New Granada in the beginning had formed …

Years: 1684 - 1827

New Granada in the beginning had formed part of the Viceroyalty of Peru, which was formed in 1544 and comprised all of Spanish South America plus Panama.

However, subordination to the viceroy in Lima was mostly nominal, and in 1717-19 New Granada in its own right attains viceregal status, which it loses in 1723 but regains permanently in 1739.

In its final shape, the Viceroyalty of the New Kingdom of Granada includea Venezuela, Quito (now shorn of jurisdiction over Pasto and Popayan), and Panama.

Venezuela becomes a captaincy general and as such conducts most affairs without reference to the viceroy, exactly as New Granada had done when attached to Peru, whereas Quito is a presidency and not quite so independent of the viceregal capital.

Yet when even a fast courier will take weeks to travel from Santa Fe to Panama or Quito, officials in these outlying areas enjoy substantial autonomy in practice.

Exactly the same can be said of the viceregal administration at Santa Fe vis-á-vis the Council of the Indies and other officials in Spain who in principle exercise supreme executive, legislative, and judicial authority over all Spanish America.

It is understood that sometimes an order from the mother country may be inapplicable in a given colony, whose top administrator can then suspend it while appealing for reconsideration—with a final decision likely to be years in coming, if it comes at all.

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