
Location of Darién Province in Panama
'Darién' is a province in eastern
Panama. It is also the largest province in
Panama. It is hot, humid, heavily forested, and sparsely populated.
Europeans first discovered the region in
1501, and
Christopher Columbus sighted it on his fourth voyage in
1503. The
Spanish established the first European
colony in
South America,
Santa María la Antigua del Darién, in Darién in
1510. The settlement did not prosper, however, and was soon abandoned. From this town
Vasco Núñez de Balboa made his march to the
Pacific in
1513. Some of the refugees from Santa María went on to found
Panama City in
1519.
In
1698, the
Scots launched another attempt to colonize Darién: the
Darién scheme. It too ended in failure and led to the
Acts of Union 1707 which joined the parliaments of Scotland and England (with Wales) into the United Kingdom.
Today the chief town in Darién is
La Palma, located where the
Tuira River empties into the
Bay of San Miguel.
The province was formed in 1922 from
Panamá province.
Darién appears in
Keats' poem ''
On First Looking Into Chapman's Homer''; in the poem, "stout Cortez" is in Darién when he first sees the Pacific Ocean. (In fact it was Balboa, not
Cortés, who was involved in this historical event.)
Districts
Darién Province is divided into two
districts:
★ Chepigana (capital:
La Palma) which contains the
easternmost point of
Central America
★ Pinogana (capital: El Real de Santa María)
The ''
comarca indígena'' (indigenous territory) of
Emberá was established in the province on November 8, 1983. It consists of two additional districts:
★
Cémaco
★ Sambú
The ''comarca indígena'' of
Kuna de Wargandí was established in 2009. It is not subdivided into districts.
See also
★
Darién Gap