Sierra Madre Tents

Sierra Madre is located on the West side of the world, in an area known as the Sierra Madre blanca or Sierra Madre cuau, at the foot of the mountains of Colombia and Ecuador. In the early time of colonization, they received little commercial exploitation, due mainly to the difficulty of obtaining, and building, sugar cane in that area. In time, the natives came to depend more on potatoes, rice, cabbage, sugar, and fruit and vegetable cultivation. Of these, sugarcane provided the primary income for the inhabitants. Although there were only a few local peasants at the beginning of the period, about 15,000 people worked in the sugar fields.

Due to its position on the eastern seaboard of the Caribbean-Central America, the region experienced one of the lowest rates of internal migration between North and South America, making it one of the leading locations in Latin America. The Indians of the Sierra Madre lived in the present-day area since their ancestors were from these hills, since the time of the Incas. Originally, Spanish conquistadors came to this area from the north coast in 1529 to 1530. In 1540, the Spanish colonized the area. The Spanish, who were very harsh and harsh people in a land where no such thing as democracy existed, sent numerous missionaries, who tended to be religious leaders of the area. One of the places that came under Spanish control after being granted rights from the king of Spain was the area of the current Sierra Madre. From that time, the area of colonial Spanish control increased. About 180,000 people lived in its boundaries. The Spanish intended to set up a military base on the north side of the Sierra Madre, called Point d’Itin, on the south entrance of the current entrance to the city of Medellin, which serves as one of the best tourist attractions in Medellin, Colombia. They also created land there to make it independent from the government of Spain, and provided many slaves for the construction of its military base.

From 1580 to 1620, it saw the presence of Spain in the area, which had established the English government in the area. The Indians of the Sierra Madre worked in the Spanish sugar fields and as mechanics in the surrounding towns. They were given protection by the Catholic Church due to their many brothers and sisters living in the area.