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6 - Creating the Royal Decree

Format, Phraseology, and Petitioners’ Transformation of Indies Law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 March 2023

Adrian Masters
Affiliation:
Universität Trier, Germany
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Summary

This chapter explains the council and king’s ratification of hundreds of thousands of royal decrees, and the unique categories that these edicts contained, such as mestizo and mulato. It outlines the pathways through which vassals of all social backgrounds suggested new laws to the ruling Council of the Indies. Pressed for time, the council’s overwhelmed ministers often transplanted petitions’ vocabulary verbatim into decrees. This meant that subjects often phrased imperial laws minor and major, regional and Indies-wide. Using a multistep archival methodology, this chapter demonstrates how scholars can match vassals’ petitions to decrees, then shows how legal categories such as mestizo and mulato came about through the petitions of not only Spaniards but also Indians, mestizos, and mulatos themselves. Subjects of any social background could therefore introduce and shape Indies legal constructs, and the empire’s agenda from the ground up. It considers the lawmaking royal signature, as well as some vassals’ dangerous decision to attempt its forgery. Lastly, it reflects on the nature of the de partes/de oficio divide in decree production, the number of gobierno royal decrees, and the costs of their production for vassals.

Type
Chapter
Information
We, the King
Creating Royal Legislation in the Sixteenth-Century Spanish New World
, pp. 221 - 256
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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