- century. In
Spanish America, the
owner of an
hacienda was
called the
hacendado or patrón. Most
owners of
large and
profitable haciendas preferred to...
-
dominated by the
hacendado class who
owned the vast
hacienda estates that made up most of the
cultivated land in the Philippines. The same
hacendado elite who...
- Most
vaqueros were men of
mestizo and
mulatto origin while most of the
hacendados (ranch owners) were
ethnically Spanish. The
first Vaqueros in
Mexico (and...
- was
rural land reform,
specifically reclaiming communal lands stolen by
hacendados in the
period before the revolution.
Although rarely active outside their...
- they did so in such
small numbers that
labor shortages prompted Spanish hacendados to
provide incentives to
attract workers,
especially in the
initial boom...
-
policies benefited a
circle of
allies and
foreign investors,
helping hacendados consolidate large estates,
often through violent means and
legal abuse...
-
regional or
international markets. The
owner of an
hacienda was
termed an
hacendado or patrón. The work
force on
haciendas varied,
depending on the type of...
- The
Representation of the
Landowners (Spanish: La Representación de los
Hacendados) is an 1809
economic report written by
Mariano Moreno, that described...
-
social transformation.
Pressure groups (consisting
mainly of businessmen,
hacendados, and industrialists) were
organized and had a
strong influence on government...
- his term. The
benefits did not
spread to the
rural agrarian areas where hacendado traditions,
termed latifundia,
remained patrician, racist, unyielding...