934 resultados para Late colonial period


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Nos proponemos analizar la integración de las indias a la vida urbana de Buenos Aires en el período colonial tardío. Este estudio se circunscribe al análisis de la conformación de los grupos domésticos. Consideramos que ellos son de una importancia fundamental ya que constituyeron los ámbitos en los cuales se transmitió y transformó el orden social. Para introducirnos a esta cuestión tomaremos en primera instancia los empadronamientos de la ciudad de Buenos Aires de los años 1744 y 1778. Dejamos para más adelante el abordaje de esta cuestión a partir de otras fuentes y con una escala de análisis reducida

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Para el período colonial tardío, Buenos Aires era una ciudad diferente del resto de Hispanoamérica, tanto en términos de su cultura como en sus manifestaciones sociales y en su crecimiento poco común. Bastaron poco más de tres décadas para que la pequeña aldea se transformara en una pujante ciudad hispanoamericana. La clave de esta transformación estuvo dada a lo largo de todo el siglo XVIII, dado que éste fue un período de profundos cambios político-sociales y Buenos Aires no fue la excepción. La ciudad comenzó a cambiar en todos sus aspectos. En primer lugar el conflicto de la España Borbónica con Inglaterra y Portugal llevó a introducir cambios profundos en la política española para el control estricto de las colonias en los bordes del imperio. La creación del Virreinato del Río de la Plata en 1776 y la extensión de la ordenanza de libre comercio dos años más tarde otorgaron un gran empuje a la ciudad. De este modo, Buenos Aires pasó a ser un activo polo de atracción tanto para los migrantes internos como para los externos del imperio español. Estos motivos provocaron mutaciones a nivel político, social y arquitectónico, dando lugar a un crecimiento único para una ciudad hispanoamericana entre 1750 y 1810

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El presente trabajo se ocupa de examinar una estrategia que los reos de la cárcel capitular porteña practicaron en tiempos virreinales en pos de aliviar las penurias propias del encierro. Nos referimos a la presentación de breves escritos -memoriales- dirigidos a las máximas autoridades políticas. Mediante un análisis cuantitativo y cualitativo, focalizaremos nuestra atención en el perfil social de los presos que utilizaron esta vía, y en las carencias que dejan entrever estas peticiones. También analizaremos las redes movilizadas y los argumentos expuestos por estos encarcelados. Concluimos que estos recursos retóricos evidencian aspectos claves de la cultura jurídica de la época y al mismo tiempo echan luz sobre los imaginarios que sustentaban la legitimidad de la autoridad política

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Este trabajo se ocupa de examinar el accionar de los agentes sociales indígenas atrapados en el entramado judicial, ya sea en calidad de damnificados o sospechados de un delito, en la campaña y a ciudad de Buenos Aires hacia fines del período colonial. El objetivo es indagar en la configuración y resolución de los conflictos que involucren a indígenas, observando tanto su posicionamiento como el de los agentes judiciales, eclesiásticos o particulares con cierto poder en el ámbito local que se encuentren involucrados en estas causas. Este análisis nos facilitará la entrada al entretejido social de la época, proporcionándonos claves para comprenderlo, a la vez que develará una diversidad de voces y miradas implicadas en el proceso de configuración y judicialización de los delitos

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En esta perspectiva, que intenta desentrañar las continuidades y rupturas entre el orden colonial y el entramado político y social del rosismo, nuestra intención es aportar un análisis sobre los litigios entre vecinos cuando la posesión de hecho sobre un terreno estaba en vías de convertirse en propiedad plena, cada vez que se accedía a los títulos mediante los distintos sistemas de otorgamiento de tierras públicas, desde los últimos años del período colonial hasta la finalización de la aplicación de la enfiteusis en la década de 1840, centrando la atención en la ocupación del territorio y los derechos adquiridos en los partidos de Chascomús y Ranchos. Aquí se pone de manifiesto el reconocimiento local de los estancieros y hacendados y los motivos de las disputas. A partir del análisis de los litigios se aprecia el juego de intereses de los hacendados y las conexiones con el poder civil en la frontera que se definen en la resolución extrajudicial del conflicto. Por otro lado se examinará el rol de las autoridades y los fundamentos de los dictámenes

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Los expedientes judiciales nos permiten acercar al complejo entramado de relaciones que se tejen entre los distintos actores sociales a nivel local. Aquí nos ocuparemos de uno de los sujetos de singular importancia en la sociedad rural bonaerense colonial: el pulpero. Sus vínculos con los distintos actores sociales locales son manifiestos, desde hacendados acaudalados y principales autoridades locales hasta vagabundos, esclavos e indios. Este artículo estudia el rol que cumplen los pulperos rurales en los conflictos que llegan a la justicia. ¿De qué lado se encuentran la mayoría de los pulperos, víctimas, acusados, testigos, funcionarios judiciales, etc.? ¿En qué tipo de casos se ven involucrados los pulperos? Robo de sus tiendas, violencia frente al mostrador, engranaje del circuito de contrabando de cueros son algunos de los asuntos en los que tienen vinculación directa. Por otro lado el trabajo aborda un tema más general ¿El pulpero perseguido por el Estado o instrumento de éste para perseguir a los sujetos que afecten el "orden público "? En definitiva el estudio intenta situar al pulpero dentro de la conflictividad de la campaña y el juego de coacción y negociación que se desarrolla con el avance de la racionalización del espacio rural hacia fines del siglo XVIII en la región pampeana.

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El presente trabajo aborda los presupuestos centrales de la Nueva Economía Institucional y su aplicación para la comprensión del período tardocolonial rioplatense. A partir del análisis de la obra de Douglas North señala los aportes, los riesgos y las tensiones de una historia que enfatiza el papel desempañado por los factores institucionales.

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Nos proponemos analizar la integración de las indias a la vida urbana de Buenos Aires en el período colonial tardío. Este estudio se circunscribe al análisis de la conformación de los grupos domésticos. Consideramos que ellos son de una importancia fundamental ya que constituyeron los ámbitos en los cuales se transmitió y transformó el orden social. Para introducirnos a esta cuestión tomaremos en primera instancia los empadronamientos de la ciudad de Buenos Aires de los años 1744 y 1778. Dejamos para más adelante el abordaje de esta cuestión a partir de otras fuentes y con una escala de análisis reducida

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This dissertation examines the discursive practice of Argentine costumbrista texts from a novel perspective. In (re)reading the works of selected prominent writers from the late colonial period to the end of the Nineteenth Century, including those of Alonso Carrió de la Vandera, Emeric Essex Vidal, León Pallière, Lucio Vicente López, Lucio V. Mansilla, and Pastor Obligado we focus on the presence of ekphrastic enunciations with a view toward linking the plastic, painterly dimensions of the prose to parallel representations by artists of the same period. Thus the costumbristas are studied in tandem with the watercolors, oil paintings and lithographic compositions of artists such as Carlos Enrique Pellegrim, César Hipólito Bacle, Raymond Monvoisin and Hipólito Moulin. The resulting comparative study of the two arts---the verbal and the pictorial---illustrates the notion described by W. J. T. Mitchell that a literary text may well "represent a work of visual or graphic art." And thus, it provides us with visual, spatial motifs that enhance its powers of representation. ^ In developing our focus on ekphrastic representations we have followed the theoretic studies of Murray Krieger, Jean H. Hagstrum, James Hefferman, John Hollander, W. J. T. Mitchell, Johann Gottfried Herder, and Wendy Steiner among others, all of whom in various ways take their cue from Horace's Ut pictura poesis and the notion that poetry, that is literary discourse, can be likened to a panting and that in both arts there is a refractive quality that makes literature a spoken vehicle of expression and painting a silent, complementary voice. ^ In studying the literary and plastic discourses comparatively what becomes evident is that they share cultural and ideological concerns that center around the notion of self-definition, national identity, and the relation of the individual to the incipient national community (Benedict Anderson). These concerns are highlighted via the depiction of customs, mores, dress, work habits, professions, and social classes. In late colonial literature and painting and especially in the Nineteenth Century, which constitutes the defining period of Argentine political independence, the confluence of the two disciplinary discourses addresses, and underscores the issues of socio-political empowerment in the new Argentine nation. ^

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ResumenUn extenso ciclo de crecimiento económico caracterizó al Valle Central de Costa Rica durante el período colonial tardío. Sin embargo, el efecto de dicho crecimiento sobre las estructuras socio-económicas no fue homogéneo, y es posible observar notables diferencias en las secciones oriental y occidental de dicho valle. En la primera, las adversas condiciones que enfrentaba el productor directo le impidieron beneficiarse de la expansión mercantil como lo hicieron los productores radicados del lado occidental.AbstractCosta Rica´s Central Valley underwent a major economic growth cycle during the late Colonial period. However, the effect of this growth on socio-economic structures was not homogeneous, and there were noticeable discrepancies between the eastern and western sections of that Valley. In the former, adverse conditions faced be direct producers did not allow them to benefit from mercantile expansion, as did those living in the western section.

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This article focuses on the studies and discourses of mostly British scholars of the early colonial period belonging to two schools of thought. It shows how the studies of both schools – European orientalism and utilitarianism – were intricately connected to the political development of the emerging British paramountcy over the South Asian sub-continent, as both were looking for means of establishing and/or strengthening colonial rule. Nevertheless, the debate was not just a continuation of discussions in Europe. Whereas the ideas of the European Enlightenment had some influence, the transformation of the Mughal Empire and especially the idea of a decline of Muslim rule offered ample opportunities for understanding the early history of India either as some sort of “Golden Age,” as the orientalists and their indigenous supporters did, or as something static and degenerate, as the utilitarians did, and from which the population of sub-continent had to be saved by colonial rule and colonial values. Fearing the spread of the ideas of the French Revolution, the first group of British scholars sought to persuade the native elites of South Asia to take the lessons of their past for the future development of their homeland. Just as the classicists back in Europe, these scholars were convinced that large-scale explanations of the past could also teach political and moral lessons for the present although it was important to deal with the distant past in an empirical manner. The utilitarians on the other hand believed that India had to be saved from its own depravity through the English language and Western values, which amounted to nothing less than the modern transformation of the true Classical Age.

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Geelong, Victoria’s second city, has an AFL football club whose culture and identity is closely tied to the city itself. An analysis of its playing group for the colonial period demonstrates that this local tribalism began early. As football became professionalised towards the end of the nineteenth century, country Victoria lost power in relative terms to metropolitan Melbourne: for example, Ballarat’s three main clubs lost their senior status. But Geelong, with its one remaining senior club, prospered and was admitted to the VFL ranks in 1897. The Geelong players were the sons and nephews of the Western District squattocracy and so had access to networks of power and influence. Many attended the prestigious Geelong Grammar School and the worthy Geelong College (in surprisingly equal numbers). They pursued careers both on the land and in professional roles, and maintained the social connections they had built through the club and other local institutions. Despite their elite standing, however, they continued to be regarded by the supporter base as an embodiment of the city and a defence against the city’s Melbourne critics that Geelong was a mere ‘sleepy hollow’.

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A common explanation for African current underdevelopment is the extractive character of institutions established during the colonial period. Yet, since colonial extraction is hard to quantify and its exact mechanisms are not well understood, we still do not know precisely how colonial institutions affect economic growth today. In this project, I study this issue by focusing on the peculiar structure of trade and labor policies employed by the French colonizers.

First, I analyze how trade monopsonies and coercive labor institutions reduced African gains from trade during the colonial period. By using new data on prices to agricultural producers and labor institutions in French Africa, I show that (1) the monopsonistic character of colonial trade implied a reduction in prices to producers far below world market prices; (2) coercive labor institutions allowed the colonizers to reduce prices even further; (3) as a consequence, colonial extraction cut African gains from trade by over 60%.

Given the importance of labor institutions, I then focus on their origin by analyzing the colonial governments' incentives to choose between coerced and free labor. I argue that the choice of institutions was affected more by the properties of exported commodities, such as prices and economies of scale, than by the characteristics of colonies, such indigenous population density and ease of settlement for the colonizers.

Finally, I study the long-term effects of colonial trade monopsonies and coercive labor institutions. By combining archival data on prices in the French colonies with maps of crop suitability, I show that the extent to which prices to agricultural producers were reduced with respect to world market prices is strongly negatively correlated with current regional development, as proxied by luminosity data from satellite images. The evidence suggests that colonial extraction affected subsequent growth by reducing development in rural areas in favor of a urban elite. The differential impact in rural and urban areas can be the reason why trade monopsonies and extractive institutions persisted long after independence.

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In western civilization, the knowledge of the elasmobranch or selachian fishes (sharks and rays) begins with Aristotle (384–322 B.C.). Two of his extant works, the “Historia Animalium” and the “Generation of Animals,” both written about 330 B.C., demonstrate knowledge of elasmobranch fishes acquired by observation. Roman writers of works on natural history, such as Aelian and Pliny, who followed Aristotle, were compilers of available information. Their contribution was that they prevented the Greek knowledge from being lost, but they added few original observations. The fall of Rome, around 476 A.D., brought a period of economic regression and political chaos. These in turn brought intellectual thought to a standstill for nearly one thousand years, the period known as the Dark Ages. It would not be until the middle of the sixteenth century, well into the Renaissance, that knowledge of elasmobranchs would advance again. The works of Belon, Salviani, Rondelet, and Steno mark the beginnings of ichthyology, including the study of sharks and rays. The knowledge of sharks and rays increased slowly during and after the Renaissance, and the introduction of the Linnaean System of Nomenclature in 1735 marks the beginning of modern ichthyology. However, the first major work on sharks would not appear until the early nineteenth century. Knowledge acquired about sea animals usually follows their economic importance and exploitation, and this was also true with sharks. The first to learn about sharks in North America were the native fishermen who learned how, when, and where to catch them for food or for their oils. The early naturalists in America studied the land animals and plants; they had little interest in sharks. When faunistic works on fishes started to appear, naturalists just enumerated the species of sharks that they could discern. Throughout the U.S. colonial period, sharks were seldom utilized for food, although their liver oil or skins were often utilized. Throughout the nineteenth century, the Spiny Dogfish, Squalus acanthias, was the only shark species utilized in a large scale on both coasts. It was fished for its liver oil, which was used as a lubricant, and for lighting and tanning, and for its skin which was used as an abrasive. During the early part of the twentieth century, the Ocean Leather Company was started to process sea animals (primarily sharks) into leather, oil, fertilizer, fins, etc. The Ocean Leather Company enjoyed a monopoly on the shark leather industry for several decades. In 1937, the liver of the Soupfin Shark, Galeorhinus galeus, was found to be a rich source of vitamin A, and because the outbreak of World War II in 1938 interrupted the shipping of vitamin A from European sources, an intensive shark fishery soon developed along the U.S. West Coast. By 1939 the American shark leather fishery had transformed into the shark liver oil fishery of the early 1940’s, encompassing both coasts. By the late 1940’s, these fisheries were depleted because of overfishing and fishing in the nursery areas. Synthetic vitamin A appeared on the market in 1950, causing the fishery to be discontinued. During World War II, shark attacks on the survivors of sunken ships and downed aviators engendered the search for a shark repellent. This led to research aimed at understanding shark behavior and the sensory biology of sharks. From the late 1950’s to the 1980’s, funding from the Office of Naval Research was responsible for most of what was learned about the sensory biology of sharks.

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The landscape of late medieval Ireland, like most places in Europe, was characterized by intensified agricultural exploitation, the growth and founding of towns and cities and the construction of large stone edifices, such as castles and monasteries. None of these could have taken place without iron. Axes were needed for clearing woodland, ploughs for turning the soil, saws for wooden buildings and hammers and chisels for the stone ones, all of which could not realistically have been made from any other material. The many battles, waged with ever increasingly sophisticated weaponry, needed a steady supply of iron and steel. During the same period, the European iron industry itself underwent its most fundamental transformation since its inception; at the beginning of the period it was almost exclusively based on small furnaces producing solid blooms and by the turn of the seventeenth century it was largely based on liquid-iron production in blast-furnaces the size of a house. One of the great advantages of studying the archaeology of ironworking is that its main residue, slag, is often produced in copious amounts both during smelting and smithing, is virtually indestructible and has very little secondary use. This means that most sites where ironworking was carried out are readily recognizable as such by the occurrence of this slag. Moreover, visual examination can distinguish between various types of slag, which are often characteristic for the activity from which they derive. The ubiquity of ironworking in the period under study further means that we have large amounts of residues available for study, allowing us to distinguish patterns both inside assemblages and between sites. Disadvantages of the nature of the remains related to ironworking include the poor preservation of the installations used, especially the furnaces, which were often built out of clay and located above ground. Added to this are the many parameters contributing to the formation of the above-mentioned slag, making its composition difficult to connect to a certain technology or activity. Ironworking technology in late medieval Ireland has thus far not been studied in detail. Much of the archaeological literature on the subject is still tainted by the erroneous attribution of the main type of slag, bun-shaped cakes, to smelting activities. The large-scale infrastructure works of the first decade of the twenty-first century have led to an exponential increase in the amount of sites available for study. At the same time, much of the material related to metalworking recovered during these boom-years was subjected to specialist analysis. This has led to a near-complete overhaul of our knowledge of early ironworking in Ireland. Although many of these new insights are quickly seeping into the general literature, no concise overviews on the current understanding of the early Irish ironworking technology have been published to date. The above then presented a unique opportunity to apply these new insights to the extensive body of archaeological data we now possess. The resulting archaeological information was supplemented with, and compared to, that contained in the historical sources relating to Ireland for the same period. This added insights into aspects of the industry often difficult to grasp solely through the archaeological sources, such as the people involved and the trade in iron. Additionally, overviews on several other topics, such as a new distribution map of Irish iron ores and a first analysis of the information on iron smelting and smithing in late medieval western Europe, were compiled to allow this new knowledge on late medieval Irish ironworking to be put into a wider context. Contrary to current views, it appears that it is not smelting technology which differentiates Irish ironworking from the rest of Europe in the late medieval period, but its smithing technology and organisation. The Irish iron-smelting furnaces are generally of the slag-tapping variety, like their other European counterparts. Smithing, on the other hand, is carried out at ground-level until at least the sixteenth century in Ireland, whereas waist-level hearths become the norm further afield from the fourteenth century onwards. Ceramic tuyeres continue to be used as bellows protectors, whereas these are unknown elsewhere on the continent. Moreover, the lack of market centres at different times in late medieval Ireland, led to the appearance of isolated rural forges, a type of site unencountered in other European countries during that period. When these market centres are present, they appear to be the settings where bloom smithing is carried out. In summary, the research below not only offered us the opportunity to give late medieval ironworking the place it deserves in the broader knowledge of Ireland's past, but it also provided both a base for future research within the discipline, as well as a research model applicable to different time periods, geographical areas and, perhaps, different industries..