New Galicia Nueva Galicia |
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Province & Indendancy | |||
El Nuevo Reino de Galicia (Spanish) The New Kingdom of Galicia |
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Country | Spain | ||
Viceroyalty | New Spain | ||
Royal Audience |
Mexico City Compostela (1548-1560) Guadalajara |
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Capital | Guadalajara | ||
Established | c.1531 | ||
Dissolved | 1824 |
El Nuevo Reino de Galicia (The New Kingdom of Galicia) or simply Nueva Galicia (New Galicia) was an autonomous kingdom of the Viceroyalty of New Spain. It was named after Galicia in Spain. Nueva Galicia's territory became the present-day Mexican states of Aguascalientes, Colima, Jalisco, Nayarit and Zacatecas.
Spanish exploration of the area began in 1531 with Nuño Beltrán de Guzmán's expedition. He named the main city founded in the area Villa de Guadalajara after his birthplace and called the area he conquered the sonorous "la Conquista del Espíritu Santo de la Mayor España" ("The Conquest of the Holy Spirit of Greater Spain"). The name was not approved. Instead Queen Joanna, at the moment the acting regent of Spain, named the area "el Reino de Nueva Galicia."
Guzmán's violent conquest left Spanish control of the area unstable, and within a decade full war had reemerged between the settlers and the Native peoples of the area. The Mixtón War, which lasted from 1540–1541, pitted an alliance of Coras, Gauchichiles and Caxcans against the settlers. Nine years later the Chichimeca War broke out, this time pitting mostly Zacatecos against their former allies, the Caxcan, who had now allied with the Spanish. Nahuas from the Valley of Mexico moved into the region along with the Spanish as the area was settled. In the last decades of the sixteenth century Huichols also arrived.