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© T. M. Whitmore TODAY Iberian roots of Conquest-quick review Early Spanish colonial institutions Spanish Colonial Settlement patterns
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© T. M. Whitmore Last Time-Questions? Iberian history & Latin American Conquest
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© T. M. Whitmore Iberian Issues for Latin American Conquest Iberia settled by Romans in 300 CE Impacts for Americas: tradition of latifundia (lg estates); urban living preference Class structure and primogeniture Preference for cattle and horses as proper for gentlemen Primogeniture Christianity
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© T. M. Whitmore Implications of the Reconquista for Latin America Border war to expand the faith War to expand territorial control New towns Victors get “tribute” AND land Looting => value in “portable” wealth War = opportunity for glory and riches Secular and religious motives mixed Iberia misses our on initial stages of Renaissance
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© T. M. Whitmore Spanish colonial policies & practices in the Americas The 3 “Gs” Glory (conquest mentality from 700 yrs of war) Gold (seizure or portable wealth andn use of Amerindians to create more) God (Christianize Indians and conquer lands for Christianity)
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© T. M. Whitmore Early Portuguese & Spanish Explorations N. Atlantic Gyre Treaty Line Tordesilles 1493-4 Spanish Portuguese
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© T. M. Whitmore Spanish Colonial economics Focused on extraction to enrich Motherland Portable wealth Indian labor to create portable wealth Mercantile model Control of trade, production, immigration
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© T. M. Whitmore Spanish colonial labor institutions I: Encomienda Early in the Caribbean, Mexico, and Peru Tribute (tax) and labor service paid to a conqueror (as reward for conquest) from each head of household (tributario) in a population in a specified area Also seen as payment for education in the holy faith (Santa Fe) and for “protection” Laws thought to control the greedy conquerors – i.e., for protection of the Indians
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© T. M. Whitmore Encomienda Not a land grant per se Initially only for lifetime of encomendero => temptation for exploitation Outcry from clerics (Bartolome de las Casas) about mistreatment Failed as Indian pops crashed Declining populations gave rise to calls from Indian leaders for new countsnew counts
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Sample Folio from Visita of Yanquecollaguas, Colca Valley, Peru 1604 Shows tributario (don Pedro Quispe) and his dependents (and earlier deaths with the ts)
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© T. M. Whitmore Spanish colonial labor institutions II: Repartimiento After 1542 in Mexico and Peru Forced labor draft with paid wages Most impressive early colonial building (e.g., churches) done under this system Somewhat similar to pre-Columbian Coatequitl (Aztec) and Mitá (Inka) labor tribute systems Legacy still evident all over the landscape Legacy
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Santa Pricina, Taxco, Mexico
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Santa Pricina, Taxco, Mexico
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Santa Pricina, Taxco, Mexico
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Tepoztitlan Mexico
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Tepoztitlan Mexico
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San Antonio, Honduras
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16 th C church Antigua, Guatemala
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Near Antigua, Guatemala (collapsed by earthquakes)
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Earthquake damaged church in Colca V, Peru
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© T. M. Whitmore Spanish Colonial Settlement I Initial Spanish occupancy pattern Tie main ports to Spanish motherland Economy focused on extraction to Spain not local connections => Dual system Euro cities with close ties to Spain Indian areas in the periphery -- carries down to today This early pattern still visible in the “dual economy” of Latin America
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© T. M. Whitmore Spanish Colonial Settlement II Caribbean settlements Fortified ports Strategic locations Virtual extinction of Amerindians in Caribbean Experiments with Mediterranean animals & crops Caribbean settlements after 1519 Increasingly unimportant Except for a few strategic locations for the shipments back to Spain Crop & animal experiments Imprint still Imprint
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© T. M. Whitmore Cartagena Panama Havana Santo Domingo San Juan
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Havana Treasure Convoys (flotas)
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© T. M. Whitmore Urban types & functions I Mexico & Central America Administrative cities: Mexico City, Antigua Commercial and transport cities Veracruz, Acapulco, Panama City Mining Centers Zacatecas, Guanajuato Agricultural Centers Guadalajara, Puebla, Querétaro “Industrial” Centers Puebla, Tlaxcala, Oaxaca
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© T. M. Whitmore Urban types & functions II Caribbean Administrative cities: Havana, Santo Domingo, San Juan Commercial and transport cities Havana
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© T. M. Whitmore Urban types & functions III South America Administrative cities: Lima, Bogotá, Quito Commercial and transport cities Callao, Cartagena Mining Centers Potosí Agricultural Centers Arequipa, Santiago “Industrial” Centers Quito, Cuenca
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© T. M. Whitmore Zacatecas San Luis Potosí Querètaro Guadalara Guanajuato Puebla Tlaxcala Mexico City Oaxaca Veracruz Acapulco
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© T. M. Whitmore Antigua Panama
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© T. M. Whitmore Cartagena Panama Havana Santo Domingo San Juan
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Bogotá Cartagena Quito Cuenca Lima Callao ArequipaPotosí
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© T. M. Whitmore Urban Morphology in Spanish America: 2 types “Freeform” mostly mining towns E.g., Guanajuanto or TaxcoTaxco Grid system cities — virtually ALL the rest Grid system cities Patterned on the new towns settled in Spain during the re-conquest Central square (plaza, plaza de armas, zócalo) surrounded by: Church Seat of local government High-class residences and shops
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Taxco, Mexico
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Central Mexico City
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Cathedral & Zócalo, Mexico City
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Cusco, Peru Plaza de Armas
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Plaza in Querétaro, Mexico
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Antigua, Guatemala
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© T. M. Whitmore Spanish Colonial Settlement World of the Spanish (and their servants etc.) Urban society as much as possible Closer to center = higher prestige Spaniards settled where wealth was to be had African World in Spanish America Plantation slaves As servants and craftspeople in Spanish cities
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© T. M. Whitmore The Indian world, the so called “República de los Indios” (for high density Amerindian societies in Mexico, Guatemala, Andes) Rural Townships Townships Follow old encomienda and parish boundaries Spanish resettlement (1550s & 1600 in Mexico, 1570s in Peru) Called congregación or reducción Role of missions in less settled areasmissions Missions of mendicant friars (Dominicans, Franciscans, Jesuits, etc.) Spanish Colonial Settlement II
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San Xavior de Bac Jesuit Mission near Tucson, AZ
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San Xavior de Bac Jesuit Mission near Tucson, AZ
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© T. M. Whitmore Spanish American Hierarchies Social distinctions among Spaniards – mostly an urban phenomena Racial distinctions – races separate to a degree Over time spatial hierarchy became: Mulattos and mestizos in smaller more remote Spanish cities or haciendas; Creoles and Spaniards in larger cities; Indians and Africans either urban servants or in rural areas
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© T. M. Whitmore Relative Populations mid 1500s mid 1600s Spanish 250,000 400,000 (thus a small minority for most of colonial times) African100,000 225,00 Indian50 million 5 million million By 1810: Spanish descent = 20%; Indian descent = 45%; Mestizo = 33%; African = 4%
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© T. M. Whitmore Portuguese Brazilian Settlement Initial Settlement Patterns State-sized settlements to private entrepreneurs to extract dye wood “palo brazil” This initial “capitalistic-like” set up failed by 1540 and all lands re- transferred to the crown
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© T. M. Whitmore Initial Settlement Tordesillas Treaty Line 1494
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