General Command of Maynas

The General Command of Maynas[a] was a governorate and general command of the Spanish Empire that existed from 1802 to 1822. It replaced the governorates of Quijos and Maynas, excluding the latter's village of Papallacta.

General Command of Maynas
Comandancia General de Maynas
Governorate and General Command of the Spanish Empire
1802–1822
Flag of Maynas

Map with controlled (green) and claimed (light green) territory
CapitalMoyobamba[1]
Historical eraViceroyalty of Peru
• Established
15 July 1802
1821–1822
• Supreme Decree
26 April 1822
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Governorate of Maynas
Governorate of Maynas

History edit

 
The area (in mustard) c. 1802.

The territory was created through the real cédula of July 15, 1802,[5] which transferred the governorates of Maynas and Quijos (excluding the village of Papallacta) into the Viceroyalty of Peru.[6] It was incorporated into the Protectorate of Peru as a department with the name of Quijos and Maynas[7] following a war for the territory's independence that lasted from 1821 to 1822, during the Spanish American wars of independence.[1] The aforementioned department was ultimately incorporated into the Department of Trujillo in 1825.[1][8]

After the wars of independence in Ecuador and Peru, the zone became extremely relevant for both countries, as it was a main focus of the Ecuadorian–Peruvian territorial dispute, which escalated in 1941 as the Ecuadorian–Peruvian War and continued to a lesser extent with skirmishes in 1995 and in 1998, the latter leading to the signing of the Brasilia Presidential Act in 1998. Additionally, it was also a focus of the territorial dispute between Colombia and Peru that escalated in 1933 with the Colombia–Peru War which concluded with the signing of the Rio Protocol the following year.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Spanish: Comandancia general de Maynas / Gobierno y comandancia general de Maynas. Translations in English vary, with General Command being used,[2][3] but also translated as the General Commandery of Maynas[4]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Historia de Moyobamba". Municipalidad de Moyobamba. Archived from the original on 2010-01-13.
  2. ^ Denegri Luna, Félix (1996). Peru and Ecuador: Notes for the History of a Frontier. Bolsa de Valores de Lima. p. 32.
  3. ^ Eguiguren, Luis Antonio (1942). Invincible Jaén. Torres Aguirre. p. 380.
  4. ^ Tirado-Fabregat, Daniel A.; Badia-Miró, Marc; Willebald, Henry (2020). Time and Space: Latin American Regional Development in Historical Perspective. Springer International Publishing. p. 251. ISBN 9783030475536.
  5. ^ Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Colombia (1901). Antonio José Uribe (ed.). Anales diplomáticos y consulares de Colombia (in Spanish). Vol. 2. Bogotá: Imprenta Nacional. p. 649.
  6. ^ Coral, Luciano (1894). Conflicto internacional: Ecuador y Perú (in Spanish). Guayaquil: Imprenta de "El Tiempo". p. 6.
  7. ^ Rengifo, Ruiz (2002-05-20). "Proyecto de Ley: declarar a la ciudad de Moyobamba capital histórica de la amazonía peruana". Congreso de la República.
  8. ^ "Aniversario de Loreto: ¿cómo llegó a ser uno de los departamentos más grandes del Perú?". Bicentenario del Perú. 2020-02-07.