New Spain, Viceroyalty of

New Spain, Viceroyalty of
Former Spanish viceroyalty (1535–1821), principally in North America.

At various times it included what is now the southwestern U.S. (as well as Florida and parts of the coast of the Gulf of Mexico), Mexico, Central America north of Panama, much of the West Indies, and the Philippines. Mexico City was the seat of the government, which also had jurisdiction over Spain's Caribbean possessions. The first viceroy sent Francisco Vázquez de Coronado on his northern expeditions. The viceroyalty succumbed to the coalition forged by Agustín de Iturbide in 1821.

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▪ historical territory, Mexico
Spanish  Virreinato de Nueva España,  

      the first of the four viceroyalties that Spain created to govern its conquered lands in the New World. Established in 1535, it initially included all land north of the Isthmus of Panama under Spanish control. This later came to include upper and lower California, the area that is now the central and southwestern portion of the United States, and territory eastward along the Gulf of Mexico to Florida. The Viceroyalty of New Spain was also charged with governing Spain's Caribbean possessions. Later, in 1565, the newly conquered Philippines were placed under the jurisdiction of New Spain.

      Although technically superior in governing authority, the viceroy in New Spain was hampered in practice from exerting that authority by the considerable independence of governors and royal audiencias in many of the subordinate areas. His power was largely confined to central and southern Mexico—from San Luis Potosí in the north to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in the south. Within this territory, the viceroys of New Spain aided in converting the native population to Christianity, developed an array of educational institutions, and oversaw an economy based almost entirely on mining and ranching. During the first 100 years of Spanish rule, the Indian population of New Spain declined from an estimated 25 million to 1 million as a result of maltreatment, disease, and disruption of their cultures.

      The first viceroy in New Spain was Antonio de Mendoza (Mendoza, Antonio de), who ruled from 1535 to 1549, then served as viceroy of Peru, where he died after one year in office. In New Spain, he dispatched Francisco Coronado on his expedition northward while ameliorating some of the worst abuses of the conquistadores. He supported the church in its work with the native population.

      After a period of decline in the late 17th and early 18th centuries, the Viceroyalty of New Spain took on new life when refreshed by two distinguished men: Antonio María de Bucareli (1771–79) and Juan Vicente de Güemes Pacheco de Padilla, 2° conde de Revillagigedo (1789–94); the latter was the last able viceroy in New Spain.

      The Viceroyalty of New Spain managed to survive the early attempts at Mexican independence led by Miguel Hidalgo and José María Morelos. But it succumbed to the coalition forged by Agustín de Iturbide in 1821. Central America, which had been loosely joined to Mexico in the Viceroyalty of New Spain, was briefly annexed by the newly independent Mexican nation. In 1823, however, the people of Central America went their own way upon the overthrow of Iturbide's empire.

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Universalium. 2010.

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