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  1. Spanish control of Texas was followed by Mexican control of Texas, and it can be difficult to separate the Spanish and Mexican influences on the future state. The most obvious legacy is that of the language; every major river in modern Texas, including the Red River, which was baptized by the Spaniards as Colorado de Texas, has a Spanish or ...

  2. Texas o Tejas 5 ( pronunciado [ˈtexas] ⓘ, /téjas/; pronunciación en inglés: /ˈtɛksɪs/) es uno de los cincuenta estados que, junto con Washington D. C. forman los Estados Unidos. Su capital es Austin y su ciudad más poblada, Houston. Está ubicado en la región Sur del país, división Centro Suroeste.

  3. www.tshaonline.org › handbook › entriesSpanish Texas - TSHA

    Feb 1, 1996 · Spanish Texas. Spanish Texas, situated on the border of Spain’s vast North American empire, encompassed only a small portion of what is now the Lone Star State. The province lay above the Nueces River to the east of the Medina River headwaters and extended into Louisiana. Over time, Texas was a part of four provinces in the Viceroyalty of New ...

  4. The Mexican independence movement forced Spain to relinquish its control of New Spain in 1821, with Texas becoming in 1824 part of the state of Coahuila y Tejas within the newly formed Mexico in the period in Texas history known as Mexican Texas (1821-1836). The Spanish left a deep mark on Texas.

  5. Dec 11, 2020 · Texas History: Time-traveling back to the first capital of Spanish Texas. Michael Barnes. Austin American-Statesman. 0:04. 0:26. Los Adaes, first capital of the province of Tejas, was...

  6. www.tshaonline.org › handbook › entriesSpanish Fort, TX - TSHA

    Jan 27, 2021 · Spanish Fort is located in north central Montague County at the end of Farm Road 103 one mile south of the Red River. Spanish Fort began in the eighteenth century as a fortified Taovaya Indian settlement, misnamed later by Anglo settlers who found Spanish artifacts and ruins of a fort near the site.

  7. Jan 1, 1996 · Updated: April 2, 2019. Spanish Mapping of Texas. Early in 1520 the pilots who had sailed the previous year with Alonso Álvarez de Pineda laid before the Spanish crown an outline sketch of the Gulf of Mexico. This crude rendering, which survives in the Archivo General de Indias in Seville, represents the beginning of the Spanish mapping of Texas.

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