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Casa de Contratación

The Casa de Contratación (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈkasa ðe kontɾataˈθjon], House of Trade) or Casa de la Contratación de las Indias ("House of Trade of the Indies") was established by the Crown of Castile, in 1503 in the port of Seville (and transferred to Cádiz in 1717) as a crown agency for the Spanish Empire. It functioned until 1790, when it was abolished in a government reorganization.[citation needed]

Although the Casa de Contratación was not located in a specific building, its documents can now be seen in the Archive of the Indies in Seville.

Before the establishment of the Council of the Indies in 1524, the Casa de Contratación had broad powers over overseas matters, especially financial matters concerning trade and legal disputes arising from it. It also was responsible for the licensing of emigrants, training of pilots, creation of maps and charters, probate of estates of Spaniards dying overseas.[1] Its official name was La Casa y Audiencia de Indias.[2]

Introduction edit

Unlike the later East India Companies, chartered companies established by the Dutch, English, and others, the Casa collected all colonial taxes and duties, approved all voyages of exploration and trade, maintained secret information on trade routes and new discoveries,[3][4] licensed captains, and administered commercial law.

In theory, no Spaniard could sail anywhere without the approval of the Casa. However, smuggling often took place in different parts of the vast Spanish Empire.[5][6][7]

The Casa de Contratación was founded by Queen Isabella I of Castile in 1503, eleven years after Christopher Columbus's landfall in the Americas in 1492.[8] Ochoa Alvarez de Isasaga (Ysasaga) was named factor for the Crown by King Ferdinand "the Catholic: and Queen Juana I of Castile in 1509 for the Casa.[9]

The Casa was the Spanish counterpart of the Portuguese organization, the Casa da Índia, or House of Índia of Lisbon,[10][11] established in 1434 and destroyed by the 1755 Lisbon earthquake.

Dr. Sancho de Matienzo became the first treasurer, Jimeno de Bribiesca the first contador, and Francisco Pinelo the first factor. They soon controlled the economic development of Hispaniola.[12]

Operation edit

A 20 per cent tax, the quinto real (royal fifth) was levied by the Casa on all precious metals entering Spain.[13][14]

The other taxes could run as high as 40% to provide naval protection for the trading ships or as low as 10 per cent during financial turmoil to encourage investment and economic growth in the colony. Each ship was required to employ a clerk to keep detailed logs of all goods carried and all transactions.[15]

The Casa de Contratación produced and managed the Padrón Real, the official and secret Spanish map used as a template for the maps carried by every Spanish ship during the 16th century.[16]

It was constantly improved from its first version in 1508, and was the counterpart of the Portuguese map, the Padrão Real. The Casa also ran a navigation school; new pilots, or navigators, were trained for ocean voyages here.[17]

Spain employed the then standard mercantilist model, governed (at least in theory) by the Casa in Seville. Trade with the overseas possessions was handled by a merchants' guild based in Seville, the Consulado de mercaderes, which worked in conjunction with the Casa de Contratación. Trade was physically controlled in well-regulated trade fleets, the famous Flota de Indias and the Manila galleons.[citation needed]

Reductions edit

By the late 17th century, the Casa de Contratación had fallen into bureaucratic gridlock, and the empire as a whole was failing, due primarily to Spain's inability to finance both war on the Continent and a global empire.[citation needed]

More often than not, the riches transported from Manila and Acapulco to Spain were officially signed over to Spain's creditors before the Manila galleon made port.[citation needed]

In the 18th century, the new Bourbon kings reduced the power of Seville and the Casa de Contratacion.[18] In 1717 they moved the Casa from Seville to Cádiz, diminishing Seville's importance in international trade. Charles III further limited the powers of the Casa,[19] and his son, Charles IV, abolished it altogether in 1790.[19][20]

The Spanish treasure fleets were also officially ended due to the abolition, bringing an end to the prosperous Spanish colonial income.[21]

Mapmakers edit

The cartographic enterprise at the Casa de Contratación was a huge undertaking, and critical to the success of the voyages of discovery. Without good navigational aids, the ability of Spain to exploit and profit from what it found would have been limited. The Casa had a large number of cartographers and navigators (pilots), archivists, record keepers, administrators and others involved in producing and managing the Padrón Real.[22]

Explorer Amerigo Vespucci, who made at least two voyages to the New World, was a pilot working at the Casa de Contratación until his death in 1512.[23] A special position was created for Vespucci, the piloto mayor (chief of navigation), in 1508;[24] he trained new pilots for ocean voyages.[15]

His nephew, Juan Vespucci, inherited his famous uncle's maps, charts, and nautical instruments,[25] and along with Andrés de San Martín was appointed to Amerigo's former position as the official Spanish government pilot at Seville.[26][27]

In 1524, Juan Vespucci was appointed examinador de pilotos (Examiner of Pilots),[28] replacing Sebastian Cabot who was then leading an expedition in Brazil.[29][30]

In the 1530s and 1540s, the principal mapmakers (known as "cosmographers") in the Casa de Contratación working on the Padrón Real included Alonso de Santa Cruz,[31] Sebastian Cabot, and Pedro de Medina.[32] The mapmaker Diego Gutiérrez was appointed as cosmographer in the Casa on October 22, 1554, after the death of his father Diego in January 1554; he also worked on the Padrón Real.

In 1562, Gutierrez published the map entitled "Americae ... Descriptio" in Antwerp. It was published in Antwerp instead of Spain because the Spanish engravers did not have the necessary skill to print such a complicated document.[33] Other cosmographers included Alonso de Chaves, Jerónimo de Chaves, and Sancho Gutiérrez (Diego's brother).[34][35]

In the late 16th century, Juan López de Velasco was the first Cosmógrafo-Cronista Mayor (Cosmographer-Chronicler Major) of the Council of the Indies in Seville.[36]

He produced a master map and twelve subsidiary maps portraying the worldwide Spanish empire in cartographic form.[37][38][39]

Although these maps are not especially accurate or detailed, his work represented the apogee of Spanish mapmaking in that period, and surpassed anything done by the other European powers.

Cartographers in England, the Low Countries, and Germany, however, continued to improve their skills in making maps and in organizing and presenting geographic information, until by the end of the 17th century, even Spanish intellectuals were lamenting that the maps produced by foreigners were superior to those made in Spain.[40][41][42]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ John R. Fisher, "Casa de Contratación" in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, vol. 1, p. 589. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1996.
  2. ^ Jorge Galván (2006). El hierro y la pólvora. UNAM. p. 231. ISBN 978-970-770-393-3.
  3. ^ Richard Flint; Shirley Cushing Flint (18 March 2003). The Coronado Expedition: From the Distance of 460 Years. UNM Press. p. 265. ISBN 978-0-8263-2977-6.
  4. ^ James D. Henderson; Helen Delpar; Maurice Philip Brungardt; Richard N. Weldon (2000). A Reference Guide to Latin American History. M.E. Sharpe. p. 26. ISBN 978-1-56324-744-6.
  5. ^ Jean O. McLachlan (19 November 2015). Trade and Peace with Old Spain, 1667–1750. Cambridge University Press. p. 80. ISBN 978-1-107-58561-4.
  6. ^ William S. Maltby (24 November 2008). The Rise and Fall of the Spanish Empire. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 81. ISBN 978-1-137-04187-6.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ J. A. C. Hugill (1991). No Peace Without Spain. Kensal Press. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-946041-58-9.
  8. ^ John Michael Francis (2006). Iberia and the Americas: Culture, Politics, and History : a Multidisciplinary Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 179. ISBN 978-1-85109-421-9.
  9. ^ Kultura (20 February 2018). "OCHOA ALVAREZ DE YSASAGA, PROTAGONISTA DEL CICLO "CONOCIENDO LA HISTORIA DE VILLAFRANCA"". ORDIZIAKO UDALA (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-12-28.
  10. ^ Susannah Ferreira (29 May 2015). The Crown, the Court and the Casa da Índia: Political Centralization in Portugal 1479-1521. BRILL. p. 169. ISBN 978-90-04-29819-4.
  11. ^ Hans Ferdinand Helmolt (1901). Pre-history. America and the Pacific ocean. W. Heinemann. p. 388.
  12. ^ Floyd, Troy (1973). The Columbus Dynasty in the Caribbean, 1492-1526. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. p. 53.
  13. ^ Massimo Livi-Bacci (2008). Conquest: The Destruction of the American Indios. Polity. p. 293. ISBN 978-0-7456-4001-3.
  14. ^ José de Acosta (24 September 2002). Natural and Moral History of the Indies. Duke University Press. p. 177. ISBN 0-8223-8393-4.
  15. ^ a b Patrick O'Flanagan (28 June 2013). Port Cities of Atlantic Iberia, c. 1500–1900. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 46. ISBN 978-1-4094-8011-2.
  16. ^ David Waters (1970). The Iberian Bases of the English Art of Navigation in the Sixteenth Century. UC Biblioteca Geral 1. p. 13. GGKEY:KXSJC7ZAS51.
  17. ^ Benjamin Keen; Keith A. Haynes (1 July 2008). A History of Latin America, Volume 1: Ancient America to 1910: Ancient America to 1910. Cengage Learning. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-618-78320-5.
  18. ^ Richard Harding (4 January 2002). Seapower and Naval Warfare, 1650-1830. Routledge. p. 24. ISBN 978-1-135-36486-1.
  19. ^ a b Max Beloff (19 December 2013). The Age of Absolutism (Routledge Revivals): 1660-1815. Taylor & Francis. p. 51. ISBN 978-1-317-81664-5.
  20. ^ Albert Goodwin (23 September 1976). The New Cambridge Modern History: Volume 8, The American and French Revolutions, 1763-93. CUP Archive. p. 402. ISBN 978-0-521-29108-8.
  21. ^ Timothy R Walton (April 2002). The Spanish Treasure Fleets. Pineapple Press Inc. p. 180. ISBN 1-56164-261-4.
  22. ^ Lloyd Arnold Brown (1979). The Story of Maps. Courier Corporation. p. 143. ISBN 978-0-486-23873-9.
  23. ^ Elizabeth Nash (13 October 2005). Seville, Cordoba, and Granada: A Cultural History. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 84. ISBN 978-0-19-518204-0.
  24. ^ Frederick Julius Pohl (28 October 2013). Amerigo Vespucci: Pilot Major. Routledge. p. 187. ISBN 978-1-136-22713-4.
  25. ^ Frederick Albion Ober (1907). Amerigo Vespucci. Harper & Brothers. pp. 235–236.
  26. ^ Clarence Henry Haring (1918). Trade and Navigation Between Spain and the Indies in the Time of the Hapsburgs. Harvard University Press. p. 307.
  27. ^ Manuel de la Puente y Olea (1900). Los trabajos geográficos de la Casa de Contratación. Escuela Tipográfica y Librería Salesianas. p. 283.
  28. ^ Álvarez Massini Álvarez; José María Olivero; Olivero Orecchia Olivero; Enrique Carlos Albornoz Nessi Albornoz (2007). Cartografía y navegación: del portulano a la carta esférica : del siglo XIII a comienzos del siglo XIX. Armada Nacional. p. 275. ISBN 978-9974-7624-1-1.
  29. ^ William Patterson Cumming; Louis De Vorsey (1998). The Southeast in early maps. University of North Carolina Press. p. 4. ISBN 9780807823712.
  30. ^ The Geographical Journal. Royal Geographical Society. 1915. p. 83.
  31. ^ Richard L. Kagan; Fernando Marías (2000). Urban Images of the Hispanic World, 1493-1793. Yale University Press. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-300-08314-9.
  32. ^ Pamela Smith; Paula Findlen (18 October 2013). Merchants and Marvels: Commerce, Science, and Art in Early Modern Europe. Taylor & Francis. p. 91. ISBN 978-1-135-30035-7.
  33. ^ Encounters. Latin American Institute of the University of New Mexico. 1989. p. 16.
  34. ^ Aaron M. Kahn (22 September 2011). On Wolves and Sheep: Exploring the Expression of Political Thought in Golden Age Spain. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 219. ISBN 978-1-4438-3417-9.
  35. ^ Pedro Ruiz-Castell and Ximo Guillem-Llobat; Josep Simon; Néstor Herran with Tayra Lanuza-Navarro (27 May 2009). Beyond Borders: Fresh Perspectives in History of Science. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 83. ISBN 978-1-4438-1147-7.
  36. ^ Daniela Bleichmar (18 December 2008). Science in the Spanish and Portuguese Empires, 1500–1800. Stanford University Press. p. 70. ISBN 978-0-8047-7633-2.
  37. ^ David Woodward (1 September 2007). Cartography in the European Renaissance. University of Chicago Press. p. 1146. ISBN 978-0-226-90733-8.
  38. ^ David Buisseret (22 May 2003). The Mapmakers' Quest: Depicting New Worlds in Renaissance Europe. Oxford University Press. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-19-150090-9.
  39. ^ Barbara E. Mundy (1 December 2000). The Mapping of New Spain: Indigenous Cartography and the Maps of the Relaciones Geograficas. University of Chicago Press. pp. 17–18, 22–23. ISBN 978-0-226-55097-8.
  40. ^ Martin Jay; Sumathi Ramaswamy (29 January 2014). Empires of Vision: A Reader. Duke University Press. pp. 215–216. ISBN 978-0-8223-7897-6.
  41. ^ Evonne Levy; Kenneth Mills (6 January 2014). Lexikon of the Hispanic Baroque: Transatlantic Exchange and Transformation. University of Texas Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-292-75309-9.
  42. ^ David Buisseret (6 July 1998). Envisioning the City: Six Studies in Urban Cartography. University of Chicago Press. p. 101. ISBN 978-0-226-07993-6.

Further reading edit

  • Barrera Osorio, Antonio, Experiencing Nature: The Spanish American Empire and the Early Scientific Revolution (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2006).
  • Buisseret, David. "Spain Maps Her 'New World'", ncounter, February 1992, No. 8, pp. 14–19.
  • Collins, Edward. "Portuguese Pilots at the Casa de la Contratación and the Examenes de Pilotos". The International Journal of Maritime History 26 (2014): 179–92.
  • ---. "Francisco Faleiro and Scientific Methodology at the Casa de la Contratación in the Sixteenth Century". Imago Mundi 65 (2013): 25–36.
  • Fisher, John R. "Casa de Contratación" in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, vol. 1, pp. 589–90. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1996.
  • McDougall, Walter (1993): Let the Sea Make a Noise: Four Hundred Years of Cataclysm, Conquest, War and Folly in the North Pacific. Avon Books, New York, USA.
  • Pulido Rubio, José. El piloto mayor de la Casa de la Contratación de Sevilla: pilotos mayores, catedráticos de cosmografía y cosmográfos. Seville: Escuela de Estudios Hispano- Americanos, 1950.

External links edit

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You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish August 2017 Click show for important translation instructions 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 5 227 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 translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es Casa de la Contratacion de Indias see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated es Casa de la Contratacion de Indias to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Casa de Contratacion Spanish pronunciation ˈkasa de kontɾataˈ8jon House of Trade or Casa de la Contratacion de las Indias House of Trade of the Indies was established by the Crown of Castile in 1503 in the port of Seville and transferred to Cadiz in 1717 as a crown agency for the Spanish Empire It functioned until 1790 when it was abolished in a government reorganization citation needed Although the Casa de Contratacion was not located in a specific building its documents can now be seen in the Archive of the Indies in Seville Before the establishment of the Council of the Indies in 1524 the Casa de Contratacion had broad powers over overseas matters especially financial matters concerning trade and legal disputes arising from it It also was responsible for the licensing of emigrants training of pilots creation of maps and charters probate of estates of Spaniards dying overseas 1 Its official name was La Casa y Audiencia de Indias 2 Contents 1 Introduction 2 Operation 3 Reductions 4 Mapmakers 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksIntroduction editUnlike the later East India Companies chartered companies established by the Dutch English and others the Casa collected all colonial taxes and duties approved all voyages of exploration and trade maintained secret information on trade routes and new discoveries 3 4 licensed captains and administered commercial law In theory no Spaniard could sail anywhere without the approval of the Casa However smuggling often took place in different parts of the vast Spanish Empire 5 6 7 The Casa de Contratacion was founded by Queen Isabella I of Castile in 1503 eleven years after Christopher Columbus s landfall in the Americas in 1492 8 Ochoa Alvarez de Isasaga Ysasaga was named factor for the Crown by King Ferdinand the Catholic and Queen Juana I of Castile in 1509 for the Casa 9 The Casa was the Spanish counterpart of the Portuguese organization the Casa da India or House of India of Lisbon 10 11 established in 1434 and destroyed by the 1755 Lisbon earthquake Dr Sancho de Matienzo became the first treasurer Jimeno de Bribiesca the first contador and Francisco Pinelo the first factor They soon controlled the economic development of Hispaniola 12 Operation editA 20 per cent tax the quinto real royal fifth was levied by the Casa on all precious metals entering Spain 13 14 The other taxes could run as high as 40 to provide naval protection for the trading ships or as low as 10 per cent during financial turmoil to encourage investment and economic growth in the colony Each ship was required to employ a clerk to keep detailed logs of all goods carried and all transactions 15 The Casa de Contratacion produced and managed the Padron Real the official and secret Spanish map used as a template for the maps carried by every Spanish ship during the 16th century 16 It was constantly improved from its first version in 1508 and was the counterpart of the Portuguese map the Padrao Real The Casa also ran a navigation school new pilots or navigators were trained for ocean voyages here 17 Spain employed the then standard mercantilist model governed at least in theory by the Casa in Seville Trade with the overseas possessions was handled by a merchants guild based in Seville the Consulado de mercaderes which worked in conjunction with the Casa de Contratacion Trade was physically controlled in well regulated trade fleets the famous Flota de Indias and the Manila galleons citation needed Reductions editBy the late 17th century the Casa de Contratacion had fallen into bureaucratic gridlock and the empire as a whole was failing due primarily to Spain s inability to finance both war on the Continent and a global empire citation needed More often than not the riches transported from Manila and Acapulco to Spain were officially signed over to Spain s creditors before the Manila galleon made port citation needed In the 18th century the new Bourbon kings reduced the power of Seville and the Casa de Contratacion 18 In 1717 they moved the Casa from Seville to Cadiz diminishing Seville s importance in international trade Charles III further limited the powers of the Casa 19 and his son Charles IV abolished it altogether in 1790 19 20 The Spanish treasure fleets were also officially ended due to the abolition bringing an end to the prosperous Spanish colonial income 21 Mapmakers editThe cartographic enterprise at the Casa de Contratacion was a huge undertaking and critical to the success of the voyages of discovery Without good navigational aids the ability of Spain to exploit and profit from what it found would have been limited The Casa had a large number of cartographers and navigators pilots archivists record keepers administrators and others involved in producing and managing the Padron Real 22 Explorer Amerigo Vespucci who made at least two voyages to the New World was a pilot working at the Casa de Contratacion until his death in 1512 23 A special position was created for Vespucci the piloto mayor chief of navigation in 1508 24 he trained new pilots for ocean voyages 15 His nephew Juan Vespucci inherited his famous uncle s maps charts and nautical instruments 25 and along with Andres de San Martin was appointed to Amerigo s former position as the official Spanish government pilot at Seville 26 27 In 1524 Juan Vespucci was appointed examinador de pilotos Examiner of Pilots 28 replacing Sebastian Cabot who was then leading an expedition in Brazil 29 30 In the 1530s and 1540s the principal mapmakers known as cosmographers in the Casa de Contratacion working on the Padron Real included Alonso de Santa Cruz 31 Sebastian Cabot and Pedro de Medina 32 The mapmaker Diego Gutierrez was appointed as cosmographer in the Casa on October 22 1554 after the death of his father Diego in January 1554 he also worked on the Padron Real In 1562 Gutierrez published the map entitled Americae Descriptio in Antwerp It was published in Antwerp instead of Spain because the Spanish engravers did not have the necessary skill to print such a complicated document 33 Other cosmographers included Alonso de Chaves Jeronimo de Chaves and Sancho Gutierrez Diego s brother 34 35 In the late 16th century Juan Lopez de Velasco was the first Cosmografo Cronista Mayor Cosmographer Chronicler Major of the Council of the Indies in Seville 36 He produced a master map and twelve subsidiary maps portraying the worldwide Spanish empire in cartographic form 37 38 39 Although these maps are not especially accurate or detailed his work represented the apogee of Spanish mapmaking in that period and surpassed anything done by the other European powers Cartographers in England the Low Countries and Germany however continued to improve their skills in making maps and in organizing and presenting geographic information until by the end of the 17th century even Spanish intellectuals were lamenting that the maps produced by foreigners were superior to those made in Spain 40 41 42 See also editThe Virgin of the Navigators the first painting depicting the discovery of the Americas is in a Casa de Contratacion chapel Llotja Consulado de Cargadores an Indias Sevilla y Cadiz References edit John R Fisher Casa de Contratacion in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture vol 1 p 589 New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1996 Jorge Galvan 2006 El hierro y la polvora UNAM p 231 ISBN 978 970 770 393 3 Richard Flint Shirley Cushing Flint 18 March 2003 The Coronado Expedition From the Distance of 460 Years UNM Press p 265 ISBN 978 0 8263 2977 6 James D Henderson Helen Delpar Maurice Philip Brungardt Richard N Weldon 2000 A Reference Guide to Latin American History M E Sharpe p 26 ISBN 978 1 56324 744 6 Jean O McLachlan 19 November 2015 Trade and Peace with Old Spain 1667 1750 Cambridge University Press p 80 ISBN 978 1 107 58561 4 William S Maltby 24 November 2008 The Rise and Fall of the Spanish Empire Palgrave Macmillan p 81 ISBN 978 1 137 04187 6 permanent dead link J A C Hugill 1991 No Peace Without Spain Kensal Press p 19 ISBN 978 0 946041 58 9 John Michael Francis 2006 Iberia and the Americas Culture Politics and History a Multidisciplinary Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 179 ISBN 978 1 85109 421 9 Kultura 20 February 2018 OCHOA ALVAREZ DE YSASAGA PROTAGONISTA DEL CICLO CONOCIENDO LA HISTORIA DE VILLAFRANCA ORDIZIAKO UDALA in Spanish Retrieved 2021 12 28 Susannah Ferreira 29 May 2015 The Crown the Court and the Casa da India Political Centralization in Portugal 1479 1521 BRILL p 169 ISBN 978 90 04 29819 4 Hans Ferdinand Helmolt 1901 Pre history America and the Pacific ocean W Heinemann p 388 Floyd Troy 1973 The Columbus Dynasty in the Caribbean 1492 1526 Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press p 53 Massimo Livi Bacci 2008 Conquest The Destruction of the American Indios Polity p 293 ISBN 978 0 7456 4001 3 Jose de Acosta 24 September 2002 Natural and Moral History of the Indies Duke University Press p 177 ISBN 0 8223 8393 4 a b Patrick O Flanagan 28 June 2013 Port Cities of Atlantic Iberia c 1500 1900 Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 46 ISBN 978 1 4094 8011 2 David Waters 1970 The Iberian Bases of the English Art of Navigation in the Sixteenth Century UC Biblioteca Geral 1 p 13 GGKEY KXSJC7ZAS51 Benjamin Keen Keith A Haynes 1 July 2008 A History of Latin America Volume 1 Ancient America to 1910 Ancient America to 1910 Cengage Learning p 91 ISBN 978 0 618 78320 5 Richard Harding 4 January 2002 Seapower and Naval Warfare 1650 1830 Routledge p 24 ISBN 978 1 135 36486 1 a b Max Beloff 19 December 2013 The Age of Absolutism Routledge Revivals 1660 1815 Taylor amp Francis p 51 ISBN 978 1 317 81664 5 Albert Goodwin 23 September 1976 The New Cambridge Modern History Volume 8 The American and French Revolutions 1763 93 CUP Archive p 402 ISBN 978 0 521 29108 8 Timothy R Walton April 2002 The Spanish Treasure Fleets Pineapple Press Inc p 180 ISBN 1 56164 261 4 Lloyd Arnold Brown 1979 The Story of Maps Courier Corporation p 143 ISBN 978 0 486 23873 9 Elizabeth Nash 13 October 2005 Seville Cordoba and Granada A Cultural History Oxford University Press USA p 84 ISBN 978 0 19 518204 0 Frederick Julius Pohl 28 October 2013 Amerigo Vespucci Pilot Major Routledge p 187 ISBN 978 1 136 22713 4 Frederick Albion Ober 1907 Amerigo Vespucci Harper amp Brothers pp 235 236 Clarence Henry Haring 1918 Trade and Navigation Between Spain and the Indies in the Time of the Hapsburgs Harvard University Press p 307 Manuel de la Puente y Olea 1900 Los trabajos geograficos de la Casa de Contratacion Escuela Tipografica y Libreria Salesianas p 283 Alvarez Massini Alvarez Jose Maria Olivero Olivero Orecchia Olivero Enrique Carlos Albornoz Nessi Albornoz 2007 Cartografia y navegacion del portulano a la carta esferica del siglo XIII a comienzos del siglo XIX Armada Nacional p 275 ISBN 978 9974 7624 1 1 William Patterson Cumming Louis De Vorsey 1998 The Southeast in early maps University of North Carolina Press p 4 ISBN 9780807823712 The Geographical Journal Royal Geographical Society 1915 p 83 Richard L Kagan Fernando Marias 2000 Urban Images of the Hispanic World 1493 1793 Yale University Press p 55 ISBN 978 0 300 08314 9 Pamela Smith Paula Findlen 18 October 2013 Merchants and Marvels Commerce Science and Art in Early Modern Europe Taylor amp Francis p 91 ISBN 978 1 135 30035 7 Encounters Latin American Institute of the University of New Mexico 1989 p 16 Aaron M Kahn 22 September 2011 On Wolves and Sheep Exploring the Expression of Political Thought in Golden Age Spain Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 219 ISBN 978 1 4438 3417 9 Pedro Ruiz Castell and Ximo Guillem Llobat Josep Simon Nestor Herran with Tayra Lanuza Navarro 27 May 2009 Beyond Borders Fresh Perspectives in History of Science Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 83 ISBN 978 1 4438 1147 7 Daniela Bleichmar 18 December 2008 Science in the Spanish and Portuguese Empires 1500 1800 Stanford University Press p 70 ISBN 978 0 8047 7633 2 David Woodward 1 September 2007 Cartography in the European Renaissance University of Chicago Press p 1146 ISBN 978 0 226 90733 8 David Buisseret 22 May 2003 The Mapmakers Quest Depicting New Worlds in Renaissance Europe Oxford University Press p 89 ISBN 978 0 19 150090 9 Barbara E Mundy 1 December 2000 The Mapping of New Spain Indigenous Cartography and the Maps of the Relaciones Geograficas University of Chicago Press pp 17 18 22 23 ISBN 978 0 226 55097 8 Martin Jay Sumathi Ramaswamy 29 January 2014 Empires of Vision A Reader Duke University Press pp 215 216 ISBN 978 0 8223 7897 6 Evonne Levy Kenneth Mills 6 January 2014 Lexikon of the Hispanic Baroque Transatlantic Exchange and Transformation University of Texas Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 292 75309 9 David Buisseret 6 July 1998 Envisioning the City Six Studies in Urban Cartography University of Chicago Press p 101 ISBN 978 0 226 07993 6 Further reading editBarrera Osorio Antonio Experiencing Nature The Spanish American Empire and the Early Scientific Revolution Austin University of Texas Press 2006 Buisseret David Spain Maps Her New World ncounter February 1992 No 8 pp 14 19 Collins Edward Portuguese Pilots at the Casa de la Contratacion and the Examenes de Pilotos The International Journal of Maritime History 26 2014 179 92 Francisco Faleiro and Scientific Methodology at the Casa de la Contratacion in the Sixteenth Century Imago Mundi 65 2013 25 36 Fisher John R Casa de Contratacion in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture vol 1 pp 589 90 New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1996 McDougall Walter 1993 Let the Sea Make a Noise Four Hundred Years of Cataclysm Conquest War and Folly in the North Pacific Avon Books New York USA Pulido Rubio Jose El piloto mayor de la Casa de la Contratacion de Sevilla pilotos mayores catedraticos de cosmografia y cosmografos Seville Escuela de Estudios Hispano Americanos 1950 External links editThe Consulados de Comercio and Defense of Maritime Commerce permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Casa de Contratacion amp oldid 1204065640, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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