Showing 21 - 40 results of 40 for search '"Spanish Crown"', query time: 0.08s Refine Results
  1. 21

    Adaptaciones y estrategias político-religiosas locales de un jesuita expulso: Diego León de Villafañe (1731-1830) y un conflicto teológico con el clero de San Miguel de Tucumán... by Nicolás Hernán Perrone

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…Between August 1804 and June 1807 a confrontation developed in San Miguel de Tucumán between some members of the Tucumán clergy and Diego León de Villafañe, a Jesuit who had managed to return from the exile imposed by the Spanish crown in 1767 to all the members of the Society of Jesus. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  2. 22

    Intermingling and colonization in Ruy Díaz de Guzmán’s La Argentina by Valentín Héctor Vergara

    Published 2021-11-01
    “…To begin with, we will take into consideration briefly the connection between the colonising project of the Spanish crown and Ruy Diaz’s intentions to link his linage and himself to the future of the conquerors’ project. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  3. 23

    Defending the Nation and Searching for Wealth: Merchants and Privateers of Chile, 1817-1820 by Francisco Betancourt Castillo

    Published 2023-01-01
    “…Permanent warfare marked the Independence process in Hispanic America, and was evident on the high seas between the newly formed States and forces loyal to the Spanish Crown. Faced with persistent maritime threats, some independent governments encouraged privateering to help the newly formed national navies secure the seas and harass the enemy. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  4. 24

    Królowa matka – szara eminencja by Barbara Obtułowicz

    Published 2014-10-01
    “…At that time she gained control of the activity of the constitutional organs of the state: i.e. the Spanish Crown, the government, and the parliament, forcing them to take decisions in accordance with her private interest, rather than the Spanish raison d’état. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  5. 25

    Un Mapa de la Conquista de la Nueva España: el “Lienzo de Tlaxcala” by Antonio Jaramillo Arango, Margarita Cossich Vielman, Federico Navarrete Linares

    Published 2021-11-01
    “…One version of this document was sent to the Spanish crown, where it was inserted in the European courtesan tradition of wall decoration with gobelin tapestries exalting the monarchy military and religious victories. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  6. 26

    O Diálogo entre o urbanismo português e os rios como identidade territorial brasileira by Margarida Valla

    “…In expeditions through Brazilian territory these technicians were also responsible for drawing maps in order to demarcate the land border, in confrontation with the Spanish crown, later recognized by European countries.The Philosophical Journey by Alexandre Rodrigues Ferreira, following the Rio Negro, Rio Branco, Rio Madeira and Rio Guaporé describes the Mato Grosso region and the border line, with references always related to the course of those rivers and their tributaries. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  7. 27

    El austracismo castellano: elección política y movili-zación social durante la Guerra de Sucesión by Julio D. MUÑOZ RODRÍGUEZ

    Published 2009-11-01
    “…It meant a tragic war between the supporters of the Austrian dynasty and the people who defended the Bourbon choice to succeed to the Spanish crown. The Castilians’ loyalty to the Bourbons has become in a well-known topoi, in spite of the social mobilisation that the archduke Charles of Austria aroused in these territories. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  8. 28

    Enter Xiuhquilitl: indigo in the Spanish Empire, c.1550-1700 by Catena, A

    Published 2015
    “…Over the course of the sixteenth century, the burgeoning globalising forces of exploration and discovery transformed the indigo trade in Asia and the Americas, the histories of blue, and woad producing regions in Europe. Around 1560, the Spanish Crown found indigo-producing plants grew wild in parts of New Spain, and across the Captaincy General of Guatemala; settlers turned with enthusiasm to the new industry, and by 1600 indigo ranked third on the list of exports from the Spanish colonies – after bullion, and cochineal, contending for its place with cattle hides. …”
    Thesis
  9. 29

    Juan Daniel Weber en Aullagas (1790): De minero de segunda en Europa a experto en Potosí by María Concepción Gavira Marquez

    Published 2015-02-01
    “…This paper addresses the issue of Central European metal workers commissioned by the Spanish Crown to modernize the American mining activity in the late 18th century. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  10. 30

    The compositional model of Santo Domingo and Cartagena fortifications between old and new world by Anna Dell'Amico, Silvia La Placa

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…Their fame is due to Giovanni Battista, the military and hydraulic engineer of Italian origin, and training in the Spanish Crown service. During the second half of the sixteenth century, he designed and built the defense of the Iberian Peninsula's borders, taking care of Cartagena's port city, the coast of the Kingdom of Valencia, and the African ports of Oran and Mazalquivir. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  11. 31

    Smuggling and its impact on the grand strategy of the Spanish Empire, XIV-XVII centuries by Zackrison, JL

    Published 2019
    “…The high level of fraude robbed the Spanish Crown of more than half of its potential tax income from the Indies, thus interfering with its grand strategy in Europe. …”
    Thesis
  12. 32

    The comedia de privanza in Spain in the reign of Philip III by Rowntree, A

    Published 2019
    “…The accession of Philip III to the Spanish crown saw the raising of the Duke of Lerma to office as the most powerful <em>privado</em>, or favourite, in Spain since the infamous medieval privado, Don Álvaro de Luna. …”
    Thesis
  13. 33

    Political Economy and Knowledge Production in the Making of the Viceroyalty of New Granada by María José Afanador-Llach

    Published 2023-07-01
    “…Objective/Context: During the eighteenth century, officials from different colonial powers attempted to turn the viceroyalty of the New Kingdom of Granada—present-day Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela, and Panama—into an economically viable territory. The Spanish Crown embraced its most radical jurisdictional reform in centuries to exercise effective state control, extract more revenue, and defend the colonies from foreign incursions. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  14. 34

    Santa Marta en la independencia: entre el pragmatismo y la insurrección Santa Marta during the Independence: Between pragmatism and insurrection by Juan Manuel Martínez Fonseca

    Published 2010-07-01
    “…This unusual situation, suggesting a loyalty to the Spanish crown, is explained by tracing the historical processes experienced by the city during the eighteenth century and early decades of the nineteenth century. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  15. 35

    The Smallpox Vaccine in Latin America: A New Approach (1801–1804) by Antonio Pérez Pérez, José Ramón Vallejo

    Published 2023-06-01
    “…Thus, the main objective of this research work is to offer an overview of the different anti-variolic vaccination initiatives prior to the campaign financed by the Spanish crown from these health facilities. Using the heuristic and hermeneutic method, our article is based on primary sources contrasted with specialised literature. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  16. 36
  17. 37

    Vasco de Quiroga en la frontera africana. Aportación de un nuevo documento para su biografía, 1526 by MARÍA MERCEDES DELGADO PÉREZ

    Published 2021-09-01
    “…It is in the Historical Archive in the Archivo Municipal de Málaga (Spain), and it shows his service to the Spanish crown as an inquirer (juez pesquisidor) for investigating the actions both the spaniards subjects, both the foreigners, especially the traders that traffiqued in the Spain’s south-east coast with the spaniard and muslim in North Africa’s strongholds, specifically in Oran. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  18. 38

    Vasco de Quiroga en la frontera africana. Aportación de un nuevo documento para su biografía, 1526 by MARÍA MERCEDES DELGADO PÉREZ

    Published 2021-09-01
    “…It is in the Historical Archive in the Archivo Municipal de Málaga (Spain), and it shows his service to the Spanish crown as an inquirer (juez pesquisidor) for investigating the actions both the spaniards subjects, both the foreigners, especially the traders that traffiqued in the Spain’s south-east coast with the spaniard and muslim in North Africa’s strongholds, specifically in Oran. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  19. 39

    LOS RESTOS ÓSEOS HUMANOS DE NOMBRE DE JESÚS.: EVIDENCIAS DE LA SALUD EN EL PRIMER ASENTAMIENTO EUROPEO EN PATAGONIA AUSTRAL THE HUMAN BONE REMAINS OF NOMBRE DE JESUS: EVIDENCES OF... by JORGE A SUBY, RICARDO A GUICHÓN, M. XIMENA SENATORE

    Published 2009-11-01
    “…These analyses make it possible to study the health of the individuals of one of the biggest expeditions of the Spanish Crown, and they provide an interesting source of evidence to discuss the first period of native european contact and the introduction of new pathologies in Patagonia.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  20. 40

    «Decadencia» y «Tiranía»: Textos, lenguajes y representaciones de la proclamación de D. João IV en el Estado de la India by José Ferreira

    Published 2014-03-01
    “…</p><p><em>How was perceived in India the rebellion that put an end the Union of the Portuguese and Spanish Crowns? This question will be the guiding line of this article, which aims to understand the global dynamics of the Restauração of 1640. …”
    Get full text
    Article