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Agustín de Ahumada, 2nd Marquess of Amarillas

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This article is about the 18th-century viceroy. For the 16th-century conquistador, see Agustín De Cepeda y Ahumada. In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Ahumada and the second or maternal family name is Villalón.
The Most ExcellentThe Marquess of AmarillasKOS
Portrait by Juan Patricio Morlete Ruiz
42nd Viceroy of New Spain
In office
10 November 1755 – 5 February 1760
MonarchFerdinand VI
Preceded byThe Count of Revillagigedo
Succeeded byFrancisco Cajigal de la Vega
Personal details
Born(1700-09-18)18 September 1700
Ronda, Andalusia, Spain
Died5 February 1760(1760-02-05) (aged 59)
Mexico City, New Spain
SpouseLuisa María del Rosario de Ahumada y Vera

Agustín de Ahumada y Villalón, 2nd Marquess of Amarillas (18 September 1700 – 5 February 1760) was a Spanish military officer and Viceroy of New Spain from 1755 to 1760.

Early life

Agustín de Ahumada was the son of Bartolomé Félix de Ahumada y Ahumada and of Luisa Gertrudis Fernández de Villalón y Narváez. He was named 1st Marqués de las Amarillas by the Spanish crown. He married Catalina de Vera y Leyva.

The Marqués de las Amarillas had a distinguished military career and gained renown in the wars in Italy, where he rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Royal Guards. He was serving as governor of the city of Barcelona at the time of his appointment to the Viceroyalty of New Spain.

As viceroy of New Spain

Agustín de Ahumada, Viceroy of New Spain

He entered Mexico City as viceroy on 10 November 1755. He celebrated the designation of the Virgin of Guadalupe as patron of New Spain (1756). He tried to suppress the irregularities of priests in Puebla (1756), where they were involved with the manufacture of aguardiente, gambling houses, and the selling of holy orders.

He intervened in the lawsuits involving the newly discovered deposits of silver in Nuevo León, trying to get the parties to settle. He tried to pacify the Indians of Coahuila, in conjunction with Governor Miguel Sesma. He continued work on the drainage system in Mexico City.

He sent aid to the Philippines against non-Christians, and to Florida against the British. The French were also trying to establish posts on the coast of Texas, and the British still threatened Spanish shipping and coastal settlements in the Caribbean.

More than 1,000 Comanches rose in revolt in Texas, committing various depredations on non-Indian settlements. Viceroy Ahumada sent armed assistance to the presidio of San Sabás, near San Antonio de Béjar, when it was besieged by the rebels. The president and other Spanish defenders were killed, but the reinforcements put down the uprising.

In 1757 the army of New Spain consisted of 2,897 men organized into 15 corps consisting of 61 companies. The main forces were concentrated in Mexico City and Veracruz, with small groups of 7 to 100 soldiers at various places in the interior.

The most productive mines in the colony in this period were Bolaños, in Jalisco, and La Voladora, in Nuevo León. The latter had just entered production.

In 1759 the volcano Jorullo was born in Michoacán, on the hacienda of San Miguel del Jorullo, property of Andrés Pimentel. All the surrounding ranches and villages had to be abandoned. The viceroy worked to find other locations for the refugees, mostly Indians. He paid much of the expenses for this purpose from his own pocket.

Death

On 10 August 1759 King Ferdinand VI died, after long illness due to his wife's death one year before; he was succeeded by Charles III. Viceroy Ahumada y Villalón died in office, in Mexico City, after a long illness. He was interred in the church of La Piedad. Because of his charitable expenditures, he left his family in poverty. The treasury paid their passage back to Spain.

He was succeeded by the Audiencia, presided over by Francisco de Echávarri, until the arrival of the next viceroy, Francisco Cajigal de la Vega, who was promoted from governor of Havana.

Additional information

Sources

Viceroys of New Spain (1535–1821)
Charles V (1535–1564)

Philip II (1566–1603)
Philip III (1603–1621)
Philip IV (1621–1665)
Charles II (1665–1701)
Philip V (1701–1746)
Ferdinand VI (1746–1760)
Charles III (1760–1789)
Charles IV (1789–1809)
Ferdinand VII (1809–1821)
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