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2 revisions | josiembrum at Oct 08, 2018 10:15 AM | |
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433435 C H [{he king. All the veteran troops in Cliile do not 3. Ecdesiasikal government .— respects the 4. The cities and dwellings . — The cities are VOL. I. L E. wealthier classes, particularly the nobility, are 5. Population . — Spanish Chile, in consequence Translation | 433435 C H [{he king. All the veteran troops in Cliile do not exceed 2000, and these consist of artillery, dra- goons, and infantry. The infantry as well as the artillery is under the command of two lieutenant- colonels. 3. Ecdesiasikal government .— respects the ecclesiastical government, Chile is divided into the two large dioceses of St. Jago and Concepcion, which cities are tlie residencies ot the bishops, who are suffragans to the archbishop of Lima. The first diocese extends from the confines of Peru to the river Maule, comprehending the province of Cnjo upon the other side of the Andes. The second comprises all the rest of Chile, with the islands, although the greater part of this extent is inhabited by pagans. The cathedrals are sup- plied with a proper mmiber of canons, whose re- venues depend upon the tithes, as do those of the bishops. The court of inquisition at Lima has at St. Jago a commissioner with several subaltern officers. Pedro Valdivia, on his first entering Chile, brought with him the monks of the order of Mercy ; and about the year 1553, introduced the Dominicans and strict Franciscans. The Au- gustins established themselves there in 1595; and the Hospitallers of St. John of God, about the the year 1615. These religious orders have all a number of convents, and the three first form dis- tinct jurisdictions. The brothers of St. John of God have the charge of the hospitals, under a commissary, who is dependent upon the provin- cial of Peru. These are the only religious frater- nities now in Chile. The Jesuits, who came into Chile in 1593, with the nephew of their founder, Don Martin de Loyola, formed likewise a separate province. Others have several times attempted, but without success, to form establishments, the Chilians having always opposed the admission of new orders among them. In St. Jago and Con- cepcion are several convents of nuns ; but they are the only cities that contai?i them. 4. The cities and dwellings . — The cities are built in the best situations in the country. Many of them, however, w ould have been better placed, for the purposes of commerce, upon the shores of the large rivers. This is particularly the case with those of more recent construction. The streets are straight, intersecting each other at right angles, and are 36 French feet in breadth. On account of earthquakes the houses are generally of one story ; they are, however, very commodious, whitewashed without, and generally painted within. Each is accommodated with a pleasant garden, ir- rigated by an aqueduct which furnishes water for the use of the family. Those belonging to the VOL. I. L E. wealthier classes, particularly the nobility, are furnished with much splendour and taste. The inhabitants perceiving that old buildings of two stories have resisted the most violent shocks, ha\ e of late years ventured to reside in the upper rooms, and now begin to construct their houses in the European naanner. In consequence of this the cities have a better appearance than formerly ; and the more so, as instead of forming their houses of clay hardened in the sun, which was supposed less liable to injury, they now employ brick and stone. Cel- lars, sewers, and wells, were formerly much more common than at present; a circumstance which may have contributed to render the buildings more secure from earthquakes. The churches are ge- nerally more remarkable for their wealth than their style of architecture. The cathedral and the church of the Dominicans in the capital, which are built of stone, are however exceptions. The first was constructed at the royal expcnce, under the direction of the Bishop Don Manuel Alday, an excellent and learned prelate; it is built in a masterly style, and is 384 French feet in front. The plan was drawn by two English architects, who superintended the work : but when it was half finished they refused to go on, unless their wages were increased. In consequence of this tlie building was suspended, when two of the Indians who had worked under the Englishmen, and had secretly found means of instructing themselves in every branch of the art, offered to complete it : which they did with as much skill and perfection as their masters themselves could have displayed. In the capital the follow ing edifices are also worthy of remark : the barracks for the dragoons, the mint, which has been lately built by a Homan ar- chitect, and the hospital for orphans. 5. Population . — Spanish Chile, in consequence of the freedom granted to its maritime trade, is peopling with a rapidity proportioned to the salu- brity of its climate and the fertility of its soil. Its population in general is composed of Europeans, Creoles, Indians, Negroes, and Musters. The Europeans, except a few French, English, and Italians, are Spaniards, who for the most part are from the s. provinces of Spain. D. Cosrne Bueno, whose manuscript account of Peru is stated by Robertson, as having been drawn up in 1764, (though the copies w hich v/e have seen of this work contain facts of a later date by at least 20 years), ffives to Chile a population of 240,000 souls. Malespina, who visited that country in 1790, is of opinion that this estimate, is greatly under the truth ; and we hove been lately informed, on good authority, that the present population of Chile] Translation |