Pre-Columbian Before the
Spanish Conquest, the land comprising the department of Sucre was mainly inhabited by two groups of indigenous people — the
Zenú and the Turbacos. The Zenú language was perhaps part of the
Chibchan language family by the
Arhuacos branch. The Turbaco people were part of the
Cariban language family and they controlled the area adjacent to the
Gulf of Morrosquillo. The Zenú people — by the Finzenú and Panzenú branches — controlled the rest of the territory, which used to be part of a bigger territory along the current department of Córdoba and parts of
Bolívar and
Antioquia sometimes known as Zenú kingdom or Zenú nation. The area adjacent to the coast was inhabited by the Turbaco people, and it was the border lands of the Caribs' territories in the Caribbean Coast of Colombia. This specific part of the Caribbean included the coasts of the present-day departments of Magdalena, Atlántico, and Bolívar. The Zenú engineers were able to develop a complicated hydraulic infrastructure in the basin of the San Jorge river — they also worked in the basin of the Sinú river in lands of the
Córdoba Department — involving flood control works as well as drainage and irrigation systems.
Colonization The first Spanish conquerors that sighted to the coastline of the present day Sucre Department were
Alonso de Ojeda,
Juan de la Cosa,
Rodrigo de Bastidas and Francisco Cesar around 1499. The conquerors thought the territory to be rich in precious metals since, but soon they would find out they were wrong about that. This situation led to the
encomenderos to employ the indigenous workforce almost exclusively for cattle rising on the northern areas. The territory had been under the tutelage of the government settled in Cartagena – except a brief period of time when it was under the jurisdiction of the central government in Bogotá – this control was effective by several denominations while the country evolved from its colonial institutions until its final republican form in 1886 and until the establishment of Sucre as a department independent from Bolivar.
Modern history In 1963, the Second Assembly of Municipalities created the Department of Sucre. People vouched for its creation after a campaign led by CorpoSucre. On July 28, 1966, the
Senate of Colombia started a debate on the creation of the department and on August 18 of the same year approved its creation under the 47 Law of 1966 sanctioned by the then-
president of Colombia,
Carlos Lleras Restrepo. ==Geography==