Spanish colonial pueblos and villas in North America explained
Spanish colonial authorities in North America established misiones (churches with attached farms), presidios (military forts) and villas or pueblos (civilian settlements with residences, retail businesses, agricultural markets, etc.). Official pueblo establishments (as opposed to those that developed organically) were granted four square Spanish leagues of land and were required to be sited at least five Spanish leagues away from any other pueblo. According to one Arizona history, "Each organized pueblo was to have at least thirty inhabitants, each one to have ten breeding cows, four oxen, one brood mare, one sow, twenty Castillian ewes, six hens and one cock. House lots and sowing lands were to be distributed among pueblo settlers."[1] Among the leadership of a pueblo was an alcalde (preceded in the history of Spanish administration by the title corregidor).
Spanish colonial pueblos in North America included:[2]
- Villa of Santa Cruz de la Cañada, now Santa Cruz, New Mexico[3]
- La Villa de San Francisco Xavier de Alburquerque, New Mexico - see
- La Villa Real de la Santa Fe de San Francisco de Asís, New Mexico[4] - see Santa Fe, New Mexico and Santa Fe de Nuevo México
- Villa el Paso del Norte at today's Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua and El Paso, Texas[5]
- Villa de Branciforte, in Santa Cruz County, California
- Pueblo de Los Ángeles in Los Angeles County, California, founded in 1781; land patented August 4, 1875, to the City of Los Angeles; containing 17,172.37 acres.
- Pueblo de San José de Guadalupe in Santa Clara County, California,[6] founded November 27,[7] 1777; patented July 4, 1884, to the City of San Jose; containing 55,891.77 acres
- Pueblo at Yerba Buena, California, adjacent to Mission San Francisco de Asís and Presidio of San Francisco in Alta California
- Pueblo de Sonoma in Sonoma County, California, founded in 1835 by the Mexican government; patented March 31, 1880, to the City of Sonoma; containing 6,063.95 acres - see Sonoma State Historic Park
- Villa de Béjar or Villa de Bexar in Spanish Texas, see History of San Antonio, Presidio San Antonio de Béxar
- Pueblo of Santa Barbara, California[8]
See also
External links
Notes and References
- Mattison . Ray . 1946-10-01 . Early Spanish and Mexican Settlements in Arizona . New Mexico Historical Review . 21 . 4 . 0028-6206.
- Web site: Rancho, Pueblo, Presidio & Mission Lands . CA State Lands Commission . 2023-03-30 . en.
- Web site: Renewing Spanish Colonial Society . 2023-03-30 . myText CNM . en-US.
- Web site: Cerkkila . 2022-07-27 . Santa Fe and the Spanish City System . 2023-03-30 . SAH ARCHIPEDIA . en.
- News: Shorris . Earl . 1999-05-09 . Rio Grande, Ciudad Juarez . en-US . The New York Times . 2023-03-30 . 0362-4331.
- Web site: A Year in the Life of a Spanish Colonial Pueblo: San José de Guadalupe in 1809 . 2023-03-30 . Google Arts & Culture . en.
- Book: Robinson, W. W. . Land in California, the story of mission lands, ranchos, squatters, mining claims, railroad grants, land scrip [and] homesteads. ]. 1948 . Univ. of California Press . Chronicles of California . Berkeley . 37.
- Web site: Santa Barbara Pueblo Lands, Diseños 543, GLO 386, Santa Barbara County, and associated historical documents .