The chiefdom of San Juan Bautista de Végueta. 16th-17th centuries

Authors

  • Raúl Adanaqué Velásquez Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos

Abstract

The study of the colonial cacicazgos is very important because it helps us to understand the strategies carried
out by the curacas or caciques in order to maintain their privileges. The cacicazgo was an institution that
functioned in colonial times as an imitation of the one that functioned in Tahuantinsuyo with the Incas, with
the aim of controlling the aboriginal population. The Spanish conquerors took advantage in their own way,
conditioning the operation for their benefit. In the old zone of Chimú influence, it was where the first population
transfers were practiced according to the interests of the encomenderos until the lawyer Lope García de
Castro (1564-1569). It was from 1570, with the government of Viceroy Francisco de Toledo (1569-1581),
that the foundation of Indian towns with the so-called reductions began to be implemented throughout the
viceroyalty. As of those years, the general transfer of the populations to the territories that had previously been
chosen, either on vacant land or owned by curacas, began again. The transfer of the population to the chosen
location was with the objective of being able to count on the indigenous workforce with greater security and
thus they could not evade, since these places were walled or fenced with adobes or sticks.

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Published

2023-05-19

How to Cite

Adanaqué Velásquez, R. . (2023). The chiefdom of San Juan Bautista de Végueta. 16th-17th centuries. YUYAYKUSUN, (12), 57–74. Retrieved from https://revistas.urp.edu.pe/index.php/Yuyaykusun/article/view/5714

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Artículos Originales