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Archivo General de Indias

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Recollections of the Archivo General de Indias - Charles Edards O'Neill (Junta de Andaluc■a, Consejer■a de Cultura)

Research opportunities at the P.K. Yonge Library of Florida History: XVI century documents related to other Spanish American areas besides Florida - Jos← Ignacio Avellaneda (s.n)

Reform in shelving and numbering in the Archivo General de Indias - Roscoe R Hill (Board of Editors of the Hispanic American Review)

Discovering the Americas: The Archive of the Indies - Pedro Gonzalez Garcia (Rizzoli Publications)

Ordenanzas del Archivo General de las Indias - Archivo General de Indias (Junta de Andaluc■a, Consejer■a de Cultura, Direcci￳n General del Libro, Bibliotecas y Archivos)

Finding list: Selected documents from Archivo General de Indias - Jack David Lazarus Holmes (s.n)

Computerization of the Archivo General de Indias: Strategies and results - Pedro Gonz£lez Garc■a (European Commission on Preservation and Access)

Guide to the materials for the history of the United States in Spanish archives (Carnegie Institution of Washington. Publication) - William R Shepherd (Kraus Reprint Corp)

Guide to the materials for the history of the United States in Spanish archives: (Simancas, the archivo Historico nacional, and Seville).-- (Carnegie Institution of Washington. Publication) - William Robert Shepherd (Kraus Reprint Corporation)

A description of certain Legajos in the Archivo General de Indias, - Charles Edward Chapman

The Archivo General de Indias ("General Archive of the Indies") is the document repository, housed in Seville in the ancient merchants' exchange, the Casa Lonja de Mercederes, of extremely valuable archival documents illustrating the history of the Spanish empire in the Americas and the Philippines. The General Archive of the Indies is housed in a structure designed by Juan de Herrera, an unusually serene and Italianate Spanish example of Renaissance architecture. The building and its contents were enregistered in 1987 by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site.

The origin of the structure dates to the founding by Philip II of the Casa de Contrataciòn or Casa Lonja. Philip commissioned the building in 1572 from Juan de Herrera, the architect of the Escorial. The merchants of Seville had been in the habit of retreating to the cool recesses of the cathedral to transact business.

The building encloses a large central patio with ranges of two storeys, the windows set in slightly sunken panels between flat pilasters. Plain square tablets float in the space above each window. The building is surmounted by a balustrade, with rusticated obelisks standing at the corners. There is no sculptural decoration, only the discreetly contrasting tonalities of stone and stucco, and the light shadows cast by the slight relief of the pilasters against their piers, by the cornices, and by the cornice strips that cap each window.

The building was begun in 1584 by Juan de Mijares, working to Herrera's plans, and was ready for use in 1598, according to an inscription on the north façade. Work on completing the structure proceeded through the 17th century, directed until 1629 by the archbishop Juan de Zumárraga and finished by Falconete.

In 1785, by decree of Charles III the archives of the Consejo de Indias (the Council of the Indies) were to be housed here, in order to bring together under a single roof all the documentation referring to the Spanish empire, which until that time had been dispersed among various archives, as Simancas, Cádiz and Seville. Responsibility for the project was delegated to José de Gálvez y Gallardo, Secretary for the Indies, who depended on the historian Juan Bautista Muñoz for the plan's execution. Two basic motivation underlay the project; in addition to the lack of space in the Archivo General de Simancas the central archive of the Spanish Crown, was the expectation, in the spirit of the Enlightenment, that Spanish historians would take up the history of Spain's colonial empire. It was decided that documents evolved after 1760 would for the time being, remain with their primary institutions.

The first of the documents arrived in October 1785. Some restructuring of the Casa Lonja to accommodate the materials was required, and a grand marble staircase was added, to designs of Lucas Cintara in 1787.

The archives are rich with autograph material from the first of the Conquistadors to the end of the 19th century. Here are Miguel de Cervantes' request for an official post, the Bull of Demarcation Inter caetera of Pope Alexander VI that divided the world between Spain and Portugal, the journal of Christopher Columbus, maps and plans of the colonial American cities, in addition to the ordinary archives that reveal the month-to-month workings of the whole vast colonial machinery, which have been mined by every Spanish historian in the last two centuries.

Today the Archivo General de Indias houses some nine kilometers of shelving, in 43,000 volumes and some 80 million pages, which were produced by the colonial administration:

  • Consejo de Indias, 16th-19th centuries
  • Casa de la Contratación, 16th-18th centuries
  • Consulados de Sevilla y Cádiz, 16th-19th centuries
  • Secretarías de Estado y Despacho Universal de Indias, de Estado, Gracia y Justicia, Hacienda y Guerra, 18th-19th centuries
  • Secretaría del Juzgado de Arribadas de Cádiz, 18th-19th centuries
  • Comisaría Interventora de la Hacienda Pública de Cádiz, Dirección General de la Renta de Correos, 18th-19th centuries
  • Sala de Ultramar del Tribunal de Cuentas, 19th century
  • Real Compañía de la Habana, 18th-19th centuries

The structure underwent a thorough restoration in 2002–2004, without interrupting its function as a research library. As of 2005, its 15 million pages are in the process of being digitized.

This article is licenced under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Archivo General de Indias".

 
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