Spain undertakes an administrative reform to increase…
1780 CE to 1791 CE
It creates an intendancy system, giving extensive powers to highly qualified officials who are directly responsible to the king.
In 1784 Spain establishes four intendancies in Upper Peru, covering the present-day departments of La Paz, Cochabamba, Potosi, and Chuquisaca.
The Spanish crown at first controls the local governments indirectly but centralizes procedures as time goes on.
At first, Viceroy Francisco de Toledo confirms the rights of local nobles and guarantees them local autonomy, but the crown eventually comes to employ Spanish officials, corregidores de indios, to collect tribute and taxes from the natives.
Corregidores de indios also import goods and force the natives to buy them, a widely abused practice that proves to be an enormous source of wealth for these officials but causes much resentment among the native population.
Locations
Groups
Aymara people (Amerind tribe)
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Guaraní, Eastern Bolivian
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Guaraní (Amerind tribe)
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Uru people
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Quechua (Amerind tribe)
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Spain, Habsburg Kingdom of
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Spaniards (Latins)
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Río de la Plata, Governorate of the
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Spain, Bourbon Kingdom of
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Río de la Plata, Viceroyalty of
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