New Kingdom of León

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New Kingdom of León

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New Kingdom of León
Nuevo Reino de León
Spanish colony
1582–1821
Cross of Burgundy,
flag of New Spain.
Coat of arms of Phillip II of Spain.
Viceroyalty of New Spain in 1819.
Capital Monterrey
Language(s) Spanish
Religion Roman Catholicism
Government Monarchy
King of Spain
 - January 16, 1556 - September 13, 1598 Philip II
 - 1813–1821 Ferdinand VII
Royal Governor
 - 1580–1588 Luis de Carabajal y Cueva
 - 1795–1810 Simón de Herrera y Leyva
Historical era Colonial era
 - Established 1582
 - Disestablished 1821
Population
 - 1790 est. 43,739 
Currency Peso

The New Kingdom of León (Spanish: Nuevo Reino de León), was an administrative territory of the Spanish Empire, politically ruled by the Viceroyalty of New Spain. It was located in an area corresponding generally to the present-day northeastern Mexican state of Nuevo León.

Contents

Origins

It was founded in 1582 by Spanish and Portuguese settlers when Philip II, King of Spain and its colonies, encouraged the colonization of Northern New Spain, and authorized the creation of a 'realm' which would have the name of Nuevo Reyno de León (New Kingdom of León), after the former Kingdom of León in Spain. Philip granted Luis de Carabajal y Cueva the title of first governor and captain-general of this new province in New Spain. The foundation of this realm was a crucial event which potentially helped the subsequent Spanish settlements in Texas.

Language

The official language of the settlers was the Spanish language though some settlers spoke the Leonese dialect from the Kingdom of León in Spain,[1] which evolved with Spanish in the New World. Today, Spanish from this region differs from that spoken in the rest of Mexico, having a high influence from English.[citation needed]

History

Map of the former provinces of New Spain, depicting the New Kingdom of León (highlighted green).

Though the New Kingdom of León was part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain, it remained functionally autonomous during much of its history, due to the long distance between its main cities; however, it quickly developed a shared culture with its neighbor provinces. This fact led it to became in 1776 part of the semi-autonomous Commandancy General of the Provincias Internas, later split in the Eastern Internal Provinces (Provincias Internas de Oriente) along with the provinces of Coahuila, Nuevo Santander and Texas, it remained part of this comandancy until 1821 when it subsequently and the rest of Mexico became an independent republic in 1821.

Today

When Mexico declared the independence from Spain, the territory of the Nuevo Reyno de León stablished the "Estado Libre y Soberano de Nuevo León".

See also

References

  1. ^ Menéndez Pidal, El Dialecto Leonés.1906

External links


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