Old Arauco In 1552
Pedro de Valdivia the first
governor of Chile, founded a fort, named
San Felipe de Rauco or
de Araucan. It was east of the location of the modern city of Arauco in the part of the valley immediately on the South or left bank of the
Carampangue River at the point where on the opposite bank it receives the
riachuelo of Conumo. Valdivia planned it to be the base for a city he planned to found. The Mapuche destroyed the fort in 1554, after killing Valdivia's insane
mother-in-law. It was raised again after the
battle of Quiapo, by
García Hurtado de Mendoza in 1559. Destroyed again in 1563 it was rebuilt again in 1566 by
Rodrigo de Quiroga and became a small town, that remained so without growing until being transferred to the current site of the city of Arauco.
Arauco The population of old Araucan was moved in 1590 by Governor Don
Alonso de Sotomayor to the seacoast, four kilometers to southwest of the mouth of the Carampangue River located between its beach on the
Bay of Arauco and the hill on the southwestern side of the place called
cerro de Colocólo. The lands for the site were ceded by the cacique Colocólo, and it was named
Villa de San Ildefonso de Arauco. However, six years later,
Martín García Óñez de Loyola transferred it to its present site, a fort raised on the slope of the Cerro Colocólo and gave it the name of
Ciudad de San Felipe de Araucan. In the great
Mapuche Uprising of 1598, that followed the death of Governor Loyola, it was destroyed by the Mapuche once again. It was recovered by Governor
Alonso de Ribera in 1603, it continued to be harassed by the Mapuche until its inhabitants were forced to leave it in another
great rising in 1655. Governor
Ángel de Peredo recovered it in 1662 and Governor
Francisco de Meneses Brito in 1665. Under the government of Don
Juan Henríquez de Villalobos its fort was reconstructed in 1673, and served as the defense of the town until it was destroyed almost completely by the
earthquake of February 20, 1835. It still suffered from the hostilities of the Mapuche in their uprisings of
1723 and
1766 and during the
war of Independence in the assault that they made on it on June 4, 1817, with their royalist allies. Population began to gather around this fort and it became the city of Araucan (later Arauco) on December 7, 1852. Later it became the capital of the
department of Araucan and now Commune of Arauco in the
Arauco Province. ==Demographics==