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EARLY ENCOUNTERS, 1492-1734 Spanish Colonies

Content Warning: This resource addresses sexual assault and physical violence.

Resource:

Life in

Brief relation of the destruction of the Indies

Bartolomé de las Casas, “Brief relation of the destruction of the Indies,” Regionum Indicarum per Hispanos (Heidelbergar: typis Guilielmi VValteri acad, 1664). New- Historical Society Library.

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Background

The spread of Catholicism was the stated goal of the Spanish conquest of the New , but the Spanish also wanted to proft from their new territories. Once the treasure of Native civilizations was looted, colonists turned to mining and plantation farming, and needed to fnd cheap labor to maximize their profts. In her early instructions for the governance of the colonies, Queen Isabella I of required all Native people to pay tribute to the crown or its representatives. Out of this directive, the encomienda system was born.

In this system, encomenderos were awarded the control of all of the Native people who lived in a defned territory, usually in recognition of special services to the crown. For example, Hernán Cortés was awarded an encomienda territory that included 115,000 Native inhabitants. Cortés’s power over his people was absolute. He could demand tribute in the form of crops or currency. He could force them to construct forts and towns, or work the mines or plantations. He could sexually exploit the women, and even sell the people who worked for him to other encomenderos. In time, the horrors of life on the would spark outrage back in Spain.

About the Image

Bartholomé de las Casas arrived in the in 1502 as part of one of the frst waves of the Spanish invasion of the . He was rewarded with an encomienda for his services to the crown. Over time, he grew horrifed by the outrageous abuse sufered by Native people under the encomienda system, and in 1515, he gave up his own encomienda and began a campaign to end the system. This illustration comes from a book he published in 1542. A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies is de las Casas’s frsthand account of the abuses he witnessed, and the illustrations that accompanied the text were intended to horrify readers. This particular illustration

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centers the sufering of women and children, and hints at the sexual exploitation Native women experienced at the hands of their oppressors.

Bartholomé de las Casas’s work outraged readers back in Spain and prompted the Spanish government to pass the in 1542. The New Laws aimed to free all Native people from the encomienda system within a generation. This was not a defnitive end to the exploitation of Native people in the Spanish colonies, but it was an important step in addressing their oppression.

Vocabulary

• conquistador: The name for the Spanish or Portuguese military leaders who conquered Central and in the 1500s. • encomenderos: The name for people who controlled encomiendas. • encomienda: A grant by the Spanish king or queen that allowed a person to demand tribute and forced labor from the Native people in a defned territory. • tribute: Payment made to a ruler.

Discussion Questions

• What does this image reveal about the lives of Native people under the encomienda system? • In what ways were women uniquely vulnerable to the abuses of the encomienda system? • Why were images like this circulated in Spain? What was the outcome of the campaign to end the encomienda system?

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Suggested Activities

• This image was created as part of a campaign to end the encomienda system. Ask students to write a letter to King Charles V of Spain, describing their reaction to the image and why the encomienda system should be ended. • Combine this image with the document about the for a lesson on sufering people of color endured for the proft of the Spanish colonies. • The encomienda system was just one form of labor exploitation practiced in the colonial Americas. Combine this image with any of the following resources to consider difering labor exploitation practices, the lives of those exploited, and why labor exploitation was critical to the development of the New World: Life Story: Dennis and Hannah Holland, Mortar and Pestle for Pounding Rice, and Fighting for Freedom in New Amsterdam. • Pair this image with Queen Isabella I’s instructions for the New World to facilitate a discussion of Isabella’s ideals vs. the reality of the Spanish conquest. • The sexual exploitation of women was practiced throughout the colonial Americas. You can learn more about this widespread problem by exploring the following resources: Women and the , Life Story: Marie-Josèphe Angélique, Marrying into the New World, Legislating Reproduction and Racial Diference, Life Story: Dennis and Hannah Holland, Life Story: Malitzen (La Malinche), and Life Story: Doña Teresa de Aguilera y Roche. • Some Native women learned to use the laws of Spain against their oppressors. To learn more read the story of The Gateras of .

Themes

POWER AND POLITICS; WORK, LABOR, AND ECONOMY; ACTIVISM AND SOCIAL CHANGE

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New-York Historical Society Curriculum Library Connections

• For more resources relating to the Spanish colonies of the Americas, see Nueva York: 1613-1945.

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