A viceroyalty was an entity headed by a viceroy. It dates back to the Spanish colonization of the Americas in the sixteenth century.
The administration over the vast territories of the Spanish Empire was carried out by , who became governors of an area, which was considered not as a colony but as a province of the empire, with the same rights as any other province in Peninsular Spain.
| + !Name !Capital or main city !Dates !Later status | |||
| Viceroyalty of Aragon | Zaragoza | 1517–1707 | Integrated into the Spain |
| Viceroyalty of Catalonia | Barcelona | 1520–1716 | Integrated into the Spain |
| Viceroyalty of Galicia | Santiago de Compostela | 1486–? | Integrated into the Spain |
| Viceroyalty of Majorca | Palma de Majorca | 1520–1715 | Integrated into the Spain |
| Viceroyalty of Naples | Naples | 1504–1707 | Ceded to Austria |
| Viceroyalty of Navarre | Pamplona | 1512–1841 | Integrated into the Spain |
| Viceroyalty of Portugal | Lisbon | 1580–1640 | Achieved independence as Portugal |
| Viceroyalty of Sardinia | Cagliari | 1417–1714 | Ceded to Austria |
| 1717–1720 | Ceded to Savoy | ||
| Viceroyalty of Sicily | Palermo | 1415–1713 | Ceded to Savoyard state |
| Viceroyalty of Valencia | Valencia | 1520–1707 | Integrated into the Spain |
| + !Name !Capital or main city !Dates !Later status | |||
| Viceroyalty of New Granada | Santa Fe de Bogotá | 1717–1723 | Bourbon Reforms into Peru |
| 1739–1810 | Achieved independence as New Granada | ||
| 1815–1822 | Achieved independence as Colombia | ||
| Viceroyalty of New Spain | Mexico City | 1535–1821 | Achieved independence as Mexico |
| Viceroyalty of Peru | Lima | 1542–1824 | Achieved independence as Peru |
| Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata | Buenos Aires | 1776–1810 | Achieved independence as Argentina |
| Viceroyalty of the Indies | Santo Domingo | 1492–1535 | Became the Viceroyalty of New Spain |
At the same time, the Spanish Empire itself and the Council of the Indies did not perceive the American Viceroyalties as possessions analogous to the Factories or administrative Colonies, in the style of other empires with a more Mercantilism behavior towards the Natives of their non-European possessions, but rather perceived the Viceroyalties as overseas Provinces, with rights equivalent in hierarchy to those of the rest of the provinces of the Crown of Castile (according to the Laws of the Indies), of which they were an integral part. Even the word colony would not have been used in any legal document of the Spanish Monarchy with respect to the Indies until the 17th century, and after the arrival of the Bourbons it would be used in reference to its classic etymological sense of human settlements established in new territories, and not in the modern sense with connotations of economic exploitation.
That would be reaffirmed in the late empire by official statements of the Supreme Central Junta (legal representative of occupied Spain in the middle of the Peninsular War).
Such statements would not have been questioned by American representatives in the Cortes of Cádiz, such as the Peruvian Vicente Morales Duárez.
However, there would still be historiographical debates in this regard, among those (the nationalist or colonialist school) who say that this was only De jure positions on paper, and not a De facto reality in social dynamics (the revisionist school). Authors such as Annick Lempérière consider that the “colonial” concept in Hispanic reality would have been an anachronistic concept that serves mostly an ideological use by historians (wanting to develop an idyllic vision of Spanish-American Independence) rather than to make a scientific description of the history of the Spanish empire, going so far as to question its apparent “objective” usefulness that modern historiography gave to the colonial concept to relate it to the causes of the Spanish-American Wars of Independence (that is, that there is an artificial consensus that American social formations, the Reinos de Indias and it's viceroyalties, have been institutionally formed for their economic exploitation and dependence on the metropolis, instead of being an integral part of the Empire like any extension of the Crown, just like its European dominions).
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