Archival practices in Early Modern Spain: transformation, destruction and (re)construction of family archives in the Canary Islands
Fecha
2019Resumen
The Canary Islands were conquered from the aboriginal population and colonised in the fifteenth century. This process subjected its inhabitants to the Castilian legal framework, in which evidence of
ownership was demanded through documentary proof. Archives,
therefore, proliferated in the new territory as a necessity to demonstrate,
prove and preserve privileges and patrimony. At the same
time, the ‘value’ of archives made them targets for destruction, theft
or seizure in situations of social, political, military and family conflict.
Moreover, Canary Island archives were affected by natural causes
and natural disasters. Within this context, the present paper focuses
on the transformations caused by these factors in family archives.
The paper aims to explain how, in cases of damage or destruction,
families struggled to reconstruct their archives in order to manage
and defend their patrimony and family memory. Drawing on different
examples, this paper offers empirical evidence on the multicontextualism
of these archives. The results demonstrate that
several family archives in the Canary Islands are (re)constructions
from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Moreover, the
archival practices can be framed within a progressive inclusion in
the islands of the ‘New Archive Culture’ from mainland Spain.