Intendancy of Trujillo
The Intendancy of Trujillo, also known informally as Trujillo Province, was one of the territorial divisions of the Viceroyalty of Peru. This territory was ruled from the city of Trujillo, located in La Libertad Region. It was created in 1784 and lasted until 12 February 1821 when General Jose de San Martin created the Department of Trujillo through the Reglamento Provisional to replace it in the new Republic of Peru.
Subdivisions
The Trujillo Intendancy was divided into the following 7 parts, called "Partidos":| Partido | Head |
| Trujillo | |
| San Miguel de Piura | |
| Cajamarca | |
| San Juan de la Frontera | |
| Lambayeque | |
| Pataz | |
| Huamachuco |
Intendants
The Governors who ruled the intendence of Trujillo were:- Fernando de Saavedra
- Vicente Gil de Taboada
- Felipe del Risco
- José Bernardo de Tagle y Portocarrero
Population and Ethnic Composition
The German naturalist Thaddäus Haenke, who took part in the Malaspina Expedition —a scientific voyage organized by the Spanish Empire across its dominions—recorded the ethnic and demographic figures in his work Descripción del Perú por Tadeo Haenke based on the census carried out in the late 18th century in the Viceroyalty of Peru. For each intendancy and its respective partidos, he reported that intendancy of Trujillo included 5 cities, 2 towns, 87 doctrinas, and 142 annexed villages, inhabited by 230,967 people or almas. This population comprised 460 clergymen, 160 male religious, and 162 nuns. In ethnic terms, it consisted of 19,008 white Spaniards, 115,647 Indians, 79,949 mestizos, 13,757 free people of color or pardos, and 4,725 enslaved Africans, distributed across the seven partidos of the intendancy.However, the sum of these categories gives a total of 233,086 people—slightly higher than the reported overall figure—which may reflect errors in compiling or aggregating the data from each partido. Even so, the numbers provide an approximation of society at the time: nearly half of the population was indigenous, both in coastal and highland regions; followed by a large mestizo group making up about one-third ; a small minority of white Spaniards, understood as both peninsulares and Creoles, generally concentrated in the main cities, highlands and especially in the Partido of Cajamarca; and finally, a minority of Afro-descendants accounting for nearly one-tenth, both free and enslaved, concentrated in the coastal valleys where they worked on the haciendas.