Real Audiencia of Quito
Royal Audience of Quito Real Audiencia de Quito | |||||||||
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Royal Audience of the Viceroyalty of Nueva Granada | |||||||||
1563 - 1822 | |||||||||
Royal Audiencia of Quito, a map of 1779 by Francisco Requena y Herrera | |||||||||
Capital | Quito | ||||||||
• Type | Audiencia Real | ||||||||
Historical era | Spanish Empire | ||||||||
• Established | 29 August 1563 | ||||||||
• Incorporation into Colombia | 24 May 1822 | ||||||||
• Independence of Ecuador | 13 May | ||||||||
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Today part of | Ecuador, Colombia, Peru, Brazil |
The Royal Audience of Quito (Spanish: Real Audiencia de Quito, sometimes referred to as la Presidencia de Quito or el Reino de Quito) was an administrative unit in the Spanish Empire which had political, military, and religious jurisdiction over territories that today include Ecuador, parts of northern Peru, parts of southern Colombia and parts of northern Brazil. It was created by Royal Decree on 29 August 1563 by Philip II of Spain in the city of Guadalajara (Law X of Title XV of Book II of the Recopilación de Leyes de Indias).[1] It ended in 1822 with the incorporation of the area into the Republic of Gran Colombia, which had been established in 1819.
Structure
The 1563 decree established its structure and district:
In the City of San Francisco of El Quito, in Peru, shall reside another Royal Audiencia and Chancellery of ours, with a president; four judges of civil cases [oidores], who will also be judges of criminal cases [alcaldes del crimen]; a crown attorney [fiscal]; a bailiff [alguacil mayor]; a lieutenant of the Gran Chancellor; and the other necessary ministers and officials; and which shall have for district the Province of Quito, and along the coast towards the Ciudad de los Reyes [Lima] to the Port of Paita, exclusive; and inland towards Piura, Cajamarca, Chachapoyas, Moyobamba and Motilones, exclusive, including towards the aforesaid part the towns of Jaén, Valladolid, Loja, Zamora, Cuenca, La Zarza and Guayaquil, with the rest of the towns, which are in their districts or will be founded [in them]; and towards the towns of La Canela and Quijos, it should include said towns and the rest that shall be discovered; and along the coast towards Panama, until the Port of Buenaventura, inclusive; and inland to Pasto, Popayán, Cali, Buga, Chapanchinca and Guarchicona; because the rest of the places of the Government (Gobernación) of Popayan are of the Audiencia of the New Kingdom of Granada, with which, and with the one of Tierrafirme [Panama], it shall share a border on the north; and with the one of Los Reyes in the south; having for its western border the South Sea [Pacific Ocean] and eastern the provinces still not yet pacified nor discovered.
The Audiencia was effectively autonomous because the Viceroyal government (to which the Audiencia was technically subordinate in political matters) was too far away to administer its territories effectively. Thus, power was devolved to the Audiencia by the Viceroy and the audiencia territory was directly administered by the President of the Audiencia and the political, military, and religious officials underneath him. Initially the Audiencia of Quito formed part of the Viceroyalty of Peru (1563–1717) and (1723–1739). Later the Audiencia was part of a newly created Viceroyalty of Nueva Granada (1717–1723). This Viceroyalty was temporarily suppressed by the King of Spain in 1723 and the Audiencia of Quito returned to the Viceroyalty of Peru. In 1739, the Viceroyalty of Nueva Granada was re-established and the Audiencia of Quito was returned to it until it declared itself independent from Spain in 1822. Ecuador joined the territories of what is today Venezuela, Colombia and Panama to form the Republic of Colombia.
Independence
As part of Gran Colombia, the territories of Quito were divided up into districts, departments, and provinces on 25 June 1824 by La Ley de Division Territorial de la Republica de Colombia. The Audiencia de Quito was divided into 4 departments: Ecuador Department, Guayaquil Department, Azuay Department, and Cauca Department. The departments of Ecuador, Guayaquil, and Azuay united to form the Distrito del Sur. On 13 May 1830 the departments of Ecuador, Guayaquil, and Azuay separated from La Gran Colombia to form a new nation called Ecuador with Juan José Flores as its first president, who tried to incorporate the Department of Cauca, but to no avail.
References
- ^ Spain (1680). Recopilación de las Leyes de Indias. Titulo Quince. De las Audiencias y Chancillerias Reales de las Indias. Madrid. Spanish-language facsimile of the original.
Bibliography
- Phelan, John Leddy. The Kingdom of Quito in the Seventeenth Century: Bureaucratic Politics in the Spanish Empire. Madison, University of Wisconsin Press, 1967.
See also
- States and territories established in 1563
- States and territories disestablished in 1822
- Colonial Peru
- Real Audiencias
- Viceroyalty of Peru
- Colonial Colombia
- History of Ecuador
- Colonial Brazil
- Legal history of Peru
- 1563 establishments in the Spanish Empire
- 1563 establishments in South America
- 1563 establishments in the Viceroyalty of Peru
- 1820s disestablishments in the Spanish Empire
- 1820s disestablishments in South America