We, the King: Creating Royal Legislation in the Sixteenth-Century Spanish New World

Author:   Adrian Masters (Universität Trier, Germany)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781009315401


Pages:   338
Publication Date:   27 November 2025
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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We, the King: Creating Royal Legislation in the Sixteenth-Century Spanish New World


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Author:   Adrian Masters (Universität Trier, Germany)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Weight:   0.549kg
ISBN:  

9781009315401


ISBN 10:   1009315404
Pages:   338
Publication Date:   27 November 2025
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

List of figures; List of tables; Acknowledgments; Prelude: A Peruvian pestizo at the Spanish Court; Introduction: the collective making of an empire; 1. Paper ceremonies for a global empire: Gobierno petitions and the collective work of Voluntad; 2. The co-creation of the Imperial Logistics Network; 3. Distant kings, powerful women, prudent ministers: the gendered creation of the Council of the Indies; 4. Lawmaking in a portable council: Gobierno decision-making technologies before 1561; 5. 'Bring the Papers:' Royal decision-making and the power of archives in Madrid, 1561–1598; 6. Creating the royal decree: format, phraseology, and petitioners' transformation of Indies law; 7. Pedro Rengifo's epilogue: subjects of chance; Conclusions; Index.

Reviews

'Meticulously researched and beautifully written, We, the King unveils the labyrinthine petitioning process involved in enacting thousands of legislative decrees and reveals how diligent vassals shaped colonial policies and categories of difference. It dismantles the standard view of the Spanish colonial state as the architect of legal rule that was all-seeing and all-pervasive. This outstanding work should be required reading for all colonial Latin Americanists.' Nancy E. van Deusen, author of Global Indos: The Indigenous Struggle for Justice in Sixteenth-Century Spain 'Adrian Masters has produced an ambitious study of early modern bureaucracy, law-making, and subaltern agency. Deeply researched and carefully written, We, the King is an indispensable resource for scholars of the Iberian empire.' Michelle McKinley, author of Fractional Freedoms: Slavery, Intimacy and Legal Mobilization in Colonial Lima, 1600–1700 'In this tour de force analysis of lawmaking in the early modern Spanish empire, Adrian Masters reveals that not only were the king's New World vassals co-creators of royal law, but most provocatively, that it was their petitions to the crown that helped codify the human differences that would inform the caste system.' S. Elizabeth Penry, author of The People Are King: The Making of an Indigenous Andean Politics 'Adrian Masters masterfully unpacks the powerful legal fiction of the King of Spain and Emperor of the Indies, demonstrating that the world's first global empire was a contingent and collective enterprise made by paper-peddling brokers and subalterns. A must read for anyone interested in the early modern history of empires and governance.' Mark Thurner, author of History's Peru: The Poetics of Colonial and Postcolonial Historiography '… this is a strong book with superb writing. While scholars generally know that princes of many European empires often merely accepted and pasted petitions of social groups and individuals into royal communications to change policy, Masters unearths and discusses many illustrative examples of this mechanism. By doing so, he successfully traces the intricate working of the imperial administration and details how social communities drummed up support to reverse discriminatory rulings against them.' Christoph Rosenmüller, American Historical Review


Author Information

Adrian Masters is Director of the University of Trier's GloVib: Global Entanglements Project. Raised in rural Costa Rica, he has written several award-winning articles on Spanish imperial history.

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