{"title":"From Bourbon Reform to Open Markets in California, 1801-1821","authors":"M. Duggan","doi":"10.1344/jesb2023.8.1.34100","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\nThe Consulado de México was the mercantile guild that acted as commercial nerve-center of Spain’s empire in the Americas. From 1801 to 1821, one of its members, Pedro González de Noriega, influenced California’s economic growth by putting his nephew, José de la Guerra y Noriega, into the colony’s military supply line. In 1801, for what purpose did De la Guerra y Noriega come to California? Whatever his intention, his life-plan changed in 1810, when insurgency broke out in New Spain, and military payroll ceased to arrive in California. Between 1811 and 1821, how did De la Guerra y Noriega adapt to this structural change by negotiating with international merchants from Manila to San Blas and Lima to supply California? As Spain’s empire unraveled, we follow the microhistory of the Noriega mercantile network, as it reconfigured to the macroeconomic context of political transformation of the Pacific Rim in the context of Mexican independence from Spain. The De la Guerra Collection at the Santa Bárbara Mission Archive-Library reveals that Guadalajara was Mexico’s emerging center for Pacific commerce, with San Blas as Guadalajara’s principal port. By Mexican independence in 1821, De la Guerra had established Santa Bárbara, California as the center of his family’s business, rather than Mexico City. Even as Manila merchants relocated to Tepic, he maintained ties with them. He also traded with the British in Callao, Peru, which is how he came to send his son to be educated in Liverpool with the Brotherston family.\n","PeriodicalId":36112,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Evolutionary Studies in Business","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Evolutionary Studies in Business","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1344/jesb2023.8.1.34100","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The Consulado de México was the mercantile guild that acted as commercial nerve-center of Spain’s empire in the Americas. From 1801 to 1821, one of its members, Pedro González de Noriega, influenced California’s economic growth by putting his nephew, José de la Guerra y Noriega, into the colony’s military supply line. In 1801, for what purpose did De la Guerra y Noriega come to California? Whatever his intention, his life-plan changed in 1810, when insurgency broke out in New Spain, and military payroll ceased to arrive in California. Between 1811 and 1821, how did De la Guerra y Noriega adapt to this structural change by negotiating with international merchants from Manila to San Blas and Lima to supply California? As Spain’s empire unraveled, we follow the microhistory of the Noriega mercantile network, as it reconfigured to the macroeconomic context of political transformation of the Pacific Rim in the context of Mexican independence from Spain. The De la Guerra Collection at the Santa Bárbara Mission Archive-Library reveals that Guadalajara was Mexico’s emerging center for Pacific commerce, with San Blas as Guadalajara’s principal port. By Mexican independence in 1821, De la Guerra had established Santa Bárbara, California as the center of his family’s business, rather than Mexico City. Even as Manila merchants relocated to Tepic, he maintained ties with them. He also traded with the British in Callao, Peru, which is how he came to send his son to be educated in Liverpool with the Brotherston family.
墨西哥领事馆是西班牙帝国在美洲的商业神经中枢。从1801年到1821年,其成员之一Pedro González de Noriega通过将他的侄子joses de la Guerra y Noriega加入殖民地的军事补给线,影响了加利福尼亚的经济增长。1801年,德拉·格拉·诺列加是为了什么目的来到加利福尼亚的?不管他的意图是什么,他的人生计划在1810年发生了变化,当时新西班牙爆发了叛乱,加州的军饷也停止了发放。在1811年到1821年间,德拉格拉·诺列加是如何通过与从马尼拉到圣布拉斯和利马的国际商人谈判来适应这种结构性变化的?随着西班牙帝国的解体,我们跟随诺列加商业网络的微观历史,因为它在墨西哥从西班牙独立的背景下重新配置到环太平洋地区政治转型的宏观经济背景下。Santa Bárbara Mission Archive-Library的De la Guerra Collection显示,瓜达拉哈拉是墨西哥新兴的太平洋商业中心,圣布拉斯是瓜达拉哈拉的主要港口。到1821年墨西哥独立时,德拉格拉已将加州圣塔Bárbara作为家族企业的中心,而不是墨西哥城。即使马尼拉商人搬迁到提匹克,他也与他们保持着联系。他还在秘鲁的卡亚俄与英国人进行贸易,因此他把儿子送到利物浦的布罗斯顿家族接受教育。