Histórica. Vol. 35 Núm. 2 (2011)

URI permanente para esta colecciónhttp://54.81.141.168/handle/123456789/175456

Tabla de Contenido


Artículos
  • En los umbrales de la Instrucción de Titu Cusi Yupanqui Cattan, Marguerite; 7-44
  • Francisco de Toledo, admirador y émulo de la «tiranía» inca Ravi Mumford, Jeremy; 45-67
  • Jurisdicciones mineras en tensión. El impacto de la minería en la puna jujeña y en el valle de Yocavil durante el periodo colonial (siglos XVII y XVIII) Estruch, Dolores; Rodríguez, Lorena B; Becerra, María Florencia; 69-100
  • Menos plata pero más papas: consecuencias económicas de la independencia en el Perú Contreras, Carlos; 101-132

  • Notas
  • La historiografía oficial castellana y la cuestión de su veracidad. Avances recientes en la reflexión sobre una vieja polémica Greusslich, Sebastián; 135-145

  • Reseñas
  • GÓMEZ ÁLVAREZ, Cristina y Guillermo TOVAR DE TERESA. Censura y revolución. Libros prohibidos por la Inquisición de México (1790-1819). Madrid: Trama Editorial, Consejo de la Crónica de la Ciudad de México, 2009, 330 pp., ilustr. Guibovich Pérez, Pedro; 149-151
  • ROBINS, Nicholas A. Mercury, Mining, and Empire. The Human and Ecological Cost of Colonial Silver Mining in the Andes. Bloomington/Indianápolis: Indiana University Press, 2011, xvi + 299 pp., ilustr. Flores Espinoza, Javier; 152-154
  • VOLPINI, Paola. El espacio político del letrado. Juan Bautista Larrea, magistrado y jurista en la monarquía de Felipe IV. Madrid: Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, 2010, 236 pp. Puente Brunke, José de la; 155-158
  • WARREN, Adam. Medicine and Politics in Colonial Peru: Population Growth and the Bourbon Reforms. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2010, 290 pp. Lerner, Adrián; 158-161
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    Mostrando 1 - 5 de 5
    • Ítem
      Francisco de Toledo, admirador y émulo de la «tiranía» inca
      (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2011-12-18) Ravi Mumford, Jeremy
      Viceroy Francisco de Toledo (1569-81) both reviled and admired the Incas. Surprisingly, he identified exactly the same aspects of their rule to praise and to condemn. To supply a legal justification for the Spanish conquest of Tawantinsuyu, Toledo and his advisers set out to prove that the Incas met the definition of tyranny in Castilian law, as explained by Aristotle and codified in the Siete Partidas. Tyranny was defined by specific elements: state surveillance and control, a climate of fear, the destruction of civil society, social leveling, and a monopoly by the state over its subjects’ time, labor, and property. But even while condemning the Inca regime for these methods, Toledo came to believe that these methods had enabled the Incas to rule well and to create a prosperous society in the Andes. The viceroy self-consciously emulated the same aspects of Inca rule that he invoked to prove that they were tyrants.
    • Ítem
      En los umbrales de la Instrucción de Titu Cusi Yupanqui
      (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2011-12-18) Cattan, Marguerite
       This article provides a detailed discussion of events prior to the writing of the Instrucción al licenciado don Lope García de Castro (1570). It reconsiders the historical events and political maneuvering that lead to the composition of the Instrucción in order to identify the possible interests and motivations behind this manuscript and the objectives pursued by it. It also includes a chronological table of the available documentation
    • Ítem
      Jurisdicciones mineras en tensión. El impacto de la minería en la puna jujeña y en el valle de Yocavil durante el periodo colonial (siglos XVII y XVIII)
      (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2011-12-18) Estruch, Dolores; Rodríguez, Lorena B.; Becerra, María Florencia
      In the late seventeenth century the mayors of the cities of Jujuy and Catamarca confronted the mining authorities of Puna de Jujuy and the Yocavil valley. Documents relating to both areas describe, in almost identical ways, how the magistrates defended the scope of their respective jurisdictions by insisting on their jurisdictional rights. The object of this article is, from a comparative and interdisciplinary perspective, to analyze the impact of mining in these two regions of northwest Argentina during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Mining was the motivation for occupying these new territories, but it also formed the background for battles over jurisdiction and territorial rights.
    • Ítem
      La historiografía oficial castellana y la cuestión de su veracidad. Avances recientes en la reflexión sobre una vieja polémica
      (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2011-12-18) Greusslich, Sebastián
      No presenta resumen
    • Ítem
      Menos plata pero más papas: consecuencias económicas de la independencia en el Perú
      (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2011-12-21) Contreras, Carlos
      This articles is divided into two sections: the first presents the most solid quantitative series on Peruvian production and commerce during the transitional period of independence. From the series is can be deduced that emancipation brought with it a contraction of production and commerce which was prolonged well into the second half of the nineteenth century. The second section deals with the characteristics of the state political economy after independence, particularly between 1821 and the 1870s. What stands out is official state neutrality with regards to mining and fiscal mitigation. These measures provoked complaints at the time and brought about the contraction mentioned above. But it also meant a certain amount of wellbeing for the Indians which was manifested in their demographic growth during the nineteenth century.