Abstract
Panamá la Vieja and Natá, two Spanish foundations of the second decade of
the sixteenth century, offer to students of urbanism in the new world
importan information about the famous orthogonal Castillian plan. The plans
of both cities are intimately related to the ordinances of 1513 and could
also have served as models for the more famous foundations of Oaxaca, the
Guatemalan plateau or the Andean region.
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