Portugal had founded the city of Colonia…
1724 CE
Portugal had founded the city of Colonia do Sacramento between 1680 and 1683 in the region across the bay from Buenos Aires.
This city had met with no resistance from the Spanish until 1723, when they began to place fortifications on the elevations around Montevideo Bay.
Field Marshal Manuel de Freitas da Fonseca of Portugal had on November 22, 1723, built the Montevieu fort.
A Spanish expedition had been sent from Buenos Aires, organized by the Spanish governor of that city, Bruno Mauricio de Zabala.
The Spanish had forced the Portuguese to abandon the location on January 22, 1724, and started populating the city, initially with six families moving in from Buenos Aires and soon thereafter by families arriving from the Canary Islands who are called by the locals "guanches", "guanchos" or "canarios".
There is also one significant early Italian resident by the name of Jorge Burgues.
A census of the city's inhabitants is performed in 1724, then a plan is drawn delineating the city and designating it as San Felipe y Santiago de Montevideo, later shortened to Montevideo.
The census counts fifty families of Galician and Canary Islands origin, more than one thousand indigenous, mostly Guaraní, and a number of Africans of Bantú origin as slaves.