Columbian Viceroyalty


The Columbian Viceroyalty, Viceroyalty of the Indies or First Viceroyalty in the Indies is the name that designates the number of titles and rights granted to Christopher Columbus by the Catholic Monarchs in 1492 on the lands discovered and undiscovered, before embarking on his first trip that culminated in the colonization of the Americas.

Origins

The titles and powers over discovered lands granted to Christopher Columbus were entered in the capitulations of Santa Fe agreed on April 17 of 1492.
Under them, the Catholic Monarchs, Isabella and Ferdinand, awarded for the period of his life, and after his death, to be conferred on his heirs or Successors one after the other perpetually:
In addition, other powers and economic prerogatives.
These titles would be confirmed by the monarchs on his return from his first voyage in May 1493. Of these, the best known in Castile, which paid the most attention both Columbus and the monarchs, was the Admiral.

History

According to the capitulations of Santa Fe, all lands discovered by Christopher Columbus were part of his viceroyalty.
On his first voyage to the Americas in 1492-1493, Columbus discovered the Bahamas, Cuba, and Hispaniola, and acted as viceroy and governor there. Before returning to Spain, he founded La Navidad in Hispaniola on 25 December 1492. This was a fort held by 39 men. The Indians of the island soon destroyed the fort, killing all its occupants.
On his second voyage in 1493-1496, Columbus discovered Dominica,
Guadeloupe, the Leeward Islands, and Puerto Rico, where he arrived on 19 November 1493. Later he found Jamaica and explored Cuba.
On his third voyage in 1498–1500, he discovered the Paria Peninsula, Trinidad, and Margarita Island. He remained until 1500 in Hispaniola.
Columbus established Spanish rule over the Indians of the islands he discovered, demanding tribute in the form of gold, food, and labor. He appointed his brothers as his deputies, and quarreled with the colonists sent from Spain, provoking mutinies and rebellions.
Many complaints about Columbus as viceroy reached King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella. In 1499, they appointed Francisco de Bobadilla as pesquisador to investigate. Bobadilla arrived in Hispaniola 23 August 1500. He arrested Columbus and his brothers, whom he sent to Spain, and assumed the governorship. In Spain, Columbus regained his freedom and viceroyalty, but Nicolas de Ovando was appointed governor in 1501.
Ferdinand and Isabella funded his fourth voyage in 1502. Columbus found Martinique, then explored the Central American coast from the Bay Islands to the Gulf of Urabá. He remained in Jamaica until 1504 and then returned to Spain, where he died in 1506.
Meanwhile, Ovando went with his own fleet to Hispaniola, where he deposed and replaced Bobadilla. Ovando brought 2,500 colonists as well. He ruled as governor until 1509.
Starting in 1499, Ferdinand and Isabella authorized voyages of discovery to the New World by other explorers. These explorers became governors of the territories they discovered, which were exempted from the Viceroyalty of the Indies. Alonso de Ojeda explored the coast of Venezuela, and was appointed governor of Coquivacoa and later of Nueva Andalucia; Vicente Yanez Pinzon explored northeastern Brazil.

The Viceroyalty after the death of Columbus

On Christopher Columbus's death his eldest son Diego Columbus inherited his father's rights in the Americas, including the viceroyalty. However, King Ferdinand refused at first to transfer all rights of his father and appointed him governor of Hispaniola in 1508. Diego began a series of lawsuits against the crown known as the Columbian Lawsuits, and in 1511 his rights as viceroy were recognized, but with limited jurisdiction over those territories that had been officially discovered by his father. Consequently, Diego Columbus became the second Viceroy of the Indies. He died in 1526 bequeathing his rights to the viceroyalty to his son Luis Colón.
In 1536, during Luis Colón's age minority, the transaction and arbitration that ended the Columbian Lawsuits with the Spanish Crown took place. In 1537, he received from the Crown the noble title of Duke of Veragua and a territorial lordship of 625 square leagues, comprising lands of the former Veragua and Castilla del Oro. He was also granted the hereditary dignity of Marquess of Jamaica and the lordship of that island, thus ending the Viceroyalty of the Indies, which was merged into the newly-created Viceroyalty of New Spain in 1535.