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Peru and Russia first established relations under Peruvian President Miguel de San Román, who reached out to Tsar Alexander II through a letter with the intention of beginning a process of establishing relations between the two countries. It was only in 1873 however that a Peruvian delegation would travel to the country, with bilateral ...
Peru 2000 (Perú 2000) National Unity (Unidad Nacional) Alliance for the Future (Alianza por el Futuro) Center Front (Frente de Centro) Decentralization Coalition (Concertación Descentralista) Alliance for the Great Change (Alianza por el Gran Cambio) Possible Peru Alliance (Alianza Electoral Perú Posible) Popular Alliance (Alianza Popular)
Historia del Perú. Vol. El Perú Contemporáneo. Lima: Lexus Editores. ISBN 9972-625-35-4. Rivera Serna, Raúl (1975). Historia del Perú. República 1822-1968 (2nd ed.). Lima: Editorial Jurídica. Rodríguez Beruff, Jorge (1983). Los militares y el poder. Un ensayo sobre la doctrina militar en el Perú: 1948–1968. Translated by de Arregui ...
The Revolutionary Union (Spanish: Unión Revolucionaria, UR), was a nationalist political party in Peru founded in 1931 by Luis M. Sánchez Cerro, former president of Peru. The party was formed following the coup with which Sanchez Cerro overthrew the eleven-year dictatorship of Augusto B. Leguía. [14]
The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics [u] (USSR), [v] commonly known as the Soviet Union, [w] was a transcontinental country that spanned much of Eurasia from 1922 to 1991. During its existence, it was the largest country by area , extending across eleven time zones and sharing borders with twelve countries , and the third-most populous country .
Diplomatic and economic ties were established with several countries during the 1970s, and one of them, Peru bought external goods from the Soviet Union. Mexico, and several countries in the Caribbean, forged increasingly strong ties with Comecon , an Eastern Bloc trading organisation established in 1949.
The 1870s was for Peru's economy "a decade of crisis and change". [2] Nitrate extraction rose while guano extraction declined and sugar cane dethroned cotton as the main cash crop. [2] Guano exports dropped from 575,000 tons in 1869 to less than 350,000 tons in 1873 and the Chincha Islands and other guano islands were depleted or close to be so ...
Immediately, Peru entered a serious economic crisis that led to historic hyperinflation (the fourth highest in the world), to the impoverishment of all sectors of the population, and to the collapse of public services. The system of generalised and indiscriminate subsidies, as well as the refusal to pay the foreign debt, closed the country's ...