Prior to 1785, the region of modern-day El Salvador was governed by the Greater Mayorship of San Salvador, a remnant of Habsburg rule in the area.[1] During the Bourbon Reforms of the late 1700s, reformists sought to reorganize the relationship between the Spanish Crown and the colonies that made up the Spanish Empire by further centralizing governance of the colonies and taking away autonomy from wealthy elites, but the attempts at such reforms caused resistance among Creoles that began gaining influence in Spanish governance.[2][3] As a part of the reform, the Intendancy of San Salvador was created, as were the intendancies of Ciudad Real, Comayagua, and León, which took away significant amounts of power and influence of the Captaincy General of Guatemala in the areas affected.[4][5][6][7]
When the mayorship was transformed into an intendancy in 1785, Mayor Manuel Fradique y Goyena remained in his position until 1786 when he was replaced by José Ortiz de la Peña as the first colonial intendant.[8] He was replaced by Francisco Luis Héctor de Carondelet in 1789.[9][10] During his tenure, indigo production decreased as a result of the reduction of the local indigenous population.[10] He recruited Spanish laborers to do the work of the indigenous people, which later resulted in a significant increase of a lighter-skinned populace in northern El Salvador today, notably in the Chalatenango Department, who are the descendants of the laborers.[10] He was considered the "best colonial intendant" of San Salvador during the intendancy.[9]
In 1782, the Spanish Crown reduced tariffs and fees obstructing trade between mainland Spain and the American colonies which greatly increased the imports and exports between Spain and its colonies.[19] As a result, the economy and population of not only the Intendancy of San Salvador, but all of the colonies increased significantly.[19] During Spanish rule, indigo was the intendancy's primary export that dominated the economy.[20] Guatemala's power and economy were notably deprived, not only as a result of losing San Salvador in 1785, but also because the value of indigo exports it lost in the process were very significant.[4]
Cruz Pacheco, José Santa & Cadenas y Vicent, Vicente (1981). "Relacion de los Alcaldes Mayores de San Salvador" [Relation of the Greater Mayors of San Salvador]. Hidalguía – La Revista de Genealogia, Nobelza y Armas [Hidalguía - The Magazine of Genealogy, Nobility and Arms] (in Spanish). Vol. 166–167. Madrid, Spain: Publicación Bimenstral. pp. 469–480. ISSN0018-1285. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
Mahoney, James (July 2003). "Long-Run Development and the Legacy of Colonialism in Spanish America". American Journal of Sociology. 109 (1). The University of Chicago Press: 50–106. doi:10.1086/378454. JSTOR10.1086/378454. S2CID73720682.
Meléndez Chaverri, Carlos (1961). José Matías Delgado, Prócer Centroamericano [José Matías Delgado, Central American Procreator] (in Spanish). Vol. 8 (2 ed.). San Salvador: Directorate of Publications and Prints, National Council for Culture and Art (published 2000). pp. 33–37. ISBN9992300574. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
Muñoz Borrero, Eduardo & Moreno, Fray Agustin (2013). "François Louis Hector de Carondelet" [Francis Louis Hector of Carondelet]. Noyelles sur Selle, Carondelet (in French). p. 1. Retrieved 5 December 2020.
Paquette, Gabriel B. (May 2007). "State-Civil Society Cooperation and Conflict in the Spanish Empire: The Intellectual and Political Activities of the Ultramarine Consulados and Economic Societies, C. 1780–1810". Journal of Latin American Studies. 39 (2). Cambridge University Press: 263–298. doi:10.1017/S0022216X07002386. JSTOR4491811. S2CID144753827.
Trabanino, J. Guillermo & Herrarte, Alberto (1956). "Acta de la Independencia" [Act of Independence]. Documentos de la Unión Centroamericana [Documents of the Central American Union] (PDF) (in Spanish). pp. 3–5. Retrieved 5 December 2020.
Woodward, Ralph Lee (2009). "Guatemala". encarta.msn.com. Encarta. pp. 8–9. Archived from the original on 30 October 2009. Retrieved 5 December 2020.
Vives, Pedro A. (1986). "Intendencias y Poder en Centroamérica: La Reforma Incautada" [Intendances and Power in Central America: The Seized Reform]. Anuario de Estudios Centroamericanos (in Spanish). 13 (2). University of Costa Rica (published 1987): 37–47. Retrieved 5 December 2020.