This dissertation is an examination of the colonial Mexican town of Papantla,
Veracruz in the eighteenth century. By examining a series of uprisings, this work
argues that the underlying social and ethnic complexity of Papantla was far more
nuanced than has generally been addressed in the scholarship. Papantla was a town
that violated the notions of an ethnically ordered society. Nor did Papantla show any
evidence that either the Spanish or native populations held any natural unity or
cohesion of action.
The study of Papantla serves as a useful guide to the type of upheaval faced
by colonial communities during the era of the Bourbon Reforms. In many ways, the
experience of this town was much like that of other communities in different parts of
the colony, with similar events triggering unrest, a somewhat standardized
progression of violent events, and typical Spanish responses. At the same time,
Papantla faced the challenges of eighteenth-century colonial reform, in a way that
was shaped by its own history and composition. As a long time agricultural center for
tobacco, Papantla was particularly disrupted by that crop's monopolization in 1764.
The five uprisings that occurred in the following decades were in part shaped by this
change. These uprisings reveal that Papantla was a community that was formed as
much by political and economic conditions as it was by any notion of ethnic
solidarity.