17 - Spanish Empire (abridged)
New Spain
Spanish colonial administrative unit including Central America, Mexico, and the southeast and southwest of the present-day United States; governed from the capital of Mexico City
Viceroyalty of Peru
Spanish colonial administrative unit including most of Spanish-ruled South America; governed from the capital of Lima
Spanish East Indies
colonies of the Spanish Empire in Asia and Oceania from 1565 until 1901: the Philippines, Marianas, Carolines, Palaos and Guam, as well as parts of Formosa, Sulawesi and the Moluccas
Manila galleons
first permanent trade route across the Pacific; heavily armed, fast ships made or two round-trip voyages per year between Mexico and the Philippines from 1565 to 1815; exchanged Asian spices and porcelain for Mexican silver
audiencia
royal court of appeals established in Spanish colonies of the New World; there were 16 throughout Spanish America; part of colonial administrative system; staffed by professional magistrates
haciendas
rural estates in Spanish colonies in New World; produced agricultural products for consumers in America; basis of wealth and power for local aristocracy
Jose de Galvez
(1720-1787) Spanish minister of the West Indies and chief architect of colonial reform; moved to eliminate Creoles from upper bureaucracy of the colonies; created intendants for local government
Tupac Amaru II
(1738-1781) mestizo leader of Indian revolt in Peru; supported by many among lower social classes; revolt eventually failed because of Creole fears of real social revolution
Zacatecas
Mexican settlement in New Spain founded in 1546 after the discovery of one of the world's richest silver veins; produced one-fifth of the world's silver by the 1700s
sistema de castas
colonial Spanish America social hierarchy based on racial origins; Europeans or whites at top, black slaves or Native Americans at bottom, mixed races in middle
Virgin of Guadalupe
an apparition of the Virgin Mary that appeared to a Mexican farmer in 1531; exerted a powerful attraction to surviving Amerindians of Mesoamericans; an icon of Mexican identity
Spanish Main
coastal waters of the mainland Spanish colonies on the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Sea; point of departure for enormous American wealth shipped to Spain in the form of gold, silver, gems, spices, hardwoods, hides and other riches; a ripe target for pirates and privateers
Spanish treasure fleet
first permanent transatlantic trade route connecting Spain and the Spanish colonies in the Americas; transported American agricultural goods, lumber, silver, gold, gems, pearls, spices, sugar, tobacco, silk, and other exotic goods to Spain
War of Spanish Succession
followed the Bourbon family's succession to Spanish throne in 1701; ended by Treaty of Utrecht in 1713; resulted in recognition of Bourbon dynasty in Spain, loss of some lands, grants of commercial rights to English and French
encomienda
grant of Indian laborers made to Spanish conquerors and settlers in Mesoamerica and South America; basis for earliest forms of coerced labor in Spanish colonies
mit'a
labor extracted for lands assigned to the state and the religion; all communities were expected to contribute; an essential aspect of Inca imperial control
Miguel Cabrera
mestizo painter of New Spain; created religious and secular art for the Catholic Church and wealthy patrons; his casta paintings depicted interracial marriage among Amerindians, Spaniards and Africans
Cerro Potosi
mountain in the Peruvian Andes; its rich mines provided vast quantities of silver for Spain; one of the largest colonial cities in the Americas
peninsulares
people born in Spain and Portugal living in the New World
mulatos
people of mixed European and African ancestry in the New World Spanish colonies
mestizos
people of mixed European and native ancestry in Mesoamerica and South America; particularly prevalent in areas colonized by Spain; often part of forced labor system
viceroyalties
two (later four) major divisions of Spanish colonies in New World; one based in Lima; the other in Mexico City; direct representatives of the king
Creoles/criollos
white Latin Americans of Spanish descent born in the New World Spanish colonies; dominated local Latin American economies and ranked just beneath peninsulares