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Article
“The Palace Façade and the Urban Form in the Documenting of Hispanic America”
Terrae Incognitae: The Journal for the History of Discoveries (2011)
  • C. Cody Barteet, Western University
Abstract
This essay examines the relationship between palace architecture and the urban form in sixteenth-century Hispanic America. By analyzing period plans, cartographic renderings, paintings, residences, and archival texts, a direct relationship can be drawn between the architectural practices of the early Spanish colonizers and the implementation of monarchical urban policies. This article explores how individuals’ architectural patronage, whether princely or individual, affected the formation of Las Leyes de Indias (the Laws of the Indies) of 1573 and other urban policies, considering that homes and palace façades were deeply encoded artifacts in European and pre-contact cultures. I suggest that the architectural façade in the sixteenth- century Hispanic world had some correlation to the evolution of the early Spanish-American urban environments. Currently, we have not sought to analyze such a dynamic interaction between the colonizers and the monarchical state.
Keywords
  • colonial architecture,
  • colonization,
  • sixteenth-century Hispanic America,
  • urban planning
Publication Date
2011
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1179/008228811X12959685200661
Citation Information
C. Cody Barteet. "“The Palace Façade and the Urban Form in the Documenting of Hispanic America”" Terrae Incognitae: The Journal for the History of Discoveries Vol. 43 Iss. 1 (2011) p. 5 - 25
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/charles-barteet/7/