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De Paso, Ignacio GarciaCorresponding Author
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Article

After the Purchase: Spanish Diaspora, Nation and Empire in New Orleans (1803–1865)

Publicated to:JOURNAL OF IBERIAN AND LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES. 29 (2): 251-271 - 2023-05-04 29(2), DOI: 10.1080/14701847.2023.2226976

Authors: de Paso, Ignacio Garcia

Affiliations

Univ Autonoma Madrid, Madrid, Spain - Author

Abstract

After half a century of Spanish imperial control over the Mississippi, the territory of Louisiana was purchased and annexed to the United States in 1803. The goal of this article is to examine the continuities of the Spanish imperial dominion over New Orleans since the Louisiana Purchase up until the American Civil War, using the Spanish-speaking community as an observatory to trace them. Decades after the Louisiana Purchase, Spanish-speaking colonists and immigrants continued to inhabit New Orleans' Vieux Carre, keeping various links to the former territories of the Spanish Monarchy, to the Peninsula and most specially to Cuba. The Spanish community generated new instruments of association as a group, such as bilingual newspapers, associations of mutual assistance, and its own militia. This heterogeneous community experienced in various ways the political upheavals affecting the Gulf of Mexico during the first six decades of the nineteenth century. This included diverse intents on behalf of the former metropole to exert different degrees of control over the community through various means, especially as Cuban separatism became a political force to be reckoned with in the Gulf.

Keywords
>AmericaConsulCubaEmpireHistoryLouisianaSpain

Quality index

Bibliometric impact. Analysis of the contribution and dissemination channel

The work has been published in the journal JOURNAL OF IBERIAN AND LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES, Q3 Agency Scopus (SJR), its regional focus and specialization in History, give it significant recognition in a specific niche of scientific knowledge at an international level.

Impact and social visibility

From the perspective of influence or social adoption, and based on metrics associated with mentions and interactions provided by agencies specializing in calculating the so-called "Alternative or Social Metrics," we can highlight as of 2025-04-28:

  • The use of this contribution in bookmarks, code forks, additions to favorite lists for recurrent reading, as well as general views, indicates that someone is using the publication as a basis for their current work. This may be a notable indicator of future more formal and academic citations. This claim is supported by the result of the "Capture" indicator, which yields a total of: 1 (PlumX).
Leadership analysis of institutional authors

There is a significant leadership presence as some of the institution’s authors appear as the first or last signer, detailed as follows: First Author (GARCIA DE PASO GARCIA, IGNACIO) and Last Author (GARCIA DE PASO GARCIA, IGNACIO).

the author responsible for correspondence tasks has been GARCIA DE PASO GARCIA, IGNACIO.