Article contents
The Debate on Sunday Markets in Nineteenth–Century Ecuador
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2009
Extract
One of the most characteristic features of a society is the way in which it organizes its time, designating special days and hours for work, religion, rest, recreation and commerce. Socially accepted patterns of temporal organization are essential to the development of communal activities such as festivals, sports, religious ceremonies, market-place trade and industrial production. Once introduced, patterns of temporal organization tend to establish themselves more and more firmly through time as they become rooted in the customs and traditions of the local population. They are only likely to be changed as a result of wide-ranging social, economic and demographic changes affecting the whole fabric of society. Any possible changes in established temporal patterns usually have both advocates and opponents, and actual changes often result from temporary or permanent shifts in the balance of power between different socio-economic groups, or from shifts in opinion promoted by external factors.
- Type
- Articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1975
References
* An earlier version of this paper was presented at the Annual Conference of the Society for Latin American Studies in Southampton, in March 1974. The authors are indebted to the staff of the Municipal, Gubernatorial and Ecclesiastical Archives in Quito, Latacunga, Ambato, Riobamba, Pílaro and Pelileo, in Ecuador, and to the staff of the Archivo Nacional de Historia in Quito, the Archivo Histórico Nacional in Bogatá, the Archivo General de Indias in Seville and the Public Record Office in London, for making the documentary material in their charge available for examination. Thanks are also due to Mr Robson Tyrer of the Department of History, University of California, Berkeley, for assisting the authors in finding several important references. The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support which each of them received from the Department of Education and Science Parry Studentships, and from the Frederick Soddy Trust.
1 See for example Hutton, Webster, Rest Days: A Study in Early Law and Morality (New York, 1916);Google ScholarSorokin, P. A. and Merton, R. K., ‘Social Time: A Methodological and Functional Analysis’, American Jouranl of Sociology, 42 (1937), 615–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2 See George, M. Forster, Culture and Conquest: America's Spanish Heritage (Chicago, 1960);Google ScholarCharles, Gibson, The Aztecs under Spanish Rule: A History of the Indians of the Valley of Mexico 1519–1810 (Stanford, 1964).Google Scholar
3 See for example Felix, Webster McBryde, Cultural and Historical Geography of Southwest Guatemala (Washington, D.C: Smithsonian Institute of Social Anthropology, Publication no. 4, 1945), p. 83;Google ScholarDavid, Maybury-Lewis, Akwé-Shavante Society (Oxford, 1967), pp. 35–59;Google ScholarReichel-Dolmatoff, , Amazonian Cosmos: The Sexual and Religous Sysmbolism of the Tukano Indains (Chicago, 1971), pp. 237–41.Google Scholar
4 See Luis, E. Valcárcel, ‘The Andean Calendar’ and ‘Indian Markets and Fairs in Peru’ in Julian, H. Steward (ed.), Handbook of South American Indians, II: The Andean Civilizations (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 143, 1946), 471–82;Google ScholarRuben, E. Reina, ‘Annual cycle and fiesta cycle’, in Manning, Nash (ed.), Handbook of Middle American Indians, vi: Social Anthropology (Austin, Texas, 1967), 327–32.Google Scholar
5 This definition is adapted from Hodder, B. W., ‘The Distribution of Markets in Yorubaland’, Scottish Geographical Magazine, 81 (1965), 57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6 See for example William, G. Lockwood, ‘The Market Place as a Social Mechanism in Peasant Society’, Kroeber Anthropological Society Papers, 32 (1965), 47–67;Google ScholarRichard, Lewis Berg, ‘The Impact of Modern Economy on the Traditional Economy in Zoogocho, Oaxaca, Mexico, and its Surrounding Area’ (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles, 1968), p. 36.Google Scholar
7 For studies of regional market systems in Hispanic America, see McBryde, op. cit.; Ralph, L. Beals, ‘The Structure of the Oaxaca Market System’, Revista Mexicana de Estudios Aurropológicos, 21 (1967), 333–42;Google ScholarMartin, Diskin, ‘Estudio estructural del sistema de plaza en el Valle de Oaxaca’, América Indígena, 29 (1969), 1077–99;Google ScholarJohn, Wagner Durston, ‘The Social Organisation of Peasant Marketing in Michoacán, Mexico’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of London);Google ScholarErdmann, Gormsen, ‘Wochenmärkte in Bereich von Puebla: Struktur und Entwicklung eines traditionellen Austauschsystems in Mexiko’, Jahrbuch für Geschichtc von Staat, Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft Lateinamerikas 8 (1971), 366–402;Google ScholarIbid., ‘Zur Ausbildung zentralörtlicher Systeme beim übergang von der semiautarken zur arbeitsteiligen Gesellschaft’, Erdkunde, XXV (1971), 108–18; Richard, Symanski, ‘Periodic Markets of Andean Colombia’ (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Syracuse University, 1971);Google ScholarCarol, A. Smith, ‘The Domestic Marketing System in Western Guatemala: An Economic, Locational and Cultural Analysis (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Stanford University, 1972).Google Scholar
8 For studies of periodic and daily markets in large cities of Latin America, see Jane, Pyle, ‘The Public Markets of Mexico City’ (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Oregon, 1968);Google ScholarIbid., ‘Tianguis: Periodic Markets of Mexico City’, forthcoming in Robert, H. T. Smith (ed.), Periodic Markets in the Tropics (Melbourne, 1975);Google ScholarOlmaria, Guimarães, O papel das fciras-livres no abastecimento da cidade de Sāo Paulo (Sā;o Paulo: Universidade de Sāo Paulo, Instituto de Geografia, Série Teses e Monografias no. 2, 1969), pp. 34–45;Google ScholarBromley, R. J., ‘The Organization of Quito's Urban Markets: Towards a Reinterpretation of Periodic Central Places’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 62 (1974), 45–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
9 On the relations of periodic and daily markets, see for example James, H. Stine, ‘Temporal Aspects of Tertiary Production Elements in Korea’, in Pitt, F. R. (ed.), Urban Systems and Economic Development (Eugene, Oregon, 1962), pp. 68–88;Google ScholarShiw, Mangal Singh, ‘The Stability Theory of Rural Central Place Development’, National Geographical Journal of India, 9 (1965), 13–21;Google ScholarPolly, Hill, ‘Notes on Traditional Market Authority and Market Periodicity in West Africa’, Journal of African History, 7 (1966), 295–311;Google ScholarHodder, B. W., ‘Periodic and Daily Markets in West Africa’, in Claude, Meillassoux (ed.), The Development of Indigenous Trade and Markets in West Africa (London, 1971), pp. 347–58.Google Scholar
10 See Sol, Tax, Penny Capitalism: A Guatemalan Indian Economy (Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institute of Social Anthropology, Publication no. 16, 1953), pp. 15–18;Google ScholarMargaret, F. Katzin, ‘The Business of Higglering in Jamaica’, Social and Economic Studies, 9 (1960), 297–331;Google ScholarDouglass, G. Norvell and Marian, Kay Thompson, ‘Higglering in Jamaica and the Mystique of Pure Competition’, Social and Economic Studies, 17 (1968), 407–16;Google ScholarPhilip, Ely Church, ‘Traditional Agricultural markets in Guatemala’ (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Oregon, 1970), pp. 61–93;Google ScholarBromley, R. J., ‘Markets in the Developing Countries: A Review’, Geography, 56 (1971), 125.Google Scholar
11 See for example Salzman, L. F., ‘The Legal Status of Markets’, Cambridge Historical Journal, 2 (1928), 205–52;CrossRefGoogle ScholarFrancisco, Benet, ‘Explosive Markets: The Berber Highlands’, in Karl, Polanyi, Arensberg, C. M. and Pearson, H. W. (eds.), Trade and Market in the Early Empires (Glencoe, Illinois, 1957), pp. 188–217;Google ScholarBromley, R. J. and Richard, Symanski, ‘Marketplace Trade in Latin America’, Latin American Research Review,9, 3 (1974), 3–38.Google Scholar
12 On the synchronization of periodic markets in space and time, see Vernon, G. Fagerlund and Robert, H. T. Smith, ‘A Preliminary Map of Market Periodicities in Ghana’, Journal of Developing Areas, 4 (1970), 333–48;Google ScholarRobert, H. T. Smith, ‘West African Market-Places: Temporal Periodicity and Locational Spacing’, in Claude, Meillassoux (ed.), The Development of Indigenous Trade and markets in West Africa (London, 1975), pp. 319–46;Google ScholarIbid., ‘The Synchronization of Periodic Markers’, in Adams, W. P. and Helleiner, F. M. (eds.), International Geography 1972: 1 (Toronto, 1972), 591–93;CrossRefGoogle ScholarCharles, M. Good, ‘Periodic markets: A Problem of Locational Analysis’, Professional Geographer, 24 (1972), 210–16.Google Scholar
13 See Bromley, R. J., ‘Traditional and Modern Change in the Growth of Systems of Market Centres in Highland Ecuador’, forthcoming in Robert, H. T. Smith (ed.), Periodic Markets in the Tropics (Melbourne, 1975).Google Scholar
14 John, V. Murra, ‘The Economic Organization of the Inca State’ (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Chicago, 1956), pp. 235–44;Google ScholarIbid., ‘Social Structural and Economic Themes in Andean Ethnohistory’, Anthropological Quarterly, 34 (1961), 7–9;Google ScholarIbid., ‘An Aymara Kingdom in 1567’, Ethnohistory, 15 (1968), 115–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
15 Louis, Baudin, Daily Life in Peru under the Last Incas (London, 1961), pp. 241–45;Google ScholarIbid., A Socialist Empire: The Incas of Peru (Princeton, 1961), pp. 267;Google ScholarIbid., Let Incas (Paris, 1964), pp. 117–9.Google Scholar
16 Roswith, Hartmann, ‘Märkte im alten Peru’ (doctoral dissertation, Rheinischen Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität, Bonn, 1968).Google Scholar
17 Ibid., pp. 93–4.
18 Vicente, Restrepo, Los Chibchas antes de la conquista española (Bogotá, 1895), p. 127.Google Scholar
19 Jiménez de la Espada, M. (ed.), Relaciones Geográflcas de Indias: Peru (Madrid: Biblioteca de Autores Españoles, tomos 83−5, 1965).Google Scholar
20 Ibid., II, 220.
21 See George, Kubler, ‘The Quechua in the Colonial World’ in Julian, H. Steward (ed.), Handbook of South American Indians, loc. cit., pp. 334–50;Google Scholar J. H. Rowe, ‘Inca Culture at the time of the Spanish Conquest’, in Ibid., pp. 183–330; Foster, op. cit., pp. 1–76, 104–11; Henry, F. Dobyns, ‘An Outline of Andean Epidemic History to 1720’, Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 37 (1963), 493–515;Google ScholarIbid., ‘Estimating Aboriginal American Population: An Appraisal of Techniques with a New Hemispheric Estimate’, Current Anthropology, 7 (1966), 395–449;CrossRefGoogle ScholarSmith, C. T., ‘Depopulation of the Central Andes in the 16th Century’, Current Anthropology, 9 (1970), 453–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
22 See, for example, Houston, J. M., ‘The Foundation of Colonial Towns in Hispanic America’, in Beckinsale, R. P. and Houston, J. M. (eds.), Urbanisation and its Problems (Oxford, 1968), pp. 352–90.Google Scholar
23 See for example Colmenares, G., Haciendas de los Jesuitas en el Nuevo Reino de Granada (Bogotá, 1969), pp. 37, 224–30;Google ScholarRosemary, D. F. Bromley, ‘Urban-rural Interrelationships in Colonial Hispanic America: A Case Study of Three Andean Towns’, Swansea Geographer, 12 (1974), p. 18.Google Scholar
24 David, Kaplan, ‘The Mexican Marketplace in Historical Perspective’ (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, 1960), pp. 156–61;Google ScholarIbid., ‘City and Countryside in Mexican history’, América Indígena, 24 (1964), pp. 63–64;Google ScholarIbid., ‘The Mexican Marketplace Then and Now’, in June, Helm (ed.), Essays in Economic Anthropology: Proceedings of the 1965 Annual Spring Meeting of the American Ethnological Society (Seattle, 1965), pp. 83–4.Google Scholar
25 See for example Guthrie, C. L., ‘Trade, Industry and Labor in Seventeenth Century Mexico City’, Revista de Historia de América, 7 (1939), 503–34;Google ScholarDusenberry, W. H., ‘The Regulation of Meat Supply in Sixteenth-Century Mexico City’, Hispanic American Historical Review, 28 (1948), 38–52;CrossRefGoogle ScholarJohn, Preston Moore, The Cabildo in Peru under the Hapsburgs (Durham, North Carolina, 1954), pp. 168–78;Google ScholarIbid., The Cabildo in Peru under the Bourbons (Durham, North Carolina, 1966), pp. 67–70;Google Scholar Gibson, op. cit., pp. 355–6.
26 For examples of colonial market regulations in highland Ecuador, see Archivo Nacional de Historia, Quito (ANH/Q), Autos Acordados, Quito, 23 Feb. 1656; ANH/Q, Testamentarias, Quito, 1683; Archivo Eclesiástico Metropolitano, Quito (AEM/Q), Diezmos, Quito, 1771; ANH/Q, Indígenas, Quito, 17 April 1774, 21 Feb. 1777, 28 July 1795; ANH/Q, Gobierno, Quito, 1784, 1790; ANH/Q, Pres. de Quito, vol. 355 f. 17, Ambato, 13 March 1799; ANH/Q, Pres. de Quito, vol. 392, ff. 773−85, Quito, 1802.
27 John, L. Phelan, The Kingdom of Quito in the Seventeenth Century (Madison, 1967), p. 53.Google Scholar
28 ANH/Q, Gobierno, Latacunga, 26 April 1782.
29 Documentary evidence confirms the existence of the following Sunday markets in highland Ecuador between Quito and the Chan Chan Valley south of Alausí in the colonial period: Machachi: ANH/Q, Pres. de Quito, vol. 380, f. 204, Machache, 6 Oct. 1801; Latacunga: ANH/Q, Indígenas, Latacunga, 4 Aug. 1798; Ambato: ANH/Q, Pres. de Quito, vol. 223, f. 15, Ambato, 22 Jan. 1785; Pelileo: ANH/Q, Indígenas, Pelileo, 1817; Guano: ANH/Q, Pres. de Quito, vol. 559 f. 207, Guano, 13 April 1818; Riobamba: Archivo de la Municipalidad, Riobamba (AM/R), legajo 2, Riobamba, 30 Aug. 1825; Guasuntos: ANH/Q, Pres. de Quito, vol. 604, f. 103, Guasuntos, 3 Nov 1786.
30 Jiménez de la Espada, op. cit., II, 220.
31 Ibid.
32 Ibid., p. 225.
33 R. J. Bromley, op. cit. (1975).
34 Kaplan, op. cit. (1964), p. 63.
35 Colmenares, op. cit., pp. 37, 124–30.
36 Archivo General de Indias (AGI), Quito, 284, Guayaquil, 17 Aug. 1765.
37 AGI, Quito, 223, C. 1758–1760.
38 The major Sunday markets in the central highlands for which archival confirmation has been located for the period before 1870 are Latacunga, Ambato, Pelilco, Guano and Riobamba (for references, see note 29), and also San Miguel de Salcedo: Archivo de la Municipalidad, Latacunga (AM/L), leg. 1870, Latacunga, 29 Dec. 1869; and Píllaro: Archivo de la Jefatura Política, Pelileo (AJP/Pe), leg. I, Pelileo, 6 June 1868. Documentary references to other markets have been located but, in most cases, the market day is not stated.
39 Archivo Histórico Nacional, Bogotá (AHN/B), Misc. de la Rcpública, vol. 223, ff. 193–7.Google Scholar
40 This figure is compiled from two cantonsl population censuses in the Archivo de la Municipalidad, Quito (AM/Q), vol. 21, f. 185, Ambato, 13 June 1840; vol. 21, Latacunga, 2 May 1840; and from the series of parish population returns in the Archivo de la Gobernación, Riobamba (AG/R), unclassified, March and April 1844.
41 Ministerio de lo Interior y Relaciones Exteriores, Exposición del Ministro de lo Interior y Relaciones Exteriores al Congreso Constitucional dcl Ecuador en 1875 (Quito, 1875).Google Scholar
42 Lilo, Linke, Ecuador: Country of Contrasts (3rd ed., London, 1960), p. 6.Google Scholar
43 Michael, T. Hamerly, ‘A Social and Economic History of the City and District of Guayaquil during the late colonial and Independence Periods’ (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Florida, Gainesville, 1970), p. 76.Google Scholar
44 Linke, op. cit., p. 6.
45 In the 1850s and 1860s, the Provinces of Chimborazo and Tungurahua in particular, were increasingly involved in the supply of agricultural products to Guayaquil: AM/R, leg. 5, Lican, 17 Sept. 1861; Academia Nacional del Ecuador, Almanaque para el año de 1863 (Quito, 1863), p. 134.Google Scholar
46 On the improvement of communications in the Ambato area, see for example, Archivo de la Municipalidad, Ambato (AM/A), vol. 6, f. 600, Pelileo 9 Sept. 1879; AM/A, vol. 7, f. s, Ambato, 4 Jan. 1880.
47 London Public Record Office (PRO), FO-25–66, Quito, 7 May 1862.
48 El Nacional (Quito), 10 June 1871.
49 Dirección General de Obras Públicas, Carretera Rumichaca-Babahoyo (Quito, 1930);Google ScholarDawn, Wiles, ‘Land Transportation within Ecuador, 1822–1954’ (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Louisiana State University, 1971), p. 123.Google Scholar
50 Ministerio de Hacienda, Exposición del Ministro de Hacienda al Congreso Constitucional de 1875 (Quito, 1875), p. 28.Google Scholar
51 PRO, FO–744–28, Guayaquil, 5 Feb. 1880.
52 Linke, op. cit., p. 25.
53 Archivo de la Gobernación, Ambato (AG/A), Ambato, 11 April 1888.
54 AM/A, vol. 12, f. 210, Ambato, 18 Feb. 1891.
55 AM/A, vol. 14, f. 226, Quero, 30 July 1893.
56 R. J. Bromley, op. cit (1975).
57 Escuela de Niños de Huambaló, ‘Monografía del centro parroquial de Huambaló (unpublished manuscript, Huambaló, n.d.), p. 4.
58 Richard, Symanski, ‘God, Food and Consumers in Periodic Market Systems’, Proceedings of the Association of American Geographers, 5 (1973), 265.Google Scholar
59 ANH/Q, Indígenas, Pelileo, 1817.
60 AM/A, vol. 00, ff. 23–25, Ambato, 9 Dec. 1857. Zero markings are archivist's numbering.
61 ANH/Q, La República, vol. 7, f. 11 Riobamba, 4 July 1857.
62 See Bromley, R. J., Richard, Symanski and Charles, M. Good, ‘The Rationale of Periodic Markets: A Socio-Cultural Perspective’ (manuscript, 1974),Google Scholar
63 AM/A, vol., f. 222, Ambato, 5 Feb. 1868.
64 AM/A, vol. 00, f. 24, Ambato, 9 Dec. 1857.
65 AM/A, vol. 4, f. 223, Ambato, 5 Feb 1868.
66 AM/A, vol. 00, f. 25, Ambato, 9 Dec. 1857.
61 AM/A, vol. 000, f. 232, Ambato, 24 Feb. 1868.
68 Phelan, op. cit., p. 53.
69 ANH/Q, Pres. de Quito, vol. 223, f. 12, Santa Rosa, 22 Jan. 1785.
70 ANH/Q, Pres. de Quito, vol. 223, ff. 17–18, Ambato, 11 Feb. 1785.
71 Ibid..
72 AM/R, leg. 5, Riobamba, 9 July 1838.
73 AM/A, vol. 000, f. 243, Ambato, 14 Feb. 1868.
74 AM/L, leg. 1870, Latacunga, 29 Dec. 1869.
75 AM/R, leg. 5, Riobamba, 9 July 1838.
76 Julio, Castillo Jácome, La Provincia del Chimborazo en 1942 (Riobamba, 1942), pp. 69–71.Google Scholar
77 Ibid., p. 71.
78 ANH/Q, Pres. de Quito, vol. f. 559, f. 207, Guano, 13 April 1818.
79 AM/R, leg. 5, Riobamba, 9 July 1838.
80 Montalvo, J. F., La Provincia de Tungurahua en 1928 (Ambato, 1928), p. 85.Google Scholar
81 ANH/Q, La República, vol. 26, ff. 155−7, 1834.
82 AJP/Pe, leg. I, Pelileo, 7 Feb. 1868.
83 AM/L, leg. 1858, Latacunga, 14 Aug. 1852.
84 See Hartmann, op. cit., p. 109.
83 Montalvo, op. cit., pp. 85–90.
86 See Donald, E. Worcester and Wendell, G. Schaeffer, The Growth and Culture of Latin America (New York, 1956), pp. 610–11, 726–7;Google Scholar Linke, op. cit., pp. 24–5; César, Bustos-Videla, ‘Church and State in Ecuador’ (unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Georgetown University, Washington, D.C., 1966).Google Scholar
87 Jacques, M. P. Wilson, The Deuclopment of Education in Ecuador (Coral Gables, Florida, 1970), pp. 41–7.Google Scholar
88 See Fred Rippy, J., Latin America: A Modern History (Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1958), p. 251.Google Scholar
89 AM/L, leg. 1867, Latacunga, 18 Jan. 1867.
90 AM/L, leg. 1867, Latacunga, 28 March 1867.
91 Ibid..
92 AM/L, leg. 1868, Latacunga, 15 Jan. 1868.
93 AM/L, leg. 1870, Latacunga, 28 Dec. 1869.
94 AM/L, leg. 1870, Latacunga, 29 Dec. 1869.
95 lgnacio, Toro Ruiz, Centenario de la feria en los días lunes (Ambato, 1970).Google Scholar
96 AM/A, vol. 00, f. 223, Ambato, 1854.
97 AM/A, vol. 00, Latacunga, 25 Nov. 1857.
98 AM/A, vol. 00, ff. 23–25, Ambato, 9 Dec. 1857; Toro Ruiz, op. cit., p. 9.
99 AM/A, vol. 4, f. 222, Ambato, 5 Feb. 1868.
100 AM/A, vol. 000, f. 268, Riobamba, 1868.
101 AJP/Pe, leg. 1, Pelileo, 7 Feb 1968.
102 AM/A, vol. 000, f. 233, Ambato, 24 Feb. 1868.
103 AM/A, vol. 4, f. 153, Ambato, 3 April 1868.
104 AM/A, vol. 4, f. 166, Ambato, 5 May 1868.
105 AM/A, vol. 00, f. 27, Ambato, 1 April 1870.
106 Reginald Enock, C., Ecuador (London, 1914), p. 255.Google Scholar
107 AJP/Pe, leg. 1, Pelileo, 6 June 1868.
108 AG/A, Ambato, 1 Aug. 1868.
109 AM/L, leg. 1872, Latacunga, 22 Feb. 1872.
110 R. J. Bromley, op. cit. (1974), p. 55.
- 9
- Cited by