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Captaincy General of Cuba

The Captaincy General of Cuba (Spanish: Capitanía General de Cuba) was an administrative district of the Spanish Empire created in 1607 as part of Habsburg Spain's attempt to better defend and administer its Caribbean possessions. The reform also established captaincies general in Puerto Rico, Guatemala and Yucatán.

Captaincy General of Cuba
Capitanía General de Cuba
1492–1898
Anthem: National anthem of Spain
Viceroyalty of New Spain in 1794, with the Captaincy General of Cuba shown in purple
StatusCaptaincy General
CapitalHavana
Common languagesSpanish
Religion
Roman Catholicism
GovernmentMonarchy
King 
• 1759–1788
Charles III
• 1886–1898
Alfonso XIII
Maria Christina of Austria (Regent)
Captain General 
• 1764–1779
Count of Ricla
• 1887–1898
Ramón Blanco y Erenas
Historical eraEarly modern Europe
• Administrative reorganisation
1492
December 10 1898
CurrencySpanish dollar, Spanish peseta
ISO 3166 codeCU
Today part ofCuba

The restructuring of the Captaincy General in 1764 was the first example of the Bourbon Reforms in America. The changes included adding the provinces of Florida and Louisiana and granting more autonomy to these provinces. This later change was carried out by the Count of Floridablanca under Charles III to strengthen the Spanish position vis-a-vis the British in the Caribbean. A new governor-captain general based in Havana oversaw the administration of the new district. The local governors of the larger Captaincy General had previously been overseen in political and military matters by the president of the Audiencia of Santo Domingo. This audiencia retained oversight of judicial affairs until the establishment of new audiencias in Puerto Príncipe (1800) and Havana (1838).

In 1825, as a result of the loss of the mainland possessions, the Spanish government granted the governors-captain generals of Cuba extraordinary powers in matters of administration, justice and the treasury and in the second half of the 19th century gave them the title of Governor General.

History

Antecedents

Since the 16th century the island of Cuba had been under the control of the governor-captain general of Santo Domingo, who was at the same time, president of the audiencia there. He oversaw the local governor and the Santo Domingo Audiencia heard appeals from the island.

The conquest of Cuba was organized in 1510 by the recently restored Viceroy of the Indies, Diego Colón, under the command of Diego Velázquez de Cuéllar, who became Cuba's first governor until his death in 1524. The new settlers did not wish to be under the personal authority of Colón, so Velázquez founded the city of Nuestra Señora de la Asunción de Baracoa in 1511 and convoked a general cabildo (a local government council), which was duly authorized to deal directly with Spain. This legal move removed Velázquez and the settlers from under the authority of Colón, their nominal superior. It was a precedent that would come back to haunt Velázquez during Hernán Cortés's conquest of the Aztec Empire. Other cities were later founded under Velázquez: Bayamo in 1513; Santísima Trinidad, Sancti Spíritus and San Cristóbal de La Habana in 1514; Puerto Príncipe and Santiago de Cuba in 1515. After the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire, Cuba experienced an exodus of settlers, and its population remained small for the next two centuries.

In 1565 the Adelantado Pedro Menéndez de Avilés, who was also Captain General of the Spanish treasure fleet which rendezvoused in Havana, established the first permanent Spanish settlement in Florida, San Agustín, initially bringing the province under the administrative control of Cuba, although due to distance and sea currents, Florida's government was granted the right to correspond directly with the Council of the Indies.

The Church played an important role in the Spanish settlement of the Americas. Furthermore, since governors, as representatives of the King, oversaw church administration due to the crown's right of patronage, the church and state were tightly intertwined in Spanish America. The first diocese was established in 1518 in Baracoa and was made suffragan to the Diocese of Seville. The seat of the Diocese was transferred to Santiago de Cuba in 1522. In 1520 Pope Leo X established the short-lived Diocese of Santiago de la Florida (or "Santiago de la Tierra Florida"). In 1546 the Diocese of Santo Domingo was elevated to an Archdiocese and the Diocese of Santiago de Cuba was made suffragan to it.

Establishment

In 1607 Philip III created the Captaincy General of Cuba as part of larger plans to defend the Caribbean against foreign threats. The first captain general was Pedro Valdés. Around the same time other captaincies general were established in Puerto Rico (1580) and Central America (1609). Cuba was divided into two governorships with capitals in Havana and Santiago de Cuba. The governor of Havana was Captain General of the island. In 1650 Cuba received a large influx of refugees when the English captured Jamaica and expelled the Spanish settlers in the colony.

In 1756 the construction of ships for the Spanish Navy began with the establishment of an Intendancy of the Navy in Havana, which functioned as a royal shipyard.

 

The British capture of the island in 1762 during the Seven Years' War proved to be a turning point in the history of Cuba and Spanish America in general. The British captured Havana after a three-month siege and controlled the western part of the island for a year. Britain returned Cuba in exchange for Florida in the Treaty of Paris. The events revealed not only the weaknesses of the region's defenses but also proved just how much the Cuban economy had been neglected by the Spanish. During the year they controlled Cuba, the British and their American colonies conducted an unprecedented amount of trade with the island.[1] A year earlier France had secretly ceded Louisiana to Spain in compensation for its losses as its ally during the war.

As a sign of the seriousness with which the government took the problems, the very year the Spanish retook control of Havana construction began on what would become the largest Spanish fort in the New World, San Carlos de la Cabaña on the eastern side of the entrance to harbor of Havana.

The Bourbon Reforms

Starting in 1764 the government apparatus of Cuba was completely restructured. A report on the island was created by Alejandro O'Reilly, which provided the basis for the changes. A new emphasis was placed on appointing military men to the governorship-captaincy general of Cuba, many of whom were later rewarded with the post of Viceroy of New Spain. To aid the captain general of Cuba, the governor of Santiago was made captain general of the province and given command of the military forces there. At the same time a new institution, which up until now had only been used in Spain, was introduced into Cuba: the intendancy. An intendencia de hacienda y guerra was set up in Havana to oversee government and military expenditures and to promote the local economy. The first Intendant, Miguel de Altarriba arrived on March 8, 1765. Other intendancies soon followed: Louisiana (1766), Puerto Príncipe (1786) and Santiago de Cuba (1786). In 1774 the first census of the island was carried out, revealing 171,670 inhabitants, and other measures were taken to improve the local economy.

These reforms, especially the institution of the intendancy, initiated a dramatic social and economic transformation of the island during the last half of the 18th century and early 19th. Cuba went from being a defensive post in the Caribbean sustained by a subsidy from New Spain, the situado, to becoming a self-sustaining and flourishing, sugar-, coffee- and tobacco-exporting colony, which also meant that large number of slaves were imported into Cuba. The agricultural economy was aided by the gradual opening of Cuban ports to foreign ships, especially after the loss of the mainland due to the independence wars.

Territorial gains and losses

During the American Revolutionary War Spain recaptured colonial Florida (which at that time included Gulf Coast lands extending all the way to the Mississippi River) from Great Britain, which was ratified in the 1783 Treaty of Paris. But, within about 35 years, all of this territory was incrementally obtained by the U.S.; this was due in part to boundary disputes.

The transfer of the Spanish part of Santo Domingo to France in 1795 in the Treaty of Basel, made Cuba the main Spanish possession in the Caribbean. The Audiencia of Santo Domingo was formally moved to Santa María del Puerto Príncipe (today, Camagüey) five years later, after temporarily residing in Santiago de Cuba. (It resided in Havana for a few years starting in 1808 before returning to Camagüey.)

The Church also experienced growth. In 1787 a Diocese of San Cristóbal de La Habana was established, which included Florida and Louisiana in its territory. In 1793 the Diocese of Louisiana and the Two Floridas was established. Both were suffragan to the Archdiocese of Santo Domingo, but after the Treaty of Basel, it disappeared, so Santiago de Cuba was elevated to an Archdiocese with the above-mentioned dioceses suffragan to it, as well as the Diocese of Puerto Rico.

The 19th century

 
1814 map of the West Indies, including Cuba.

The Spanish Constitution of 1812, enacted by the Cortes of Cádiz – which served as a parliamentary Regency after Ferdinand VII was deposed – declared the territory of the Captaincy General an integral part of the Spanish Monarchy and transformed it into a province with its own elected diputación provincial, a governing board with joint administrative and limited legislative powers. Municipalities were also granted locally elected cabildos. The provincial deputation and cabildos functioned while the Constitution was in force from 1812 to 1814 and 1820 to 1823. Ultimately the Constitution was abolished by Ferdinand VII.

The death of Ferdinand VII brought about new changes. Regent María Cristina reconvened the Cortes, in its traditional form with three estates. In 1836, Constitutional government was reestablished in Spain, except this time the government in Spain, despite its liberal tendencies, defined the overseas territories as colonies, which should be governed by special laws. The democratic institutions, such as the Diputación Provincial and the cabildos, established by the 1812 Constitution were removed. The new Constitution of 1837 ratified Cuba's demoted status. However, the "special laws" by which the overseas areas would be governed were not drafted until three decades later, when a special Junta Informativa de Reformas de Ultramar (Overseas Informative Reform Board), with representatives from Cuba and Puerto Rico, was convened in 1865. Even then its proposals were never made into laws.

On 24 August 1821 the new Mexican Empire under Emperor Don Agustin de Iturbide, gave back the Island of Cuba and its Captaincy to the Spanish crown in good faith.[citation needed]

In the 1830s, judicial affairs were restructured. An Audiencia of Havana was created in 1838, with the jurisdiction of the Puerto Príncipe Audiencia limited to the east and center of the island. (The latter was temporarily abolished from 1853 to 1868.)

In 1851 the filibustering Lopez Expedition from the United States led by Narciso López and William Crittenden failed with many of the participants being executed. Three years later the territory was the subject of the Ostend Manifesto by which several American diplomats discussed a scheme to purchase Cuba from Spain, or even take it by force.

By mid-century a definite pro-independence movement had coalesced, and Cuba experienced three civil wars in thirty years that culminated in a US intervention and the island's eventual independence: the Ten Years' War (1868–78), the Little War (1879–80) and the War of Independence, which became the Spanish–American War. During the last war the issue of autonomy came to a head. In 1895 the Overseas Minister, with approval from the Prime Minister, took the extra-constitutional step in 1897 of writing the Constitución Autonómica, which granted the Caribbean islands autonomy, technically bringing the Captaincy General to an end. Given the urgency of the movement, the government approved this unusual measure. The new government of the island was to consist of "an Island Parliament, divided into two chambers and one Governor-General, representative of the Metropolis, who will carry out his duties in its name, the supreme Authority."[2] The new government functioned only for a few months before the United States took control of the island.

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ As depicted on the main portal of the Palace of the Captains General in Havana, arms in use until the transfer of the island to the US

References

  1. ^ Thomas, Hugh (1998). Cuba: The Pursuit of Freedom (2nd ed.). New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-80827-7.
  2. ^ "Autonomic Constitution of 1897" (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2012-06-29.
  3. ^ Zamora y Coronado, José María (1846). Biblioteca de Legislación Ultramarina (Vol. 5). Madrid: Imprenta de J. Martín Alegría. p. 105.
  4. ^ Real Academia Matritense de Heráldica y Genealogía (1993). Pendón de la Banda. Madrid: Instituto de España. p. 44.

Bibliography

  • Kuethe, Allan J. (1986). Cuba, 1753–1815: Crown, Military, and Society. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. ISBN 0-87049-487-2.

Coordinates: 23°07′N 82°21′W / 23.117°N 82.350°W / 23.117; -82.350

captaincy, general, cuba, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Captaincy General of Cuba news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Captaincy General of Cuba Spanish Capitania General de Cuba was an administrative district of the Spanish Empire created in 1607 as part of Habsburg Spain s attempt to better defend and administer its Caribbean possessions The reform also established captaincies general in Puerto Rico Guatemala and Yucatan Captaincy General of CubaCapitania General de Cuba1492 1898Flag 1785 1898 Coat of arms 19th century Anthem National anthem of SpainViceroyalty of New Spain in 1794 with the Captaincy General of Cuba shown in purpleStatusCaptaincy GeneralCapitalHavanaCommon languagesSpanishReligionRoman CatholicismGovernmentMonarchyKing 1759 1788Charles III 1886 1898Alfonso XIIIMaria Christina of Austria Regent Captain General 1764 1779Count of Ricla 1887 1898Ramon Blanco y ErenasHistorical eraEarly modern Europe Administrative reorganisation1492 Treaty of ParisDecember 10 1898CurrencySpanish dollar Spanish pesetaISO 3166 codeCUPreceded by Succeeded byNew Spain United States Military Government in CubaToday part ofCubaThe restructuring of the Captaincy General in 1764 was the first example of the Bourbon Reforms in America The changes included adding the provinces of Florida and Louisiana and granting more autonomy to these provinces This later change was carried out by the Count of Floridablanca under Charles III to strengthen the Spanish position vis a vis the British in the Caribbean A new governor captain general based in Havana oversaw the administration of the new district The local governors of the larger Captaincy General had previously been overseen in political and military matters by the president of the Audiencia of Santo Domingo This audiencia retained oversight of judicial affairs until the establishment of new audiencias in Puerto Principe 1800 and Havana 1838 In 1825 as a result of the loss of the mainland possessions the Spanish government granted the governors captain generals of Cuba extraordinary powers in matters of administration justice and the treasury and in the second half of the 19th century gave them the title of Governor General Contents 1 History 1 1 Antecedents 1 2 Establishment 1 3 The Bourbon Reforms 1 4 Territorial gains and losses 1 5 The 19th century 2 Gallery 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 BibliographyHistory EditAntecedents Edit Since the 16th century the island of Cuba had been under the control of the governor captain general of Santo Domingo who was at the same time president of the audiencia there He oversaw the local governor and the Santo Domingo Audiencia heard appeals from the island The conquest of Cuba was organized in 1510 by the recently restored Viceroy of the Indies Diego Colon under the command of Diego Velazquez de Cuellar who became Cuba s first governor until his death in 1524 The new settlers did not wish to be under the personal authority of Colon so Velazquez founded the city of Nuestra Senora de la Asuncion de Baracoa in 1511 and convoked a general cabildo a local government council which was duly authorized to deal directly with Spain This legal move removed Velazquez and the settlers from under the authority of Colon their nominal superior It was a precedent that would come back to haunt Velazquez during Hernan Cortes s conquest of the Aztec Empire Other cities were later founded under Velazquez Bayamo in 1513 Santisima Trinidad Sancti Spiritus and San Cristobal de La Habana in 1514 Puerto Principe and Santiago de Cuba in 1515 After the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire Cuba experienced an exodus of settlers and its population remained small for the next two centuries In 1565 the Adelantado Pedro Menendez de Aviles who was also Captain General of the Spanish treasure fleet which rendezvoused in Havana established the first permanent Spanish settlement in Florida San Agustin initially bringing the province under the administrative control of Cuba although due to distance and sea currents Florida s government was granted the right to correspond directly with the Council of the Indies The Church played an important role in the Spanish settlement of the Americas Furthermore since governors as representatives of the King oversaw church administration due to the crown s right of patronage the church and state were tightly intertwined in Spanish America The first diocese was established in 1518 in Baracoa and was made suffragan to the Diocese of Seville The seat of the Diocese was transferred to Santiago de Cuba in 1522 In 1520 Pope Leo X established the short lived Diocese of Santiago de la Florida or Santiago de la Tierra Florida In 1546 the Diocese of Santo Domingo was elevated to an Archdiocese and the Diocese of Santiago de Cuba was made suffragan to it Establishment Edit In 1607 Philip III created the Captaincy General of Cuba as part of larger plans to defend the Caribbean against foreign threats The first captain general was Pedro Valdes Around the same time other captaincies general were established in Puerto Rico 1580 and Central America 1609 Cuba was divided into two governorships with capitals in Havana and Santiago de Cuba The governor of Havana was Captain General of the island In 1650 Cuba received a large influx of refugees when the English captured Jamaica and expelled the Spanish settlers in the colony In 1756 the construction of ships for the Spanish Navy began with the establishment of an Intendancy of the Navy in Havana which functioned as a royal shipyard Havana after the successful British siege in 1762 The British capture of the island in 1762 during the Seven Years War proved to be a turning point in the history of Cuba and Spanish America in general The British captured Havana after a three month siege and controlled the western part of the island for a year Britain returned Cuba in exchange for Florida in the Treaty of Paris The events revealed not only the weaknesses of the region s defenses but also proved just how much the Cuban economy had been neglected by the Spanish During the year they controlled Cuba the British and their American colonies conducted an unprecedented amount of trade with the island 1 A year earlier France had secretly ceded Louisiana to Spain in compensation for its losses as its ally during the war As a sign of the seriousness with which the government took the problems the very year the Spanish retook control of Havana construction began on what would become the largest Spanish fort in the New World San Carlos de la Cabana on the eastern side of the entrance to harbor of Havana The Bourbon Reforms Edit Starting in 1764 the government apparatus of Cuba was completely restructured A report on the island was created by Alejandro O Reilly which provided the basis for the changes A new emphasis was placed on appointing military men to the governorship captaincy general of Cuba many of whom were later rewarded with the post of Viceroy of New Spain To aid the captain general of Cuba the governor of Santiago was made captain general of the province and given command of the military forces there At the same time a new institution which up until now had only been used in Spain was introduced into Cuba the intendancy An intendencia de hacienda y guerra was set up in Havana to oversee government and military expenditures and to promote the local economy The first Intendant Miguel de Altarriba arrived on March 8 1765 Other intendancies soon followed Louisiana 1766 Puerto Principe 1786 and Santiago de Cuba 1786 In 1774 the first census of the island was carried out revealing 171 670 inhabitants and other measures were taken to improve the local economy These reforms especially the institution of the intendancy initiated a dramatic social and economic transformation of the island during the last half of the 18th century and early 19th Cuba went from being a defensive post in the Caribbean sustained by a subsidy from New Spain the situado to becoming a self sustaining and flourishing sugar coffee and tobacco exporting colony which also meant that large number of slaves were imported into Cuba The agricultural economy was aided by the gradual opening of Cuban ports to foreign ships especially after the loss of the mainland due to the independence wars Territorial gains and losses Edit See also Spanish American wars of independence Louisiana Purchase and Adams Onis Treaty During the American Revolutionary War Spain recaptured colonial Florida which at that time included Gulf Coast lands extending all the way to the Mississippi River from Great Britain which was ratified in the 1783 Treaty of Paris But within about 35 years all of this territory was incrementally obtained by the U S this was due in part to boundary disputes The transfer of the Spanish part of Santo Domingo to France in 1795 in the Treaty of Basel made Cuba the main Spanish possession in the Caribbean The Audiencia of Santo Domingo was formally moved to Santa Maria del Puerto Principe today Camaguey five years later after temporarily residing in Santiago de Cuba It resided in Havana for a few years starting in 1808 before returning to Camaguey The Church also experienced growth In 1787 a Diocese of San Cristobal de La Habana was established which included Florida and Louisiana in its territory In 1793 the Diocese of Louisiana and the Two Floridas was established Both were suffragan to the Archdiocese of Santo Domingo but after the Treaty of Basel it disappeared so Santiago de Cuba was elevated to an Archdiocese with the above mentioned dioceses suffragan to it as well as the Diocese of Puerto Rico The 19th century Edit See also Mid nineteenth century Spain 1814 map of the West Indies including Cuba The Spanish Constitution of 1812 enacted by the Cortes of Cadiz which served as a parliamentary Regency after Ferdinand VII was deposed declared the territory of the Captaincy General an integral part of the Spanish Monarchy and transformed it into a province with its own elected diputacion provincial a governing board with joint administrative and limited legislative powers Municipalities were also granted locally elected cabildos The provincial deputation and cabildos functioned while the Constitution was in force from 1812 to 1814 and 1820 to 1823 Ultimately the Constitution was abolished by Ferdinand VII The death of Ferdinand VII brought about new changes Regent Maria Cristina reconvened the Cortes in its traditional form with three estates In 1836 Constitutional government was reestablished in Spain except this time the government in Spain despite its liberal tendencies defined the overseas territories as colonies which should be governed by special laws The democratic institutions such as the Diputacion Provincial and the cabildos established by the 1812 Constitution were removed The new Constitution of 1837 ratified Cuba s demoted status However the special laws by which the overseas areas would be governed were not drafted until three decades later when a special Junta Informativa de Reformas de Ultramar Overseas Informative Reform Board with representatives from Cuba and Puerto Rico was convened in 1865 Even then its proposals were never made into laws On 24 August 1821 the new Mexican Empire under Emperor Don Agustin de Iturbide gave back the Island of Cuba and its Captaincy to the Spanish crown in good faith citation needed In the 1830s judicial affairs were restructured An Audiencia of Havana was created in 1838 with the jurisdiction of the Puerto Principe Audiencia limited to the east and center of the island The latter was temporarily abolished from 1853 to 1868 In 1851 the filibustering Lopez Expedition from the United States led by Narciso Lopez and William Crittenden failed with many of the participants being executed Three years later the territory was the subject of the Ostend Manifesto by which several American diplomats discussed a scheme to purchase Cuba from Spain or even take it by force By mid century a definite pro independence movement had coalesced and Cuba experienced three civil wars in thirty years that culminated in a US intervention and the island s eventual independence the Ten Years War 1868 78 the Little War 1879 80 and the War of Independence which became the Spanish American War During the last war the issue of autonomy came to a head In 1895 the Overseas Minister with approval from the Prime Minister took the extra constitutional step in 1897 of writing the Constitucion Autonomica which granted the Caribbean islands autonomy technically bringing the Captaincy General to an end Given the urgency of the movement the government approved this unusual measure The new government of the island was to consist of an Island Parliament divided into two chambers and one Governor General representative of the Metropolis who will carry out his duties in its name the supreme Authority 2 The new government functioned only for a few months before the United States took control of the island Gallery Edit Coat of arms of the Captaincy General of Cuba Savoyard rule 1870 1873 Royal Arms of Spain 3 4 note 1 See also EditList of colonial governors of Cuba Piracy in the Caribbean British expedition against Cuba History of CubaNotes Edit As depicted on the main portal of the Palace of the Captains General in Havana arms in use until the transfer of the island to the USReferences Edit Thomas Hugh 1998 Cuba The Pursuit of Freedom 2nd ed New York Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 80827 7 Autonomic Constitution of 1897 in Spanish Archived from the original on 2012 06 29 Zamora y Coronado Jose Maria 1846 Biblioteca de Legislacion Ultramarina Vol 5 Madrid Imprenta de J Martin Alegria p 105 Real Academia Matritense de Heraldica y Genealogia 1993 Pendon de la Banda Madrid Instituto de Espana p 44 Bibliography EditKuethe Allan J 1986 Cuba 1753 1815 Crown Military and Society Knoxville University of Tennessee Press ISBN 0 87049 487 2 Coordinates 23 07 N 82 21 W 23 117 N 82 350 W 23 117 82 350 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Captaincy General of Cuba amp oldid 1139415915, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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