The aboriginal tribes who inhabited this region were the
Tobas,
Timbúes,
Mocovíes,
Pilagás,
Guaycurúes, and
Guaraníes. They were
nomadic, lived from hunting, fishing and fruit recollection. The first European settlement was established in 1527, at the confluence of the
Paraná and
Carcarañá rivers, when
Sebastian Cabot, on his way to the north, founded a fort named
Sancti Spiritus, which was destroyed two years later by the natives. In 1573,
Juan de Garay founded the city of Santa Fe in the surroundings of present town Cayastá, but the city was moved in 1651 and 1660 to its present location. In 1812, the lawyer and general
Manuel Belgrano created and displayed for the first time the
Argentine flag on the banks of the Paraná River, at
Rosario (by that time a small village), south of Santa Fe. In 1815, while
Alvear's central government fell due to
Ignacio Álvarez Thomas' rebellion (at that time commander of an army sent to Santa Fe against
Artigas), Francisco Candioti, the local
militia chief, took over the government peacefully, thus starting the era of Santa Fe as an autonomous province. This period was short lived, since that same year Candioti died and central government reestablished the dependent government. However, in 1816, the
caudillos Mariano Vera and
Estanislao López deposed the governor delegate and proclaimed the
sovereignty of the province and its membership into
Artigas's Free Peoples League (
Liga de Pueblos Libres). López drew, in 1818, a provincial constitution of a strongly
conservative flavour, after rejecting a project proposed by a provincial assembly; Santa Fe was the first province to have its constitution. During the civil strifes of 1820, Santa Fe troops were decisive in the defeat of
Buenos Aires' centralist army. So, in time, López gradually became the ''Federation's Patriarch'', establishing himself as the central figure of the Federal Party until his death in 1838. , the first in the War for Independence. After López's death, his secretary and right-hand man
José María Cullen was elected governor. However, Cullen being a potential rival of Buenos Aires governor and Confederation's Foreign Affairs Representative,
Juan Manuel de Rosas, he sought and obtained Cullen's capture and execution, naming the pro-Rosas
Juan Pablo López as governor. The new governor remained in power, alternating with
Pascual Echagüe, until the province's invasion by
Justo José de Urquiza's Great Army in 1851, and during his term the province adopted a new constitution in 1841. After the organization of the nation, the province entered an era of peace and prosperity; in 1872 the railways already connected many points of the province, as well as the telegraph lines, and in 1889 the
Provincial University of Santa Fe was founded. The political hegemony of the conservative groups was challenged by the new ideas brought by the European
immigrants, giving birth to the
Radical Civic Union (UCR) and the
Progressive Democratic Party (PDP), and the creation of the
Argentine Agrarian Federation. These two parties had many strong electoral contests with the province's conservative parties. , in
Rosario After the Electoral Reform of
Roque Sáenz Peña in 1912, the UCR reached the government and stayed until the coup of 1930. During this time, more precisely in 1919, the
National University of the Littoral was founded. In 1932, it was the PDP who got the governor's seat. The contentious 1958 elections (from which
Peronist candidates were barred) brought an ally of President-elect
Arturo Frondizi to power in Santa Fe,
Dr. Carlos Sylvestre Begnis. Gov. Begnis quickly steered budgets into sorely needed public works, most notably the construction of the
Hernandarias Tunnel, a -long connection between the city of Santa Fe and neighboring
Paraná. The tunnel, most of which runs under the massive Paraná River, is the longest in Argentina. Forced to resign after conservative pressure drove President Frondizi from office in 1962, Begnis had the satisfaction of seeing
Hernandarias open in 1969, and voters overwhelmingly return him to office in 1973 (this time as a Peronist). Santa Fe suffered the violence of the late '70s and the depression of the 1980s more than most other provinces. It continued to languish economically during the prosperous 1990s, as the revalued
Argentine peso put pressure on its productive sectors. Touching bottom around 2002, its economy has grown by 7% a year since then. The heart of Argentina's lucrative soy harvest, the province's importance has continued to grow, now rivaling
Buenos Aires Province as the nation's leading agricultural producer, with
Rosario as one of the most important ports in Argentina. == Geography ==