The archives are rich with autograph material from the first of the
Conquistadores to the end of the 19th century. Here are
Miguel de Cervantes' request for an official post, the
Bull of Demarcation
Inter caetera of
Pope Alexander VI in which he divided the world between Spain and Portugal, the journal of
Christopher Columbus, maps and plans of Spanish American cities, in addition to the ordinary records that reveal the month-to-month workings of the whole vast bureaucatic machinery of the empire. These have been mined by historians in the last two centuries. Today, the Archive of the Indies houses some nine kilometers of shelving, in 43,000 volumes and some 80 million pages, which were produced by the administrators in the Americas and the Philippines: •
Consejo de Indias, Council of the Indies, 16th–19th centuries •
Casa de la Contratación, House of Trade, royal bureaucracy for the monopoly on trade, 16th–18th centuries •
Consulados de Sevilla y Cádiz,
Spanish merchant guild located first in the port of Seville, which then relocated to Cádiz, 16th–19th centuries •
Secretarías de Estado y Despacho Universal de Indias, de Estado, Gracia y Justicia, Hacienda y Guerra, 18th–19th centuries •
Secretaría del Juzgado de Arribadas de Cádiz, 18th–19th centuries •
Comisaría Interventora de la Hacienda Pública de Cádiz, Dirección General de la Renta de Correos, 18th–19th centuries •
Sala de Ultramar del Tribunal de Cuentas, 19th century •
Real Compañía de la Habana, 18th–19th centuries The structure underwent a thorough restoration in 2002–2004, without interrupting its function as a research library. , its 15 million pages are in the process of being digitized. The digitized sources are accessible online ==References==