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Cacique

A cacique, sometime spelled as cazique ( Spanish: [kaˈsike]; Portuguese: [kɐˈsikɨ, kaˈsiki]; feminine form: cacica) was a tribal chieftain of the Taíno people, who were the indigenous inhabitants of the Bahamas, the Greater Antilles, and the northern Lesser Antilles at the time of European contact with those places. The term is a Spanish transliteration of the Taíno word kasike.

Túpac Amaru II, an Andean cacique who led a 1781 rebellion against Spanish rule in Peru
Cangapol, chief of the Tehuelches, 18th century.

Cacique was initially translated as "king"[1] or "prince"[2][3] for the Spanish. In the colonial era the conquistadors and the administrators who followed them used the word generically to refer to any leader of practically any indigenous group they encountered in the Western Hemisphere. In Hispanic and Lusophone countries, the term has also come to mean a political boss, similar to a caudillo, exercising power in a system of caciquismo.[4]

Spanish colonial-era caciques edit

The Taíno word kasike descends from the Taíno word kassiquan, which means "to keep house".[5] In 1555 the word first entered the English language, defined as "prince".[6] In Taíno culture, the kasike rank was hereditary[7] and sometimes established through democratic means. As the Taínos were mostly a peaceable culture the kasike's importance in the tribe was determined by the size of his clan rather than his skills in warfare. The Taíno kasikes also enjoyed several privileges that marked them as the elite class of Taíno society: they lived in a larger rectangular hut in the center of the village, rather than the peripheral circular huts of other villagers, and they had reserved places from which to view the areytos (ceremonial dances) and ceremonial ball game.[8] Most importantly, the kasike's word was law and they exercised this power to oversee a sophisticated government, finely involved with all aspects of social existence.[9]

 
Hatuey monument plaque

The Spanish transliterated kasike and used the term (cacique) to refer to the local leader of essentially any indigenous group in Spanish America.[10] Caribbean caciques who did not initially oppose the Spanish became middlemen, serving as the interface between their communities and the Spanish. Their cooperation was frequently provisional. Most of the early caciques eventually revolted, resulting in their deaths in battle or by execution.[11] Two of the most famous of these early colonial-era caciques are Hatuey from what is now Cuba and Enriquillo on the island of Hispaniola.[12] Both are now respective national heroes in Cuba and the Dominican Republic.

The Spanish had more success when they drafted the leaders of the far more hierarchically organized indigenous civilizations of Central Mexico. These Central Mexican caciques served as more effective, and loyal, intermediaries in the new system of colonial rule. The hierarchy and nomenclature of indigenous leadership usually survived within a given community and the Spaniards' designation of caciques did not usually correspond to the hereditary or likely candidate from a given system of indigenous leadership.

As a consequence, elite indigenous men willing to cooperate with the colonial rulers replaced their rivals who had better hereditary or traditional claims on leadership.[13] The Spanish recognized indigenous nobles as a European-style nobility, within the newly established colonial system and a cacique's status among the colonizers (along with that of his family) was buttressed by their being permitted the Spanish noble honorifics don and doña.

As colonial middlemen, caciques were often the first to introduce European material culture to their communities. This is seen in the Spanish-style houses they built, the Spanish furnishings that filled them and the European fashions they wore everywhere. They engaged in Spanish commercial enterprises as sheep and cattle ranchers and sericulture. Many even owned enslaved Africans to operate these concerns. The caciques also acquired new privileges, unknown before contact. These included the right to carry swords or firearms and to ride horses or mules.[14] Some caciques had entailed estates called cacicazgos. The records of many of these Mexican estates are held in the Mexican national archives in a section Vínculos ("entails").[15][16][17] The establishment of Spanish-style town government (cabildos) served as a mechanism to supplant traditional rule. Spanish manipulation of cabildo elections[18] placed compliant members of the traditional, hereditary lineages on such cabildos town councils.[19]

By the late colonial era in central Mexico, the term cacique had lost any dynastic meaning, with one scholar noting that "cacique status could in some degree buttress a family's prestige, but it could no longer in itself be regarded as a rank of major authority."[20] In a 1769 petition by a cacique family to the Viceroy of New Spain, appealing for the restoration of its privileges, the following expectations were listed: "that, the cacique should be seated separately from commoners at public functions; he was excused from serving in town government; he was exempted from tribute and other exactions; he was excused from Sunday worship and payments of the half real; his servants were not liable for community labor; he was exempt from incarceration for debt and his property from sequestration; he could be imprisoned for serious crime but not in the public jail; the caciques' names were to be listed among the nobles in official registers; and "all these privileges are to apply equally to the caciques' wives and widows." With Mexican independence in 1821, the last of the special privileges of colonial-era caciques were finally abolished.[21]

In contrast to the rest of the Spanish Colonial Americas, in the Andean region the local term kuraka was preferred to cacique. After conquering the Inca Empire the Spaniards administering the new Peruvian viceroyalty had allowed the kurakas or caciques to maintain their titles of nobility and perquisites of local rule so long as they swore fealty to the Spanish monarch.[22]

In 1781, the Tīpac Amaru rebellion was led by a kuraka who claimed to be a descendant of the Inca royal line, that of the final Inca, Túpac Amaru. At independence in 1825, Simón Bolívar abolished noble titles, but the power and prestige of the kurakas was already in decline following the Great Rebellion.[23] Kuraka rebellions had been waged since the beginning of the Spanish colonial rule, and decades after Túpac Amaru II's 1781 uprising other insurrections such as the Túpac Katari or the Mateo Pumakawa uprisings were often the first major engagements of the South American Wars of Independence.

 
Mapuche cacique (lonko) Lloncon, southern Chile, around 1890

Caciquismo and caudillismo edit

An extension of the term cacique, caciquismo ("boss rule") can refer to a political system dominated by the power of local political bosses, the caciques. In the post-independence period in Mexico, the term retained its meaning of "indigenous" leaders, but also took on a more general usage of a "local" or "regional" leader as well.[24][25] Some scholars make a distinction between caudillos (political strongmen) and their rule, caudillismo, and caciques and caciquismo.[26] One Argentine intellectual, Carlos Octavio Bunge viewed caciquismo as emerging from anarchy and political disruption and then evolving into a "pacific" form of "civilized caciquismo", such as Mexico's Porfirio Díaz (r. 1876–1911).[27] Argentine writer Fernando N.A. Cuevillas views caciquismo as being "nothing more than a special brand of tyrant".[28]

In Spain, caciquismo appeared in the late 19th-century and early 20th-century Spain.[29] Writer Ramón Akal González views Galicia in northwest of Spain, as having remained in a continual state of strangulated growth over centuries as a result of caciquismo and nepotism. "Galicia still suffers from this anachronistic caste of caciques."[30] Spanish strongman El Caudillo Francisco Franco (1892-1975) was born in Ferrol in Galicia.

In the Philippines, the term cacique democracy was coined by Benedict Anderson.[31] It has been used to describe the political system where in many parts of the country local leaders remain very strong, with almost warlord-type powers.[32] The Philippines was a colony of Spain from the late sixteenth century until the Spanish–American War of 1898, when the United States assumed control. The U.S. administration subsequently introduced many commercial, political and administrative reforms. They were sometimes quite progressive and directed towards the modernization of government and commerce in the Philippines. However, the local traditional Filipino elites, being better educated and better connected than much of the local population, were often able to take advantage of the changes to bolster their positions.

There is no consensus in the scholarly literature about the origins of caciquismo. Murdo J. MacLeod suggests that the terms cacique and caudillo "either require further scrutiny or, perhaps, they have become so stretched by the diversity of explanations and processes packed into them that they have become somewhat empty generalizations".[33]

Taínos edit

 
Map by Smithsonian Magazine of territories governed by different caciques in Puerto Rico

Notable native caciques of the Americas edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Loven, Sven (2010-06-27). Origins of the Tainan Culture, West Indies. University of Alabama Press. p. 503. ISBN 978-0-8173-5637-8.
  2. ^ Bailey, Richard W. (2012-01-04). Speaking American: A History of English in the United States. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-991340-4.
  3. ^ Boissière, Prudence (1862). Dictionnaire analogique de la langue française: répertoire complet des mots par les idées et des idées par les mots (in French). Larousse.
  4. ^ Robert Kern, The caciques: oligarchical politics and the system of caciquismo in the Luso-Hispanic world. Albuquerque, University of New Mexico Press [1973]
  5. ^ The Catastrophe of Modernity: Tragedy and the Nation in Latin American Literature. Bucknell University Press. 2004. pp. 136–. ISBN 978-0-8387-5561-7. Retrieved 25 June 2013.
  6. ^ Bailey, Richard W. (2012-01-04). Speaking American: A History of English in the United States. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-991340-4.
  7. ^ Loven, Sven (2010-06-27). Origins of the Tainan Culture, West Indies. University of Alabama Press. p. 503. ISBN 978-0-8173-5637-8.
  8. ^ "Taíno Indians Culture". Topuertorico.org. Retrieved 2012-06-19.
  9. ^ Loven, Sven (2010-06-27). Origins of the Tainan Culture, West Indies. University of Alabama Press. p. 503. ISBN 978-0-8173-5637-8.
  10. ^ Murdo J. MacLeod, "Cacique, Caciquismo" in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture. Vol. 1, p. 505. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1996.
  11. ^ MacLeod, "Caciques, Caciquismo", p. 505.
  12. ^ Ida Altman, "The Revolt of Enriquillo and the Historiography of Early Spanish America," The Americas vol. 63(4)2007, 587-614.
  13. ^ Charles Gibson, The Aztecs Under Spanish Rule: A History of the Indians of the Valley of Mexico, 1519-1810, Stanford: Stanford University Press 1964, p. 36.
  14. ^ Horn, Rebecca. "Caciques." In Davíd Carrasco (ed). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures. Vol 1. New York : Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 9780195108156, 9780195188431
  15. ^ Guillermo S. Fernández de Recas, Cacicazgos y Nobiliario Indígena de la Nueva España, Mexico: Biblioteca Nacional de México, 1961.
  16. ^ S.L. Cline, "A Cacicazgo in the seventeenth century: The case of Xochimilco" in Land and Politics in the Valley of Mexico: A two-thousand-year perspective. Ed. H.R. Harvey. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 1991.
  17. ^ Guido Münch, El cacicazgo de San Juan Teotihuacan durante la colonia, 1521-1821. Mexico City: SEP, Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, Centro de Investigaciones Superiores 1976.
  18. ^ Robert Haskett, Indigenous Rulers: An Ethnohistory of Town Government in Colonial Cuernavaca. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 1991.
  19. ^ MacLeod, "Cacique, Caciquismo", p. 505.
  20. ^ Gibson, The Aztecs Under Spanish Rule, p. 163.
  21. ^ Gibson, "The Aztecs Under Spanish Rule," pp. 164-65.
  22. ^ Andagoya, Pascual de. "Narrative of Pascual de Andagoya". Narrative of the Proceedings of Pedrarias Davila. The Hakluyt Society. Retrieved 21 June 2019 – via Wikisource.
  23. ^ Cecilia Méndez, The Plebeian Republic: The Huanta Rebellion and the Making of the Peruvian State. Durham: Duke University Press 2005, pp. 102-05.
  24. ^ John Lynch, Caudillos in Spanish America: 1800-1850. Oxford: Clarendon Press 1992, p.6.
  25. ^ Mark Wasserman, Capitalists, caciques, and revolution: the native elite and foreign enterprise in Chihuahua, Mexico, 1854-1911. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1984.
  26. ^ Fernando Díaz Díaz, Caudillos y caciques: Antonio López de Santa Anna y Juan Álvarez. Mexico, 1972, 3-5.
  27. ^ Carlos Octavio Bunge, "Caciquismo in Our America" (1918), in Hugh M. Hamill, ed. Caudillos: Dictators in Spanish America. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press 1992, p. 172.
  28. ^ Fernando N.A. Cuevillas, "A Case for Caudillaje and Juan Perón" in Hugh M. Hamill, ed. Caudillos, p. 287.
  29. ^ Varela Ortega, José (2001). El poder de la influencia: Geografía del caciquismo en España: (1875–1923). Centro de Estudios Políticos y Constitucionales. ISBN 978-84-259-1152-1.
  30. ^ Ramón Akal González, Obra Completa II, 1977, p. 111.
  31. ^ Benedict Anderson, 'Cacique Democracy in the Philippines: Origins and Dreams', New Left Review, I (169), May–June 1988
  32. ^ Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson, Cacique Democracy'
  33. ^ MacLeod, "Cacique, Caciquismo", p. 506

Further reading edit

  • Abercrombie, Thomas A. "Tributes to Bad Conscience: Charity, Restitution, and Inheritance in Cacique and Encomendero Testaments of Sixteenth-Century Charcas" in Dead Giveaways: Indigenous Testaments of Colonial Mesoamerica and the Andes, Susan Kellogg and Matthew Restall, eds. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press 1998, pp. 249–289.
  • Anderson, Benedict. "Cacique Democracy in the Philippines: Origins and Dreams", New Left Review, I (169), May–June 1988
  • Bartra, Roger et al.,Caciquismo y poder político en el México rural. 8th ed. Mexico: Siglo Veintiuno Editores, 1986.
  • Caciquismo in twen[t]ieth-century Mexico. London: Institute for the Study of the Americas, 2005.
  • Chance, John K. (1996) "The Caciques of Tecali: Class and Ethnic Identity in Late Colonial Mexico." Hispanic American Historical Review 76(3):475-502.
  • Chance, John K.(1998) "La hacienda de los Santiago en Tecali, Puebla: Un cacicazgo naua colonial, 1520-1750." Historia Mexicana 47(4):689-734.
  • Cline, S.L. “A Cacicazgo in the Seventeenth Century: The Case of Xochimilco” In Land and Politics in Mexico, H.R. Harvey, University of New Mexico Press 1991, pp. 265–274
  • Costa y Martínez, Joaquín, Oligarquía y caciquismo: como la forma actual de gobierno en España, urgencia y modo de cambiarla. Zaragoza: Guara Editorial, 1982.
  • Costa y Martínez, Joaquín, Oligarquía y caciquismo: colectivismo agrario y otros escritos (antología). Madrid : Alianza Editorial, c1967.
  • de la Peña, Guillermo. "Poder local, poder regional: perspectivas socio-antropológica." In Poder local: poder region, Eds. Jorge Padua and Alain Vanneph. Mexico City: Colegio de México-CEMCA 1986..
  • Díaz Rementería, Carlos J. El cacique en el virreinato del Perú: estudio histórico-jurídico. Sevilla: Universidad de Sevilla, 1977.
  • Dutt, Rajehwari. Maya Caciques in Early National Yucatán. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press 2017.
  • Falcón, Romana. Revolución y caciquismo: San Luis Potosí, 1910-1938. México, D.F.: Centro de Estudios Históricos, Colegio de México, 1984.
  • Fernández de Recas, Guillermo S., Cacicazgos y nobiliario indígena de la Nueva España. México : 351 pp. Serie: Instituto Bibliográfico Mexicano. Publicación 1961.
  • Forced marches soldiers and military caciques in modern Mexico. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2012
  • Friedrich, Paul. "The Legitimacy of a Cacique". In Local-Level Politics: Social and Cultural Perspectives, ed. by Marc J. Swartz. Chicago: Aldine 1968.
  • Gibson, Charles. "The Aztec aristocracy in colonial Mexico." Comparative Studies in Society and History 2, no. 2 (1960): 169–196.
  • Girón, Nicole. Heraclio Bernal, bandolero, cacique o precursor de la Revolución?. México : Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, SEP, Departamento de Investigaciones Históricas, 1976.
  • Heine, Jorge. The last cacique: leadership and politics in a Puerto Rican city. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1993.
  • Hoekstra, Rik. 2010. "A Colonial Cacicazgo: The Mendozas of Seventeenth-Century Tepexi de la Seda." European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies 89:87-106.
  • Joseph, Gilbert M. "Caciquismo and the Revolution: Carrillo Puerto in Yucatán" in Caudillo and Peasant in the Mexican Revolution, 1980
  • Kern, Robert, The caciques: oligarchical politics and the system of caciquismo in the Luso-Hispanic world. Albuquerque, University of New Mexico Press [1973]
  • MacLeod, Murdo J., "Cacique, Caciquismo" in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, vol. 1, pp. 505–06. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1996.
  • Martínez Assad, Carlos, ed. Estadistas, caciques, y caudillos. Mexico City: UNAM-IIS 1998.
  • Menengus Borneman, Margarita and Rodolfo Aguierre Salvador eds. El Cacicazgo en Nueva España. Mexico: UNAM - Plaza y Valdés 2005.
  • Ouweneel, Arij. 1995. "From Tlahtocayotl to Governadoryotl: A Critical Examination of Indigenous Rule in 18th-century Central Mexico." American Ethnologist 22(4):756-85.
  • Ramírez, Susan, "The 'Dueños de Indios': Thoughts on the Consequences of the Shifting Bases of Power of the 'Curaca de los Viejos' Under the Spanish in Sixteenth-Century Peru," Hispanic American Historical Review 67, no. 4 (1987):575-610.
  • Roniger, Luis, "Caciquismo and Coronelismo: Contextual Dimensions of Patron Brokerage in Mexico and Brazil." Latin American Research Review Vol. 22, No. 2 (1987), pp. 71-99
  • Saignes, Thierry. Caciques, tribute, and migration in the southern Andes: Indian society and the seventeenth-century colonial order. Trans. Paul Garner. London: University of London 1985.
  • Salmerón Castro, Fernando. "Caciquismo" in Encyclopedia of Mexico, vol. 1, pp. 177-179. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997.
  • Spores, Ronald. "Mixteca cacicas: Status, wealth, and the political accommodations of the native elite women in early colonial Oaxaca" in Indian Women of Early Mexico, ed. Susan Schroeder et al. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press 1997.
  • Tusell, Javier, Oligarquía y caciquismo en Andalucía (1890-1923). Barcelona : Editorial Planeta, 1976.
  • Villella, Peter B. "“Pure and Noble Indians, Untainted by Inferior Idolatrous Races”: Native Elites and the Discourse of Blood Purity in Late Colonial Mexico." Hispanic American Historical Review 91, no. 4 (2011): 633-663.
  • Wasserman, Mark, Capitalists, caciques, and revolution: the native elite and foreign enterprise in Chihuahua, Mexico, 1854-1911. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1984.
  • Wilson, Samuel M. Hispaniola: Caribbean Chiefdoms in the Age of Columbus. 1990.
  • Wood, Stephanie. "Testaments and Títulos: Conflict and Coincidence of Cacique and Community Interests in Central Mexico" in Dead Giveaways: Indigenous Testaments of Colonial Mesoamerica and the Andes, Susan Kellogg and Matthew Restall, eds. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press 1998, pp. 85–111.
  • Zeitlin, Judith Francis, and Lillian Thomas. "Spanish justice and the Indian cacique: disjunctive political systems in sixteenth-century Tehuantepec." Ethnohistory (1992): 285–315.

cacique, other, uses, disambiguation, also, sachem, weroance, cacique, sometime, spelled, cazique, spanish, kaˈsike, portuguese, kɐˈsikɨ, kaˈsiki, feminine, form, cacica, tribal, chieftain, taíno, people, were, indigenous, inhabitants, bahamas, greater, antill. For other uses see Cacique disambiguation See also Sachem and Weroance A cacique sometime spelled as cazique Spanish kaˈsike Portuguese kɐˈsikɨ kaˈsiki feminine form cacica was a tribal chieftain of the Taino people who were the indigenous inhabitants of the Bahamas the Greater Antilles and the northern Lesser Antilles at the time of European contact with those places The term is a Spanish transliteration of the Taino word kasike Tupac Amaru II an Andean cacique who led a 1781 rebellion against Spanish rule in PeruCangapol chief of the Tehuelches 18th century Cacique was initially translated as king 1 or prince 2 3 for the Spanish In the colonial era the conquistadors and the administrators who followed them used the word generically to refer to any leader of practically any indigenous group they encountered in the Western Hemisphere In Hispanic and Lusophone countries the term has also come to mean a political boss similar to a caudillo exercising power in a system of caciquismo 4 Contents 1 Spanish colonial era caciques 2 Caciquismo and caudillismo 3 Tainos 4 Notable native caciques of the Americas 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingSpanish colonial era caciques editThe Taino word kasike descends from the Taino word kassiquan which means to keep house 5 In 1555 the word first entered the English language defined as prince 6 In Taino culture the kasike rank was hereditary 7 and sometimes established through democratic means As the Tainos were mostly a peaceable culture the kasike s importance in the tribe was determined by the size of his clan rather than his skills in warfare The Taino kasikes also enjoyed several privileges that marked them as the elite class of Taino society they lived in a larger rectangular hut in the center of the village rather than the peripheral circular huts of other villagers and they had reserved places from which to view the areytos ceremonial dances and ceremonial ball game 8 Most importantly the kasike s word was law and they exercised this power to oversee a sophisticated government finely involved with all aspects of social existence 9 nbsp Hatuey monument plaqueThe Spanish transliterated kasike and used the term cacique to refer to the local leader of essentially any indigenous group in Spanish America 10 Caribbean caciques who did not initially oppose the Spanish became middlemen serving as the interface between their communities and the Spanish Their cooperation was frequently provisional Most of the early caciques eventually revolted resulting in their deaths in battle or by execution 11 Two of the most famous of these early colonial era caciques are Hatuey from what is now Cuba and Enriquillo on the island of Hispaniola 12 Both are now respective national heroes in Cuba and the Dominican Republic The Spanish had more success when they drafted the leaders of the far more hierarchically organized indigenous civilizations of Central Mexico These Central Mexican caciques served as more effective and loyal intermediaries in the new system of colonial rule The hierarchy and nomenclature of indigenous leadership usually survived within a given community and the Spaniards designation of caciques did not usually correspond to the hereditary or likely candidate from a given system of indigenous leadership As a consequence elite indigenous men willing to cooperate with the colonial rulers replaced their rivals who had better hereditary or traditional claims on leadership 13 The Spanish recognized indigenous nobles as a European style nobility within the newly established colonial system and a cacique s status among the colonizers along with that of his family was buttressed by their being permitted the Spanish noble honorifics don and dona As colonial middlemen caciques were often the first to introduce European material culture to their communities This is seen in the Spanish style houses they built the Spanish furnishings that filled them and the European fashions they wore everywhere They engaged in Spanish commercial enterprises as sheep and cattle ranchers and sericulture Many even owned enslaved Africans to operate these concerns The caciques also acquired new privileges unknown before contact These included the right to carry swords or firearms and to ride horses or mules 14 Some caciques had entailed estates called cacicazgos The records of many of these Mexican estates are held in the Mexican national archives in a section Vinculos entails 15 16 17 The establishment of Spanish style town government cabildos served as a mechanism to supplant traditional rule Spanish manipulation of cabildo elections 18 placed compliant members of the traditional hereditary lineages on such cabildos town councils 19 By the late colonial era in central Mexico the term cacique had lost any dynastic meaning with one scholar noting that cacique status could in some degree buttress a family s prestige but it could no longer in itself be regarded as a rank of major authority 20 In a 1769 petition by a cacique family to the Viceroy of New Spain appealing for the restoration of its privileges the following expectations were listed that the cacique should be seated separately from commoners at public functions he was excused from serving in town government he was exempted from tribute and other exactions he was excused from Sunday worship and payments of the half real his servants were not liable for community labor he was exempt from incarceration for debt and his property from sequestration he could be imprisoned for serious crime but not in the public jail the caciques names were to be listed among the nobles in official registers and all these privileges are to apply equally to the caciques wives and widows With Mexican independence in 1821 the last of the special privileges of colonial era caciques were finally abolished 21 In contrast to the rest of the Spanish Colonial Americas in the Andean region the local term kuraka was preferred to cacique After conquering the Inca Empire the Spaniards administering the new Peruvian viceroyalty had allowed the kurakas or caciques to maintain their titles of nobility and perquisites of local rule so long as they swore fealty to the Spanish monarch 22 In 1781 the Tipac Amaru rebellion was led by a kuraka who claimed to be a descendant of the Inca royal line that of the final Inca Tupac Amaru At independence in 1825 Simon Bolivar abolished noble titles but the power and prestige of the kurakas was already in decline following the Great Rebellion 23 Kuraka rebellions had been waged since the beginning of the Spanish colonial rule and decades after Tupac Amaru II s 1781 uprising other insurrections such as the Tupac Katari or the Mateo Pumakawa uprisings were often the first major engagements of the South American Wars of Independence nbsp Mapuche cacique lonko Lloncon southern Chile around 1890Caciquismo and caudillismo editAn extension of the term cacique caciquismo boss rule can refer to a political system dominated by the power of local political bosses the caciques In the post independence period in Mexico the term retained its meaning of indigenous leaders but also took on a more general usage of a local or regional leader as well 24 25 Some scholars make a distinction between caudillos political strongmen and their rule caudillismo and caciques and caciquismo 26 One Argentine intellectual Carlos Octavio Bunge viewed caciquismo as emerging from anarchy and political disruption and then evolving into a pacific form of civilized caciquismo such as Mexico s Porfirio Diaz r 1876 1911 27 Argentine writer Fernando N A Cuevillas views caciquismo as being nothing more than a special brand of tyrant 28 In Spain caciquismo appeared in the late 19th century and early 20th century Spain 29 Writer Ramon Akal Gonzalez views Galicia in northwest of Spain as having remained in a continual state of strangulated growth over centuries as a result of caciquismo and nepotism Galicia still suffers from this anachronistic caste of caciques 30 Spanish strongman El Caudillo Francisco Franco 1892 1975 was born in Ferrol in Galicia In the Philippines the term cacique democracy was coined by Benedict Anderson 31 It has been used to describe the political system where in many parts of the country local leaders remain very strong with almost warlord type powers 32 The Philippines was a colony of Spain from the late sixteenth century until the Spanish American War of 1898 when the United States assumed control The U S administration subsequently introduced many commercial political and administrative reforms They were sometimes quite progressive and directed towards the modernization of government and commerce in the Philippines However the local traditional Filipino elites being better educated and better connected than much of the local population were often able to take advantage of the changes to bolster their positions There is no consensus in the scholarly literature about the origins of caciquismo Murdo J MacLeod suggests that the terms cacique and caudillo either require further scrutiny or perhaps they have become so stretched by the diversity of explanations and processes packed into them that they have become somewhat empty generalizations 33 Tainos editMain article List of Tainos nbsp Map by Smithsonian Magazine of territories governed by different caciques in Puerto RicoAgueybana The Great Sun Agueybana II The Brave Anacaona Arasibo Brizuela Caguax Comerio Enriquillo Guacanagarix Guama Guarionex Habaguanex Hatuey Hayuya Huarea Jumacao Loquillo Orocobix UrayoanNotable native caciques of the Americas editAgueybana I of the Taino of Puerto Rico Agueybana II of the Taino of Puerto Rico Aquiminzaque of the Muisca of Chunsa Arariboia of the Temininos of Espirito Santo Arasibo of the Taino of Puerto Rico Atlacatl of the Pipil of El Salvador Carlos of the Calusa Catacora of Acora and Puno Caguax of the Taino of Puerto Rico Chacao of Venezuela Correque of the Huetar of Costa Rica Cunhambebe of the Tupinambas of Sao Paulo Diriangen of the Chorotega of Nicaragua El Guarco of the Huetar of Costa Rica El Quibian of the Ngabe of Panama Felipe Camarao of the Potiguara Garabito of the Huetar of Costa Rica Gonzalo Mazatzin Moctezuma of Mexico Guaicaipuro of the Teques and Caracas Guama of the Taino of Cuba Guaicaipuro of Venezuela Guarionex of the Taino of Hispaniola Hatuey of the Taino of Hispaniola Idacansas of the Muisca of Colombia Inacayal of the Tehuelche Jumacao of the Taino of Puerto Rico Juan de Lebu of the Moluche of Chile Lempira of the Lenca of Honduras Macuilmiquiztli of the Nicarao of Nicaragua Maria of the Tehuelche of Patagonia Orocobix of the Taino of Puerto Rico Saguamanchica of the Muisca of Muyquyta Saturiwa of the Timucua Sepe Tiaraju of the Guarani Missions Tamanaco of the Mariches and Quiriquires Tibirica of the Tupiniquims of Sao Paulo Urraca of the Ngabe of Panama Urriparacoxi of central FloridaSee also editCaciques in Puerto Rico Caudillo Gregorio de San Juan Kalku Lonko Machi Gregor MacGregor he claimed to be cacique of Poyais a fictional Central American country European colonization of the Americas GuaicaipuroReferences edit Loven Sven 2010 06 27 Origins of the Tainan Culture West Indies University of Alabama Press p 503 ISBN 978 0 8173 5637 8 Bailey Richard W 2012 01 04 Speaking American A History of English in the United States Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 991340 4 Boissiere Prudence 1862 Dictionnaire analogique de la langue francaise repertoire complet des mots par les idees et des idees par les mots in French Larousse Robert Kern The caciques oligarchical politics and the system of caciquismo in the Luso Hispanic world Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1973 The Catastrophe of Modernity Tragedy and the Nation in Latin American Literature Bucknell University Press 2004 pp 136 ISBN 978 0 8387 5561 7 Retrieved 25 June 2013 Bailey Richard W 2012 01 04 Speaking American A History of English in the United States Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 991340 4 Loven Sven 2010 06 27 Origins of the Tainan Culture West Indies University of Alabama Press p 503 ISBN 978 0 8173 5637 8 Taino Indians Culture Topuertorico org Retrieved 2012 06 19 Loven Sven 2010 06 27 Origins of the Tainan Culture West Indies University of Alabama Press p 503 ISBN 978 0 8173 5637 8 Murdo J MacLeod Cacique Caciquismo in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture Vol 1 p 505 New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1996 MacLeod Caciques Caciquismo p 505 Ida Altman The Revolt of Enriquillo and the Historiography of Early Spanish America The Americas vol 63 4 2007 587 614 Charles Gibson The Aztecs Under Spanish Rule A History of the Indians of the Valley of Mexico 1519 1810 Stanford Stanford University Press 1964 p 36 Horn Rebecca Caciques In David Carrasco ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures Vol 1 New York Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 9780195108156 9780195188431 Guillermo S Fernandez de Recas Cacicazgos y Nobiliario Indigena de la Nueva Espana Mexico Biblioteca Nacional de Mexico 1961 S L Cline A Cacicazgo in the seventeenth century The case of Xochimilco in Land and Politics in the Valley of Mexico A two thousand year perspective Ed H R Harvey Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1991 Guido Munch El cacicazgo de San Juan Teotihuacan durante la colonia 1521 1821 Mexico City SEP Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e Historia Centro de Investigaciones Superiores 1976 Robert Haskett Indigenous Rulers An Ethnohistory of Town Government in Colonial Cuernavaca Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1991 MacLeod Cacique Caciquismo p 505 Gibson The Aztecs Under Spanish Rule p 163 Gibson The Aztecs Under Spanish Rule pp 164 65 Andagoya Pascual de Narrative of Pascual de Andagoya Narrative of the Proceedings of Pedrarias Davila The Hakluyt Society Retrieved 21 June 2019 via Wikisource Cecilia Mendez The Plebeian Republic The Huanta Rebellion and the Making of the Peruvian State Durham Duke University Press 2005 pp 102 05 John Lynch Caudillos in Spanish America 1800 1850 Oxford Clarendon Press 1992 p 6 Mark Wasserman Capitalists caciques and revolution the native elite and foreign enterprise in Chihuahua Mexico 1854 1911 Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 1984 Fernando Diaz Diaz Caudillos y caciques Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna y Juan Alvarez Mexico 1972 3 5 Carlos Octavio Bunge Caciquismo in Our America 1918 in Hugh M Hamill ed Caudillos Dictators in Spanish America Norman University of Oklahoma Press 1992 p 172 Fernando N A Cuevillas A Case for Caudillaje and Juan Peron in Hugh M Hamill ed Caudillos p 287 Varela Ortega Jose 2001 El poder de la influencia Geografia del caciquismo en Espana 1875 1923 Centro de Estudios Politicos y Constitucionales ISBN 978 84 259 1152 1 Ramon Akal Gonzalez Obra Completa II 1977 p 111 Benedict Anderson Cacique Democracy in the Philippines Origins and Dreams New Left Review I 169 May June 1988 Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson Cacique Democracy MacLeod Cacique Caciquismo p 506Further reading editAbercrombie Thomas A Tributes to Bad Conscience Charity Restitution and Inheritance in Cacique and Encomendero Testaments of Sixteenth Century Charcas in Dead Giveaways Indigenous Testaments of Colonial Mesoamerica and the Andes Susan Kellogg and Matthew Restall eds Salt Lake City University of Utah Press 1998 pp 249 289 Anderson Benedict Cacique Democracy in the Philippines Origins and Dreams New Left Review I 169 May June 1988 Bartra Roger et al Caciquismo y poder politico en el Mexico rural 8th ed Mexico Siglo Veintiuno Editores 1986 Caciquismo in twen t ieth century Mexico London Institute for the Study of the Americas 2005 Chance John K 1996 The Caciques of Tecali Class and Ethnic Identity in Late Colonial Mexico Hispanic American Historical Review 76 3 475 502 Chance John K 1998 La hacienda de los Santiago en Tecali Puebla Un cacicazgo naua colonial 1520 1750 Historia Mexicana 47 4 689 734 Cline S L A Cacicazgo in the Seventeenth Century The Case of Xochimilco In Land and Politics in Mexico H R Harvey University of New Mexico Press 1991 pp 265 274 Costa y Martinez Joaquin Oligarquia y caciquismo como la forma actual de gobierno en Espana urgencia y modo de cambiarla Zaragoza Guara Editorial 1982 Costa y Martinez Joaquin Oligarquia y caciquismo colectivismo agrario y otros escritos antologia Madrid Alianza Editorial c1967 de la Pena Guillermo Poder local poder regional perspectivas socio antropologica In Poder local poder region Eds Jorge Padua and Alain Vanneph Mexico City Colegio de Mexico CEMCA 1986 Diaz Rementeria Carlos J El cacique en el virreinato del Peru estudio historico juridico Sevilla Universidad de Sevilla 1977 Dutt Rajehwari Maya Caciques in Early National Yucatan Norman University of Oklahoma Press 2017 Falcon Romana Revolucion y caciquismo San Luis Potosi 1910 1938 Mexico D F Centro de Estudios Historicos Colegio de Mexico 1984 Fernandez de Recas Guillermo S Cacicazgos y nobiliario indigena de la Nueva Espana Mexico 351 pp Serie Instituto Bibliografico Mexicano Publicacion 1961 Forced marches soldiers and military caciques in modern Mexico Tucson University of Arizona Press 2012 Friedrich Paul The Legitimacy of a Cacique In Local Level Politics Social and Cultural Perspectives ed by Marc J Swartz Chicago Aldine 1968 Gibson Charles The Aztec aristocracy in colonial Mexico Comparative Studies in Society and History 2 no 2 1960 169 196 Giron Nicole Heraclio Bernal bandolero cacique o precursor de la Revolucion Mexico Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e Historia SEP Departamento de Investigaciones Historicas 1976 Heine Jorge The last cacique leadership and politics in a Puerto Rican city Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press 1993 Hoekstra Rik 2010 A Colonial Cacicazgo The Mendozas of Seventeenth Century Tepexi de la Seda European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies 89 87 106 Joseph Gilbert M Caciquismo and the Revolution Carrillo Puerto in Yucatan in Caudillo and Peasant in the Mexican Revolution 1980 Kern Robert The caciques oligarchical politics and the system of caciquismo in the Luso Hispanic world Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1973 MacLeod Murdo J Cacique Caciquismo in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture vol 1 pp 505 06 New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1996 Martinez Assad Carlos ed Estadistas caciques y caudillos Mexico City UNAM IIS 1998 Menengus Borneman Margarita and Rodolfo Aguierre Salvador eds El Cacicazgo en Nueva Espana Mexico UNAM Plaza y Valdes 2005 Ouweneel Arij 1995 From Tlahtocayotl to Governadoryotl A Critical Examination of Indigenous Rule in 18th century Central Mexico American Ethnologist 22 4 756 85 Ramirez Susan The Duenos de Indios Thoughts on the Consequences of the Shifting Bases of Power of the Curaca de los Viejos Under the Spanish in Sixteenth Century Peru Hispanic American Historical Review 67 no 4 1987 575 610 Roniger Luis Caciquismo and Coronelismo Contextual Dimensions of Patron Brokerage in Mexico and Brazil Latin American Research Review Vol 22 No 2 1987 pp 71 99 Saignes Thierry Caciques tribute and migration in the southern Andes Indian society and the seventeenth century colonial order Trans Paul Garner London University of London 1985 Salmeron Castro Fernando Caciquismo in Encyclopedia of Mexico vol 1 pp 177 179 Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 Spores Ronald Mixteca cacicas Status wealth and the political accommodations of the native elite women in early colonial Oaxaca in Indian Women of Early Mexico ed Susan Schroeder et al Norman University of Oklahoma Press 1997 Tusell Javier Oligarquia y caciquismo en Andalucia 1890 1923 Barcelona Editorial Planeta 1976 Villella Peter B Pure and Noble Indians Untainted by Inferior Idolatrous Races Native Elites and the Discourse of Blood Purity in Late Colonial Mexico Hispanic American Historical Review 91 no 4 2011 633 663 Wasserman Mark Capitalists caciques and revolution the native elite and foreign enterprise in Chihuahua Mexico 1854 1911 Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 1984 Wilson Samuel M Hispaniola Caribbean Chiefdoms in the Age of Columbus 1990 Wood Stephanie Testaments and Titulos Conflict and Coincidence of Cacique and Community Interests in Central Mexico in Dead Giveaways Indigenous Testaments of Colonial Mesoamerica and the Andes Susan Kellogg and Matthew Restall eds Salt Lake City University of Utah Press 1998 pp 85 111 Zeitlin Judith Francis and Lillian Thomas Spanish justice and the Indian cacique disjunctive political systems in sixteenth century Tehuantepec Ethnohistory 1992 285 315 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cacique amp oldid 1204065458, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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