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Society, science, and technology: Mariano de Rivero, mining and the birth of Peru as a Republic, 1820-1850

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  • José Deustua

Abstract

This article studies the relationships between society, science, and technology through an analysis of the personal life of the Peruvian scientist Mariano Eduardo de Rivero y Ustáriz. Starting with his education at the Seminario de San Jerónimo in Arequipa, the Highgate School in London, and the École Royale des Mines in Paris, this study focuses on Rivero’s activities related to mining in Peru and its vicissitudes, from the development of Simon Bolivar’s strategy for the country after Independence had been achieved, through to the uncertainties of the subsequent period of caudillaje. Particular attention is given to capital investments, especially foreign and British, and the technology employed in the mining sector (especially in Cerro de Pasco) in this early Republican period.

Suggested Citation

  • José Deustua, 2017. "Society, science, and technology: Mariano de Rivero, mining and the birth of Peru as a Republic, 1820-1850," Apuntes. Revista de ciencias sociales, Fondo Editorial, Universidad del Pacífico, vol. 44(80), pages 51-77.
  • Handle: RePEc:pai:apunup:en-80-02
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    1. Carlos Contreras, 2004. "El aprendizaje del capitalismo. Estudios de historia económica y social del Perú republicano," Libros no PUCP / Books other publishers, Otras editoriales / Other publishers, edition 1, number otr-2004-02, March.
    2. Klein, Herbert S., 1992. "Bolivia: The Evolution of a Multi-Ethnic Society," OUP Catalogue, Oxford University Press, edition 2, number 9780195057355.
    3. Carlos Contreras & Luis Miguel Glave, 2015. "La independencia del Perú. ¿Concedida, conseguida, concebida?," Libros no PUCP / Books other publishers, Otras editoriales / Other publishers, edition 1, number otr-2015-04, March.
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