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Duke University Press

The New Kingdom of Granada: The Making and Unmaking of Spain's Atlantic Empire

The New Kingdom of Granada: The Making and Unmaking of Spain's Atlantic Empire

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The New Kingdom of Granada tells the history of the making and unmaking of empire in the diverse and decentralized Indigenous landscapes of the Northern Andes. Santiago Mu?oz-Arbel?ez examines the intricate and disputed processes that reshaped the peoples and landscapes of present-day Colombia into a kingdom within the global Spanish monarchy. Drawing on correspondence, visitation reports, judicial records, maps, textiles, and accounting and legal documents created by Europeans and Indigenous peoples, Mu?oz-Arbel?ez outlines the painstaking century-long effort between 1530 and 1630 to consolidate the kingdom. A diverse group of people that included Indigenous interpreters, scribes, and intellectuals spearheaded these projects, which eventually expanded colonial control outward from its base in the highland Andean plateaus down to the lowland river valleys. Meanwhile, autonomous Indigenous political projects constantly threatened imperial rule, as rebels often encircled the kingdom and seized the corridors that linked it to Spain. By foregrounding the kingdom's difficult establishment and tenuous hold on power, Mu?oz-Arbel?ez challenges traditional understandings of imperial politics and the myriad ways Indigenous peoples participated in, disputed, and negotiated the establishment of colonial rule.

Author: Santiago Mu?oz-Arbel?ez
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Duke University Press
Published: 05/16/2025
Pages: 328
Weight: 0.96lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.73d
ISBN: 9781478031840
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