Cabildo (council)

Spanish colonial municipal governments From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A cabildo (Spanish pronunciation: [kaˈβildo]) or ayuntamiento (Spanish: [aʝuntaˈmjento]) was a Spanish colonial and early postcolonial administrative council that governed a municipality. Cabildos were sometimes appointed, sometimes elected, but were considered to be representative of all land-owning heads of household (vecinos). The colonial cabildo was essentially the same as the one that was developed in medieval Castile.

1810 meeting of the cabildo in Buenos Aires
Depiction of the main cabildo buildings of the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata.

The word cabildo has the same Latin root (capitulum) as the English word chapter and in fact is also the Spanish word for a cathedral chapter. Historically, the term ayuntamiento was often preceded by the word excelentísimo (English: "most excellent") as a style of office in referring to the council. That phrase is often abbreviated Exc.mo Ay.to

History

Cabildo of Salta, Argentina.

The Castilian cabildo has some similarities to the ancient Roman municipium and civitas, especially in the use of plural administrative officers and its control of the surrounding countryside, the territorium, but its evolution is a uniquely-medieval development. With the collapse of the Western Roman Empire and the establishment of the Visigothic Kingdom, the ancient municipal government vanished. In many areas, seeking to escape from the political instability around them, people entrusted themselves to large landholders and to exchanging their service for the landholder's protection in a process that ultimately led to feudalism. (See also Manorialism.) In areas in which the old territoria survived, the Visigothic kings appointed a single officer, called either a comes or a iudice, to replace the defunct municipia or civitates. After the Muslim conquest, the new rulers also appointed various judicial officers to manage the affairs of the cities. Qadis heard any cases that fell under the purview of Sharia law, and sahibs oversaw the administration of the various other areas of urban life, such as the markets and the public order.[1]

The cabildo proper began its slow evolution in the process of the Reconquista. As fortified areas grew into urban centres, or older cities were incorporated into the expanding Christian kingdoms of Portugal, León and Castile, kings and sometimes local lords granted the cities various levels of self-rule and unique sets of laws (the fueros) and made them the administrative centre of a large terminus or alfoz, which was analogous to the ancient territorium. In general, municipal governments often consisted of a council (consejo) that was open to all the property-owning adult males of the city and a nobleman appointed to represent the king and organize the defense of the city and terminus. By the 13th century, these open councils proved unwieldy and were replaced by a smaller body, the cabildo or ayuntamiento consisting of set number of regidores (usually 24 in the largest cities) elected by the property owners in the city. The new bodies took their permanent form by the end of the 14th century. As part of the same process, a municipal council (the consell) with different attributes and composition also evolved in the neighboring Kingdom of Aragon during this period.[2]

Structure

Vargas, José María; Cevallos García, Gabriel and others investigators. (1646)

In theory, every municipality in the Spanish colonies in the Americas and the Spanish Philippines had a cabildo. Municipalities included not only the cities but also the surrounding lands. All lands were ultimately assigned to a municipality. Usually, the cabildo made local laws and reported to the presidente (president) of the audiencia, who in turn reported to the viceroy. The cabildo had judicial, legislative, and administrative duties. For that reason, it was often addressed with the formula, Consejo, Justicia y Regimiento (Council, Justice and Government).

Gerardo Flores Ivaldi Oil

The cabildo consisted of several types of officials. There were four to twelve regidores, depending on the size and importance of the municipality. Regidores were not just deliberative officers, but all shared in the administration of the territory by dividing tasks among themselves. Initially the regidores were elected by all the heads of household. In the late Middle Ages, those elections often turned violent, with citizens forming bands to control elections and even resorting to murder. To minimize that problem, kings began to appoint a certain number of or even all of the regidores in certain cities. By the modern era, different cabildos had different mixes of elected and appointed regidores both in Europe and overseas. Finally, to add another layer of control, the kings introduced corregidores to represent them directly and preside over the cabildos. Although many municipalities lost their right to elect all or some of their regidores as time went on, cities and cabildos gained new power with the development of the Castilian and Leonese Parliaments (the cortes) because cities had a right to representation in them.[3]

In addition to the council members, the cabildo had one or two magistrates, the alcades, whom the regidores elected every January 1. Alcaldes served as judges of first instance in all criminal and civil cases and acted as presiding officers of the cabildo unless there was a corregidor. In provincial capitals, the first alcalde would fill in for incapacitated governors. Other officers were the alférez real (royal standard-bearer), who had a vote in cabildo deliberations and would substitute the alcalde if the latter could not carry out the functions of his office; the alguacil mayor, who oversaw local law enforcement; the fiel ejecutor, who was the inspector of weights, measures and markets, in charge of the supplies of the city and oversaw municipal sanitation; the procurador or city attorney; and a scribe.

After the Bourbon Reforms, peninsulares were almost exclusively appointed to the positions of viceroy and bishop. Other offices, such as oidores of the audiencia, corregidores (in the places in which they continued to exist after the Bourbon Reforms) and intendant, also saw a rise in the proportion of peninsulares being appointed. The last ones had been positions to which creoles once had easy access, especially after the approval of the sale of offices, which began during the financial crisis in the late 16th century. As a result of being shut out of those offices, creoles turned to the cabildos for political power. Soon enough, cabildos became the centre of power for creoles, as evidenced in many of the clashes, usually with the peninsular-dominated audiencias, in the period leading up to the Spanish American Wars of Independence. In the first decades of the national period, the traditional form of the cabildo was kept in several Spanish American nations although they were eventually replaced by legislative municipal councils.

List of Spanish American settlements ruled by a cabildo during colonial times

Viceroyalty of New Spain

For most of the colonial period, the Viceroyalty of New Spain was divided into five real audiencias or kingdoms: Santo Domingo, Mexico, Guatemala, New Galicia and Manila. The following list shows the settlements (cities and villas) in the real audiencias that made up New Spain which had a cabildo and were ruled following this municipal form of local government during the Spanish colonial period.[4]

Real Audiencia of Santo Domingo

Real Audiencia of Mexico

Real Audiencia of Guatemala

More information City or villa, Colonial province ...
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Real Audiencia of New Galicia

More information City or villa, Colonial province ...
City or villa Colonial province Modern country Modern population
Bexar Texas United States 1,434,625
Cadereyta New León Mexico 75,721
Chihuahua Durango Mexico 925,762
Colima Guadalajara Mexico 146,965
Durango Durango Mexico 616,068
Guadalajara Guadalajara Mexico 1,385,629
León New León Mexico 7,169
Monterrey New León Mexico 1,142,952
Parral Durango Mexico 109,510
Saltillo Coahuila Mexico 879,958
Santa Fe de Nuevo México New Mexico United States 87,505
Parral Durango Mexico 44,472
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Viceroyalty of New Granada

Since the creation of the Viceroyalty of New Granada, its territory was divided into three real audiencias or kingdoms: New Granada, Quito and Venezuela. The following list shows the settlements (cities and villas) in the real audiencias that made up New Granada which had a cabildo and were ruled following this municipal form of local government during the Spanish colonial period.[5]

Real Audiencia of Santa Fe in New Granada

More information City or villa, Colonial province ...
City or villa Colonial province Modern country Modern population
Altagracia Santa Fe Colombia 0
Anserma Popayán Colombia 20,876
Antioquia Antioquia Colombia 23,216
Arma Antioquia Colombia 5,000
Cambis Neiva Colombia 0
Cartagena de Indias Cartagena Colombia 914,552
Cartago Popayán Colombia 142,902
Chire Llanos Colombia 1,250
Girón Pamplona Colombia 152,582
Guaduas Santa Fe Colombia 15,862
Honda Mariquita Colombia 23,658
Ibagué Mariquita Colombia 492,554
La Palma Mariquita Colombia 7,708
La Plata Neiva Colombia 25,791
La Ronda Mariquita Colombia 0
Marinilla Antioquia Colombia 48,258
Mariquita Mariquita Colombia 27,907
Medellín Antioquia Colombia 2,490,164
Medina Llanos Colombia 7,281
Mompox Cartagena Colombia 23,649
Muzo Tunja Colombia 5,350
Nata Tierra Firme Panama 6,003
Neiva Neiva Colombia 365,542
Nombre de Dios Tierra Firme Panama 1,130
New Córdoba Santa Marta Colombia 0
New Salamanca de la Ramada Santa Marta Colombia 0
New Seville Santa Marta Colombia 0
Ocaña Santa Marta Colombia 116,232
Pamplona Pamplona Colombia 46,013
Panama Tierra Firme Panama 1,086,990
Penonomé Tierra Firme Panama 21,748
Pore Llanos Colombia 7,420
Portobelo Tierra Firme Panama 4,559
Purificación Neiva Colombia 29,539
Remedios Antioquia Colombia 29,199
Rionegro Antioquia Colombia 90,256
Riohacha Riohacha Colombia 126,103
Rosario Pamplona Colombia 107,991
Salazar Pamplona Colombia 4,611
San Agustín de Cáceres Tunja Colombia 0
San Gil Socorro Colombia 51,874
San José de Cúcuta Pamplona Colombia 748,948
San Juan de los Llanos Llanos Colombia 5,006
San Martin de los Llanos Llanos Colombia 21,831
Santa Fe de Bogotá Santa Fe Colombia 7,968,095
Santa Marta Santa Marta Colombia 566,150
Santiago de las Atalayas Llanos Colombia 0
Simití Cartagena Colombia 15,353
Socorro Socorro Colombia 26,232
Tamalameque Santa Marta Colombia 5,585
Tenerife Santa Marta Colombia 6,932
Timaná Neiva Colombia 7,321
Tocaima Mariquita Colombia 13,176
Tolú Cartagena Colombia 26,401
Toro Popayán Colombia 9,303
Tunja Tunja Colombia 163,894
Valledupar Santa Marta Colombia 431,794
Vélez Socorro Colombia 10,231
Veraguas Tierra Firme Panama 88,997
Villa de Leyva Tunja Colombia 9,926
Zaragoza Antioquia Colombia 13,434
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Real Audiencia of Quito

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Real Audiencia of Caracas in Venezuela

Viceroyalty of Peru

After the creation of the Viceroyalties of New Granada and Río de la Plata, the Viceroyalty of Peru was divided into two real audiencias or kingdoms: Peru and Chile. The following list shows the settlements (cities and villas) in the real audiencias that made up Colonial Peru which had a cabildo and were ruled following this municipal form of local government during the Spanish colonial period.[6]

Real Audiencia of Lima in Peru

More information City or villa, Colonial province ...
City or villa Colonial province Modern country Modern population
Arequipa Arequipa Peru 1,195,700
Arica Arequipa Peru 241,653
Castrovirreyna Huancavelica Peru 1,523
Chachapoyas Trujillo Peru 32,026
Cusco Cuzco Peru 428,450
Huamanga Huamanga Peru 180,766
Huánuco Tarma Peru 196,627
Ica Lima Peru 282,407
Jerez de la Frontera Jaén Peru 15,130
Lima Lima Peru 10,092,000
Moquegua Arequipa Peru 69,882
Moyobamba Trujillo Peru 50,073
New Jerez Jaén Peru 0
Paita Trujillo Peru 179,346
Piura Trujillo Peru 630,244
Puno Puno Peru 135,288
Santa Marta de Indios Arequipa Peru 0
Saña Trujillo Peru 4,550
Tangarara Trujillo Peru 0
Trujillo Trujillo Peru 1,067,700
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Real Audiencia of Santiago de Chile

More information City or villa, Colonial province ...
City or villa Colonial province Modern country Modern population
Castro Chiloé Chile 29,148
Cauquenes Concepción Chile 33,114
Concepcion Concepción Chile 223,574
Copiapó Santiago Chile 168,831
La Imperial Concepción Chile 0
La Serena Santiago Chile 212,884
Melipilla Santiago Chile 108,540
Osorno Chiloé Chile 132,245
Petorca Santiago Chile 4,535
Quillota Santiago Chile 66,025
Santiago de Chile Santiago Chile 6,269,384
Talca Santiago Chile 232,131
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Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata

Since the creation of the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, its territory was divided into two real audiencias or kingdoms: Río de la Plata and Charcas. The following list shows the settlements (cities and villas) in the real audiencias that made up Río de la Plata which had a cabildo and were ruled following this municipal form of local government during the Spanish colonial period.[7]

Real Audiencia of Buenos Aires in Río de la Plata

Real Audiencia of Charcas

More information City or villa, Colonial province ...
City or villa Colonial province Modern country Modern population
Charcas Charcas Bolivia 296,125
Cochabamba Cochabamba Bolivia 661,484
La Paz La Paz Bolivia 757,431
Mizque Cochabamba Bolivia 26,659
Oruro Charcas Bolivia 297,497
Potosí Potosí Bolivia 267,907
Santa Cruz Cochabamba Bolivia 1,606,671
Tarija Potosí Bolivia 268,000
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Currently existing

Because cabildos were the city government, the city administrative offices were often called the "cabildo". Those names are preserved in parts of Latin America and even in New Orleans.

At present, cabildos exist only on the Canary Islands (cabildos insulares), with one governing each island, and they are elected. Cabildos there resemble the consells insulars (island councils) of the Balearic Islands.

See also

The "Cabildo Abierto" of May 22, 1810, in the city of Buenos Aires (now part of Argentina, then part of the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata), where it was decided to remove the viceroy Baltasar Hidalgo de Cisneros.

References

Sources

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