In the pre-Columbian era, the region of Guayaquil was inhabited by several indigenous peoples. These peoples consisted of political organization, warlike actions, and commercial exchange with other peoples located to the south in present-day Peru, and to the north in present-day Mexico, by raft navigation, relying on the fluvial structure of the Guayas River.
The battle of Guayaquil took place on September 24, 1860 and took place in the surroundings of the city of Guayaquil in the Republic of Ecuador. It was the last battle of a series of warlike confrontations that sustained the forces of the de facto government of Gabriel García Moreno based in Quito, supported by the general and former president Juan José Flores,
In the colonial period, Santiago de Guayaquil began to grow from the Santa Ana hill and after a short time began to become an important commercial center, with which the Audiencia maintained its commercial ties with other parts of the entire South Pacific region, and this added to the abundance of useful wood for construction, the existence of large numbers of individuals in search of work (which made labor cheaper) and the strategic location of the port, allowed Guayaquil to become the main shipyard of the South Sea Navy.
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