n.
officially Oriental Republic of Uruguay
Country, southeastern South America.
Area: 68,037 sq mi (176,215 sq km). Population (2002 est.): 3,382,000. Capital: Montevideo . Groups of European ancestry (mostly Spanish and Italian) form nearly nine-tenths of the population; the remainder are mestizos (European and Indian ancestry), mulattos (European and black), and blacks. Few Indians remain. Language: Spanish (official). Religions: Roman Catholicism, Protestantism, Judaism. Currency: Uruguayan peso. Uruguay is the only South American country lying entirely outside the tropics. Its topography consists mainly of low plateaus and low hilly regions. The principal waterway is the Negro River ; the Uruguay River forms the country's entire western border with Argentina. Mineral and energy resources are limited. Pastures, covering almost four-fifths of the land area, support large herds of livestock raised for meat, leather goods, and wool. Chief crops include wheat, corn (maize), oats, and barley. Other important economic activities are tourism, fishing, and the manufacture of textiles, chemicals, and transportation equipment. Uruguay is a republic with two legislative houses; its head of state and government is the president. Prior to European settlement, Uruguay was inhabited mainly by the Charrúa Indians. The Spanish navigator Juan Díaz de Solís sailed into the Río de la Plata estuary in 1516. The Portuguese established Colonia in 1680. Subsequently, the Spanish established Montevideo in 1726, driving the Portuguese from their settlement; 50 years later Uruguay became part of the Viceroyalty of Río de la Plata . It gained independence from Spain in 1811. The Portuguese regained it in 1821, incorporating it into Brazil as a province. A revolt against Brazil in 1825 led to its being recognized as an independent country in 1828. It sided with Brazil and Argentina against Paraguay in the War of the Triple Alliance (1864, 186570). The economy benefited from a demand for raw material during World War II (193845) and the Korean War (195053). The office of the president was abolished in 1951 and replaced with a nine-member council. The country adopted a new constitution and restored the presidential system in 1966. A military coup occurred in 1973, but the country returned to civilian rule in 1985. The 1990s brought a general upturn in the economy.