast and the
Andes Mountains. The Chilean Central Valley lies between the coastal mountains and the Andes, of which the Gulfs of Ancud and Corcovado form the southern extension. Mountains run north and south along the spine of the island. The east coast is deeply indented, with several natural harbors and numerous smaller islands.
Climate
Chiloe runs from 41º 47' S to 43º 26' S latitude, and has a humid, cool
temperate climate. The western side of the island is rainy and wild, home to the
Valdivian temperate rain forests, one of the world's few temperate rain forests.
Chiloé National Park (Parque Nacional de Chiloé) is located on the Island's western shore and includes part of the coastal range.
The eastern shore, in the rain shadow of the interior mountains, is warmer and drier, and home to almost all of Chiloé's population, agriculture and aquaculture, which includes
prairies,
potatoes and
Atlantic salmon.
History
Chiloé's first known inhabitants were the
Chonos, a nomadic people. Later the
Huilliche (a part of the
Mapuche) came from the mainland and settled on the eastern shore, practicing agriculture and fishing.
In 1567 the island was first claimed by
Spain, which was exploring and claiming most of South America and many neighbouring islands, and established a settlement at Castro in
1567, which later became the seat of a
Jesuit mission, and was capital of the province until the founding of Ancud in
1768.
In 1784 Chiloé Island was made a direct dependency of the colonial
viceroyalty of Peru together with
Valdivia, while most of continental Chile was a captaincy-general within the viceroyalty.
Unlike the
central region of Chile where a long war of independence resumed after a Spanish reoccupation, Chiloe never joined the "Patria Vieja" (Old Republic). In December 1817 the island became the last stronghold of Spanish loyalists with the arrival of forces fleeing the Chilean mainland, from which it was separated by Mapuche territory. A Chilean expedition led by
Thomas Cochrane, 10th Earl of Dundonald failed to conquer it. On 15 January 1826, after another unsuccessful attempt in 1824, the Spanish forces surrendered to a military expedition led by
Ramon Freire, and the island was fully incorporated into the now independent republic of Chile (although Spain did not recognize it until 1844).
The last Spanish Military governors were :
★
Mariano Osorio December 1817 - 1818
★
Antonio de Quintanilla 1818 - 15 January 1826
Charles Darwin visited Chiloé during the summer of
1834–
1835, writing about his impressions of southern Chile in his
diaries [1].
During the colonization of the
Patagonia by Chile and
Argentina, a lot of chilotes migrated to the mainland to work in cattle farming.
The cathedral in Ancud was totally destroyed and Castro was badly damaged by the
Great Chilean Earthquake of
1960, widely considered to be the most powerful ever recorded. In
1982, the provincial capital, after over 200 years, was returned to Castro.
Demographics and economy
The population of the province with its ten
municipalities according to the
2002 census was 154,775; of this, 44% lived in rural areas, according to the Instituto Nacional de Estadisticas (INE). Chiloé's people are known as ''Chilotes''.
Salmon
aquaculture, tourism, agriculture and timber are the mainstays of the island economy.
Culture
In part because of its physical isolation from the rest of Chile, Chiloé has a very special architecture and local culture. The Spanish, who arrived in the
16th century, and
Jesuit missionaries who followed, constructed hundreds of small
wooden churches in an attempt to bring
Christianity to a pagan land; the result was a mixing of
Catholicism and pagan beliefs. These unique buildings have been designated a
UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Architecture

Roof shingles in a house of Dalcahue.
'Chilotan architecture' is a unique architectural style that is mainly restricted to
Chiloe Island and nearby areas.
In part because of its physical isolation from the rest of Chile, and access to different materials, Chiloé has a very special architecture that differs a lot from the typical
Spanish colonial architecture. The Spanish who arrived in the
16th century, and
Jesuit missionaries who followed, constructed hundreds of small
wooden churches in an attempt to bring
Christianity to a pagan land; the result was a mixing of
Catholicism and pagan beliefs. These unique buildings have been designated a
UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Nearly all the houses and buildings in colonial Chiloe were built with wood, and
roof shingles were extensively employed. Roof shingles of
Fitzroya came to be used as money and called "
Real de Alerce". In the late XIX century a lot of
palafitos (
stilt houses) were built in cities like
Castro and
Chonchi.
Mythology
They have a rich folklore with many mythological animals and spirits (the
Caleuche, the
Trauco, the
Pincoya, the
Invunche, etc.)
See also
★
Chacao Channel bridge
Sources and External links
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Mythology of Chiloé
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Research at Chiloé Rain Forest
★
Making Connections or Breaking Cultural Traditions? (Bridging Chiloé with Chile)
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WorldStatesmen- Chili
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The churches of Chiloe at Unesco world heritage site
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description of the chiloe churches with pictures