Chapter 19
Early Latin America
- I. Introduction
- A. Cortes conquers Aztecs
- 1. Amazed at beauty of Tenochtitlan - uncomparable
- B. Pattern of conquest, continuity and rebuilding
- 1. Spanish tried to utilized Native resources similarly
- a. Used materials from ruins to build own houses
- b. Used similar forced labor system
- c. Allowed to follow ancient customs
- 1. Spanish tried to utilized Native resources similarly
- C. Impact of invasions
- 1. Huge Spanish/Portuguese empires
- 2. Latin America pulled into new world economy
- 3. Hierarchy of world economic relationships – Europe on top
- 4. New societies created – some incorporated, some destroyed
- a. Distinct civilization combining Iberian Peninsula w/ Native
- 5. Created large landed estates
- 6. Europeans came to Americas for economic gain and social mobility
- 7. Exploited precious metals
- A. Cortes conquers Aztecs
- II. Spaniards and Portuguese: From Reconquest to Conquest
- A. Introduction
- 1. Iberian Peninsula on the Eve of Exploration
- a. Tradition of military conquest and rule over other peoples
- b. Ferdinand and Isabella – unified and destroyed religious diversity
- a. Jews expelled
- b. Religious contributed to acceptance of Columbus’s idea
- 1. Iberian Peninsula on the Eve of Exploration
- B. Iberian Society and Tradition
- 1. Recreating Iberian life
- a. Urban cities surrounded by American Indians
- b. Conquerors as nobles with Indians as serfs
- c. Precedent of controlling African slaves
- 2. Political rule
- a. Professional bureaucracy
- b. Theocracy – religion and Church influenced politics – vice versa
- 3. Role of merchants
- a. Trading posts in Africa, but estates in Atlantic islands
- b. Trade factories turned into plantations - Brazil
- 1. Recreating Iberian life
- C. The Chronology of Conquest
- 1. Era of Conquest – 1492>1570 – administration and economy set-up
- 2. Consolidation and Maturity – 1570>1700 – colonial institutions
- 3. Reform and Reorganization – 1700>1800 – Reform and reorganization
- a. Seeds of dissatisfaction and revolt
- D. The Caribbean Crucible
- 1. Early island conquests – Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, Cuba
- 2. Treatment of natives – Taino natives distributed to encomendero
- 3. City precedents – gridlike around central plaza – church, town hall, governor’s
- 4. Methods of rule – governors, treasury officials, notaries, Spanish laws brought
- 5. Early immigration
- a. Import African slaves
- b. Women came also – conquest goal turned to settlement
- c. Gold hunting phase initial then replaced by sugar plantations
- 6. Treatment of Natives – enslavement, disease, murder
- 7. Attempts at reform
- a. Clerics and priests tried to end abuses
- b. Bartolome d Las Casas – wrote of complaints
- E. The Paths of Conquest
- 1. Taking over Central Mexico – between 1519 and 1535
- a. Not a movement, but series of individual initiatives
- b. Cortez defeats Aztecs in Tenochtitlan
- 2. Taking over South America
- a. Pizarro and Incas – Peru by 1540
- 3. Further exploration
- a. Densely populated areas first, then went after semisedentary/nomadic
- b. Coronado searches for gold goes into US
- c. 1570 192 Spanish cities and towns
- 1. Taking over Central Mexico – between 1519 and 1535
- F. The Conquerors
- 1. Motivation
- a. 1/5 of all treasure to crown
- b. Money then divided among men signed up, priority to friends/relatives
- 2. Types of people that were conquerors
- a. Hoping to improve selves
- b. Serve God by conquering heathen
- c. soldiers, gentlemen, some women
- d. saw selves as new nobility
- 3. Reasons for Spanish success
- a. Weapons – firearms/steel weapons
- b. Effective/ruthless leadership
- c. Epidemic diseases – smallpox, influenza, measles
- d. Internal divisions rivalries between Indians
- e. Mobile, nomadic tribes stiffer resistance than centralized states
- 4. Who replaced conquerors?
- a. bureaucrats, merchants, colonists
- b. sometimes conflict over transfer of power
- 1. Motivation
- G. Conquest and Morality
- 1. Reasons why treatment of Natives justified
- a. Aristotle argument – freeing Indians from unjust lord
- b. Indians not fully human
- c. Born to serve
- 2. Reasons why treatment of Natives not justified
- a. Rational people
- b. Never done harm like the Muslims
- c. Admirable customs and accomplishments
- d. Conversion should take place peacefully – Indians our brothers
- 3. Spanish crown tried to make changes, but too late
- 1. Reasons why treatment of Natives justified
- A. Introduction
- III. The Destruction and Transformation of Indian Societies
- A. Introduction
- 1. Decline of population
- a. Caribbean population almost disappears – slavery, mistreatment, disease
- b. Mexico – 25 million > 2 million, Peru – 10 million >
- 1.5 million
- 2. Reasons for loss of population
- a. Disease
- b. Disruption of economic social structures – those left in chaos
- c. Cattle replaced Indian population on Spanish farms/unclaimed land
- 1. Decline of population
- B. Exploitation of the Indians
- 1. Native American life preserved
- a. Nobility kept in place to facilitate tax collection, labor demands
- 2. New methods of labor and taxation
- a. Encomienda system – use Indians as workers/servants/tax them
- b. Often arbitrary, excessive
- c. Without reciprocal obligation/protection – what have you done for me lately?
- d. Encomiendas ended because Spain didn’t want to compete with new nobility
- e. Thousands of Indians mobilized for state projects
- f. Some left towns and worked for Spanish – start of wage labor system
- 3. Resiliency to exploitation
- a. Some adapted and learned to use language, legal system, law courts
- b. Selective in their adaptation of European foods, technology, culture
- 1. Native American life preserved
- A. Introduction
- IV. Colonial Economies and Governments
- A. Introduction
- 1. Agrarian society – 80% worked on farms
- 2. Precious metals – mining efforts/booty of conquest essential activity
- B. The Silver Heart of Empire
- 1. Mining labor and methods
- a. Potosi in Peru – 160,000 people lived/worked in town/mine
- b. Laborers
- a. American Indian slaves – early encomienda system
- b. Changed to large # of wage laborers eventually
- c. Used European method of amalgamation w/ mercury (ahhhh…of course)
- 2. Relation of mining to economy
- a. Gov’t profited 1/5 of profit + controlled mercury
- b. Service industries develop around mining towns
- 1. Mining labor and methods
- C. Haciendas and Villages
- 1.Rural estates – basis of wealth and power for local aristocracy
- a. Some plantation crops sent overseas
- 1.Rural estates – basis of wealth and power for local aristocracy
- D. Industry and Commerce
- 1. Types of trade
- a. Sheep raising and textile manufacturing
- b. Mercantilism – only Spaniards allowed to trade w/ America
- 1. consulado in Seville controlled all goods – kept prices high
- 2. Fleet system
- a. Convoy system sent two fleets annually
- 1. Came from Philippines as well twice annually
- b. Galleons protected
- c. ports created to guard treasure
- a. Convoy system sent two fleets annually
- 3. European reaction to supply of American silver
- a. ½ of silver remained in Spain
- 1. Paid for Spanish wars
- 2. Bought manufactured goods from elsewhere and then shipped
- b. Sharp rise in inflation
- c. Wealth of Spain still depended on taxation
- d. Bankers lended more money than they should have
- a. ½ of silver remained in Spain
- 1. Types of trade
- E. Ruling an Empire: State and Church
- 1. Determining sovereignty
- a. North/South line – Treaty of Tordesillas – Brazil vs. everything else
- 2. Method of control of Spanish kingdoms
- a. University trained bureaucrats – letrados
- b. Codified laws – Recopilacion
- c. Two viceroyalties – one in Mexico City and one in Lima
- 1. Viceroys controlled military, legislative, judicial powers
- d. Under viceroys – audiencias – professional magistrates at local level
- 3. Role of the Church
- a. Established churches in towns/villages
- b. Set up missions in frontier areas
- c. Recording and analysis of Indian culture – for conversion purposes
- d. Later, state appointed archbishops – subsequently, allegiance
- 4. Impact of the Church
- a. Stimulated architects with church/cathedral building
- b. printing presses high percentage of religious books
- c. Schools run by clergy, universities – law and theology
- d. Tribunal of Inquisition to judge heretics
- 1. Determining sovereignty
- A. Introduction
- V. Brazil: The First Plantation Colony
- A. Introduction
- 1. Early settlements
- a. At first, relations with Native Americans peaceful
- b. Sugar plantations established
- c. By 1600, 100,000 residents – 30,000 Europeans, 15,000 black slaves
- 1. Early settlements
- B. Sugar and Slavery
- 1. Labor intensive
- a. Sugar had to be processed on site
- b. Required large amounts of capital for machinery – plantation only viable
- 2. First great plantation economy
- a. Single crop produced by slave labor
- b. Social hierarchy reflected plantation/slave origins
- 1. White planter family as aristocracy
- c. Slaves at bottom of social hierarchy
- d. Mixed origin – became artisans, small farmers, herders, free laborers
- 3. Government structure
- a. Royal officials trained in law ruled by governor
- b. Jesuits – religious group supported by cattle ranches/sugar mills
- c. Didn’t have independent printing presses, intellectual life
- 1. Closer connection to Portugal than New Spain to Spain
- 1. Labor intensive
- C. Brazil’s Age of Gold
- 1. Competition with Europe
- a. Affected by change in ruling monarchies
- b. French entrance into Caribbean lowered price of sugar, increased slave price
- 2. Gold rush begins
- a. 1695 gold discovered in interior regions
- b. 5000 immigrants a year, went to interior
- c. Used slaves for mining labor
- d. Wild towns initially turned into network of towns
- e. 1735>1760 Brazil greatest producer of gold in the world
- 3. Impact of gold discovery
- a. Opened interior to settlement
- 1. Hurt indigenous population
- b. Mining stimulated opening of new areas to ranching and farming
- c. Rio de Janeiro – closest port to mines – grew
- d. Hierarchy of color in new areas
- e. Portugal continued negative economic policies
- 1. Buy manufactured goods from abroad, not make
- a. Gold went from Portugal to England
- b. Trade imbalance
- c. Became economically dependent on England
- 1. Buy manufactured goods from abroad, not make
- a. Opened interior to settlement
- 1. Competition with Europe
- A. Introduction
- VI. Multiracial Societies
- A. Introduction
- 1. Relation of different ethnic groups
- a. Europeans, Indians, slaves
- 1. All came for different reasons
- 2. Hierarchy based on
- i. master vs. servant
- ii. Christian vs. pagan
- a. Europeans, Indians, slaves
- 1. Relation of different ethnic groups
- B. The Society of Castas
- 1. Miscegenation
- a. Few European women available
- b. Sexual exploitation of women or marriage = mestizos
- c. Mestizos
- 1. Intermediary – higher than Indians, but not as respected as Spanish
- 2. Sociedad de castas
- a. Occupation important, but race at birth more instrumental
- b. Castas – people of mixed origin
- 1. Mulattoes – half African/half European
- 2. Mestizos – half Spanish/half Indian
- c. With marriage, hard to tell – someone lower could pass off as someone higher
- 3. Class privileges
- a. Peninsulares – whites born in Spain
- b. Creoles – whites born in New World
- 1. Dominated local economies
- 2. Sensitive to any suggestion of inferiority
- 3. Would be the leaders of future protest movements
- 4. Patriarchal society
- a. Father has control of children to 25
- b. Women – motherhood and household
- c. Widow could assume direction of family
- d. Lower-class could be involved in commerce
- e. Marriages often arranged, came with dowry
- f. Women full rights of inheritance
- g. After a certain age, unmarried upper class women moved to convents
- 1. Miscegenation
- A. Introduction
- VII. The 18th Century Reforms
- A. Introduction
- 1. Changing ideas
- a. Amigos del pais – friends of the country – clubs that discussed reforms
- i. Goal – economic benefits
- b. Brief period of growth followed by decline
- i. expansion of European population
- ii. increased demand for American products
- a. Amigos del pais – friends of the country – clubs that discussed reforms
- 1. Changing ideas
- B. The Shifting Balance of Politics and Trade
- 1. Competition with Europe
- a. Problems in Spain
- i. foreign wars
- ii. increasing debt
- iii. declining population
- iv. internal revolts
- b. Pressure from France, England, Dutch
- i. Buccaneers raided Caribbean ports
- ii. General process of colonization in Americas
- a. Problems in Spain
- 2. Failure of Spanish mercantile and political system
- a. Annual fleets became irregular
- b. Silver payments became fewer
- c. Goods shipped to colonies not Spanish
- d. Colonies became self-sufficient
- i. Mfg needed products
- ii. Local gov’ts became more powerful
- e. Graft/corruption common
- 3. Legal division of Spanish properties
- a. Spanish king dies without heir – War of the Spanish Succession
- b. Treaty of Utrecht – 1713 – French merchants gain more control
- i. Bourbon (French) king, but can’t unite France/Spain
- 1. Competition with Europe
- C. The Bourbon Reforms
- 1. Causes of reform
- a. Age of enlightened despotism
- b. Strong central government
- c. economic nationalism
- d. Kicked out anyone who didn’t want to change – Jesuits tied to Rome
- e. Improvements
- i. French bureaucratic models
- ii. Tightened system of taxation
- iii. New navy
- iv. Fleet system abolished, new ports opened
- v. Try to get rid of graft
- vi. New methods of tax collection
- 2. Reform in the West Indies
- 3. Reforms in America
- a. Defense and military reforms
- b. Missions and outposts in frontier areas – California
- c. Resisted foreign competitors militarily
- 4. Changing trading regulations
- a. State monopolies established over tobacco, gunpowder
- b. Influx of cheap Spanish/English goods
- i. Conflict over free trade vs. locally made/more expensive goods
- 5. Impact of changes
- a. Spain - Revived Spanish Empire
- b. America – social tension
- i. removal of Creoles from gov’t
- ii. creation of Creole militia
- iii. dissatisfaction among elite
- 1. Causes of reform
- D. Pombal and Brazil
- 1. Pombal’s reforms
- a. Fiscal reforms to eliminate – contraband, gold smuggling, tax evasion
- b. Creation of monopoly companies
- i. Sent to develop Amazon region
- c. Encouraged whites to marry Indians – don’t need to be military controlled
- 2. Impact of Pombal’s reforms
- a. Reduced Portugal’s trade imbalance
- b. Demand for Brazilian products low
- c. Hard to compete in European market
- d. Set stage for independence at end of 18th century
- 1. Pombal’s reforms
- E. Reforms, Reactions and Revolts
- 1. 18th century American boom
- a. Population increase
- i. lower mortality
- ii. increasing fertility
- iii. increasing immigration
- iv. rising slave trade
- a. Population increase
- 2. Changes in power
- a. Greater control from Spain/Portugal annoyed old power elite
- b. Urban uprisings, tax revolts, Indian uprisings
- 3. Tupac – not the rapper
- a. Tupac Amaru – mestizo in Peru
- b. Led 70,000 Indians, Mestizos and Creoles – eventually executed
- 4. What led to complaints and frustration
- a. Activism by mother country government
- b. Dissatisfaction of American colonies
- c. But…sharp ethnic divisions made it difficult to unify locals
- 1. 18th century American boom
- A. Introduction
- VIII. Global Connections
- A. Colonial Empires
- 1. Iberian nations transferred their culture, gov’t – recreated society
- B. Diverse societies
- 1. Some indigenous cultures survived – Peru, Mexico
- 2. Culture dependent on demographic breakdown – more slaves, Europeans, or Natives
- 3. Racial hierarchies
- C. Relation to Russian Empires
- 1. Development of coerced labor
- 2. Impact of gunpowder
- 3. Western forms imposed on populations, with resistance – Russia more selective
- D. Demand for Latin American products
- 1. World economic position as dependant and based on coerced labor
- A. Colonial Empires
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Chapter 19 Early Latin America | 57 KB |