![]() ![]() And the fact that those volumes mostly focus on the ancient world, i.e. This reminds me of a series of highly interdisciplinary, volumes that have been published in the last decade on the “perception of the world in pre-modern societies” (Talbert and Brodersen, 2004 Raaflaub and Talbert 2010 Geus and Rathmann 2013). On the contrary, if we reflect on the picture the records are providing us with, a whole set of questions guides our exploration: how did officials in Buenos Aires think about Guinea? How did officials in Mexico City perceive the Philippines, or the Mariana Islands? And how different were their perceptions from those of other inhabitants of those two viceroyal capitals? And from those of the Spaniards living in, and the native populations of, the Philippines?Īn important point, then, is to realize how contemporaries understood the spaces that we are trying to address. We would not be able to find those records, and even less so to interpret them. For otherwise not only would we not understand why the records on Fernando Poo are included in a record that also inform us about new routes from Buenos Aires to Potosi, and on the new settlements in the Falklands/Malvinas and along the Patagonian coast. ![]() What then if – to put it very simply – the Philippines and Guinea belong to America (and an America called “Indias”)? In my opinion, this forces us, as historians, to avoid superposing our own contemporary spatial categories to the past realities we study conversely, it requires that we “listen” to what the sources are actually telling us (and to their silences too) about space and its perception. To make things even more interesting (or complicated), if the annexation would have happened only a couple of years earlier, the Guinean islands would have administratively depended on the Viceroyalty of Peru, since the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata was only established in 1776 as a partition of the former. The sources held at the Archivo General de Indias in Sevilla and at the Archivo Historico Nactional in Madrid actually reveal that the expedition that settled the islands sailed from the present-day-Argentinean capital. In addition to this, when under the Treaty of El Pardo (1778) the Portuguese crown ceded the islands of Fernando Poo and Annobon in Guinea to the King of Spain, these territories were officially put under the jurisdiction of the Viceroy of the Rio de la Plata, based in Buenos Aires. ![]() However, the Philippines in Asia, and the Micronesian territories of the Marianas and the Caroline Islands in Oceania were also administratively dependent on the Viceroy based in Mexico City. The Viceroyalty of New Spain included, among others, present-day Mexico, Central America (except Panama), Cuba, Puerto Rico, most of the United States west of the Mississipi River, and Florida. But there is also another reason, which has kept fascinating me since I started this research: Spanish “America” actually included parts of Asia, Oceania, and Africa. For example, the circulation of convicts and military convicts from peninsular Spain to the Caribbean – the single most important route from a quantitative point of view – cannot be explained unless the circulation from the North African presidios to peninsular Spain is taken into account. I will not deny that my own curiosity plays a part in this “expansion”. No doubt, the geographical scope has become broader than Spanish America. This brought me to areas as far from each other as peninsular Spain, North Africa, the Caribbean, California, Florida and Louisiana, South America (excluding Brazil), the Philippines, and the islands of Annobon and Fernando Po in Guinea. During the first seven months of research, I have been especially mapping the presence of convict in, and the routes of their transportation to, the presidios in the Spanish empire during the second half of the 18th century. The focus lies on convict transportation to colonial military fortifications (presidios) and post-colonial penal colonies, and the chronology covers the period from 1750 to 1958. In the context of the Carceral Archipelago project, my research addresses the circulation of convicts to and within colonial and post-colonial Latin America, in connection to other (“free” and “unfree”) labour flows and other types of punishment. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |