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The historiography of colonial Spanish America in multiple languages is vast and has a long history. It dates back to the early sixteenth century with multiple competing accounts of the conquest, Spaniards’ eighteenth-century attempts to discover how to reverse the decline of its empire, and Latin American-born Spaniards' (creoles') search for an identity other than Spanish, and the creation of creole patriotism. Following independence in some parts of Spanish America, some politically-engaged citizens of the new sovereign nations sought to shape national identity. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, non-Spanish American historians began writing chronicles important events, such as the conquests of Mexico and Peru, dispassionate histories of the Spanish imperial project after

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  • La historiografía de la América española tiene una larga historia. Se remonta a principios del siglo XVI con múltiples relatos de la conquista, los intentos de los españoles del siglo XVIII de descubrir cómo revertir la decadencia de su imperio y la búsqueda de una identidad española distinta de los españoles (criollos) nacidos en Estados Unidos (criollos), y la creación del patriotismo criollo. Tras la independencia en algunas partes de la América española, algunos ciudadanos comprometidos políticamente de las nuevas naciones soberanas buscaron moldear la identidad nacional. En el siglo XIX y principios del XX, los historiadores no hispanoamericanos comenzaron a escribir las crónicas de eventos importantes, como las conquistas de México y Perú, las historias desapasionadas del proyecto imperial español después de su casi completa desaparición en el hemisferio, y las historias de las fronteras del suroeste; áreas de los Estados Unidos que anteriormente habían sido parte del imperio español, liderado por Herbert Eugene Bolton. A comienzos del siglo XX, la investigación académica sobre la América española vio la creación de cursos universitarios sobre la región, la capacitación sistemática de historiadores profesionales en el campo y la fundación de la primera revista especializada, . Durante la mayor parte del siglo XX, los historiadores de la América española colonial leyeron y estaban familiarizados con un gran canon de trabajo. Con la expansión del campo a finales del siglo XX, se establecieron nuevos subcampos, la fundación de nuevas revistas y la proliferación de monografías, antologías y artículos para profesionales y lectores cada vez más especializados. La , la organización de historiadores latinoamericanos afiliados a la Asociación Histórica de Estados Unidos, otorga una serie de premios para publicaciones, con obras sobre la historia latinoamericana temprana bien representadas.​ (es)
  • The historiography of colonial Spanish America in multiple languages is vast and has a long history. It dates back to the early sixteenth century with multiple competing accounts of the conquest, Spaniards’ eighteenth-century attempts to discover how to reverse the decline of its empire, and Latin American-born Spaniards' (creoles') search for an identity other than Spanish, and the creation of creole patriotism. Following independence in some parts of Spanish America, some politically-engaged citizens of the new sovereign nations sought to shape national identity. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, non-Spanish American historians began writing chronicles important events, such as the conquests of Mexico and Peru, dispassionate histories of the Spanish imperial project after its almost complete demise in the hemisphere, and histories of the southwest borderlands, areas of the United States that had previously been part of the Spanish Empire, led by Herbert Eugene Bolton. At the turn of the twentieth century, scholarly research on Spanish America saw the creation of college courses dealing with the region, the systematic training of professional historians in the field, and the founding of the first specialized journal, Hispanic American Historical Review. For most of the twentieth century, historians of colonial Spanish America read and were familiar with a large canon of work. With the expansion of the field in the late twentieth century, there has been the establishment of new subfields, the founding of new journals, and the proliferation of monographs, anthologies, and articles for increasingly specialized practitioners and readerships. The Conference on Latin American History, the organization of Latin American historians affiliated with the American Historical Association, awards a number of prizes for publications, with works on early Latin American history well represented. The Latin American Studies Association has a section devoted to scholarship on the colonial era. (en)
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  • La historiografía de la América española tiene una larga historia. Se remonta a principios del siglo XVI con múltiples relatos de la conquista, los intentos de los españoles del siglo XVIII de descubrir cómo revertir la decadencia de su imperio y la búsqueda de una identidad española distinta de los españoles (criollos) nacidos en Estados Unidos (criollos), y la creación del patriotismo criollo. Tras la independencia en algunas partes de la América española, algunos ciudadanos comprometidos políticamente de las nuevas naciones soberanas buscaron moldear la identidad nacional. En el siglo XIX y principios del XX, los historiadores no hispanoamericanos comenzaron a escribir las crónicas de eventos importantes, como las conquistas de México y Perú, las historias desapasionadas del proyecto im (es)
  • The historiography of colonial Spanish America in multiple languages is vast and has a long history. It dates back to the early sixteenth century with multiple competing accounts of the conquest, Spaniards’ eighteenth-century attempts to discover how to reverse the decline of its empire, and Latin American-born Spaniards' (creoles') search for an identity other than Spanish, and the creation of creole patriotism. Following independence in some parts of Spanish America, some politically-engaged citizens of the new sovereign nations sought to shape national identity. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, non-Spanish American historians began writing chronicles important events, such as the conquests of Mexico and Peru, dispassionate histories of the Spanish imperial project after (en)
rdfs:label
  • Historiografía de la América Española Colonial (es)
  • Historiography of Colonial Spanish America (en)
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