Governorate of Bracamoros explained

Native Name:Gobierno de Bracamoros
Conventional Long Name:Governorate of Bracamoros
Common Name:Bracamoros
Subdivision:Governorate
Nation:the Spanish Empire
Title Leader:Governor
Leader1:Juan de Salinas (first)
Year Leader1: 1556–1569
Capital:Jaén de Bracamoros
Year Start:1540s
Year End:1821
Date End:4 June
Era:Spanish colonization of the Americas
Flag:Flag of Spain
P1:BracamorosBracamoros people
P2:
  1. HistoryYahuarzongos Governorate
Flag P2:Flag of Cross of Burgundy.svg
S1:Protectorate of Peru
Flag S1:Flag of Peru (1821-1822).svg

The Governorate of Bracamoros (Spanish; Castilian: Gobierno de Bracamoros / Tenencia de Bracamoros) was a governorate (gobernación) of the Spanish Empire established during the 16th century in an area of the Amazon rainforest originally populated by the now extinct Bracamoros people.

The area was originally established as two governorates, including the Governorate of Yahuarzongos (Spanish; Castilian: Gobernación de Yahuarzongos), although it was eventually merged into a single entity. The governorate was occupied by the Liberating Expedition of Peru during the Peruvian War of Independence, later being one of the areas subject to a long-lasting territorial dispute between Ecuador and Peru.

History

See also: Bracamoros. The Spanish arrived to the region in the 16th century, with the first expedition taking place in 1536 under the orders of Francisco Pizarro. It ended with the establishment of the short-lived town of Jérez de la Frontera, near the Pongo de Rentema, later refounded with the name of "Nueva Jérez de la Frontera," five leagues off "old Jaén" (Jaén viejo)[1] and today today non-existent.[2] While Juan Porcel of the Spanish Army was in charge of the construction of the city's cabildo and church, he was summoned by Viceroy Blasco Núñez Vela to fight against Gonzalo Pizarro's rebellion, later joining him and continuing his expeditions under his brief government. In 1546, he again switched sides against Pizarro.[1] Jerez was renamed to Jaén in April 1549.[1]

Jaén was followed by the creation of the settlements of Ávila (later part of the Governorate of Quijos and destroyed during an Indian rebellion on November 29, 1578.[3]) Perico and Chirinos. Advancements into the area had already been made from the north and south by the time Jaén was established. Near the Zamora's basin in the northern part of the area, the short-lived town of Bilbao was founded in 1541, later repopulated by Pedro de Vergara.[1] Another town known as Zamora de los Alcaides was also established during this time.[4] Once the area had been occupied with settlements, the governorates of Bracamoros and Yahuarzongos were established, eventually merged into the former.[4]

From 1549 onwards, the territories were reorganised as encomiendas and distributed among the Spaniards that took control of the area, with the natives numbered at 20,000 people. By 1606, the number had been reduced to 1,500 due to the effects of forced labour and diseases brought by the Spanish. The last two huambucos died in the town Santa Rosa around 1961.[5]

The Bourbon Reforms made the governorate, as well as Luya and Zaña, important commercial centres for the cultivation of tobacco that formed a route alongside Lima, Santiago de Chile, and other cities to the south.[6]

The governorate, originally part of the Viceroyalty of Peru and dependent on Lima, became part of the Real Audiencia of Quito in 1563 and of the Bishopric of Trujillo since 1616. It was annexed to the Viceroyalty of New Granada in 1717 but reincorporated to Peru in 1723, joining New Granada again in 1739.[7] Jaén supported the independence of Trujillo and declared its independence from Spain and the Real Audiencia of Quito on June 4, 1821, joining the Protectorate of Peru[8] and being represented at its first congress in 1822.[7] The Province of Jaén was created on May 19, 1828, as part of the department of Trujillo and then of La Libertad until the creation of the Department of Cajamarca in 1855.[7]

List of representatives

The following is an incomplete list of governors of Bracamoros:

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Santos-Granero, Fernando . Etnohistoria de la Alta Amazonia . Ediciones Abya–Yala . 1992 . 83–85 . es .
  2. Book: Calderón Quijano, José Antonio . Toponimia española en el Nuevo Mundo . Guadalquivir . 1990 . 9788486080266 . 204 . es . De la Nueva Jerez de la Frontera no quedaron más vestigios que los documentos del siglo XVI..
  3. Book: Gutiérrez Marín, Wilson . Baeza: la ciudad de los Quijos. Su historia desde el siglo XVI al siglo XIX . Ediciones Abya–Yala . 2002 . 9978-22-243-X . Quito . 44, 48, 160–163 . es .
  4. Book: Peru: A Chronicle of Deception: Attempts to Transfer the Awajún Border Territory in the Cordillera Del Cóndor to the Mining Industry . . 2010 . 9788791563737 . 14 .
  5. Los grupos étnicos en la cuenca del Chuquimayo, siglos 15 y 16 . . Espinoza Soriano . Waldemar . 19–73 . 1973 . 2024-03-07 . 2007-09-28 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070928042951/http://www.ifeanet.org/publicaciones/articulo.php?codart=1211 . dead .
  6. Comercio y mercado del tabaco en la gobernación de Jaén de Bracamoros en la primera mitad del siglo xviii . . Morales . Carlos Ernesto . 2013-12-30 . 31 . 17 . 147–153 . 10.15381/is.v17i31.7904.
  7. Web site: Reseña histórica . Municipalidad provincial de Jaén.
  8. Web site: Efemérides: 4 de Junio de 1821 Declaración de la Independencia de Jaén . 2022-06-04 . Centro de Estudios Histórico Militares del Perú.
  9. Web site: Juan de Salinas Loyola . . Hampe Martínez . Teodoro.