World History Journal WEEK 2

Try to answer the following questions in each of your journal entries:

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The journal entry is strictly based on the materials provided below.

LECTURE 3/ 4/ 5 AND chapter 16 in the book

  • What interested you the most in the week’s course content? Why?
  • What about the concepts discussed this week? (use the syllabus, course schedule, to see each week’s concepts). Did they help you understand the historical process better, or not? How come? Comment on at least one concept and related event/process discussed in the textbook or lectures.
  • What event, concept, or historical process remained unclear to you? Why?
  • How do you evaluate your learning process about world history so far?

Please answer each questions RESPECTIVELY.

750 WORDS

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How to Read Primary
Sources?
(and a comment about the related assignments)
History 111 – World History since 1500

Spring 2022

Jorge Minella (jminella@umass.edu)

Reading Primary
Sources

 “Stuff” produced in the past by
people from the past.

 Tell things from the past.

 How to read? What to ask?

 Historical imagination, study,
some common sense.

  • The Primary Source Assignments
  •  Four sets of historical documents.

     Assignments.
     Collective annotation on Perusall.
     Final essay about one of the sets.

     How historians work.

     Autonomy.

  • PAPER
  •  Purpose of the primary source’s author.

     Argument and strategy.

     Presuppositions and values.

     Epistemology.

     Relate to Other texts.

    Collective Annotation –
    Perusall

    • How to Read Primary Sources?�(and a comment about the related assignments)
    • Reading Primary Sources
    • The Primary Source Assignments
      PAPER

    • Collective Annotation – Perusall

    Iberian Societies and
    Expansion

    History 111 – World History since 1500
    Spring 2022
    Jorge Minella (jminella@umass.edu)

  • Introduction – Lecture Parts
  •  Portugal and Spain.

     Maritime expansion.
     Accumulate wealth.
     Gain power against rivals.
     Spread Christianity.

     Route to Asia.

     Atlantic World.

  • Spain and Portugal, 15th century
  •  Urban centers.

     Estate society. (low social mobility)
     Commoners (peasants, artisans, professionals).
     Clergy.
     Nobility.

     God-parentage and patron-client relations essential to
    maintenance of the social fabric.

  • Iberian Reconquista
  •  Medieval Iberia.
    711-1492, intermittent conflict between

    Christians and Muslims.

     “Plunder mentality,” territorial conquest.

     Rise of Christian religious intolerance.

    Caliphate of Córdoba, c.
    1000 ce.

  • Maritime Expansion
  • Europe and the
    Greater Mediterranean

     1453, still showing the
    Kingdom of Granada, in
    southern Iberia.

     Ottomans in Turkey and the
    Balkans.

     Mamluk Sultanate in Egypt
    and the Middle East.

     New routes to Asia: silk,
    spices, dyes, luxury goods.

  • Portuguese Maritime Expansion
  • – 15th and
    16th centuries

    Portuguese Maritime Expansion

     Trade – gold, spices, slaves.

     Lisbon – cosmopolitan city, experienced merchants.

     Geography – position and favorable currents.

     Politics – early state formation; most of society benefitted.

    Cross-Cultural
    Seafaring Expertise

     Ship-building and operation
    techniques from the Arabs
    and Northern Europeans.

     Navigation instruments
    perfected from Chinese
    and Arab technologies.

     Guns: China and the
    Ottomans.

    Portuguese carracks. Painting
    attributed to Gregório Lopes or
    Cornelis Antoniszoon, c. 1540

  • Concluding Remarks
  •  Expansion started from Portugal and Spain.

     Wealth, power, Christianity.

     Expansion shaped by previous experiences.

     Eventually resulted in the colonization of the Americas.

    • Iberian Societies and Expansion�
    • Introduction – Lecture Parts
      Spain and Portugal, 15th century
      Iberian Reconquista
      Maritime Expansion

    • Europe and the Greater Mediterranean
    • Portuguese Maritime Expansion – 15th and 16th centuries
    • Portuguese Maritime Expansion

    • Cross-Cultural Seafaring Expertise
    • Concluding Remarks

    Conquest and Early
    Colonization of the Americas
    History 111 – World History since 1500

    Spring 2022

    Jorge Minella (jminella@umass.edu)

    Introduction –
    Colonialism
     Spanish and Portuguese maritime

    expansion.

     Toward Asia.

     Main goal: trade.

     But colonization in America later.

     Colonialism.

     Transfer of population to a new
    territory;

     To live as permanent settlers;

     While maintaining political
    allegiance to their country of
    origin.

    Spanish Galleon. Fragment of A Naval Encounter between Dutch
    and Spanish Warships, Cornelis Verbeeck’s oil on panel, c.
    1618/1620.

  • 15th Century Side-Effects of Exploration
  •  The Spanish in the Canary Islands, 1430s.

     Enslavement of locals.

     Sugar plantations.

     The Portuguese in São Tomé, 1480s.

     Uninhabited island.

     Import of enslaved Africans.

     Sugar plantations.

     Testing models of colonization.

    First Contact and Conflicts in
    the Caribbean

    MAP 16.2 European Voyages of Discovery, c.
    1420–1600. Textbook page 575.

    1492 – 1519: Castilian
    Disappointment, Caribbean
    Disaster

     Cultural Clash.

     How to obtain wealth?

     Conquer land and people.
     Indigenous enslavement.

     Encomienda.

     Forced conversion to Christianism.

    Encomienda

     System of coerced labor.

     Native communities allocated to Spanish encomendero.

     Who could exploit native labor and demand tribute.

     Goods.

     Agricultural surpluses.

     Gold and silver.

    Caribbean
    Catastrophe

     Catastrophic model.

     Needed extreme violence.

     Eventually undermined Spanish goals.

     Lack of labor force.

     90% of Caribbean Natives died in less than a
    century.

     Mostly disease.

     Overwork and enslavement.

     Forced dislocations.

     Violence and killings.

     Different colonial models.

    Part of the Codex Kingsborough (c. 1550), an indigenous
    Mexican complaint against an abusive encomendero

    The

  • Fall of the Aztec
  • and
    Inca Empires

    Conquistador
    Companies

     Private expeditions
    authorized by the
    Crown.

     Higher rank
    commoners.

     Conquest as
    opportunity.
     Bounty.
     Encomiendas.
     Noble titles.

    Early 20th century depiction of Diego de Almagro’s conquistador company. Expedición de
    Almagro a Chile. Fray Pedro Subercaseaux, c. 1900.

    Fall of the Aztec

     Rival native groups
    joined conquistadors.

     Emperor Moctezuma
    II held hostage and
    killed.

     Disease.

    Depiction of Cortes’ conquistador band and Tlaxcalan allies. Codex
    Azcatitlan, mid-16th to mid 17th centuries.

  • Fall of the Inca
  •  Civil war.

     Atahualpa vs. Huascar.

     Deception and treachery.

     Atahualpa captured and killed.

     Despite immense wealth given
    to conquistadors.

    Early 17th century representation of Atahualpa and
    Pizarro’s meeting. Poma de Ayala, Nueva Crónica y Buen
    Gobierno, 1615.

    What Explains
    Conquest

     Effects of disease (smallpox, mainly).

     Circumstances and timing.

     Resentment against the Aztec led to
    native allies.

     Inca in civil war.

     Spanish tactic of seizing and killing the
    leadership proved effective.

    20th century artwork depicting the
    transformation of Tenochtilan into Mexico
    City. Roberto Cueva del Río, 1986.

    The Portuguese Coastal
    Colony

    First Decades:
    Brazilwood Trade

     Wealth?

     Trade with Tupis.
     Brazilwood for tools

    and trinkets.

     Portuguese focused
    on Asia.

    Map of Brazil in the Miller Atlas, 1519.
    Brazilwood trees represented.

    1530s – Change to
    Captaincies

     Promote colonization.

     Assigned to “Donatary Captains” as
    possessions.

     Most failed.

     Lack of resources or interest.

     Poorly informed decisions.

     Indigenous resistance against forced labor.

     Lack of royal oversight and support.

    Governorate
    General and
    Sugar

     1549 – formation of the Governorate
    General, based in Salvador, Bahia.

     Pernambuco.
     Sugar.

     Large landed property.

     African captives.

     Model: plantations in Atlantic Islands.

  • Late Colonization of the Interior
  •  No precious metals until late 17th century.

     Profitable sugar production on coastal areas.

     Fierce indigenous groups.

     No wealthy native empires.

     Bandeirantes, 17th century.

    Local Realities and Global
    Importance: Silver and the
    Columbian Exchange

    The Columbian
    Exchange

     Alfred Crosby (1972)

     “the massive interoceanic transfer of
    animals (including humans), plants,
    and diseases” started after 1492.

     Global change, impact in everyday life.

     Intentional exchanges.

     Unintentional exchanges.

    Global Impact of
    Spanish American Silver

     Unprecedent amount of
    silver into the market.

     Global trade boost.

     Facilitated wage labor.

     Funded wars.

  • Local Impact of Spanish American Silver
  •  Spanish investment in the mines.

     Enslaved Africans working in the mints and refineries.

     Natives subjected to draft labor to work underground.
     Mita and Repartimiento: harsh rotational labor draft imposed to the

    indigenous communities.

    Local Impact –
    Potosí

     10,000 mita laborers.
     Brutal labor regime.

     Formed a large urban
    center.

     Driving force of Spanish
    South America’s colonial
    economy.

     Silver to Castile.

    Mining in Potosí, an
    engraving from Theodoor
    de Bry in Historia Americae
    sive Novi Orbis, 1596.

  • Recap
  •  The Caribbean and the encomienda.

     Conquest of the Aztec and Inca empires.

     Brazil’s different path.

     Columbian Exchange and silver mining.

    • Conquest and Early Colonization of the Americas
    • Introduction – Colonialism
    • 15th Century Side-Effects of Exploration

    • First Contact and Conflicts in the Caribbean
    • Número do slide 5
    • 1492 – 1519: Castilian Disappointment, Caribbean Disaster
    • Encomienda
    • Caribbean Catastrophe
    • The Fall of the Aztec and Inca Empires
    • Conquistador Companies
    • Fall of the Aztec
      Fall of the Inca

    • What Explains Conquest
    • The Portuguese Coastal Colony
    • First Decades: Brazilwood Trade
    • 1530s – Change to Captaincies
    • Governorate General and Sugar
    • Late Colonization of the Interior

    • Local Realities and Global Importance: Silver and the Columbian Exchange
    • The Columbian Exchange
    • Global Impact of Spanish American Silver
    • Local Impact of Spanish American Silver

    • Local Impact – Potosí
    • Recap

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 566 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    16

    The Rise of an Atlantic World
    1450–1600

    567

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 567 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    World in the Making Painted on calfskins,
    portolan (“port finder”) charts were used by mariners
    in the Mediterranean and North Atlantic beginning
    in the late fourteenth century. A fter Columbus’s
    momentous transatlantic voyage in

    1492

    , portolan
    charts began to depict new European discoveries in
    the A mericas with great accuracy. This 1500 map by
    Juan de la Cosa, who sailed with Columbus, is the
    earliest such chart.

    Guns, Sails, and Compasses: Europeans
    Venture Abroad

    FOCUS Why and how did Europeans begin to
    cross unknown seas in the fifteenth century?

    New Crossroads, First Encounters: The
    European Voyages of Discovery, 1492–1521

    FOCUS What were the main sources of conflict
    between Europeans and native Americans in
    the first decades after contact?

    Spanish Conquests in the Americas,
    1519–160

    0

    FOCUS What factors enabled the Spanish to
    conquer the Aztec and Inca Empires?

    A New Empire in the Americas: New
    Spain and Peru, 1535–16

    00

    FOCUS Why was the discovery of silver in
    Spanish America so important in the course of
    world history?

    Brazil by Accident: The Portuguese in the
    Americas, 1500–1600

    FOCUS How and why did early Portuguese Brazil
    develop differently from Spanish America?

    COUNTERPOINT: The Mapuche of Chile:
    Native America’s Indomitable State

    FOCUS How did the Mapuche of Chile manage
    to resist European conquest?

    backstory
    By the mid-1400s, some 60 million people

    inhabited the Americas, about half of them

    subjects of the Aztec and Inca Empires (see

    Chapter 15). These empires relied on far-

    flung tribute networks and drew from diverse

    cultural traditions even as they spread their

    own religious practices and imperial lan-

    guages. Outside the Aztec and Inca realms,

    smaller states and chiefdoms occupied much

    of the hemisphere. Conflict between groups,

    whether in Peru, Brazil, Mexico, or eastern

    North America, was frequent.

    The inhabitants of western Eurasia and

    North Africa were slowly recovering from the

    Black Death of 1347–1350 (see Chapter 14).

    Weakened nobilities and rebounding popu-

    lations stimulated trade, political consolida-

    tion, and the adoption of new technologies for

    war and transport. The long-distance trade in

    luxury goods also recovered, but by the early

    1400s the rise of the Ottoman Empire in the

    eastern Mediterranean intensified competi-

    tion and limited western European access to

    overland routes such as the Silk Road.

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    Malintzin (mah-LEEN-tseen) was only a girl when she was traded away around
    1510 to serve a noble family in what is today the state of Tabasco, Mexico. She
    herself was a noble, a native speaker of the Aztec language, Nahuatl (NAH-watt).
    Malintzin’s new masters were Chontal Maya speakers, and soon she learned this
    language.

    Throughout Malintzin’s servitude in Tabasco, stories circulated there and in the
    neighboring Yucatan peninsula of bearded strangers. One day in the year 1519,
    vessels filled with such men arrived in Tabasco. The Tabascans attacked a party that
    came ashore, but they were defeated. In exchange for peace, they offered the strang-
    ers gold and feather work, and also several servant girls, among them Malintzin.
    W hen asked through an interpreter where the gold had come from, the Tabascans
    said “Mexico.”

    The strangers’ interpreter was a Spanish castaway, Jerόnimo de Aguilar, who had
    lived several years in the Yucatan, recently ransomed by his countrymen. Aguilar
    soon discovered that Malintzin knew the language of Aztec Mexico. The strangers’
    leader, Hernando Cortés, took a special interest in her for this reason, but he also
    considered her the most beautiful and intelligent of the captives.

    Twice given away now, Malintzin joined the foreigners in their floating homes.
    Heading west, they reached an island where Cortés ordered a party ashore to make
    contact with villagers and, through them, to speak with traveling Aztec representa-
    tives. Only Nahuatl was spoken.

    Suddenly the bilingual Malintzin was thrust into a role of global significance. She
    passed along in Nahuatl the words Aguilar gave her in Chontal Mayan. Then she did
    the reverse when the Aztec ambassadors replied. Aguilar made sense of the Mayan
    replies for Cortés, who was already planning a march on the Aztec capital. From
    here until the end of the conquest campaigns in 1521, Malintzin served as Cortés’s
    key to Aztec Mexico.

    In modern Mexican mythology Malintzin, or Malinche (mah-LEEN-cheh), is
    regarded as a traitor, a collaborator, even a harlot. But these characterizations are
    anachronistic and unfair. Malintzin was not seen as a traitor in her own day, even by
    the Aztecs. In their paintings of the conquest, early Nahuatl-speaking artists often
    placed Malintzin at the center, poised and confident.

    But why had Europeans like Cortés suddenly arrived in Malintzin’s world? In part
    it was because wealth-seeking Iberians (inhabitants of the peninsula occupied
    by Spain and Portugal) had long begun charting the Atlantic. Over time they

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    T h e Ri s e o f a n At l a n t i c Wo r l d 145 0 –16 0 0

    developed the technologies needed to navigate open seas, exploring first the west
    coast of Africa and then crossing the ocean itself. Flush with capital, Italian bankers
    helped fund these enterprises.

    The resulting Iberian encounter with the Americas was an accident of monumental
    significance. In quest of legendary Asian riches, Christopher Columbus and his
    successors landed instead in the previously isolated regions they called the New
    World. It was new to them, of course, but not so to native Americans like Malintzin.
    Cultural misunderstandings, political divisions among indigenous peoples, and
    European firearms aided conquest and settlement, but germs made the biggest
    difference.

    These germs were part of what historian Alfred Crosby dubbed “the Columbian
    Exchange,” the first major biological relinking of the earth since the continents had
    drifted apart in prehistoric times. Although Europeans brought deadly diseases to
    the Americas, they also brought animals for transport, plowing, and consumption.
    Another effect of this global exchange was rapid population growth in parts of
    the world where American crops such as potatoes and maize took root. European
    expansion made the Atlantic a global crossroads, the center of a new pattern of ex-
    change affecting the entire world.

    Finally, we should not make the mistake of assuming that Europeans met no signifi-
    cant resistance in the Americas. As we shall see in the Counterpoint that concludes
    this chapter, one group of native Americans who successfully fought off European
    conquest, in part by adopting the horse and turning it against their oppressors, were
    the Mapuche of Chile.

    1. What were the main

    biological and environ-

    mental consequences of

    European expansion to

    the Atlantic after 1492?

    2. What roles did misun-

    derstanding and chance

    play in the conquests of

    the Aztecs and Incas?

    3. How did Eurasian

    demand for silver and

    sugar help bring about

    the creation of a linked

    Atlantic world?

    OVERVIEW QUESTIONS

    The major global development in this chapter: European expansion across the
    Atlantic and its profound consequences for societies and cultures worldwide.

    As you read, consider:

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    Guns, Sails, and Compasses: Europeans
    Venture Abroad

    FOCUS Why and how did europeans begin to cross unknown
    seas in the fifteenth century?

    Nordic and southern European mariners had long been venturing out to sea, test-
    ing winds and currents as they founded colonies and connected markets. Some
    shared information, but as in the Mediterranean, colonizing distant lands was a
    competitive process. In the fifteenth century tiny Portugal forged the world’s first
    truly global maritime empire. Neighboring Spain followed, spurred on by Christo-
    pher Columbus and a crusading spirit.

    Motives for Exploration
    Early modern Europeans sought to accumulate wealth, gain power against their
    rivals, and spread Christianity. Commerce was a core motive for expansion, as
    European merchants found themselves starved for gold and silver, which they
    needed to purchase Asian spices, silks, gems, and other luxuries. In part because of
    Europe’s relative poverty, ambitious monarchs and princes adopted violent means
    to extend their dominions overseas and to increase their tax and tribute incomes.
    Finally, Europe’s many Christian missionaries hoped to spread their religion
    throughout the globe. These motives would shape encounters between Europeans
    and native Americans.

    “Gold is most excellent,” wrote Christopher Columbus in a letter to the king
    and queen of Spain. “Gold constitutes treasure, and anyone who has it can do
    whatever he likes in the world.”1 Columbus was a native of the Italian city-state of
    Genoa, and Genoese merchants had long traded for gold in North A frica. A frican
    gold lubricated Mediterranean and European trade, but population growth, com-
    mercial expansion, and competition among Christian and Islamic states strained
    supplies. It was thus the well-placed Portuguese, who established a North A frican
    foothold in Morocco in 1415, who first sought direct access to A frican gold (see
    Map 16.2, pages 576–577).

    Italian merchants made some of their greatest profits on spices. Since most
    spices came from the tropical margins of Asia, they rose considerably in value as
    they passed through the hands of mostly Islamic middlemen in the Indian Ocean
    and eastern Mediterranean. Indian pepper and Indonesian nutmeg were but a few
    of the many desired condiments that Portuguese and other European merchants

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    smi49245_ch16_566-603 571 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    hoped to purchase more cheaply by sailing directly to the source. This entailed
    either circumnavigating A frica or finding a western passage to the Pacific.

    Slaves were also prized throughout the Mediterranean basin, and demand for
    them grew with the expansion of commercial agriculture and the rise of wealthy
    merchant families. Prices also rose as source regions near the Black Sea were cut off
    after 1453 by the Ottomans. As the word slave suggests, many captives came from
    the Slavic regions of eastern Europe. Others were prisoners of war. In part to meet
    growing Christian European demand, sub-Saharan A fricans were transported
    to North A frican ports by caravan. As with gold, southern European merchants
    sought captives by sailing directly to West A frica.

    Sugar, another commodity in high demand in Europe, required large invest-
    ments in land, labor, and machinery. Produced mostly by enslaved workers on
    eastern Atlantic islands such as Portuguese Madeira by the mid-fifteenth century,
    cane sugar increasingly became common as both a sweetener and preservative. As
    sugar took the place of honey in Old World cuisines, few consumers pondered its
    growing connection to overseas enslavement. In time, European demand for sugar
    would lead to the establishment of the Atlantic slave trade and the forced migra-
    tion of millions of A fricans to the Americas.

    Technologies of Exploration
    As they set sail for new horizons, Europeans employed innovations in three tech-
    nological spheres: gun making, shipbuilding, and navigation. First was firearms
    manufacture. Gunpowder, a Chinese invention, had been known since at least
    the ninth century C.E . Chinese artisans made rockets and bombs, but it was early
    modern Europeans who developed gunpowder and gun making to their greatest
    destructive effect.

    Europeans had also borrowed Chinese papermaking and movable type technol-
    ogies, and by 1500 they published treatises detailing the casting and operation of
    cannon. Soon, crude handguns and later muskets transformed field warfare, first in
    Europe, then worldwide. As gun and powder technologies improved, contingents
    of musketeers replaced archers, crossbowmen, and other foot soldiers.

    The second key technological leap was in ship construction. A lthough small,
    swift-sailing vessels traversed the medieval Mediterranean, long-distance car-
    riers were cumbersome and even dangerous when overloaded. The Roman-style
    galley was a fighting vessel propelled by captive oarsmen with occasional help from
    sails. Galleys functioned best where seas were calm, distances short, and prisoners
    plentiful. Something else was needed for the rougher waters and longer voyages
    common in the North Atlantic. Here, shipwrights combined more rigid North Sea

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    smi49245_ch16_566-603 572 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    hull designs and square sail rigs with some of the defen-
    sive features of the galley. They also borrowed the gal-
    ley’s triangular or lateen sails, which in turn had been
    adapted from the Arabian dhows (dowz) of the Indian
    Ocean.

    The resulting hybrid vessels, including the caravel
    used by ocean-crossing mariners such as Columbus,
    proved greater than the sum of their parts. A lthough
    slow and unwieldy by modern standards, these
    late- fifteenth-century European ships were the world’s
    most durable and maneuverable means of heav y trans-
    port to date. Later modified into galleons, frigates, and
    clippers, they would serve as the basic models for virtu-
    ally all European carriers and warships until the advent
    of steam technology in the early nineteenth century.

    European navigational innovations also propelled
    overseas expansion. Cosmographers believed the
    world to be spherical by Columbus’s time, but finding
    one’s way from port to port beyond sight of land was
    still a source of worry. One aid was the magnetic com-
    pass, like gunpowder and printing a fairly ancient Chi-
    nese invention developed in a novel way by Europeans.
    We know from travelers’ accounts that sailors in the
    Indian Ocean also used compasses, but rarely in com-
    bination with portolan (“port finder”) sea charts, which
    contained detailed compass bearings and harbor de-
    scriptions (see again the chapter-opening illustration).
    Charts and compasses together changed European
    navigators’ perceptions of what had formerly been
    trackless seas.

    Another borrowed instrument, apparently Arabic in
    origin, was the astrolabe. A calculator of latitude (one’s
    location north or south of the equator), it proved even
    more critical for long-distance maritime travel than the
    compass. Precise knowledge of latitude was essential
    for early modern sailors in particular since longitude,
    a more complicated east–west calculation, was hard to
    determine until the mid-eighteenth century.

    Portuguese Ship The Portuguese were the
    first Europeans to develop ocean-going ships
    for extended, return voyages. Initially they
    combined rigid hull designs from the Atlantic with
    maneuverable triangular sails of A rabic origin to
    build caravels, but these small vessels had limited
    cargo space and were vulnerable to attack. This
    evocative image from a contemporary manuscript
    shows Vasco da Gama’s flagship, the St. Gabriel,
    on its way to India in 1497–1498 with every stitch
    of canvas out. For such long trips the Portuguese
    chose to sacrifice the maneuverability of the caravel
    in favor of maximizing sail surface and relying on
    trade winds. The resulting ships, which could carry
    up to 1200 tons of cargo and were built like floating
    fortresses, are known as “carracks.” Portugal’s
    national symbol until recent times, the red cross
    of the Order of Christ, identified such ships as
    Portuguese. (The A rt A rchive/Science Academy Lisbon/
    Gianni Dagli Orti.)

    G u n s, S a i l s, a n d C o m p a s s e s: Eu r o p e a n s Ve n t u r e A b r o a d 573

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 573 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    Thus armed with an impressive ensemble of
    borrowed and modified tools, weapons, and sail-
    ing vessels, Europeans were poised to venture
    out into unknown worlds. Add the recent devel-
    opment of the printing press, and they were also
    able to publicize their journeys in new if not alto-
    gether honest ways.

    Portugal Takes the Lead
    W hy did tiny Portugal, one of Europe’s least
    populated kingdoms, lead the way in overseas
    expansion? A look at key factors helps solve this
    puzzle. First, Portugal was an ancient maritime
    crossroads straddling two commercial spheres,
    the Mediterranean and northeast Atlantic (see
    Map 16.1). Coastal shipping had grown effi-
    cient while overland transport remained slow
    and costly. Well before 1400, merchants from
    as far away as Venice and Stockholm put in at
    Lisbon, the Portuguese capital, to break up their
    journeys. Commercial competition was fos-
    tered by Portugal’s kings, and along with money
    and goods, important shipbuilding and sailing
    knowledge was exchanged. Capital, in the form
    of money, ships, and goods, accumulated in the
    hands of merchant clans, many of them foreign.

    Other factors besides accumulating capital
    pushed the Portuguese abroad. By the 1430s, fish-
    ermen regularly ventured far out into the Atlantic
    in pursuit of better catches. Moreover, arable land
    in Portugal became scarce as populations grew,
    rendering overseas colonization more attractive.
    A lso, religious and strategic concerns drove Por-
    tuguese nobles to capture the Islamic port city
    of Ceuta (SYOO-tah), on Morocco’s Mediter-
    ranean coast, in 1415. Thus, the push of limited
    resources at home and the pull of opportunities
    abroad stimulated Portuguese expansion.

    20

    º

    W

    20
    ºE

    20ºS

    20ºN

    40ºN

    Equator

    Tropic of Cancer

    Tropic of C

    a

    pricorn

    P
    rim

    e
    M

    e
    rid

    ian

    0

    0 500 Kilometers

    500 Miles

    ATLANTIC
    OCEAN

    Mediterranean Sea

    Gulf of Guinea

    Cape of
    Good Hope

    Cape
    Verde Is.

    (Port.)

    Azore
    (Port.)

    Madeira Is.
    (Port.)

    Sicily

    Canary Is.
    (Sp.)

    Principe I.
    (Port.)

    São Tomé
    (Port.)

    da Gam
    a, 1497–1498

    To India

    D
    ias, 1487–1488

    Lake
    Chad

    Senegal

    R.

    Gambia R.

    Ben
    ue

    R.

    Co
    ng

    o
    R.

    Orange R.

    BENIN

    KONGO

    SONGHAI
    WOLOF

    MOROCCO

    PORTUGAL SPAIN

    Genoa
    Venice

    Granada
    Lisbon

    Seville

    Ceuta

    Sugar Plantation

    �e East Atlantic, c. 1500

    WEST AFRICA

    CENTRAL
    AFRICA

    MAP 16.1 The East Atlantic, c. 1500 The Portuguese
    were the first Europeans to seek a sea route to Asia, and
    they did so by mak ing their way south along the Atlantic
    coast of A frica. The diseases of tropical A frica limited
    Portuguese colonization to a few fortified enclaves, but
    they established lucrative settlement colonies in the
    eastern Atlantic island chains of the A zores, Madeiras,
    and Cape Verdes, along with the wet tropical island of
    São Tomé in the Gulf of Guinea. By 1500 the Portuguese
    had discovered that the fastest way to round the tip of
    A frica was to follow the prevailing winds and currents
    that swept to the west of the A frican coast before turning
    southeast.

    574 CH A P T ER 16 T h e R is e o f a n aT l a n T i c W o R l d 14 5 0 –16 0 0

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 574 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    With support from ambitious nobles such as Prince Henry “the Navigator”
    (1394–1460), Portuguese and foreign investors pooled capital and invested it in new
    technologies to create a network of settlement colonies and feitorias (fay-toe-R EE-
    ahs), or fortified trading posts. Some invested in overseas plantations in the eastern
    Atlantic and Mediterranean, others in the gold and slave trades of West Africa.

    The Portuguese soon learned to navigate the West A frican coast. By 1430 they
    had come upon the Azores and Madeiras, uninhabited island chains in the east-
    ern Atlantic (see again Map 16.1). With incentives from the Crown and Italian
    merchant investment, Portuguese settlers colonized and farmed these islands.
    The Canaries, farther south, were different. These rugged volcanic islands posed
    distinct political and moral challenges from their inhabitants: chiefdoms de-
    scended from pre-Islamic Moroccan immigrants. “They go about naked with-
    out any clothes,” wrote one Portuguese chronicler, “and have little shame at it;
    for they make a mockery of clothes, saying they are but sacks in which men put
    themselves.”2

    W hat was to be done? Should the inhabitants of the Canary Islands be con-
    quered and their lands taken over by Europeans, and if so, by what right, and by
    whom? The presence of indigenous Canarians in fact spurred competition among
    European adventurers, including Spanish missionaries and French and Portuguese
    nobles. Spanish nobles under Isabella and Ferdinand ultimately won title to the is-
    lands. The Guanches (H WA N-chehs), as the Europeans called the largest group of
    native inhabitants, faced annihilation. Survivors were enslaved and made to work
    on sugar plantations. In many ways, the Canarian experience foretold Iberian, and
    more generally European, actions in the Americas. W hen they stood in the way of
    European ambitions, the interests of indigenous peoples counted for little.

    A lways in search of gold, which the eastern Atlantic islands lacked, and spurred
    on by Prince Henry, the Portuguese in 1444 reached the mouth of the Senegal
    R iver. Here the Portuguese traded warhorses for gold dust with representatives of
    the Muslim Wolof kingdoms. They also traded, and on a few occasions raided, for
    slaves. The victims of these 1440s raids and exchanges were the first A fricans to
    be shipped en masse across Atlantic waters. Most ended up in the households and
    workshops of Lisbon.

    The Portuguese reached the kingdom of Benin in the 1480s, when they also
    began settling the offshore islands of Príncipe and São Tomé. Some captives from
    Benin were forced to plant and refine sugar on São Tomé. The slave-staffed sugar
    plantation, which would define life in much of the American tropics from the fif-
    teenth to nineteenth centuries, found a prototype here off central A frica just before
    Columbus’s famous voyages.

    feitoria A Portuguese
    overseas trading post,
    usually fortified.

    N e w C r o s s r o a d s, F i r s t En c o u n t e r s 575

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 575 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    By 1488, Bartolomeu Dias rounded A frica’s Cape of Good Hope, and ten years
    later, Vasco da Gama became the first European to reach India by sea. W hen Chris-
    topher Columbus proposed a westward route to “the Indies,” the Portuguese king,
    on the advice of his cosmographers, declined. Columbus’s calculations were in
    doubt, as was the need for an alternative. Once in the Indian Ocean, the Portu-
    guese used their sturdy ships and superior firepower to capture more than a dozen
    ports by 1510. The emphasis on ports reflected Portuguese ambitions. They sought
    to dominate the existing maritime Asian trade, not to establish a colonial land
    empire. Thus, as we shall see, Portuguese and Spanish expansion would take dif-
    ferent forms.

    New Crossroads, First Encounters: The
    European Voyages of Discovery 1492–1521

    FOCUS What were the main sources of conflict between europe-
    ans and native americans in the first decades after contact?

    Portugal’s Spanish neighbors were equally interested in overseas expansion, but by
    Columbus’s time they lagged far behind. Like Portugal, Spain had competent sail-
    ors and shipbuilders, and some families were tied to the early A frican trade. W hat
    would distinguish Spain’s overseas enterprises from Portugal’s, however, was a
    tendency to acquire large landmasses by force, colonize them with large numbers
    of settlers, and force Catholicism on all inhabitants. In part this pattern derived
    from the centuries-long Christian Reconquest of the Iberian peninsula that ended
    with the defeat of the Muslim caliphate of Granada in January 1492. As if fated, it
    was at Ferdinand and Isabella’s military encampment at Granada that Columbus
    received his license to sail across the Atlantic.

    Christopher Columbus in a New World
    Christopher Columbus, born in Genoa in 1451, came of age in the profit-seeking
    East Atlantic world centered on Lisbon. Columbus married Felipa de Perestrelo, a
    Portuguese noblewoman, but did not settle down. Instead, he sailed on Portuguese
    ships bound for West A frica, England, and even Iceland. He became obsessed with
    sailing west to China and Japan, which he had read about in the account of Marco
    Polo. Around 1485 Columbus left for Spain, where he eventually won the sponsor-
    ship of Isabella and Ferdinand. By 1492 he was off to cross the Atlantic in search of
    the successors of Qubilai K han, China’s famed thirteenth-century Mongol ruler.

    576 CH A P T ER 16 T h e R is e o f a n aT l a n T i c W o R l d 14 5 0 –16 0 0

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 576 07/31/18 08:30 PM

    90

    ºW

    60
    ºW

    30
    ºW150

    ºW

    12

    W

    30ºS

    60ºS

    30ºN

    60ºN


    Equator

    Arctic Circle

    Tropic of Capricorn

    P
    ri

    m
    e

    M
    e

    ri
    d

    ia
    n

    0

    0 1600 Kilometers

    1600 Miles

    Haiti (Hispaniola)

    Tierra del

    Fuego

    Cape Horn

    Boriquen
    (Puerto Rico)

    Cape Verde Is.
    (Port.)

    Canary Is.
    (Sp.)
    Madeira Is.
    (Port.)

    Azores
    (Port.)

    Guanahani
    (San Salvador)

    Cuba

    Pizarro
    1531–1533

    Coronado
    1540–1542

    Cabeza de Vaca
    1528–1536

    Cortés
    1519–1521

    Solís
    1515–1516

    Vesp
    ucci

    149
    9–15

    00

    Columbus 1492
    –1493

    O rellana 15 41– 154
    2

    Magellan 1519–1521

    Cabral 1500

    da Gama 1497–1498

    Dias 1487–1488

    D
    rake 1580

    B�ZIL

    WOLOF
    SONGHAI

    BENIN
    KONGO

    ANGOLA

    MOROCCO
    PORTUGAL SPAIN

    CARIB

    TAINO

    TUPI

    MAPUCHE

    NORTH
    AMERICA

    A F R I C A

    SOUTH
    AMERICA

    Gulf of
    Mexico

    Caribbean
    Sea

    Strait of
    Magellan

    Tre
    aty o

    f To
    rd

    e
    sillas, 1

    4
    9
    4

    PACIFIC
    OCEAN

    ATLANTIC
    OCEAN

    A nd
    es M

    ts.

    R
    ock

    y
    M

    ts.

    P
    a

    t
    a

    g
    o

    n
    i a

    Cuzco Salvador

    Bogotá

    Ceuta

    Timbuktu Gao

    Paris

    London

    Niani

    SevilleLisbon

    Tenochtitlán
    (Mexico City)

    Cajamarca

    Quito

    Rio de la
    Plata

    MAP 16.2 European Voyages of Discovery, c. 1420–1600 In a remarkably short time, the
    Portuguese and Spanish went from exploring the eastern Atlantic to circumnavigating the globe.
    Christopher Columbus’s first Spanish-sponsored voyage across the Atlantic in 1492 and Vasco da Gama’s
    Portuguese-sponsored trip to India in 1497–1498 heightened the competition, and by 1519 Ferdinand

    90ºE

    60ºE

    30ºE

    150ºE
    120ºE

    Tropic of Cancer
    Tropic of Capricorn

    International Date Line

    Sumatra
    Java

    Borneo

    Mariana Is.Philippine Is.
    (Sp.)

    Guam
    Sebu

    M
    aluccas

    Madagascar
    del C

    ano (a
    �er M

    agella
    n’s De

    ath) 1
    521–1

    522

    Drak
    e 157

    7–15
    80

    Ca
    bra

    l 1
    50

    0
    da G

    ama
    149

    7–1
    498

    JAPAN

    MING
    EMPIRE

    MUGHAL
    EMPIRE

    SAFAVID
    EMPIRE

    O�OMAN
    EMPIRE

    KONGO
    ANGOLA

    Portuguese explorers

    Spanish explorers

    Spanish conquistadors

    English explorers

    French explorers

    Portuguese claims

    Spanish claims

    European Voyages of Discovery, c. 1420–1600
    European claims, c. 1600

    A F R I C A

    AUSTRALIA

    South
    China
    Sea

    Arabian
    Sea

    Bay of
    Bengal

    PACIFIC
    OCEAN

    INDIAN
    OCEAN

    Goa
    (Port.)

    Macao
    (Port.)

    Nagasaki
    (Port.)

    Guagzhou

    Melaka

    Diu
    (Port.)

    Muscat

    Hormuz

    Constantinople

    Calicut

    Mozambique

    Mombassa

    Bombay

    N e w C r o s s r o a d s, F i r s t En c o u n t e r s 577

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 577 07/13/18 01:22 PM


    90
    ºW
    60
    ºW
    30
    ºW150
    ºW
    12

    W
    30ºS
    60ºS
    30ºN
    60ºN

    Equator
    Arctic Circle
    Tropic of Capricorn
    P
    ri
    m
    e
    M
    e
    ri
    d
    ia
    n
    0
    0 1600 Kilometers
    1600 Miles
    Haiti (Hispaniola)
    Tierra del Fuego
    Cape Horn
    Boriquen
    (Puerto Rico)
    Cape Verde Is.
    (Port.)
    Canary Is.
    (Sp.)
    Madeira Is.
    (Port.)
    Azores
    (Port.)
    Guanahani
    (San Salvador)
    Cuba
    Pizarro
    1531–1533
    Coronado
    1540–1542
    Cabeza de Vaca
    1528–1536

    Coetés
    1519–1521

    Solís
    1515–1516
    Vesp
    ucci
    149
    9–15
    00
    Columbus 1492
    –1493
    O rellana 15 41– 154
    2
    Magellan 1519–1521
    Cabral 1500
    da Gama 1497–1498
    Dias 1487–1488
    D
    rake 1580
    B�ZIL
    WOLOF
    SONGHAI
    BENIN
    KONGO
    ANGOLA

    MAROCCO

    PORTUGAL SPAIN
    CARIB
    TAINO
    TUPI
    MAPUCHE
    NORTH
    AMERICA
    A F R I C A
    SOUTH
    AMERICA
    Gulf of
    Mexico
    Caribbean
    Sea
    Strait of
    Magellan
    Tre
    aty o
    f To
    rd
    e
    sillas, 1
    4
    9
    4
    PACIFIC
    OCEAN
    ATLANTIC
    OCEAN
    A nd
    es M
    ts.
    R
    ock
    y
    M
    ts.
    P
    a
    t
    a
    g
    o
    n
    i a
    Cuzco Salvador
    Bogotá
    Ceuta
    Timbuktu Gao
    Paris
    London
    Niani
    SevilleLisbon
    Tenochtitlán
    (Mexico City)
    Cajamarca
    Quito
    Rio de la
    Plata
    90ºE
    60ºE
    30ºE
    150ºE
    120ºE
    Tropic of Cancer
    Tropic of Capricorn
    International Date Line
    Sumatra
    Java
    Borneo
    Mariana Is.Philippine Is.
    (Sp.)
    Guam
    Sebu
    M
    aluccas
    Madagascar
    del C
    ano (a
    �er M
    agella
    n’s De
    ath) 1
    521–1
    522
    Drak
    e 157
    7–15
    80
    Ca
    bra
    l 1
    50
    0
    da G
    ama
    149
    7–1
    498
    JAPAN
    MING
    EMPIRE
    MUGHAL
    EMPIRE
    SAFAVID
    EMPIRE
    O�OMAN
    EMPIRE
    KONGO
    ANGOLA
    Portuguese explorers
    Spanish explorers
    Spanish conquistadors
    English explorers
    French explorers
    Portuguese claims
    Spanish claims
    European Voyages of Discovery, c. 1420–1600
    European claims, c. 1600
    A F R I C A
    AUSTRALIA
    South
    China
    Sea
    Arabian
    Sea
    Bay of
    Bengal
    PACIFIC
    OCEAN
    INDIAN
    OCEAN
    Goa
    (Port.)
    Macao
    (Port.)
    Nagasaki
    (Port.)
    Guagzhou
    Melaka
    Diu
    (Port.)
    Muscat
    Hormuz
    Constantinople
    Calicut
    Mozambique
    Mombassa

    Bombay

    Magellan, a Portuguese navigator sailing for the Spanish, set out to circle the globe by rounding South
    A merica and crossing the Pacific. Magellan was killed in the Philippines, but some of his crew survived
    to return to Spain in 1522. It was not until the 1577–1580 voyage of the English privateer Francis Drake,
    led by a kidnapped Portuguese pilot, that another European circumnavigated the globe.

    578 CH A P T ER 16 T h e R is e o f a n aT l a n T i c W o R l d 14 5 0 –16 0 0

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 578 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    On October 12, 1492, barely a month after leaving his last stop in the Canary
    Islands, Columbus and his mostly Spanish crew made contact with the native
    Taino (tah-EE-no) inhabitants of Guanahani, one of the smaller Bahama Islands.
    Unable to communicate with them, Columbus imagined himself somewhere near
    Japan, or at least “east of India.” He christened the island San Salvador, or “Holy
    Savior,” and called the native Bahamians and all other indigenous peoples he sub-
    sequently encountered “Indians” (see Map 16.2).

    Remarking in his journal that the “Indians” he met in the Bahamas were tall,
    well built, scantily clad, and ignorant of iron weapons, Columbus proposed that
    they would make excellent slaves. They reminded him of the Canary Islanders.
    True to his word, Columbus eventually shipped some five hundred Caribbean na-
    tives to the markets of Seville.

    After landfall in the Bahamas, Columbus sailed southwest to Cuba, then east to the
    large island known locally as Haiti. He renamed it “Española” (“Hispaniola,” “Little
    Spain” in English) and began looking for a town site to settle in the name of his queen.
    In the course of this and three subsequent voyages, Christopher Columbus claimed
    and named everything and everyone that came into his view for his royal Spanish
    sponsors. In his logbook, Columbus reiterated his hopes of finding gold, spices, and
    news of “the Great Khan.” He died in 1506, still believing he was near China.

    For the diverse American peoples who met Columbus and his crewmembers, the
    foreigners provoked mixed feelings. They brought useful goods, including hatch-
    ets and sewing needles, but when their demands for food, gold, and sexual com-
    panionship were not met, they turned violent, torturing, raping, and murdering
    native islanders at will. No one, least of all Columbus, seemed willing to punish the
    newcomers or rein them in. Before long, some frustrated Taino hosts returned the
    violence in kind, but this only led to vengeance raids. In the most extreme cases,
    native women killed their children, then themselves, to avoid violation.

    As he continued looking for China, and for gold, Columbus came to regard his
    arrival in the “Indies” as a divinely sanctioned event. He claimed in his writings
    that the Indians, particularly his Taino allies, needed him for religious indoctrina-
    tion, instruction in the ways of work and trade, and physical protection.

    Protection was essential due to the presence of “evil” Indians, as Columbus
    described them, enemies of the Taino. The word Caribbean derives from Carib,
    or caribe, apparently an ethnic term. Groups of so-called Caribs did inhabit the
    smaller islands to the east and south of Borinquen, the large island renamed Puerto
    R ico by the Spanish. A lthough culturally similar to the Taino, these Caribs were
    said to have a particularly bad habit: they ate human flesh.

    “Man-eating” natives were a predictable New World wonder, the sort of marvel
    medieval travelers had described for sensation-hungry readers. Columbus happily

    N e w C r o s s r o a d s, F i r s t En c o u n t e r s 579

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 579 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    played along. It appears he blended the Latin canis
    (dog) and local ethnic name caribe to produce a new
    word: canibal, or “cannibal.” Carib and cannibal soon
    became interchangeable terms in the lexicon of Span-
    ish conquest, and the image of the cannibal stuck fast
    in the European imagination. Indeed, almost as quickly
    as news of the Indies reached Europe, printers rushed
    to illustrate the alleged atrocities of the Caribbean
    “dog-people.”

    Scholars disagree as to whether the so-called Caribs
    practiced cannibalism. W hat mattered for Columbus
    and his followers was that their allies, the “good Indi-
    ans,” said they did. With such a legal pretext (the eating
    of human flesh being regarded as a clear violation of
    natural law in the Western tradition), the newcomers
    could claim to be serving a necessary police role. They
    alone could adequately “protect” and “punish”—that
    is, take over Western-style functions of government in
    the “New World.”

    Spanish sovereignty in the Americas required more
    legal support. Even before the voyages of Columbus,
    Portugal’s overseas interests had clashed with Spain’s.
    With the pope’s mediation, in 1494 the Spanish and
    Portuguese split the world into two zones of influence.
    According to the Treaty of Tordesillas, the Spanish
    were to rule everyone living 370 leagues (roughly 1110
    miles) or more west of the Canaries. A frica, Asia, and
    eventually Brazil, which was not known to Europeans
    until 1500, fell to the Portuguese (see again Map 16.2).

    W hy was the Roman Catholic pope involved in
    an agreement of this k ind? First, fi fteenth-centur y
    Europeans regarded his authorit y as above that of
    secular rulers. More important, however, was the
    matter of spreading the Christian gospel, a job Columbus himself embraced.
    Iberian monarchs, as pious Catholics, promised to sponsor the conversion of
    ever yone their subjects encountered abroad and also to continue the medieval
    fight against “ infidels.” Commerce may have supplied the initial and most pow-
    erf ul motive for overseas expansion, but a drive for religious and cultural hege-
    mony soon played an important part in European colonization.

    Dog-Faced Cannibals European readers of
    chivalry tales and travel accounts expected the
    A merican “New World” to yield fantastic and
    horrible creatures. Early news from the Caribbean
    and Brazil suggested the existence of humans with
    doglike, omnivorous appetites, seeming to confirm
    the alleged observations of Marco Polo and other
    medieval travelers. In this 1527 woodcut, a German
    artist fused Weimaraner-like dogs’ heads with
    naked German butchers, one with a raised steel
    cleaver, to represent native A mericans. Since this
    image predates the Spanish conquest of the Incas
    by five years, the horned llama-like animal at lower
    left is of special interest.

    580 CH A P T ER 16 T h e R is e o f a n aT l a n T i c W o R l d 14 5 0 –16 0 0

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 580 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    From Independence to Servitude:
    The Encomienda System
    A lthough missionaries were present in the Caribbean from the 1490s, early Span-
    ish colonization was mostly a mad dash for gold and slaves. Settlers had little inter-
    est in working the land, preferring instead to live off native American slaves and
    tribute payers. As news of massive abuse and alarming death rates reached Spain,
    Queen Isabella demanded an end to Amerindian slavery. A fter 1503 only violent
    rebels and alleged cannibals were to be enslaved.

    Would the Taino then be free in exchange for accepting Catholicism and Span-
    ish protection against the Caribs? No, in large part because their labor was thought
    necessary to mine gold, which Spain’s monarchs desperately wanted. Compromise
    came in the form of the encomienda system. Native villages were entrusted to
    Spaniards in a manner resembling medieval European feudalism: village farming
    folk were to offer labor and surplus produce to their “lord” in exchange for military
    protection. Chiefs served as middlemen. The Spanish encomenderos who received
    these fiefdoms were self-styled men-at-arms, and from their ranks would come the
    conquerors of the mainland.

    Indians deemed good and faithful subjects paid tributes to their encomendero,
    or “trustee,” as he was called, in local goods, twice a year. Adult men were also re-
    quired to work for the encomendero from time to time. For his part, the encomen-
    dero was to protect his tributaries from outside attack and ensure their conversion
    to Christianity. However reciprocal in theory, the encomienda system was in fact
    used mostly to round up workers for the gold mines. It looked like slavery to the
    few Spanish critics who denounced it, and even more so to the many thousands of
    native peoples who suffered under it.

    One Spanish critic was Bartolomé de Las Casas, a Hispaniola encomendero’s
    son turned Dominican priest who became the leading defender of native American
    rights in early modern times. Through constant pleading at court, and in university
    debates and publications, Las Casas helped to suppress the indigenous slave trade
    and restrict the encomienda system by the early 1540s. For the Tainos, the reforms
    came too late. By 1510 there were only a few hundred encomienda subjects whereas
    a decade before there had been hundreds of thousands. By almost any measure, the
    Columbian era in the Caribbean was a disaster.

    Columbus’s Successors
    Columbus’s accomplishments spawned dozens of like-minded expeditions
    (see again Map 16.2). These included the four voyages of A merigo Vespucci
    (1497–1504), a Florentine merchant for whom the continents of the Western

    encomienda A feudal-
    style grant of a native
    A merican village to a
    conquistador or other
    Spaniard.

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    smi49245_ch16_566-603 581 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    Hemisphere would later be named. Vespucci won fame as a publicist of the new
    lands and peoples that Europeans were encountering throughout the A merican
    tropics. Vespucci soon realized that the A mericas were not part of Asia. This did
    not, however, prevent him from embracing other European preconceptions. In re-
    lating his voyages to Brazil, Vespucci calmly described the roasting and eating of
    human flesh among the local inhabitants. His reports only added to the European
    fi xation on native A merican cannibalism.

    Other voyages included those of Juan de Solís and Ferdinand Magellan. Both
    were Portuguese explorers sailing for Spain, and both, like Columbus, sought a
    westward route to Asia. Solís sailed up the R ío de la Plata estuary near modern
    Buenos Aires in 1516, but was captured and killed in a skirmish with local inhab-
    itants. Magellan learned details of the Argentine coast from survivors of the Solís
    expedition, then organized a much more ambitious voyage to the Moluccas, or
    Maluku, in what is today Indonesia. The epic journey that followed, arguably one
    of the boldest ever undertaken, was recorded by the Venetian Antonio de Pigafetta.

    Of the five ships that left Spain in 1519, two were wrecked before Magellan
    reached the straits at the southern tip of South America that still bear his name.
    W hen food ran short, crewmembers shot and salted penguins and sea lions. En-
    counters with the native inhabitants of Tierra del Fuego and the neighboring
    mainland were brief and hostile. A lways the good publicist, Pigafetta described
    encounters with primitive giants, giving rise to the legend of Patagonia, or “the
    land of Big Foot.”

    Once in the Pacific, Magellan sailed northwest to Guam, in the Mariana Islands.
    The four-month ocean crossing had left the crew malnourished; many died from
    the effects of scurv y, a disease caused by lack of vitamin C. Magellan then sailed
    to the Philippine island of Sebu, where he became embroiled in a dispute between
    local chieftains. A larmed to find Muslim merchants active in the region, Magellan
    sought to create an alliance with new converts to Christianity through a show of
    force. Instead, he and forty crew members were killed. Only one vessel escaped,
    returning to Spain in 1522 by following the new Portuguese sailing route through
    the Indian and Atlantic oceans. For the first time in recorded history, the world had
    been circumnavigated (see again Map 16.2).

    Meanwhile, in the Caribbean, Spanish colonists became disillusioned with the
    fabled “West Indies” of Columbus. Unhappiest of all were the newest immigrants,
    desperate young men with dreams of gold. They fanned out across the Caribbean
    in search of new sources of wealth, both human and metallic. Most failed, and
    many died, but some eventually found what they sought: fabled continental em-
    pires rich beyond belief.

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    The Columbian Exchange
    In a landmark 1972 book, historian A lfred Crosby argued that the most signifi-
    cant consequences of 1492 were biological.3 W hat Crosby called the Columbian
    Exchange referred to the massive interoceanic transfer of animals (including
    humans), plants, and diseases that followed in Columbus’s wake. Many of these
    transfers, such as the introduction of rats and smallpox to the Americas, were un-
    intentional. Yet all had profound consequences.

    Since European explorers circled the globe shortly
    after Columbus’s time, this process of biological ex-
    change was a worldwide phenomenon. Indigenous
    cuisines, farming practices, and transportation modes
    were changed, sometimes for the better. Northern
    European populations, for example, grew rapidly
    thanks to A ndean potatoes, which thrived in cool,
    wet climates. South and Southeast Asian cuisines
    were altered by the introduction of A merican capsi-
    cum peppers and peanuts, which flourished in the Old
    World tropics.

    But European livestock also rapidly altered land-
    scapes, sometimes with catastrophic consequences.
    In the worst case, the highlands of central Mexico
    were reduced to deserts following the introduction of
    sheep in the sixteenth century. Lacking predators, and
    having access to vast new pastures, their populations
    exploded. Similar processes of environmental transfor-
    mation were later repeated in Australia, New Zealand,
    Argentina, and the western United States.

    As in the case of ship-borne rats, many unwanted
    exchanges took place as well. Worst among these were
    diseases, mostly caused by viruses, bacteria, and blood
    parasites, introduced to previously unexposed hosts. In
    A frica and Eurasia the repeated spread of diseases such
    as smallpox, measles, and mumps had allowed people
    over time to develop immunity against these and other
    pathogens. As seen in Chapter 14, pandemics of plague
    could still be devastating, but never to the extent that
    they would be in long-isolated regions overseas. The
    peoples of the Americas, Australia, and Polynesia

    Maize Perhaps the most globally transformative
    native A merican crop (v ying with the potato),
    maize was first domesticated in highland Mexico
    some 7000 years ago. This 1542 German depiction
    is the most accurate to survive from the first
    decades after maize was introduced to Europe.
    Similar varieties soon transformed global dietary
    patterns, particularly in sub-Saharan A frica. Some
    cultures adopted maize only as livestock feed.

    Columbian
    Exchange Historian
    A lfred Crosby’s term
    for the movement
    of A merican plants,
    animals, and germs to
    the rest of the world
    and vice versa.

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    smi49245_ch16_566-603 583 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    proved tragically vulnerable in this regard; they suffered what was probably the
    worst demographic collapse in history.

    Germs, coupled with colonialism, killed tens of millions. Evidence suggests that
    throughout the A mericas and Pacific Islands, indigenous populations declined
    by almost 90 percent within a century. Recovery and acquired immunity came
    slowly. With the introduction of malaria, yellow fever, and other mosquito-borne
    blood parasites, A merica’s lowland tropics became especially deadly. On the
    plus side, world food exchanges spurred population growth in Europe, A frica,
    and Asia, and contributed to the rebound of the A mericas. Overall, the spread
    of A merican crops boosted world population significantly before the end of early
    modern times. The peoples of the A mericas, however, paid a steep price for the
    Columbian Exchange.

    Spanish Conquests in the Americas
    1519–1600

    FOCUS What factors enabled the spanish to conquer the aztec
    and inca empires?

    Two men disappointed by the Caribbean islands were Hernando Cortés and Fran-
    cisco Pizarro. Cortés gained fame after 1521 as conqueror of the Aztecs, and Pizarro
    after 1532 as conqueror of the Incas. Their experiences on the American mainland
    gave rise to the almost mythical Spanish-American livelihood of conquistador, or
    conqueror. Like Columbus, neither man acted alone, but both altered the course
    of global history.

    The Fall of Aztec Mexico
    As we saw in Chapter 15, the people known as Aztecs called themselves Mexica
    (meh-SHEE-cah). By the time Spaniards reached them in the late 1510s, the
    Mexica ruled much of Mesoamerica, often by terror. Cortés would soon discover,
    however, that the Aztec Empire was vulnerable.

    A brash and ambitious leader, Hernando Cortés left his base in southern Cuba
    after a dispute with his sponsor, the governor. In Yucatan, as we have seen, he
    found an extraordinarily valuable translator in Malintzin. By September of 1519
    Cortés set out for the interior from the new town of Veracruz on Mexico’s Gulf
    coast. With him were Malintzin and several hundred horses and well-armed men,
    accompanied by fighting dogs. A fter attacking both Aztec allies and enemies, the

    conquistador Spanish
    for “conqueror,” a
    new livelihood in
    the A mericas after
    Columbus.

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    Spanish and several thousand new allies entered Tenochtitlán in
    November 1519 as guests of the emperor, Moteuczoma, or “Moc-
    tezuma,” II.

    Shortly after being treated to a feast by the curious and gra-
    cious Moctezuma, Cortés and his followers managed to seize
    the unsuspecting emperor. Fearful for their ruler’s life, the Aztec
    people, now leaderless, faced great uncertainty. Cortés ordered
    that anyone who opposed the Spanish and their allies would be
    publicly cut to pieces and fed to the dogs. Treachery, terror, and
    seizure of indigenous leaders were in fact stock tactics developed
    by Spanish conquistadors in the Caribbean. These tactics proved
    even more effective against mainland imperial peoples who de-
    pended on divine kings. Attached to their subsistence plots, set-
    tled farmers had nowhere to run.

    There followed several months of looting and destruction,
    punctuated by battles and skirmishes. Some who resented the
    Aztecs supported the Spanish, most significantly the Tlaxcalans,
    but others resisted violently. Soon unfamiliar diseases such as
    smallpox and influenza swept through Tenochtitlán and the
    entire Valley of Mexico, decimating a vast and densely populated
    region already facing food shortages. Ironically, the people who
    would give the world maize, tomatoes, chocolate, vanilla, and a

    thousand other life-sustaining and pleasurable foods were now receiving only the
    deadliest ingredients of the Columbian Exchange: viruses and bacteria. Cortés or-
    dered that images of the Virgin Mary be placed atop Aztec temples to assert the
    power of the invaders’ Christian deities.

    W hile Cortés went to negotiate with soldiers sent by Cuba’s governor to arrest
    him in early 1520, the Spaniards left behind in Tenochtitlán provoked a siege by
    massacring Aztec nobles. Rushing to the city with Cuban recruits whom he had
    just won over, Cortés reached his comrades only to be trapped by the Aztec war-
    riors. The desperate Spaniards brought out the captive emperor, Moctezuma, in
    hopes of calming tempers, but he was killed in a hail of stones. The besieged Span-
    ish tried to flee Tenochtitlán but were quickly pinned down on one of the city’s
    three narrow causeways. Cortés and others escaped at the head of the pack, but
    many other Spaniards, about half the total number, fell into Aztec hands. Accord-
    ing to Aztec accounts, when the city’s male warriors fell dead or exhausted, women
    warriors took over, attacking with equal vigor (see Reading the Past: Tlatelolcan
    Elders Recall the Conquest of Mexico).

    Cortés’s Invasion of the Aztec Empire,
    1519–1521

    0

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    Gulf of
    Mexico

    Texcoco

    Cholula
    Tenochtitlán

    Zautla
    Jalapa

    Otumba

    Veracruz
    Tlaxcala

    Lake
    Texcoco

    Cortés’s Invasion
    of the Aztec Empire,
    1519-1521

    Aztec Empire, 1519
    Cortés’s original route, 1519
    Cortés’s retreat, 1520
    Cortés’s return route, 1520–1521

    S p a n i s h C o n q u e s t s i n t h e A m e r i c a s 1519 –16 0 0 585

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 585 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    READING THE PAST

    Tlatelolcan Elders Recall the Conquest of Mexico
    In what would become New Spain, or colonial

    Mexico, Spanish missionaries quickly introduced

    European-style writing systems. Indigenous scribes

    picked them up within a few decades of the con-

    quest, rendering Nahuatl, Maya, and other local

    languages in a Latinate script with Spanish pho-

    netics. Formal documents, including histories and

    sermons, were produced in this manner, but also

    interviews, myths, genealogies, criminal testimo-

    nies, and a host of everyday transactions. The fol-

    lowing excerpt is a direct English translation of a

    Nahuatl document from about 1540 relating the

    conquest of both Tenochtitlán and its “twin city,”

    Tlatelolco. The Tlatelolcan elders relating the story

    to junior scribes apparently witnessed and partici-

    pated in the events in question.

    “And when they reached Yacocolco here, Spaniards

    were captured on the Tlilhuacan [tleel-WALK-on]

    road, as well as all the people from the various al-

    tepetl [allied city-states]. Two thousand died there,

    and the Tlatelolcans were exclusively responsible

    for it. At this time we Tlatelolcans set up skull racks;

    skull racks were in three places. One was in the

    temple courtyard at Tlillan, where the heads of

    our [present] lords [the Spaniards] were strung; the

    second was in Yacocolco, where the heads of our

    lords [the Spaniards] were strung, along with the

    heads of two horses; the third place was in Çacatla,

    facing the Cihuateocalli [see-wah-tayoh-CAH-yee]

    [Woman-Temple]. It was the exclusive accomplish-

    ment of the Tlatelolcans. After this they drove us

    from there and reached the marketplace. That was

    when the great Tlatelolcan warriors were entirely

    vanquished. With that the fighting stopped once

    and for all. That was when the Tlatelolcan women

    all let loose, fighting, striking people, taking cap-

    tives. They put on warriors’ devices, all raising their

    skirts so that they could give pursuit.”

    Source: James Lockhart, ed. and trans., We People Here: Nahuatl Accounts of the Conquest of Mexico (Berkeley: University of

    California Press, 1993), 265–267.

    Examining the Evidence

    1. W hat does this document tell us about Aztec political identity during the conquest?

    2. W hat does it tell us about military culture and gender roles?

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    Cortés and his bedraggled Spanish forces eventually regrouped with aid from the
    Tlaxcalans, their staunchest allies, but it was over a year before Tenochtitlán and
    its twin city of Tlatelolco fell. Cut off from the mainland, the Aztecs faced starva-
    tion, then attack by land and water. Cortés ordered thirteen small, European-style
    sailing vessels built on the shores of Lake Texcoco, and armed with cannon these
    helped pound remaining Aztec warrior contingents in canoes. By August 1521
    Cortés and his men and allies had forced the Aztecs to retreat to Tlatelolco. Both
    cities were then occupied and pillaged.

    Soon after, a successor emperor to Moctezuma was killed for allegedly hiding
    booty, prompting dissatisfied conquistadors to fan out across Mesoamerica in
    search of riches and other empires. The self-promoting Cortés traveled to Spain to
    consolidate his gains, but found little support from the emperor Charles V. Con-
    quest of the Aztec center had been difficult, and at the fringes conquest carried on.
    Far more difficult would be winning the hearts and minds of millions of former
    Aztec subjects now anxious to assert their own agendas. This would be the long
    story of colonial Mexico, a “New Spain” so unlike its Iberian namesake.

    The Fall of Inca Peru
    W hen Francisco Pizarro left Panama City in 1522 in search of
    “Pirú,” a mythical chieftain, he had no idea that events high in
    the Andes would conspire to favor his dream of repeating the
    success of Cortés. But as with Cortés and his many companions
    and aides, an empire—even with guns, germs, and steel on one’s
    side—could not be toppled overnight.

    In fact it took a decade of reconnaissance and failure before
    Pizarro at last marched into Peru. In the meantime he had ac-
    quired Quechua translators immersed in Castilian Spanish; a
    small army of men with horses, armor, and state-of-the-art weap-
    ons; and a license from Charles V. By late 1532, when Pizarro’s
    forces began marching across a coastal desert reminiscent of
    southern Spain, Peru at last seemed ripe for the taking.

    Tawantinsuyu (tah-wahn-tin-SUE-you), as the Incas called
    their empire, faced crisis in 1532. A succession battle had recently
    been won by Atawallpa (also Atahualpa). According to eyewit-
    ness accounts, when Pizarro and his 168 men climbed into the
    Andes to meet Atawallpa in the city of Cajamarca, the new Sapa
    Inca was flush with victory. Atawallpa seemed invulnerable, and
    apparently intended, rather like Moctezuma in Mexico, to draft
    the foreigners into his service. In November 1532 Pizarro and

    0

    0 350 Kilometers

    350 Miles

    PACIFIC
    OCEAN

    A
    n

    d
    e

    s
    M

    o
    u

    n
    t

    a
    i

    n
    s

    Panama

    Lima

    Cuzco
    1533

    Tumbes

    Cajamarca

    1532

    Maule R.

    A mazo n
    R.

    Pizarro’s Invasion
    of the Inca Empire,
    1531–1533

    Inca Empire,
    1532
    Pizarro,
    1522–1529
    Pizarro,
    1531–1533

    Pizarro’s Invasion of the Inca Empire,
    1531–1533

    S p a n i s h C o n q u e s t s i n t h e A m e r i c a s 1519 –16 0 0 587

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 587 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    his men captured Atawallpa in an act reminiscent of
    Cortés’s seizure of Moctezuma. Humiliated, Atawallpa
    was held hostage for nearly a year as his subjects scram-
    bled to collect enough gold and silver to free him. The
    Incas possessed far more precious metals than the
    Aztecs, and the ransom they offered was staggering.
    Suddenly Pizarro and his followers were rich beyond
    their wildest dreams.

    Thus “Peru” became synonymous with great wealth
    among Europeans, an association soon reinforced by
    the discovery of immensely rich silver mines. Despite
    the ransom, however, Atawallpa was killed on Pizarro’s
    orders in 1533. The treachery was complete, and by
    1534 Tawantinsuyu was in Spanish hands.

    The Conquest: Myths and Realities
    How did a small number of Spanish men topple two of
    the world’s largest empires? Some biologists and an-
    thropologists have claimed that these great, isolated in-
    digenous empires faced inevitable defeat because they
    lacked iron, sufficient protein, draft animals, wheeled
    vehicles, writing, acquired immunity to numerous
    pathogens, and other advantages. Historians have long
    puzzled over this riddle, too, but more with an eye on
    human actors and the timing of events.

    For their part, the conquistadors and their Spanish
    contemporaries regarded these victories as the will of
    their Christian God. Spain’s enemies—and internal
    critics such as Las Casas—emphasized the conquista-
    dors’ “sins” of treachery, cruelty, lust, and greed. By the
    nineteenth century, historians less interested in judg-
    ing the Spanish focused on individual leadership. They
    emphasized the intelligence and tenacity of Cortés and
    Pizarro, and the apparent weakness and indecisiveness of their adversaries, Moc-
    tezuma and Atawallpa.

    Recently, historians have focused on other causal factors. These include the im-
    portance of indigenous allies and interpreters; the conquistadors’ accumulated ex-
    perience as “Indian fighters” in the Caribbean; imperial politics and the timing of
    Spanish arrival; indigenous adaptation to Spanish fighting methods; contrasting

    Pizarro Meets Atawallpa Throughout colonial
    times native and European artists depicted the
    day in 1532 when Inca emperor Atawallpa met
    Francisco Pizarro. This is the first known image of
    the Peruvian encounter, a woodcut accompanying
    an eyewitness account published in Seville, Spain,
    in 1534. It depicts Atawallpa on a litter holding up
    what is probably the prayer book given him by the
    priest Vicente de Valverde, also pictured. Pizarro
    stands back with his fellow Spaniards, armed but
    not poised to attack. In the distance is a European-
    style castle presumably meant to stand for an
    Inca city. Notably absent is the native A ndean
    interpreter whom we know only by his Christian
    name, “Little Philip.”

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    smi49245_ch16_566-603 588 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    goals of warfare; and of course, the introduction of novel weapons, animals, and
    diseases. Most historians agree that the conquests resulted from the convergence
    of these many variables—a number of them, such as the appearance of the able
    translator Malintzin, unpredictable (see Seeing the Past: Malintzin and the Meet-
    ing Between Moctezuma and Cortés).

    Were indigenous peoples overawed by Spanish horses and technology, and did
    they view the newcomers as gods? Much evidence suggests the answer is “no.” As

    SEEING THE PAST

    Malintzin and the Meeting Between Moctezuma and Cortés
    This image, taken from the early post-conquest

    document known as the Florentine Codex, was

    created by an indigenous Mexican artist who had

    been exposed to European prints and paintings

    while being schooled by Spanish friars. In it, Ma-

    lintzin translates the words between Aztec emperor

    Moctezuma and Hernando Cortés at their first mo-

    mentous meeting.

    Examining the Evidence

    1. How does this drawing reflect the indigenous artist’s
    instruction by Spanish friars?

    2. To what extent is it a reflection of Malintzin’s per-
    ceived importance in the conquest of Mexico?

    Malintzin Interprets for Cortés and Moctezuma
    (The Granger Collection, New York.)

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    smi49245_ch16_566-603 589 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    this quote from a Spanish soldier who participated in the conquest of Mexico sug-
    gests, Aztec warriors adapted rapidly to the threat of cannon and armored oppo-
    nents on horseback:

    One day an Indian I saw in combat with a mounted horseman struck the horse
    in the chest, cutting through to the inside and killing the horse on the spot.
    On the same day I saw another Indian give a horse a sword thrust in the neck
    that laid the horse dead at his feet. . . . Among them are extraordinary brave
    men who face death with absolute determination.4

    The evidence from Inca Peru barely differs. A fter the capture of Atawallpa in
    1532, Andean warriors avoided open field engagements where they might be run
    down by mounted Spaniards, preferring instead to ambush their enemies as they
    crossed rivers and traveled through narrow canyons. Simple stones and slingshots
    proved a surprising match for guns and steel swords in these conditions. Rebel-
    lions and raids continued for decades in the Mexican and Peruvian backcountry,
    but the Spanish conquest of the Aztec and Inca imperial cores was sealed by those
    empires’ own former subjects: although they did not know what was in store for
    them, most were anxious for something different.

    A New Empire in the Americas: New Spain
    and Peru 1535–1600

    FOCUS Why was the discovery of silver in spanish america so
    important in the course of world history?

    Soon after conquest, Spanish settlers penetrated deep into the Americas, trans-
    forming the world’s largest overseas land empire into the world’s greatest source of
    precious metals. Spain’s monarchs in turn used this mineral bounty to pursue their
    ambitions in Europe and beyond. Merchants used it to link the world economy.
    But for the millions of native Americans subjected to Spanish rule, life would re-
    volve around negotiating a measure of freedom within an imperial system at least
    as taxing as those of the Aztecs and Incas.

    American Silver and the Global Economy
    In 1545 an indigenous prospector found silver ore on a high, red mountain in what
    is today Bolivia. The Cerro R ico, or “R ich Hill,” of Potosí (poh-toe-SEE) turned
    out to be the most concentrated silver deposit ever discovered (see Map 16.3). This

    590

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 590 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    MAP 16.3 European Claims in the Americas, c. 1600 Beginning in the 1510s, the Spanish used bases in Cuba and
    on the Isthmus of Panama to launch the conquests of the Aztec and Inca Empires. In search of similar empires, Spanish
    explorers drove deep into the interiors of North and South America; by the 1540s they had penetrated the U.S. Southwest
    and South America’s R ío de la Plata basin, and made their way down the Amazon. Other conquests in Central America,
    northwest Mexico, and New Granada led to the creation of a vast Spanish-American Empire, under the twin capitals of
    Mexico City and Lima. Portuguese Brazil, by contrast, consisted of only a few small settlements along the Atlantic coast,
    but by 1600 it was the world leader in sugar production, increasingly dependent on the labor of enslaved Africans.

    30ºW

    60
    ºW

    90ºW

    12

    W
    60ºS
    30ºN
    Equator
    Tropic of Cancer
    Tropic of Capricorn

    Antarctic Circle

    Tre
    aty o
    f To
    rd
    e
    sillas, 1
    4
    9
    4
    0

    0 1100 Kilometers

    1100 Miles

    PACIFIC
    OCEAN
    ATLANTIC
    OCEAN
    Gulf of
    Mexico

    Caribbean Sea

    Bahamas
    1492

    Hispaniola
    1492

    Puerto Rico
    1502

    Trinidad
    1498

    Cuba
    1514

    Jamaica
    1509

    ISTHMUS
    OF PANAMA

    FRENCH COLONY
    1555–1567

    Amaz
    on R.

    M
    is

    si
    ss

    ip
    pi

    R
    .

    PERU
    B�ZIL

    NEW SPAIN

    NORTH
    AMERICA
    SOUTH
    AMERICA
    A
    n
    d
    e

    s

    M

    o
    u
    n
    t
    a
    i
    n
    s

    Acoma
    1599

    St. Augustine
    1565

    Santiago de Guatemala
    1524 Cartagena de Indias

    1532

    Panama
    1519

    Mexico City
    1521

    Zacatecas
    1546

    Guanajuato
    1554

    Veracruz
    1519

    Caracas
    1567

    Cuzco
    1533

    Potosí
    1545

    RÍO DE LA PLATA

    Salvador
    1549

    Buenos Aires
    1535

    Rio de Janeiro
    1565

    Lima
    1535

    Huancavelica
    1564

    Santiago

    1541

    Quito
    1534

    Bogotá
    1538

    Pachuca
    1528

    Fort Caroline
    1564–1565

    (France)

    PERNAMBUCO

    NEW G�NADA

    MEXICO

    Spanish

    Portuguese

    Date of conquest or se�lement

    Headquarters of the Inquisition

    Brazilwood

    Gold

    Mercury

    Pearls

    Silver

    Sugar Plantation

    Emeralds

    European Claims in
    the Americas, c. 1600
    European claims, c. 1600

    Major economic activities

    1492

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    smi49245_ch16_566-603 591 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    and related silver discoveries in early Spanish America transformed not only life
    in the colonies, but the global economy. As we will see in subsequent chapters,
    in regions as distant as China and South Asia, American silver affected people’s
    livelihoods in profound ways. Even before Potosí, silver mines had been located
    in Mexico, and new finds followed. Mexican districts such as Zacatecas (zah-cah-
    TAY-cus) and Guanajuato (hwan-uh-WA H-toe) were expanding by the 1550s and
    would continue to drive Mexico’s economy for centuries.

    A lthough the Spanish adopted Old World techniques of tunneling and refining,
    the silver boom also spurred technical innovations. Chief among these was the use
    of mercury to separate silver from crushed ore. Amalgamation, as this process is
    known, was practiced in antiquity, but it was Bartolomé de Medina, a merchant
    working in Mexico in the mid-1550s, who patented a refining process suitable for
    New World environments. Medina’s invention revolutionized Spanish-American
    silver mining even as it spread one of the world’s most persistent toxins, mercury.

    Amalgamation was implemented in Potosí after 1572. A lthough Spain itself pro-
    duced mercury, New World sources had been sought since conquest. Before long,
    the mine owners’ dreams came true: in highland Peru the mercury mines of Huan-
    cavelica (wan-kah-bell-EE-cah) were discovered in 1564. Thus the Spanish paired
    Andean mercury with Andean silver, sparking an enormous boom in production.
    Potosí yielded tens of millions of ounces of silver annually by the 1580s.

    Even with abundant mercur y, silver production remained costly. Unlike gold
    panning, underground mining required massive investment. Water-powered
    ore-processing mills, first developed in Germany, were among the world ’s most
    complex machines at the time, and mercur y remained expensive despite Spanish
    price controls. Less often calculated, although well k nown even in the si xteenth
    centur y, were the environmental and health costs of mercur y pollution. Soils,
    rivers, and refiner y workers’ clothing were saturated with mercur y, leading to
    neurological disorders and birth defects. “Trembling like someone with mer-
    cur y poisoning” became a common colonial metaphor for fright, ak in to “shak-
    ing like a leaf.”

    More costly than mercury and machines was labor. Mining was hard and deadly
    work, attracting few volunteers. A frican slaves supplemented the workforce in
    boomtowns such as Zacatecas and Potosí, but Spanish-American silver mines
    came to rely mostly on native American draft and wage workers. The draft, or mita
    (MEE-tah) as it was called in the Andes, entailed a year of service in Potosí, Huan-
    cavelica, or some other mining center, followed by six years of work in one’s own
    home region, usually in subsistence farming or herding. In Mexico the Spanish
    implemented a similar system called repartimiento (reh-par-tee-M YEN-toe).
    Drafted indigenous laborers received a small wage and rations during their work

    mita A Spanish revival
    of the Inca draft labor
    system.

    repartimiento 
    A n allotment of
    indigenous laborers
    in colonial Mexico,
    similar to the A ndean
    mita.

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    stints, but given the danger of these jobs and the high cost of living in mining
    towns, the mita and repartimiento severely disrupted indigenous lifeways. Many
    considered draft work a death sentence.

    Potosí boomed in the first years of the mita, but heightened demand for mine
    laborers in this remote and unhealthy site only worsened an already dramatic in-
    digenous demographic collapse. Most eligible workers who remained in the region
    learned to avoid the most dangerous tasks, and many sold whatever they could
    to pay a cash fee for exemption. Mine owners were forced to pay wages to stay in
    business.

    The R ich Mountain of Potosí This c. 1603 image of Potosí’s famous Cerro R ico shows not only the legendary red
    mountain with its silver veins but also workers, most of them native A ndeans, refining silver by mercury amalgamation,
    and antlike llamas carrying ore down the mountain. The ore-crushing mill in the foreground is powered by a stream of
    water supplied by canals coming down from artificial reservoirs built high in a neighboring mountain range.

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    American Silver and Everyday Life
    The silver bonanza of the sixteenth century altered many livelihoods. In the
    Spanish colonies, everything from ranch work to church building was connected
    in one way or another to the flow of silver. Dependent miners living in towns such
    as Potosí and Zacatecas spurred merchants and landowners to expand their in-
    ventories, crops, and livestock herds. Mule-drivers, weavers, tanners, and other
    specialists came to rely on the mines’ productivity for their sustenance. In town
    centers, indigenous market women carved out a lucrative space as well. Silver pro-
    duction even drove Spanish missionaries to intensify conversion efforts. World-
    wide, Spanish-American silver funded the expansion of the Catholic Church.

    W hereas most indigenous peoples adapted to Spanish laws and civic traditions
    and even tolerated the oppressive obligations of mine work, they usually resisted
    total conversion to Catholicism. Confident in the universality of their religion,
    European missionaries expected indigenous populations to accept Christianity as
    they themselves understood it. W hen they did not, conversion turned to coercion.
    Soon after military conquest, priests and Church officials used violent means to
    advance their project.

    Native Americans were not the only victims of religious intolerance. Offices of
    the Inquisition, a branch of the Catholic Church dedicated to enforcing ortho-
    dox beliefs and practices, were established in Mexico City and Lima in 1570–1571
    and Cartagena in 1610. Their purpose was to punish alleged deviants and heretics
    among the Spanish settlers and people of A frican descent. In the indigenous ma-
    jority (soon exempted from prosecution by the Inquisition due to their newness
    to the faith), complete conversion was limited by long-held beliefs. Most native
    American converts adopted the Christian God, his holy intermediaries, and saints
    on their own terms, as new additions to an already crowded pantheon. Missionary
    priests became pessimistic and often angry with this half-hearted Catholicism, al-
    though some realized that conversion was a slow process requiring that they them-
    selves achieve a better understanding of would-be converts.

    It was only after some priests learned to speak indigenous languages fluently
    that Europeans began to transform native cosmologies. One way around conflict-
    ing beliefs was to ignore elders and focus conversion efforts on native youths, par-
    ticularly boys. Upon maturity, they would be exemplary believers, leaders in the
    new faith. Many such boys were removed from their parents’ custody, taught to
    read and write, and ordered to collect myths and sagas. These stories were then
    altered by European priests to match Christian history and beliefs.

    The missionaries had less success with women. Despite the burdens of colo-
    nialism, indigenous women continued teaching their children the old ways while

    Inquisition A branch
    of the Catholic Church
    established to enforce
    orthodoxy.

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    also pressing for social recognition within the new order. Some, like Malintzin,
    refashioned themselves as something in between Spanish and indigenous, often
    bearing mestizo (meh-STEE-soh) or mixed-heritage children. But the persistence
    of indigenous language and lifeways was due mostly to humble indigenous women,
    unsung keepers of the hearth. Despite Spanish determination to remake the
    Americas to serve European interests and ambitions, diverse indigenous cultures
    would continue to shape colonial society.

    Brazil by Accident: The Portuguese
    in the Americas 1500–1600

    FOCUS how and why did early Portuguese Brazil develop
    differently from spanish america?

    The Portuguese followed a distinct path in colonizing Brazil. The trend in the
    century after contact in 1500 was from benign neglect and small-scale trade with
    indigenous coast-dwellers toward a more formal royal presence and settled plan-
    tation agriculture, mostly concentrated along the northeast coast. By 1600, Brazil
    was the world’s largest sugar producer. It also became the prime destination for
    sub-Saharan A frican slaves. A key stimulus for this shift was French encroachment
    in Brazil. The arrival of French traders and religious refugees forced the Portu-
    guese to briefly take their eyes off India.

    Native Encounters and Foreign Competitors
    It was on the way to India in early 1500 that Pedro Á lvares Cabral and his fleet
    were blown west ward from Cape Verde, in West A frica. Toward the end of April
    the fleet sighted land, which the captain dubbed the “Island of the True Cross.”
    The landmass was later found not to be an island, but rather part of the conti-
    nent of South A merica. The huge eastern portion of the continent claimed by
    Portugal under the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas would later be called Brazil (see
    again Map 16.3).

    Brazil was initially of little interest to Portugal. Without gold or some other lu-
    crative export, there seemed to be no point in colonizing this distant land. Brazil’s
    one obvious resource, and what earned it its name, was brazilwood, a tree with a
    deep-red, pithy heart. Portuguese traders, soon followed by French competitors,
    set up posts all along Brazil’s vast coast to barter with indigenous Tupi speakers for
    precut, red-hearted logs.

    mestizo A person
    of mixed European
    and native A merican
    ancestry.

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    Brazilwood was shipped to Europe, where dye was extracted and sold at profit.
    Native Brazilians willingly participated in this trade because it brought them tan-
    gible benefits: metal hatchets, knives, sewing needles, and other utilitarian items,
    along with beads, bells, and other adornments. For some, it also brought military
    alliances against traditional enemies. In several places Portuguese degredados, or
    criminal castaways, survived exile and married into eminent indigenous families,
    becoming translators and commercial middlemen.

    French competition for control of Brazil and its dyewood pressed the Portuguese
    to assert their claims more forcefully. A fleet of warships was sent from Lisbon in
    1532 to protect Portuguese traders and to punish French interlopers. Land claims
    were also reorganized. A fter 1534 Brazil was carved into fifteen proprietary colo-
    nies, granted to courtiers by K ing Manoel. Brazil’s new “lords” were expected to
    organize defense against French and indigenous enemies.

    With few exceptions, the Brazilian proprietary colonies failed; the French were
    still a menace, and native Brazilians, not Portuguese colonists, had the run of the
    land. In 1549 the Crown tried another strategy: Salvador, a defensible hamlet lo-
    cated at the tip of a wide bay in northeastern Brazil, was made the royal capital and
    seat of a governor-general. Jesuit missionaries also arrived. They soon set out to
    convert tens of thousands of native, Tupi-speaking allies to Roman Catholicism.

    The French did not easily give up on their Brazilian enterprise, and in fact re-
    doubled their efforts at midcentury. In 1555 they established a new colony in Gua-
    nabara Bay, near modern R io de Janeiro (see again Map 16.3). The colony’s leader,
    however, could not sort out disputes between Catholics like himself and numerous
    Protestant refugees, or Huguenots. Divided by religion, like France itself at the
    time (as we will see in Chapter 19), the French colony was doomed. The Portu-
    guese drove out Catholics and Protestants alike by 1567. As for indigenous ene-
    mies, Portuguese wars and slaving expeditions were just beginning.

    Bitter Sugar: Slavery and the Plantation Complex
    in the Early Atlantic World 1530–1600
    A search for precious metals and gems came up short after the capital of Salva-
    dor was established in 1549, but the Portuguese found other ways beyond bra-
    zilwood to profit from the colony. On Brazil ’s northeast coast, sugar cane was
    planted as early as the 1530s. By 1570, Brazil was the world ’s number one sugar
    producer. Cane sugar was Brazil ’s answer to Spanish-A merican silver, but like
    silver, sugar had a cost. First indigenous, then A frican, slaves were made to do
    the burdensome work required to produce it (see Lives and Livelihoods: Atlantic
    Sugar Producers).

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    LIVES AND LIVELIHOODS

    Atlantic Sugar Producers

    Found in countless foods and beverages, and now a
    major global source of biofuels, cane sugar was once
    a rare commodity. Introduced to the Mediterra-
    nean by Muslim traders and colonists in the eighth
    or ninth century C.E ., sugar was at first a medicine
    and high-status condiment. Its source, sugar cane,
    a tall, thick grass, was eventually planted in Egypt,
    Sicily, Cyprus, and southern Iberia, and by at least

    the fourteenth century was processed
    not only by Muslims but also by Chris-
    tian landowners in southern Spain and
    Portugal. Though later associated ex-
    clusively with slavery, sugar making
    in this era was done by a mixed free
    and enslaved labor force. Before long,
    women joined men in both cane fields
    and processing plants.

    Sugar cane is so tough that consid-
    erable energy is required to extract
    maximum juice. Efficient presses were
    thus a technical hurdle for commercial
    producers. Like silver refining, sugar
    making required technical expertise
    and a complex sequence of chemical
    processes that allowed for few errors.

    Specialists were required to design and
    build ever larger and more powerful
    machines, which were among the most
    complex mechanical apparatus known
    at the time.

    Animals such as oxen were often used for power,
    but waterwheels were preferred for their greater effi-
    ciency. In the generally dry and sometimes frost-prone
    Mediterranean basin, access to warm, well-watered
    plains and consistently flowing millstreams was se-
    verely limited. Bounded by ecological and capital con-
    straints, mill ownership remained a dream of most
    sugar producers. This soon proved equally true in the

    Sugar Plantations Enslaved sugar-makers worked not only in fields but
    also in powerful mills and refining furnaces. Men, women, and children
    were all involved. This 1662 Dutch image of Pernambuco, Brazil, depicts
    enslaved sugar refinery and transport workers during the intense harvest
    period when the mills ran all night. The Dutch controlled Pernambuco
    and its sugar plantations from 1630 to 1654. (Courtesy of the John Carter
    Brown Library at Brown University.)

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    Atlantic islands and Brazil. For their part, millwork-
    ers, particularly the women and sometimes children
    who fed canes through the rollers, faced loss of limbs
    and sometimes death. “And in these Mills,” wrote En-
    glish visitor Richard Flecknoe in 1654, “the work of
    immediately applying the canes to the Mill being so
    perilous [that] if through drowsiness or heedlessness
    a finger’s end be but engaged between the posts, their
    whole body inevitably follows.”1

    Rendering the precious juice into white crystal
    sugar was also difficult and labor intensive. Workers
    had to boil the juice in huge copper vats, then reduce
    it in a series of smaller vats into a concentrated syrup
    they poured into molds to crystallize. Women were
    usually in charge of whitening the resulting brown
    sugar loaves with wet clay and removing them from
    the molds and packing them for shipment. Euro-
    pean consumers considered white sugar purer than
    brown, “purged” of imperfections. Each phase of the
    process required skill and close monitoring, and fires
    had to be stoked throughout the night. Sugar making

    thus produced a number of task-specific livelihoods,
    such as purger (purifier), mold-maker, and crating
    supervisor. Given its complexity, high capital invest-
    ment, and careful attention to timing, sugar making
    has been described as an early modern precursor of
    industrial, or factory, production. However labeled,
    sugar work was monotonous and occasionally deadly.

    Europeans’ taste for sugar grew slowly at first, but
    by 1600, sugar was an ordinary ingredient in many
    foods. Its association with slavery also gradually
    increased. Numerous slaves labored in the early
    cane fields and mills of the East Atlantic islands
    of Madeira and the Canaries, but the pattern rep-
    licated in the Americas—predominantly A frican
    slaves manning large plantations—appeared first
    on the Portuguese island of São Tomé, off equato-
    rial West A frica. By 1550, the so-called plantation
    complex was established in the Spanish Caribbean
    and Brazil. In the Americas, as in the Canaries, with
    the decimation of local cultures, indigenous slavery
    gave way to A frican slavery.

    Questions to Consider:

    1. How did the rise of Atlantic sugar affect the global economy?
    2. How did it transform livelihoods?

    For Further Information:

    Mintz, Sidney W. Sweetness and Power. New York: Viking, 1985.
    Schwartz, Stuart B., ed. Tropical Babylons: Sugar and the Making of the Atlantic World, 1450–1680. Chapel Hill:

    University of North Carolina Press, 2004.

    1. E. Bradford Burns, ed., A Documentary History of Brazil (New York: A lfred A. K nopf, 1966), 82.

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    Sugar growers near Salvador competed with their counterparts in Pernambuco,
    one of the few surviving proprietary colonies. Each region vied for the greater share
    of total output, with Pernambuco usually ahead. Native Brazilian slaves were ex-
    ploited in large numbers in both regions, but well before 1600 Portuguese planters
    turned to A frica for still more enslaved laborers. Indigenous workers died from dis-
    ease and abuse, as happened in the early Spanish Caribbean, and were also prone
    to run away to the interior. As will be seen in greater detail in the next chapter, the
    Portuguese responded by importing millions of enslaved A fricans from western or
    Atlantic A frica.

    Though more resistant to Old World diseases than their native American
    co-workers, many A fricans died in the cane fields of Brazil, literally worked to
    death. Instead of moderating workloads, improving nutrition and medical care,
    and encouraging family formation, Portuguese masters opted to exhaust the labor
    power of their slaves, the vast majority of them young men. The reason was as log-
    ical as it was cold-hearted: having direct access to more captives at relatively low
    cost, sugar planters “used up” laborers much like mine owners did mita workers in
    Peru. Even when female slaves were introduced and families formed, high child
    mortality rates discouraged reproduction. Brazil would subsequently become so
    dependent on A frica for labor that by the time the slave trade ended in the nine-
    teenth century over 40 percent of all slaves transported across the Atlantic had
    landed in this single destination.

    COUNTERPOINT: The Mapuche of Chile:
    Native America’s Indomitable State

    FOCUS how did the Mapuche of chile manage to resist
    european conquest?

    The climate of southern Chile, a land of rugged coasts and dense forests, is wet
    and cool. Gently rolling hills are interspersed with picturesque lakes, rivers, and
    volcanoes. Near the coast is a temperate rain forest. Fish and wildlife are abun-
    dant. Towering araucaria pines yield nuts rich in fat and protein, and wild berries
    abound in the thickets. This is the homeland of the Mapuche (mah-POOH-cheh),
    or A raucanians (a term derived from the Bay of A rauco), one of the A mericas’
    most resilient native cultures. Across nearly five centuries, they successfully

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    resisted attempted conquests by the Incas, the Spanish, and the
    Chilean nation-state.

    Today, more than five hundred years after Columbus, the
    Mapuche, half a million strong, are still proclaiming their inde-
    pendence. It was only in the 1880s that Chilean armed forces
    managed to partially subdue the Mapuche using modern weap-
    ons. But what of colonial times, the era of the conquistadors?
    There was substantial gold in the Mapuche heartland, yet the
    Spanish failed to conquer them despite knowing this since the
    time of Pizarro. W hy?

    A Culture of Warfare
    Successful Mapuche resistance owed much to cultural patterns.
    As poets, ex-captives, and Mapuche commentators themselves
    noted, this was a fiercely independent people raised to fight. The
    Mapuche reared boys for a life of warfare, apparently before as
    well as after Spanish arrival in the region. Girls were raised to
    produce and store the food surpluses needed for the war effort.
    Despite arriving with horses, steel-edged weapons, and firearms,
    the Spanish fared little better than the Incas against the native
    Chileans.

    There were early successes, however. The first conquistadors in Chile, headed by
    Pedro de Valdivia, managed to reduce a large number of Mapuche to encomienda
    servitude by 1550. R ich gold deposits were subsequently discovered, and Mapuche
    men were forced to work them. Once it became clear that the Spanish were only
    after gold and captive laborers, the Mapuche resisted violently. To drive their point
    home, they captured, killed, and ate portions of Valdivia’s corpse in a great public
    ceremony. Mapuche cannibalism was plainly intended to terrorize the enemy.

    Uprisings Against the Spanish
    W hat followed was a general uprising lasting from 1553 to 1557. Raids on Spanish
    settlements continued until 1598, when the Mapuche captured and ate yet an-
    other governor, Martín García de Loyola. This incident was followed by a mass
    uprising in 1599. It was a resounding success. No Spanish town remained south of
    the Biobío R iver after 1600, and Spanish attempts to reconquer the Mapuche and
    occupy their lands failed throughout the colonial period.

    0
    0 350 Kilometers
    350 Miles
    PACIFIC
    OCEAN
    ATLANTIC
    OCEAN

    Bay of
    Arauco

    Strait of
    Magellan

    Malvinas Is.
    Tierra del

    Fuego
    A
    n
    d
    e

    s

    M
    t

    s
    .

    P
    a
    t
    a
    g
    o

    n
    i

    a
    Santiago

    Valdivia

    Concepción

    �e Mapuche of Chile, c. 1550

    MAPUCHE
    Maule R.

    Biobío R.

    The Mapuche of Chile, c. 1550

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    W hat factors besides a culture of warfare allowed the Mapuche to succeed when
    so many other native American cultures fell to European invaders? As in North
    America’s Great Plains, the introduction of horses by the Spanish enhanced Ma-
    puche warrior mobility. Steel-edged weapons and guns were also captured and
    adopted. Further, the Mapuche “Columbian Exchange” included adopting Old
    World foods and animals such as wheat, apples, chickens, and pigs, markedly in-
    creasing their subsistence base.

    Despite their new mounts and weapons, Chile’s native warriors did not alter
    their style of warfare. Rather than face the better-armed Spanish on the open field,

    Mapuche Man and Woman The Mapuche peoples of Chile proved as resistant to the Spanish as they had been to the
    Incas. Hostilities began in 1549, and by 1599 Mapuche warriors had destroyed all inland Spanish settlements south
    of the Biobío R iver. This image, painted by a Spanish priest who fled the Mapuche in 1600, depicts a Mapuche woman
    with her spinning equipment and trademark horned hairstyle. To the left is the great Mapuche leader Lautaro, who led
    the first uprisings. As is evident, the Mapuche adopted Spanish-style helmets and body armor, which they fashioned
    from the raw hides of introduced cattle. Like the Plains peoples of North A merica, the Mapuche also adopted the horse
    to great effect. (Courtesy of the University of Oviedo Librar y, Spain.)

    C o n c l u s i o n 601

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 601 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    the Mapuche preferred night attacks, long-distance raiding, captive-taking, and
    other tactics later termed guerrilla, or “little war,” by the Spanish. Long bamboo
    lances remained the weapon of choice, and Mapuche men continued to fight bare-
    foot. A lliances were another key to success. The great uprising of 1599 linked
    culturally related neighbors in a confederacy that the Spanish termed “the Indom-
    itable State.”

    Mapuche resistance turned southern Chile into a permanent frontier of Spanish
    South America. The Mapuche, though still frequently at war with their European
    neighbors, had proved the fact of their independence. Throughout the Spanish world,
    they became legendary. Only in the late nineteenth century was a tenuous peace
    established with the Chilean government. Like many treaties between nation-states
    and indigenous peoples, this peace brought not integration but marginalization and
    poverty. As a result, the Mapuche are still fighting.

    Conclusion
    The first wave of European overseas expansion in the Americas was deeply trans-
    formative, and would not be repeated in A frica, Asia, or Oceania for several cen-
    turies. Hundreds of isolated cultures were brought into contact with one another,
    often for the first time. European farmers and ranchers migrated to new landscapes,
    which they and their plants, livestock, and germs quickly transformed. Millions
    of sub-Saharan A fricans, most of them captive laborers, joined a fast-emerging
    Atlantic, and soon globally integrated, world.

    Spearheading this transformation were the uniquely positioned and highly
    motivated Portuguese, armed and outfitted to undertake risky voyages of recon-
    naissance and chart new routes to commercial success abroad. A lthough most
    interested in material gain, the Portuguese also promoted a militant Christianity
    while establishing a global network of trading posts. In Brazil they took another
    tack, establishing hundreds of slave-staffed sugar plantations.

    Early modern Spaniards sought the same gold, spices, sugar, and slaves that
    motivated their Portuguese neighbors, but after encountering the Americas, they
    turned away from trading posts in favor of territorial conquest. Those they de-
    feated were forced to extract wealth and accept conversion to the Catholic faith.
    Ironic as it may seem, it was imperial peoples such as the Aztecs and Incas who
    proved most vulnerable to the Spanish onslaught, and more especially to foreign
    disease. Mobile, scattered cultures such as the Mapuche of Chile proved far more
    resistant. Even at the margins, however, violent conquest and the beginnings of the
    Atlantic slave trade transformed livelihoods for millions. Some individuals swept

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    up in the early phases of colonial encounter and the Columbian Exchange, such
    as Malintzin, found advantages and even a means to social gain. Countless others
    found themselves reduced to servitude in an emerging Atlantic world defined by
    race as much as by wealth or ancestry. This new order forged in the Americas would
    soon affect much of western A frica.

    review
    The major global development in this chapter: European expansion across the Atlantic and its profound
    consequences for societies and cultures worldwide.

    Important Events

    1441 First sub-Saharan Africans captured and taken by ship to Portugal

    1492 Fall of Granada and expulsion of Jews in Spain; Columbus reaches America

    1494 Treaty of Tordesillas divides known world between Portugal and Spain

    1498 Vasco da Gama becomes first European to reach India by sea

    1500 Portuguese reach Brazil

    1519–1521 Spanish conquest of Aztec Mexico

    1519–1522 Magellan’s ship circumnavigates the globe

    1532–1536 Spanish conquest of Inca Peru

    1545 Discovery of silver deposits at Potosí

    1549 Portuguese establish royal capital of Salvador; first Jesuits arrive in Brazil

    1555 French establish colony in Brazil’s Guanabara Bay

    1564 Discovery of mercury mines in Huancavelica, Peru

    1567 Portuguese drive French from Brazil

    1570–1571 Inquisition established in Lima and Mexico City

    1572 Mita labor draft and mercury amalgamation formalized in Potosí

    1592 Potosí reaches peak production

    1599 Great Mapuche uprising in Chile

    603

    smi49245_ch16_566-603 603 07/13/18 01:22 PM

    KEY TERMS
    Columbian Exchange (p. 582)
    conquistador (p. 583)
    encomienda (p. 580)

    feitoria (p. 574)
    Inquisition (p. 593)
    mestizo (p. 594)

    mita (p. 591)
    repartimiento (p. 591)

    CHAPTER OVERVIEW QUESTIONS
    1. W hat were the main biological and environmen-

    tal consequences of European expansion into the
    Atlantic after 1492?

    2. W hat roles did misunderstanding and chance
    play in the conquests of the Aztecs and Incas?

    3. How did Eurasian demand for silver and sugar
    help bring about the creation of a linked Atlantic
    world?

    MAKING CONNECTIONS
    1. How did Spanish and Portuguese imperial aims

    differ from those of the Incas and Aztecs (see
    Chapter 15)?

    2. How would you compare the Spanish conquest
    of Mexico with the Ottoman conquest of Con-
    stantinople discussed in Chapter 14?

    3. W hat role did European consumers play in the
    rise of the A merican plantation complex?

    4. How did global demand for silver affect the lives
    of ordinary people in the Spanish colonies?

    For further research into the topics covered in this chapter, see the Bibliography at the end of the book.
    For additional primary sources from this period, see Sources of World in the Making.

    M a k i n g C o n n e c t i o n s

    • PART 3: The Early Modern World, 1450–1750
    • 16: The Rise of an Atlantic World 1450–1600
      The Major Global Development in this Chapter: European expansion across the Atlantic and its profound consequences for societies and cultures worldwide.
      backstory
      Guns, Sails, and Compasses: Europeans Venture Abroad
      Motives for Exploration
      Technologies of Exploration
      Portugal Takes the Lead
      New Crossroads, First Encounters: The European Voyages of Discovery 1492–1521
      Christopher Columbus in a New World
      From Independence to Servitude: The Encomienda System
      Columbus’s Successors
      The Columbian Exchange
      Spanish Conquests in the Americas 1519–1600
      The Fall of Aztec Mexico
      The Fall of Inca Peru
      The Conquest: Myths and Realities
      A New Empire in the Americas: New Spain and Peru 1535–1600
      American Silver and the Global Economy
      American Silver and Everyday Life
      Brazil by Accident: The Portuguese in the Americas 1500–1600
      Native Encounters and Foreign Competitors
      Bitter Sugar: Slavery and the Plantation Complex in the Early Atlantic World 1530–1600
      COUNTERPOINT The Mapuche of Chile: Native America’s Indomitable State
      A Culture of Warfare
      Uprisings Against the Spanish
      Conclusion
      Review
      SPECIAL FEATURES
      READING THE PAST: Tlatelolcan Elders Recall the Conquest of Mexico
      SEEING THE PAST: Malintzin and the Meeting Between Moctezuma and Cortés
      LIVES AND LIVELIHOODS: Atlantic Sugar Producers

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