Los "alucinados" de Puerto Viejo: nociones de soberanía y ciudadanía en Manabí 1812-1822
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Abstract
The article analyzes the social and cultural reaction of some villages from Manabí, an Ecuadorian coastal province, especially from the partidos of Pueblo Viejo and Canoa, in light of the political events occurred on the Iberian Peninsula between 1812 and 1822. The research explores the form in which different social sectors, including the indigenous and other subaltern groups, appropriated notions of citizenship and sovereignty, disseminated particularly in the context of the oath of the Constitution of Cadiz, issued in 1812. The colonial authorities reported that these political activities were accompanied by riots and acts of insubordination.
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