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Introduction: Features of Huy's First Founding Stage Foreword: In the United States, like the reconquest and repopulation of Castile, communities can be created by becoming part of the group that built them

author:Academy of Literature and History

Analysis: Features of Huy's first founding phase

Preface: In the United States, like the reconquest and repopulation of Castile, community can be obtained through the simple fact of being part of the group that built it.

However, this is not the same as receiving fair benefits in the distribution of privileges. Many of the laborers and infantry who accompanied Captain Francisco de Algañáraz to establish Jujuy not only did not receive mercy from Encomendas.

And without land or honor, therefore, the initial composition of the founding group and its unequal distribution exacerbated internal conflicts, while it regulated and copied the hierarchical and corporate colonial city system.

To be a neighbor means to have a special and differentiated status: even within the group considered "neighbor", there are internal differences, since nobility or nobility may give rise to specific rights, immunities and privileges.

Arguments such as "blood purification" or the presence (presumed or real) of noble predecessors in the trunk lineage are important points to consider when sharing benefits, and the genealogy, origins, and manner by which individuals enter new communities may hinder or facilitate access to land and Indian resources.

Having the mercy of the Indians was one of the most important goals of the conquerors, since it allowed gaining prestige and material support for the development of different economic activities.

The system of succession is subject to the system of succession perpetuates in the interests of certain bloodlines, allowing them to ascend the throne in the space of prestige and power.

Thus, in order to preserve the Nkomenda in future generations, many efforts have been made, either to litigation or to politics and the management of parental relations.

The whole system is full of tension and dominated by constant competition between groups and individuals, and their durability in the power structure is also disputed if this small group of families rotates in different positions.

With the almost complete absence of important resident merchants, the preeminence occupied by the entourage in the early political life of the city allowed them to have priority access to the Cabildo and, with it, to the direction of fate of the jurisdiction.

This practice of putting the office of the Council in the hands of the commander is repeated in many municipalities of Tucumán, who seem to occupy these positions legally, a custom that preserves the conditions of the neighbors, in addition to having densely populated houses, has Indian connotations.

In the early years of Huy's life, relations between the capital and the beneficiaries of Indian mercy were cemented despite the royal family's efforts to offset their influence in the U.S. Congress, seeking to free trade to other non-feudal neighbors.

As early as the third decade of the 17th century, the abolition of the electoral system meant the replacement of the traditional confrontation between "acquired rights" with a "political position market" that emphasized wealth, which manifested itself in the conflict between the old and the new, and wealth was a dynamic factor and means of rapid social status.

The "famous" neighbors found in Cabildo the key space to establish their rise and maintain their status at the local level, while consolidating the autonomy trend that repeats what happened in other jurisdictions of Tucumán.

The distance from the provincial capital and other centers of royal power led to the development of a certain independence of its capital elite, and the first founding phase of Juy was characterized by poor intervention by the government and even the Chalcas royal audience, giving priority to the interests of local companies over the generals.

As a result, members of the most centralized bloc took turns occupying politically decisive positions, developing important and successful policies to defend their interests, forcing the governors of the time to negotiate the appointment of their local deputies.

Often neighbours in the same city, while in some cases lobbyists encouraged the appointment of neighbours in jurisdictions to perform the duties of a royal magistrate, in other cases the same neighbourhood was used as a mechanism to allow them to be stripped of their posts.

This was the case of Captain Diego Iníguez de Chavarri, son-in-law of Francisco de Algagnalla z "Elmozo", as well as a neighbor and lieutenant of the Governor of the city and its jurisdiction, Major of Justice and Captain of War.

Denounced in 1633 by Tarienho Pablo Bernardes de Ovando for carrying this double condition, Ovando asked the Court of Hearing of La Plata to exclude him from this position.

For the purposes of this work, this document is of particular concern for two reasons, firstly, because it puts current regulations in tension with other unwritten norms that promote loyalty to the city.

For convenience, they are neighbors in the same city, since they have been the aforementioned field chiefs, Juan Ochoa de Zarate and Don Francisco de Algarnaraz, as well as the governors Martín de Ledesm and Valderrama and other feudal regimes in the city.

There is no contradiction, so the above-mentioned war master and others his feelings and friends did not use the above royal rules as now, the aforementioned Captain Pablo Bernardes de Ovando did.

Conclusion: His nephews, because of their hatred for his integrity in administering justice and for doing so in the cause of the aforementioned live master, and with the notorious inconvenience, are outsiders because of the well-known grievances they have done and done. #历史 #

Source:

Albeck, María Esther and Palomec, Silvia. The Spanish occupied the indigenous lands of Pune and "Tucumánraya" during the early colonial period. American Memory. July/December 2009, No. 17-2, pp. 173-212.

Balar, M.E. de Sotana Sporapanpa: Religion and Society of Taldo Colonization in Rural Buenos Aires. Buenos Aires: Prometeo, 2007.

Introduction: Features of Huy's First Founding Stage Foreword: In the United States, like the reconquest and repopulation of Castile, communities can be created by becoming part of the group that built them
Introduction: Features of Huy's First Founding Stage Foreword: In the United States, like the reconquest and repopulation of Castile, communities can be created by becoming part of the group that built them
Introduction: Features of Huy's First Founding Stage Foreword: In the United States, like the reconquest and repopulation of Castile, communities can be created by becoming part of the group that built them

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