Spanish fortifications in America

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Castle of San Pedro de la Roca. Santiago de Cuba, Cuba.

The coastal 'fortifications' of

pirates.[1]

History

Defense fortifications were present from the beginning of the

conquest of America, military actions and diplomatic efforts that resulted in Spain's control of a vast territory. In addition to walling the populations, castles were built in the highest part, which allowed the control of the territory and allowed an effective defense.[2]

From the reign of Felipe II onwards, notable efforts were made to build new fortifications or expand existing ones in the face of the annexationist threat from other European nations.

By 1550 certain strategic ports had become fortified enclaves:

Cartagena (guardian of northern South America and incursions through the Isthmus of Panama area); Nombre de Dios and later Portobelo on the isthmus;[3] San Juan de Ulúa in Veracruz (key point and entrance to Mexico); and Havana (strategic center and meeting point for groups of ships to undertake their return voyage to Spain). Other secondary fortifications were also built in Yucatán, Florida, Central America, Venezuela[4] and the islands to discourage attackers and foreign settlers. The first defenses were simple earthen forts armed with a few culverins
and small-caliber cannons. But the capture of Havana by French attackers in 1555 highlighted the need for larger and more resistant fortifications and forts., and other settlements and ports.

In the Caribbean and the

Juan Bautista Antonelli
to design modern fortifications at San Juan de Ulúa and evaluate the Caribbean defenses. Antonelli's proposals led to the construction of a costly but quite effective system of fortifications that in the case of Havana resisted attempts to capture it for almost 200 years until 1762. Indeed, further attacks by Drake and Hawkins in 1595 against the improved fortifications failed at San Juan, Puerto Rico, and at Cartagena, yellow fever, malaria and dysentery, and other tropical diseases forced the attacking troops to desist in their attempts. Drake attacked and razed Nombre de Dios on the isthmus, after which the town was abandoned and activity was concentrated in Portobelo.

After the signing of the Treaty of London in 1604, European competitors occupied the vacant territories in America, which became excellent stalking points from which to launch more planned and larger attacks. Simultaneously small forces of buccaneers, often supported by European allies, plundered and ravaged the ports. They massacred the Portobelo barracks in 1668 and managed to capture numerous Spanish coastal towns and fortifications. On several occasions, buccaneers forces crossed the isthmus, capturing Spanish ships, and captured weakly fortified Pacific ports in Central America, Mexico, and Peru. While the great fortresses of the Caribbean should have been impregnable against such attacks, problems with the availability of troops in barracks and difficulties in maintaining large-scale works, artillery, and stores provided opportunities for surprise lightning attacks.

As revenues declined during the 17th century, poorly recruited and trained Spanish troops in the Americas lacked the determination to defend the fortifications against buccaneer attack. Campeche fell in 1672, and in 1683 a buccaneer force stormed the Fortress of San Juan de Ulúa and captured Veracruz. They sacked the town, killed 300 of its 6,000 inhabitants, and even threatened to massacre the entire population if a ransom was not paid. With the arrival of the annual Spanish fleet, Mexican military forces from Puebla, Orizaba, Jalapa, and Cordoba reoccupied the town and found destroyed buildings and the bodies of people and animals rotting in the streets. As a consequence of this disaster, Mexican authorities organized special tribunals to investigate and punish military personnel who had not defended the fortifications effectively.

During the wars against Great Britain in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, Spanish forces and fortifications helped resist and repel British attacks on Cartagena de Indias (1741), La Guaira [1743], Puerto Cabello (1743), San Juan de Puerto Rico (1797), and discourage plans to invade Mexico in the period 1805 to 1807. Although the fortress of San Juan de Ulúa was the last bastion of Spanish power in Mexico until 1825, it did not serve the Spaniards to reconquer the viceroyalty. Throughout the 19th century, many of the fortifications were converted into prisons and penitentiaries, rather than serving as sentries to protect strategic ports against foreign advances.

Gallery

References

  1. ^ Fernández del Hoyo, María Antonia, Las defensas: la fortificación estratégica de las Indias, Madrid, Rialp, 1985.
  2. ^ Castles and Fortified Cities in Spanish America: Plans of the XVIII century. Carlos San-Antonio-Gómez Polytechnic University of Madrid (2005)
  3. ^ Céspedes del Castillo, Guillermo, "La defensa militar del istmo de Panamá a fines del siglo XVII y comienzos del XVIII", Anuario de Estudios Americanos, IX (Sevilla, 1952), pp. 235-275.
  4. ^ In Venezuela, no less than fifty forts, fortresses and castles were erected at this time, thirty-six of which are located along the extensive (2,813 km) Caribbean coast. forts, fortresses and castles, thirty-six of which are located along the extensive (2,813 km) Caribbean coastline. Of the latter, twenty-one were built for the defense of the port of La Guaira. The others are (or were) scattered throughout the rest of the country. Some of them were built to fulfill a temporary defensive function and therefore were used to Some of them were built to fulfill a temporary defensive function, and for this reason materials of little resistance were used in them (such as "fajina", in the case of La Guardia in Catia la Mar; tree trunks, in the case of the fort of Unare, and even earth, in the case of San Miguel de Paria).
  5. ^ Colonial fortifications of the city of Havana, Havana, Ministry of Culture, Directorate of Cultural Heritage, 1982

Bibliography

  • Paul E. Hoffman, The Spanish Crown and the Defense of the Caribbean, 1535–1585: Precedent, Patrimonialism, and Royal Parsimony (1980).
  • John H. Parry, The Spanish Seaborne Empire (1966)
  • Arthur P. Newton, The European Nations in the West Indies, 1493–1688 (1933).
  • Peter T. Bradley, The Lure of Peru: Maritime Intrusion into the South Sea, 1598–1701 (1989).
  • Clarence H. Haring, The Buccaneers in the West Indies in the Seventeenth Century (1910).
  • Juan Juárez Moreno, Corsarios y piratas en Veracruz y Campeche (1972).
  • Richard Pares, War and Trade in the West Indies, 1739–1763 (1936);
  • David Syrett, The Siege and Capture of Havana, 1762 (1970);
  • Richard Harding, Amphibious Warfare in the Eighteenth Century: The British Expedition to the West Indies, 1740–1742 (1991).
  • Antonio Calderón Quijano, Historia de las fortificaciones en Nueva España (1953),
  • Guillermo Lohmann Villena, Las defensas militares de Lima y Callao (1964).
  • Blanes Martín, Tamara. Fortificaciones del Caribe. La Habana, Cuba: Letras cubanas, 2001.
  • Marchena Fernández, Juan. Ejército y milicias en el mundo colonial americano. Madrid: Editorial MAPFRE, 1992.
  • Serrano Alvarez, José Manuel. Fortificaciones y tropas: El gasto militar en tierra firme, 1700–1788. Sevilla: Diputación de Sevilla, 2004.