The
Viceroyalty of New Granada (Spanish:
Virreinato de la Nueva Granada) was the name given in
1717 to a Spanish colonial jurisdiction in northern
South America, corresponding mainly to modern
Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela. Before the
nineteenth century independence struggles, the Viceroyalty of New Granada existed as a political and administrative entity which also extended to include oversight over local authorities in
Ecuador,
Guyana,
Panamá,
Trinidad and Tobago, and
Venezuela, as well as small parts of
Brazil and
Peru.
Colonial history
After the establishment of an
Audiencia (a "court of hearing") at
Santa Fé de Bogotá and of the
New Kingdom of Granada in the
sixteenth century, whose governor was loosely dependent upon the Viceroy of Peru at
Lima, the slowness of communications between the two capitals led to the creation of an independent
Viceroyalty of New Granada in
1717 (and its reestablishment in
1739 after a short interruption); other provinces corresponding to modern
Ecuador and
Venezuela, and eventually
Panama, until then under other jurisdictions, came together in a political unit under the jurisdiction of Bogota, confirming that city as one of the principal administrative centers of the Spanish possessions in the New World, along with
Lima and
Mexico City. Sporadic attempts at reform were directed at increased efficiency and centralized authority, but control from Spain was never very effective.
The rough and diverse geography of northern South America and the limited range of proper roads made travel and communications inside the Viceroyalty difficult. The establishment of a
Captaincy General in
Caracas and an
Audiencia in
Quito, still legally subordinated to the Viceroy, was a response to the necessities of effectively governing their surrounding regions, and some analysts consider that it was also reflecting a degree of local traditions that, much later, eventually contributed to creating differing political and national differences between the newly independent territories that the unifying efforts of
Simón Bolívar couldn't overcome.
Demographics
New Granada is estimated at having 4,345,000 inhabitants in 1819:
Source:
World Population, GDP and Per Capita GDP, 1-2003 AD
Main Cities
By population
- 1 - Santa Fe
- 2 - Caracas
- 3 - Quito
- 4 - Cartagena
- 5 - Panama
- 6 - Cuenca
- 7 - Popayan
- 8 - Tunja
Independent history
The territories of the Viceroyalty gained full
de facto independence from Spain between
1819 and
1822 after a series of military and political struggles, uniting as part of a federation known as
Gran Colombia.
When Ecuador and Venezuela became separate states during the dissolution of Gran Colombia, a "Republic of New Granada" centered around the capital of Bogotá lasted from
1831 to
1856, and "New Granada" was a usage that later survived in conservative circles, such as among ecclesiastics.
Today, some people in Colombia's neighboring countries sometimes still refer to Colombians as
neogranadinos ("new-granadians").
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