Resumen
This article analyzes missionary Fray Pedro González de Agüeros's writings on frontier missions in the Chiloé archipelago in southern Chile held by the Franciscan College of Propaganda Fide in Ocopa at the end of the 18th century. González de Agüeros supported the application of the Bourbon reforms on his college's frontier missions. Through his writings, I explore the nature of the relationship between the monarchy, the state and the frontier territories in Spanish America in the late colonial period. I further examine his adherence to a reformist agenda that defended the militarization, socioeconomic progress, population settlement, and public education in the frontiers of empire as a means to improve the local situation and royal control as well as to continue Spanish expansion along the Pacific coast and islands. Focusing mainly on the province of Chiloé, south of the kingdom of Chile, and the territories to the South, the missionary's work demonstrates an adaptation between the religious discourse and the new administrative and political realities that characterize the relationship between the frontiers of Spanish America, the Hispanic monarchy and the state during the final period of Bourbon reforms. In this sense, I intend to demonstrate that González de Agüeros's ideas echoed contemporary discourses of political and economic reform in Spanish America typical of the Bourbon reforms.
Título traducido de la contribución | Empire from the margins: A study of the work of Fray Pedro González de Agüeros and his reformist plans for the southern frontiers of South America in the late 18th century |
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Idioma original | Español |
Páginas (desde-hasta) | 153-189 |
Número de páginas | 37 |
Publicación | Jahrbuch fuer Geschichte Lateinamerikas/Anuario de Historia de America Latina |
Volumen | 57 |
DOI | |
Estado | Publicada - dic. 2020 |
Palabras clave
- Chiloé
- Colegio de Ocopa
- Franciscans
- Kingdom of Chile
- Missionaries
- Politics