Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Rural/Urban Rural/Urban Gender: patriarchies and double standards--Native, Iberian, African Gender: patriarchies and double standards--Native, Iberian, African Condition: slave/not encomendado/not Condition: slave/not encomendado/not Race/calidad/casta: español, indio, casta--phenotype (color), not enough Race/calidad/casta: español, indio, casta--phenotype (color), not enough Culture: language, dress, food, social interaction Culture: language, dress, food, social interaction Class, wealth: poor, not Class, wealth: poor, not Society of castas: Spanish America
2
1580: colonial hegemony Spanish cities and towns: 225 (tot. pop ~500,000) Native towns and villages: thousands (~5 million) Spanish mines and plantations
3
Post-conquest society (Spanish America) rural urban
4
Native: gendered division of labor universal, early marriage (15-16 yrs) access to village lands via household Native: gendered division of labor universal, early marriage (15-16 yrs) access to village lands via household Iberian sex-ratio imbalance--5-10 males/female nearly universal, later marriage (17-18) equi-partible inheritance Iberian sex-ratio imbalance--5-10 males/female nearly universal, later marriage (17-18) equi-partible inheritance African sex ratio imbalance--3 males/female slavery threatened family, community advantage of informal unions African sex ratio imbalance--3 males/female slavery threatened family, community advantage of informal unions Gender: patriarchies and double standards
5
Ethno-racial composition, New Spain
6
Race/calidad/ casta Racial lines more apparent than real Phenotype (color) not enough Flexibility: calidad (character, reputation) Crossings Crossings
7
Three divisions Español peninsular, creole Indio encomendado, migrant (naboria) Casta negro (bozal) mulato, etc.
8
Marriageways Spain: “ Better to marry than to burn”-- low illegitimacy in Spain. New Spain : “Better to be well fixed with a concubine than badly married.”--high illegitimacy in Spanish America.
9
Indian: rampant in the Caribbean (until the virtual extinction of the population) and on the frontiers (until the end of colonial rule) Indian: rampant in the Caribbean (until the virtual extinction of the population) and on the frontiers (until the end of colonial rule) African: first the earliest conquests small in number until 18th century but important in society, economy and even politics (militias) African: first the earliest conquests small in number until 18th century but important in society, economy and even politics (militias)Slavery
10
Slave Traffic from Africa: 1451-1870 (data repeated on next 4 maps) 1451-1600: beginning (1/4 million) 1451-1600: beginning (1/4 million) 1601-1700: growing (1.3 million) 1601-1700: growing (1.3 million) 1701-1811: peaking (6 million) 1701-1811: peaking (6 million) 1811-1870: declining (2 million) 1811-1870: declining (2 million)
11
Slave Traffic (figures in thousands): 1451-1600, beginning (1/4 million) (P.D. Curtin, The Atlantic Slave Trade) 50 75 50 100
12
Slave Traffic: 1601-1700, growing (1.3 million) 25 300 600 250 150 50 50
13
Slave Traffic: 1701-1810, peaking (6 million) 350 600 1,400 1,400 1,900 450
14
Slave Traffic: 1811-1870, declining (2 million) 50 600 100 1,100
15
Cacao Boom: Venezuela, 4 regions occurred after 1680s (data for 1684, 1720, 1744) Caracas
16
Encomenderos: conquerors and royal favorites Encomenderos: conquerors and royal favorites Encomienda: Grants of tribute and labor of native villagers, primarily to conquistadores Encomienda: Grants of tribute and labor of native villagers, primarily to conquistadores Crown attempts to convert from private to royal control (New Laws of 1542) Crown attempts to convert from private to royal control (New Laws of 1542) Attempts to restrict use of labor by encomenderos (personal service banned 1549) Attempts to restrict use of labor by encomenderos (personal service banned 1549) Labor drafts: mita and repartimiento (1550-) Labor drafts: mita and repartimiento (1550-) Encomienda and encomenderos
17
Potosí (Upper Peru), 1545: richest silver mine in the early modern world
18
Inside Potosí: native miners Migrant labor draft: mita every 7 years 16 provinces: lost 50% of pop in a century
19
End
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.