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    • Deal with problems in the Spanish colonies

      • Impressed with Velasco's achievements and loyalty to the Spanish crown, Emperor Charles V (King Charles I of Spain) sent him to New Spain, in 1550, to deal with problems in the Spanish colonies, among them slavery and the encomienda system.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Luis_de_Velasco,_2nd_Viceroy_of_New_Spain
  1. On November 25, 1550, Velasco made his official entry into Mexico City, thus becoming Viceroy of New Spain. He served until his death there on July 31, 1564. Velasco helped the natives defend themselves against the abuses of gold-mining slave owners, and released 15,000 Indian slaves.

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  3. May 23, 2018 · Luis de Velasco (1511-1564) was the second viceroy of New Spain (now Mexico). A devoted and loyal public servant, he consolidated Spanish control over New Spain and implemented legislation ending Indian slavery in his viceroyalty.

  4. As Spanish power and influence spread, there was growing discontent among indigenous and mestizo populations. In 1680, the Pueblo Revolt in present-day New Mexico began one of the most significant uprisings. Led by a Tewa religious leader named Po'pay, the Pueblo people rose against Spanish rule.

  5. Velasco, Luis de vāläsˈkō [key], d. 1564, Spanish administrator, second viceroy (1550–64) of New Spain (now Mexico), successor to Antonio de Mendoza. His rule was remarkably energetic, humanitarian, and free of corruption.

  6. Born in Carrión de los Condes, Palencia, in Spain, Velasco first went to Mexico in 1560 to join his father, who was the second viceroy. Earlier he had gone with his brother, don Antonio de Velasco, as a member of the party which accompanied Philip II to England for his marriage to Queen Mary.

  7. The viceroy, Don Luis de Velasco, put it succinctly in 1550 when he justified the creation of the repartimiento for agriculture in part because it would cultivate the Indians’ interest in working regularly for economic gain. 1 The monarchs and their bureaucrats did not see the use of force to achieve this end as slavery but, rather, as the ...

  8. Jan 1, 2003 · The story goes that he came out to New Spain in 1549, at about age ten, in the company of his fa-ther, the viceroy Luis de Velasco. His mother and older brother re-mained in Spain, although...

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