New Granada
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
New Granada , former Spanish colony, N South America. It included at its greatest extent present Colombia, Ecuador, Panama, and Venezuela. Between 1499 and 1510 a host of conquerors explored the Caribbean coast of Panama and South America. After 1514, Pedro Arias de Ávila was successful in assuring permanent colonization of the isthmus of Panama. At Santa Marta (1525) and Cartagena (1533), Spanish control of the Colombian coast was firmly established, and in the next few years the northern hinterland was explored. German adventurers, notably Nikolaus Federmann, penetrated the Venezuelan and Colombian llanos between 1530 and 1546. By far the greatest of the conquerors was Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada , who in 1536 ascended the Magdalena River, climbed the mighty Andean cordillera, where he subdued the powerful Chibcha (an advanced native civilization), and by 1538 had founded Santa Fé de Bogotá, later known simply as Bogotá . He named the region El Nuevo Reino de Granada [the new kingdom of Granada]. During the next 10 years the conquest was virtually completed. No civil government was established in New Granada until 1549, when an audiencia court, a body with both executive and judicial authority, was set up in Bogotá. To further stabilize colonial government, New Granada was made a presidency (an administrative and political division headed by a governor) in 1564, and the audiencia was relegated to its proper judicial functions. Loosely attached to the viceroyalty of Peru, the presidency came to include Panama, Venezuela, and most of Colombia. Disputes with—and the great distance from—Lima led to the creation (1717) of the viceroyalty of New Granada, comprising Colombia, Ecuador, Panama, and Venezuela. Later the captaincy general of Venezuela and the presidency of Quito were detached, creating a political division that was to survive the revolution against Spain and the efforts of Simón Bolívar to establish a republic of Greater Colombia. The struggle for independence began in 1810, and by 1830 Venezuela and Ecuador had seceded, and the remnant (Colombia and Panama) was renamed the Republic of New Granada. This became the Republic of Colombia in 1886, from which the present Panama seceded in 1903.
Bibliography: See A. J. Kuethe, Military Reform and Society in New Granada (1978).
Author not available, NEW GRANADA.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Advert cuts hit jobs at Granada.
The Birmingham Post (England); 11/29/2001; 532 words
; ... Pain Business Staff ITV broadcaster Granada is axing another 430 jobs on top of ... Steve Morrison yesterday said that the new cutback, expected to take effect over ... year as advertising revenues tumbled . Granada said advertising revenue was down 12 ... pounds 270 million the previous year. Granada, ...
Read more
|
|
Will Richard and Judy come to the rescue of This Morning? Scene & Heard: In the wake of the John Leslie debacle insiders believe there's only one way to save Granada's flagship programme
Evening Standard - London; 10/31/2002; VERONICA LEE; 934 words
; ... and Judy left for Channel 4 and many industry insiders thought that the late-morning slot had had its day. But Granada decided to press on with the show and must be wishing it hadn't. Industry insiders are wondering if This Morning ... Leslie was working on other projects, all surely now consigned to the scrapheap) will ...
Read more
|
|
GRANADA SELLS BSKYB STAKE.
European Report; 10/21/1998; 97 words
; Britain's Granada Group Plc has sold a 6.5% stake in satellite television broadcaster BSkyB to broker BT Alex. Brown Inc. forGBP429 million ... investors at 404 pence a share. According to market sources, the shares were sold to BT Alex. Brown at 400 pence a share. Granada, which owns British regional TV companies, ...
Read more
|
|
Granada Bowl ending has sequel in sight
Oakland Tribune; 6/24/2007; Tim Hunt; 651 words
; ... Fanucchi family, owners of The Granada Bowl in downtown Livermore ... would sell, but if and where a new bowl would be built. About ... group lined up to build the new state-of- the-art facility ... league bowlers alike, the good news is that Livermore will continue ... to oversee bowling at the ...
Read more
|
|
GRANADA PACTS WITH OZ'S SCREENWEST.
Variety; 2/22/1999; WOODS, MARK; 212 words
; ... major Artist Services for a reported $16 million, Britain's Granada Media has clinched a joint venture with Western Australian ... develop and fund $40 million worth of TV and film projects. Granada, which produces 6,000 hours of programming annually, will ... centers of Oz's eastern seaboard. The pact was sealed ...
Read more
|
|
Granada details pounds 100m savings
The Independent - London; 1/4/1996; MATHEW HORSMAN and JOHN SHEPHERD; 655 words
; MATHEW HORSMAN and JOHN SHEPHERD Granada is poised to bury Forte's management ... hostile bid. The breakdown of Granada's promised pounds 100m in savings shows how Granada intends to achieve half that ... The figures, to be released by Granada next week, are likely to be accompanied ... analysts differ on ...
Read more
|
|
'El influjo del clima sobre los seres organizados' y la retórica ilustrada en el semanano del Nuevo Reyno de Granada *.
Revista Historia Crítica; 7/1/2005; Prieto, Mauricio Castaño, Paola Ojeda, Diana; 10510 words
; ... Capital , en S'emanatio del Nuevo Reyno de Granada, No. 1, Santafé de Bogotá, enero 3 de ... Capital , en Semanario deINuevo Reyno de Granada, No. 22, Santafé de Bogotá, may0 29 ... Caldas, en Semanario deíNuevo Reyno de Granada, No. 8, Santafé de Bogotá, febrero 21 ... y moral del hombre del Nuevo ...
Read more
|
|
ICON AND GRANADA CENTER SIGN CONTRACT FOR REALPRO - PROPERTY MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE
Al Bawaba; 4/26/2006; 816 words
; ... its has signed a contract with Granada Center, Riyadh- Saudi Arabia ... was held at Management Office of Granada Center. Contract was signed by ... Al-Kharashi, Executive Manager for Granada Center and Mr. Muhammad Mustaqeem ... current and futuristic needs of Granada Center. "Competition for ...
Read more
|
|
Granada and Carlton in focus.(Business)
The Birmingham Post (England); 10/12/2002; 720 words
; Byline: Cheryl Cole Granada and Carlton Communications have agreed to ... to BSkyB last month. Shares in Carlton and Granada, the main stakeholders in the ITV network, soared on news of a tie-up that would see Granada acquire Carlton and take control of the new business. Granada ...
Read more
|
|
TENNIS ROUNDUP: GRANADA HILLS WANTS TO BREAK `ECR CURSE' TENNIS RIVALS TO MEET IN CITY SECTION SEMIS.(Sports)
Daily News (Los Angeles, CA); 5/5/2005; 541 words
; Byline: Daily News The Granada Hills High boys' tennis team likens its ... relationship between the Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees. Granada Hills' Aaron Novak calls it the ``Curse ... between the two West Valley League rivals. Granada Hills, however, has fallen to ECR in four ... this year, ...
Read more
|
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
New Granada
A Dictionary of World History
New Granada A former Spanish viceroyalty in north-west South America that comprised present-day Colombia, Ecuador, Panama, and Venezuela.
Read more
|
|
Viceroyalty of New Granada
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... 151; that included the modern countries of Colombia, Panama, Venezuela, and Ecuador. Its capital was Santa Fe (modern Bogota ). It was liberated from Spain in 1823. Viceroyalty of New Granada Viceroyalty of New Granada Viceroyalty of New Granada
Read more
|
|
Spain
Cities of the World
... rare, and the city is fairly free of winged pests. Flies are ... Population density is comparable to New England's and is much lower ... Other cities in Andalucia are Granada, home to the famous Alhambra ... the "conquistadores" of the New World. Public Institutions ... Generation of the 1950s and 1960s." ...
Read more
|
|
Gonzalo Jimenez de Quesada
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... 151;died Feb. 16, 1579, Mariquita, New Granada) Spanish conquistador. He went to the ... Magdalena River into the central plain of New Granada (modern Colombia), defeating the Chibcha ... became the most influential person in New Granada. In 1569 he set out in search of the ...
Read more
|
|
Nicaragua
Cities of the World
... Cathedral appears to be becoming the city's new focal point. Population In 1995, the Government ... giving the National Assembly impressive new powers and in dependence, including over ... General Humberto Ortega, in accordance with a new military code, enacted in 1994. He has espoused ...
Read more
|