A companion to viceregal Mexico City, 1519-1821 / / edited by John F. López.

This book presents a historical overview of colonial Mexico City and the important role it played in the creation of the early modern Hispanic world. Organized into five sections, an interdisciplinary and international team of twenty scholars scrutinize the nature and character of Mexico City throug...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Brill's Companions to the Americas ; Volume 3
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden ;, Boston : : Brill,, [2021]
©2021
Year of Publication:2021
Language:English
Series:Brill's companions to the Americas ; Volume 3.
Physical Description:1 online resource.
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Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • Contents
  • Figures and Tables
  • Archival and Image Repositories
  • Notes on the Contributors
  • Acknowledgements
  • Viceregal Mexico City, Colonial Cosmopolitanism, and the Hispanic World
  • 1 History and Society
  • 2 Religious Life
  • 3 Institutions
  • 4 Special Themes
  • 5 The Arts
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • Part1: History and Society
  • 1. Fear, Wonder, and Absence
  • 1 The Conquistador Lens
  • 2 Fear and Wonder
  • 3 Absence
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • 2. The Weirdest of All?
  • 1 Indians and Cities
  • 2 Between Civilization and Nature
  • 3 A Paradoxical Decline
  • 4 Making the City
  • 5 Becoming Cosmopolitan
  • 6 The Three-Headed City
  • 7 Concrete Coloniality, Awkward Cosmpolitanism
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • 3. Blackness and Blurred Boundaries in Mexico City
  • 1 Afro-Mexicans in Mexico City and the Viceroyalty
  • 2 Connecting and Identifying through Healing
  • 3 Church-Based Practices and Networks
  • 4 Spanish Anxieties and Limitations on Afro-Mexican Opportunities
  • 5 Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • 4. Of Pleasures and Proscriptions
  • 1 Birth and Childhood
  • 2 Courtship and Couples
  • 3 Families and Households
  • 4 Gender, Sexuality, and Family
  • 5 Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • 5. War, Legitimacy, and Ceremony in 18th-Century Mexico City
  • 1 The Inauguration of Military Honors for Soldiers
  • 2 Legitimizing the Bourbon Succession
  • 3 Ceremony and Bourbon Absolutism in the 1760s
  • 4 Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • Part 2: Religious Life
  • 6. City of Friars, City of Archbishops
  • 1 The Struggle to Occupy Urban Space: The 16th-Century City.
  • 2 The Religious Orders and the Initial Planning of the City, 1523-1554
  • 3 The Clash Between Two Church Projects for the City: The Archbishop vs. The Monasteries, 1555-1570
  • 4 Introduction of the Episcopal Model: New Religious Orders and New Convents, 1571-1600
  • 5 The Ecclesiastical Institutions in the Baroque City, 1600-1700
  • 6 Baroque Bishops and the Founding of Religious Institutions
  • 7 The City of Friars and Jesuits
  • 8 Epilogue
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • 7. The Cabildo of Mexico City, Patron Saints, and the Making of Local and Imperial Identities
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • 8. Visualizing Corporate Piety
  • 1 Memory, History, Historiography: The Hospital de Jesús and the Scuola Grande
  • 2 Performing Identity: Membership Books and Patents
  • 3 Collective Devotion, Seeing Together
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • 9. Permanence and Change in Mexico City's Viceregal Court, 1535-1821
  • 1 Inventing Court
  • 2 The Court and Its Social and Urban Setting
  • 3 New Viceroys for a New Dynasty
  • 4 From the Old Court to a New One
  • 5 Enlightened Leaders
  • 6 The Empty Throne
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • 10. Finance and Credit in Viceregal Mexico City
  • 1 Credit in Mexico City
  • 2 Mercantile Credit
  • 3 The Church Institutions and Credit
  • 4 The Convents
  • 5 The Chaplaincies
  • 6 The Confraternities
  • 7 The Inquisition
  • 8 The Monte de Piedad
  • 9 The Banco de Avío Minero
  • 10 The End of an Epoch
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • 11. Uneven Chances
  • 1 The Head of the Kingdom
  • 2 Educating the Indigenous Population: Maceguales and Lords
  • 3 The World of the Criollos
  • 4 Education and Bourbon Reforms
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature.
  • 12. Medicine and Municipal Rights in Viceregal Mexico City
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 The Castilian Protomedicato: Establishment, Practice, and Jurisdiction
  • 3 Reconquest Iberia: Aragón and Castile
  • 4 Persistance of Medieval Fuero Limitations
  • 5 The Protomedicato of New Spain: Regulation in the Capital
  • 6 The Royal Protomedicato in the 18th Century: Increasing Jurisdiction and Authority
  • 7 Effects in New Spain: Increasing Privileges, Increasing Municipal Challenges
  • 8 Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • Part 4: Special Themes
  • 13. The Urban Plans of Mexico City, 1520-1810
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Plans and the Multi-ethnic Population
  • 3 Indigenous Foundations
  • 4 Early Hybrids
  • 5 Mapping the Desagüe
  • 6 Mapping Reform Proposals of the 18th Century
  • 7 The City in Printed Form
  • 8 The Plans of Mexico City's Past
  • 9 Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • 14. The Desagüe's Watermark
  • 1 A City Aflood
  • 2 Mapping Nature's Character
  • 3 "The Geometrization of Space"
  • 4 The Talisman of Martínez' Authority
  • 5 Rupturing the Bond Between City and Water
  • 6 Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • 15. Urban Science in 18th-Century Mexico City
  • 1 Venus, the Sun, and Mexico City
  • 2 Natural Order, Urban Order
  • 3 Science in the Streets
  • 4 Urban Expertise
  • 5 Conclusions
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • 16. A Culture of Print in Viceregal Mexico City
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • 17. Novohispanic Baroque Poetry
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • 18. Music and Literature in New Spain
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Buen Gusto
  • 3 Buen Gusto, the Noble Arts, and the Quest for Social Status
  • 4 Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources.
  • Secondary Literature
  • 19. The Royal Academy of San Carlos, 1781-1800
  • 1 Founding the Royal Academy of San Carlos
  • 2 An Institution of the Bourbon Reforms
  • 3 Arrival of Gerónimo Antonio Gil
  • 4 The Royal Academy of San Carlos
  • 5 Teaching Neo-Classicism: Discourse, Text, and Objects
  • 5.1 Discourse
  • 5.2 Text
  • 5.3 Objects
  • 6 Experiencing Fine Art and Bourbon Imperialism
  • 7 Students
  • 8 Administrators and Faculty
  • 9 Power and Presence
  • 10 The Equestrian Monument of Charles IV
  • 11 Conclusion
  • Bibliography
  • Primary Sources
  • Secondary Literature
  • Index.