Spaniards led by Pedro de Valdivia have…
September 1541 CE
Spaniards led by Pedro de Valdivia have begun the establishment of several settlements in Chile, including, on February 12, 1541, the city of Santiago del Nuevo Extremo (“Saint James of the New Frontier”), formerly inhabited by the Picunche people, and located on the Mapocho River at the northern end of the fertile Central Valley.
Valdivia has chosen the location because of its moderate climate and the ease with which it could be defended—the Mapocho River splits into two branches and rejoins further downstream, forming an island.
The city is destroyed on September 11, 1541 by the Indian forces under the chief Michimalonco, which leads to the Arauco War, a long conflict between colonial Spaniards and the Mapuche people of the region of Araucanía.
The survivors remove to a small island and await relief from their Spanish compatriots in Peru.
Quickly rebuilt, Santiago is today the capital of Chile, and the center of its largest conurbation (Greater Santiago).