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Captaincy General of Guatemala

The Captaincy General of Guatemala (Spanish: Capitanía General de Guatemala), also known as the Kingdom of Guatemala (Spanish: Reino de Guatemala), was an administrative division of the Spanish Empire, under the viceroyalty of New Spain in Central America, including the present-day nations of Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala, and the Mexican state of Chiapas. The governor-captain general was also president of the Royal Audiencia of Guatemala, the superior court.

Captaincy General of Guatemala
Capitanía General de Guatemala (Spanish)
1542–1821
Map of the provinces of the Kingdom of Guatemala.
StatusKingdom
Capital
Common languages
Religion
Catholicism
GovernmentMonarchy
• 1542–1621
Philip III
• 1621–1665
Philip IV
• 1808–1813
Joseph I Bonaparte (not recognized)
• 1810–1814
Cortes of Cádiz
• 1814–1821
Ferdinand VII
Captaincy General 
LegislatureAudiencia of Guatemala
Historical eraSpanish Empire
• Established
1542
• Disestablished
1821
CurrencyPeso
ISO 3166 codeGT
Map of the Provinces formed from the Captaincy General of Guatemala, including the Kingdom of Mosquitia, up to 1821.

Antecedents edit

Colonization of the area that became the Captaincy General began in 1524. In the north, the brothers Gonzalo and Pedro de Alvarado, Hernán Cortés and others headed various expeditions into Guatemala and Honduras. In the south Francisco Hernández de Córdoba, acting under the auspices of Pedro Arias Dávila in Panama, moved into what is today Nicaragua.

Moving of the capital edit

 
The colonial coat of arms of Antigua Guatemala and Guatemala City.

The capital of Guatemala has moved many times over the centuries. On 27 July 1524, Pedro de Alvarado declared the Kaqchikel city Iximche the first regional capital, styled Santiago de los Caballeros de Guatemala ("St. James of the Knights of Guatemala").[2][3][4] However, hostilities between the Spaniards and the Kaqchikel soon made the city uninhabitable.

In 1526 the Spanish founded a new capital at Tecpán Guatemala. Tecpán is the Nahuatl word for "palace".[5] Tecpán is sometimes called the "first" capital because it was the first permanent Spanish military center, but the Spaniards soon abandoned it due to Kaqchikel attacks that made defense of the city untenable.

In 1527, the capital was moved to the Almolonga Valley to the east, on the site of today's San Miguel Escobar district of Ciudad Vieja, near Antigua Guatemala.[6][7] This settlement was destroyed by a catastrophic lahar from Volcan de Agua in 1541, and the survivors abandoned the site.

In 1543, the capital was again refounded several kilometres away at Antigua Guatemala. Over the next two centuries, this city would become one of the richest of the New World capitals. However, it too was destroyed, this time by a devastating series of earthquakes, and the city was ordered abandoned in 1776.

The final and current capital is the modern-day Guatemala City.

Role of the church edit

The Church played an important role in the administration of the overseas possessions of the Spanish crown. The first dioceses were established in León, Nicaragua and Guatemala in 1534. Another diocese was created in Chiapas in 1539. The dioceses of Guatemala and Chiapas were suffragan to the Archdiocese of Seville, until 1546 when they were placed under the Archdiocese of Mexico. The Diocese of León was made suffragan to Archdiocese of Lima in 1546. Another short-lived diocese was set up in Verapaz, Guatemala in 1559. Along the Caribbean coast, there were several attempts to establish a diocese in Honduras—which finally succeeded in 1561 with the Diocese of Comayagua—which was placed under the Archdiocese of Santo Domingo.

In 1543 the territory of the kingdom was defined with the establishment of the Audiencia of Guatemala, which took most of Central America as its jurisdiction. This audiencia, along with the one in Lima, took over the territory of the first Audiencia of Panama. It was the first institution to define Central America (with the exception of Panama) as a region within the Spanish Empire.

Establishment edit

 
The Fort of San Fernando, Omoa. Built by the Spaniards to defend against pirates.

In 1609 the area became a captaincy general, when the governor and Audiencia president was also granted the title of captain general to deal with foreign threats to the area from the Caribbean, granting the area autonomy in administrative and military matters. Around the same time Habsburg Spain created other captaincies general in Puerto Rico (1580), Cuba (1607) and Yucatán (1617).

In the 17th century, a process of uniting the church hierarchy of Central America also began. The dioceses of Comayagua and León became suffragan to the Archdiocese of Mexico in 1620 and 1647, respectively. Finally, in the 18th century, Guatemala was raised to an archdiocese in 1743 and the dioceses of León, Chiapas and Comayagua were made suffragan to it, giving the region unity and autonomy in religious matters.

As part of the Bourbon Reforms in 1786 the crown established a series of intendancies in the area, which replaced most of the older corregimientos. The intendants were granted broad fiscal powers and charged with promoting the local economy. The new intendancies were San Salvador (El Salvador), Ciudad Real (Chiapas), Comayagua (Honduras), and León (Nicaragua).

The governor-captain general-president of Guatemala became the superintendente general of the territory and functioned as the de facto intendant of Guatemala proper. The agricultural, southern region of Costa Rica remained under a civil and military governor with fiscal oversight only over military expenses; the expenses of the civil government were handled by the intendant of León. These intendancies helped shape local political identity and provided the basis of the future nations of Central America.

Independence edit

With the removal of Ferdinand VII during the Peninsular War, independence movements broke out in the intendancies of San Salvador and León in 1811, which were quickly suppressed. In 1812 the Cortes of Cádiz divided the region into two provinces: Guatemala (consisting of Guatemala, Belize, Chiapas, Honduras and El Salvador) and Nicaragua y Costa Rica. These provinces existed from 1812 to 1814 and once again from 1820 to 1821, the period during which the Spanish Constitution of 1812 was in effect. The two provinces elected seven deputies to the Cortes during the first period.[8]

Gabino Gainza Fernandez de Medrano, the jefe político superior (governor) of Guatemala remained the Captain General of Central America and Chiapas. The Captaincy General ended in 1821 with the signing of the Act of Independence of Central America, after which the regional elite supported the Plan of Iguala and joined the First Mexican Empire by annexation.[9] With the exception of Chiapas, the region peacefully seceded from Mexico in July 1823, establishing the United Provinces of Central America. While the region remained politically cohesive for a short time, centrifugal forces soon pulled the individual provinces apart by 1842.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Guatemala"( 2009-10-30 at the Wayback Machine; Archived 2017-11-11 at the Wayback Machine 2009-10-31). Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2008. Microsoft Corporation.
  2. ^ Schele & Mathews 1999, p. 297.
  3. ^ Recinos 1998, p. 101.
  4. ^ Guillemín 1965, p. 10.
  5. ^ Schele & Mathews 1999, p. 299.
  6. ^ Lutz 1997, pp. 10, 258.
  7. ^ Ortiz Flores 2008.
  8. ^ Rieu-Millan, Marie Laure (1990). Los diputados americanos en las Cortes de Cádiz: Igualdad o independencia (in Spanish). Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas. p. 43. ISBN 978-84-00-07091-5.
  9. ^ Valle, Rafael Heliodoro (1924). La anexión de Centro América a México (in Spanish). Vol. 6. Mexico: Archivo Histórico Diplomático Mexicano. OCLC 833583997.

Further reading edit

  • Dym, Jordana; Christophe Belaubre, eds. (2007). Politics, Economy, and Society in Bourbon Central America, 1759–1821. Boulder, Col.: University Press of Colorado. ISBN 978-0-87081-844-8. OCLC 434291337.
  • Hawkins, Timothy (2004). José de Bustamante and Central American Independence: Colonial Administration in an Age of Imperial Crisis. Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press. ISBN 0-8173-1427-X. OCLC 1120659170.
  • Wortman, Miles L. (1982). Government and Society in Central America, 1680–1840. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-05212-X. OCLC 469874119.

External links edit

  • Map of the Provinces of Nicaragua and Costa Rica—from 1764, created during the Captaincy

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Santiago de Guatemala". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

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This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish June 2023 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Spanish article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 5 023 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your 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the same name see Central America under Mexican rule The Captaincy General of Guatemala Spanish Capitania General de Guatemala also known as the Kingdom of Guatemala Spanish Reino de Guatemala was an administrative division of the Spanish Empire under the viceroyalty of New Spain in Central America including the present day nations of Costa Rica Nicaragua Honduras El Salvador and Guatemala and the Mexican state of Chiapas The governor captain general was also president of the Royal Audiencia of Guatemala the superior court Captaincy General of GuatemalaCapitania General de Guatemala Spanish 1542 1821Flag Coat of armsMap of the provinces of the Kingdom of Guatemala StatusKingdomCapitalSantiago de Guatemala Guatemala City Gracias Lempira 1544 1549 Common languagesSpanish official Mayan languagesNawatLencaReligionCatholicismGovernmentMonarchy 1542 1621Philip III 1621 1665Philip IV 1808 1813Joseph I Bonaparte not recognized 1810 1814Cortes of Cadiz 1814 1821Ferdinand VIICaptaincy General LegislatureAudiencia of GuatemalaHistorical eraSpanish Empire Established1542 Disestablished1821CurrencyPesoISO 3166 codeGTPreceded by Succeeded by Real Audiencia of Guatemala First Mexican Empire Federal Republic of Central America Map of the Provinces formed from the Captaincy General of Guatemala including the Kingdom of Mosquitia up to 1821 Contents 1 Antecedents 1 1 Moving of the capital 1 2 Role of the church 2 Establishment 3 Independence 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksAntecedents editMain article Spanish conquest of Guatemala Colonization of the area that became the Captaincy General began in 1524 In the north the brothers Gonzalo and Pedro de Alvarado Hernan Cortes and others headed various expeditions into Guatemala and Honduras In the south Francisco Hernandez de Cordoba acting under the auspices of Pedro Arias Davila in Panama moved into what is today Nicaragua Moving of the capital edit nbsp The colonial coat of arms of Antigua Guatemala and Guatemala City The capital of Guatemala has moved many times over the centuries On 27 July 1524 Pedro de Alvarado declared the Kaqchikel city Iximche the first regional capital styled Santiago de los Caballeros de Guatemala St James of the Knights of Guatemala 2 3 4 However hostilities between the Spaniards and the Kaqchikel soon made the city uninhabitable In 1526 the Spanish founded a new capital at Tecpan Guatemala Tecpan is the Nahuatl word for palace 5 Tecpan is sometimes called the first capital because it was the first permanent Spanish military center but the Spaniards soon abandoned it due to Kaqchikel attacks that made defense of the city untenable In 1527 the capital was moved to the Almolonga Valley to the east on the site of today s San Miguel Escobar district of Ciudad Vieja near Antigua Guatemala 6 7 This settlement was destroyed by a catastrophic lahar from Volcan de Agua in 1541 and the survivors abandoned the site In 1543 the capital was again refounded several kilometres away at Antigua Guatemala Over the next two centuries this city would become one of the richest of the New World capitals However it too was destroyed this time by a devastating series of earthquakes and the city was ordered abandoned in 1776 The final and current capital is the modern day Guatemala City Role of the church edit The Church played an important role in the administration of the overseas possessions of the Spanish crown The first dioceses were established in Leon Nicaragua and Guatemala in 1534 Another diocese was created in Chiapas in 1539 The dioceses of Guatemala and Chiapas were suffragan to the Archdiocese of Seville until 1546 when they were placed under the Archdiocese of Mexico The Diocese of Leon was made suffragan to Archdiocese of Lima in 1546 Another short lived diocese was set up in Verapaz Guatemala in 1559 Along the Caribbean coast there were several attempts to establish a diocese in Honduras which finally succeeded in 1561 with the Diocese of Comayagua which was placed under the Archdiocese of Santo Domingo In 1543 the territory of the kingdom was defined with the establishment of the Audiencia of Guatemala which took most of Central America as its jurisdiction This audiencia along with the one in Lima took over the territory of the first Audiencia of Panama It was the first institution to define Central America with the exception of Panama as a region within the Spanish Empire Establishment edit nbsp The Fort of San Fernando Omoa Built by the Spaniards to defend against pirates In 1609 the area became a captaincy general when the governor and Audiencia president was also granted the title of captain general to deal with foreign threats to the area from the Caribbean granting the area autonomy in administrative and military matters Around the same time Habsburg Spain created other captaincies general in Puerto Rico 1580 Cuba 1607 and Yucatan 1617 In the 17th century a process of uniting the church hierarchy of Central America also began The dioceses of Comayagua and Leon became suffragan to the Archdiocese of Mexico in 1620 and 1647 respectively Finally in the 18th century Guatemala was raised to an archdiocese in 1743 and the dioceses of Leon Chiapas and Comayagua were made suffragan to it giving the region unity and autonomy in religious matters As part of the Bourbon Reforms in 1786 the crown established a series of intendancies in the area which replaced most of the older corregimientos The intendants were granted broad fiscal powers and charged with promoting the local economy The new intendancies were San Salvador El Salvador Ciudad Real Chiapas Comayagua Honduras and Leon Nicaragua The governor captain general president of Guatemala became the superintendente general of the territory and functioned as the de facto intendant of Guatemala proper The agricultural southern region of Costa Rica remained under a civil and military governor with fiscal oversight only over military expenses the expenses of the civil government were handled by the intendant of Leon These intendancies helped shape local political identity and provided the basis of the future nations of Central America Independence editWith the removal of Ferdinand VII during the Peninsular War independence movements broke out in the intendancies of San Salvador and Leon in 1811 which were quickly suppressed In 1812 the Cortes of Cadiz divided the region into two provinces Guatemala consisting of Guatemala Belize Chiapas Honduras and El Salvador and Nicaragua y Costa Rica These provinces existed from 1812 to 1814 and once again from 1820 to 1821 the period during which the Spanish Constitution of 1812 was in effect The two provinces elected seven deputies to the Cortes during the first period 8 Gabino Gainza Fernandez de Medrano the jefe politico superior governor of Guatemala remained the Captain General of Central America and Chiapas The Captaincy General ended in 1821 with the signing of the Act of Independence of Central America after which the regional elite supported the Plan of Iguala and joined the First Mexican Empire by annexation 9 With the exception of Chiapas the region peacefully seceded from Mexico in July 1823 establishing the United Provinces of Central America While the region remained politically cohesive for a short time centrifugal forces soon pulled the individual provinces apart by 1842 References edit a b Guatemala Archived 2009 10 30 at the Wayback Machine Archived Archived 2017 11 11 at the Wayback Machine 2009 10 31 Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2008 Microsoft Corporation Schele amp Mathews 1999 p 297 Recinos 1998 p 101 Guillemin 1965 p 10 Schele amp Mathews 1999 p 299 Lutz 1997 pp 10 258 Ortiz Flores 2008 Rieu Millan Marie Laure 1990 Los diputados americanos en las Cortes de Cadiz Igualdad o independencia in Spanish Madrid Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas p 43 ISBN 978 84 00 07091 5 Valle Rafael Heliodoro 1924 La anexion de Centro America a Mexico in Spanish Vol 6 Mexico Archivo Historico Diplomatico Mexicano OCLC 833583997 Further reading editDym Jordana Christophe Belaubre eds 2007 Politics Economy and Society in Bourbon Central America 1759 1821 Boulder Col University Press of Colorado ISBN 978 0 87081 844 8 OCLC 434291337 Hawkins Timothy 2004 Jose de Bustamante and Central American Independence Colonial Administration in an Age of Imperial Crisis Tuscaloosa AL University of Alabama Press ISBN 0 8173 1427 X OCLC 1120659170 Wortman Miles L 1982 Government and Society in Central America 1680 1840 New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 05212 X OCLC 469874119 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Spanish colonial period in Guatemala Map of the Provinces of Nicaragua and Costa Rica from 1764 created during the Captaincy nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Santiago de Guatemala Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Captaincy General of Guatemala amp oldid 1219469884, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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