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1492

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Title: 1492


1
Early Latin America
  • 1492 1788

2
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3
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4
1491
5
Spanish Portuguese Cruelty
6
People
  • Ferdinand of Aragon
  • Isabella of Castile
  • Bartolome de las Casas
  • Hernan Cortez
  • Mocteczuma II
  • Francisco Pizarro
  • Francisco Vazquez de Coronado
  • Pedro de Valdivia
  • Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz
  • Pedro Alvarez Cabral
  • Charles III
  • Jose de Galvez
  • Marquis of Pombal
  • Tupac Amaru

7
Groups Concepts
  • Corregidores
  • Casa de la Contratacion
  • Consulado
  • Council of the Indies
  • Letrados
  • Viceroyalties
  • Paulistas
  • Hidalgos
  • Grandees
  • Encomienda
  • Mita
  • Potosi
  • Huancavelica
  • Galleons
  • Recopilacion
  • Audiencia
  • Haciendas

8
Places Concepts
  • Hispanola
  • Mexico City
  • New Spain
  • Captaincies
  • War of Spanish Succession
  • Columbian Exchange
  • Treaty of Tordesillas

9
Viceroy
Pennisulares
Creoles
Mestizos
Mulatos
Indians
Slaves
10
Reconquesta
  • 1492
  • Muslims ruled from 700s
  • Retake Iberia from the Muslims
  • Inquisition
  • Expel Jews
  • Atlantic reconnaissance

11
Iberian Traditions
  • Patriarchal society
  • Nobles landholders
  • Professional bureaucracy
  • Based on legal system
  • No separation of church state
  • Slavery

12
Chronology of Conquest
3 Time Periods
  • 1st Period
  • 1492 1570
  • Est. administration economy
  • 2nd Period
  • 1570 1700
  • Colonial institutions society
  • 1 M people under European control
  • 3rd Period
  • 18th Century
  • Reform reorganization
  • Set stage for dissatisfaction revolution

13
Caribbean Experience
  • MODEL FOR COLONIZATION
  • Columbus
  • Formed encomiendas
  • Enslave Indians
  • Diseases destroy indigenous populations
  • Bartolome de las Casas tried to end abuse
  • Urban centers on European grid model
  • Build universities cathedrals
  • Magistrates control government
  • Church joins process
  • Women African slaves

14
Paths of Conquest
  • IMPLEMENTED BY INDIVIDUAL INITIATIVES
  • Cortez in Mexico 1519 Aztec Mexica
  • Amerindian allies devastating disease
  • Capture Tenochititlan Moctezuma II
  • New Spain
  • Pizarro 1535 S. America Inca
  • Atahualpa
  • Weakened by civil war
  • Built capital at Lima

15
Paths of Conquest
  • Francisco Vazquez de Coronado
  • 1540
  • U.S. Southwest
  • Pedro de Valdivia
  • 1541
  • Central Chile Santiago
  • By 1570
  • 192 Spanish urban settlements in
    New Spain

16
The Conquerors
  • Regulated by agreement b/w exploration leaders
    sovereign
  • Authority for promises of sharing spoils
  • Men of conquest are not soldiers
  • New nobility over Amerindian peasantry
  • Epidemic diseases end any resistance
  • Conquest ends by 1570

17
Conquest Morality
  • Conquest, exploitation, conversion justifiable?
  • Justification
  • Natives were not human
  • thus subordinate
  • Defense
  • De las Casa defended natives
  • they are human
  • Outcome
  • De las Casas wins but much too late

18
Destruction Transformation
  • Indigenous people suffered from conquest
  • Demographic catastrophe
  • Central Mexico
  • 25 M declined to less than 2 M
  • Spanish response
  • Concentrate survivors into towns and confiscate
    their land
  • Completely transformed their society

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Exploitation
  • Spanish keep native institutions
  • Hold their nobles responsible
  • Labor debt tax collecting
  • Enslavement except in warfare was
    forbidden by 16th C.
  • Encomiendas created by king
  • Land grants to conquerors
  • Used natives for labor taxes

21
Encomienda
  • Land grants by crown
  • Modified because
  • Feared rise of new nobility
  • Disappeared by 1620s
  • State contracted native labor
  • Used in mines state projects
  • Indians adapted Spanish culture to conform to
    their own

22
The Great Exchange
  • Columbian Exchange
  • Massive biological exchange
  • Changed both the new and old world
  • Exchanged crops domestic animals Diseases
  • Caused
  • Population increases in Old World
  • Counterintuitive need for more colonization

23
Colonial Economic Systems
  • New Spain
  • 80 agriculture ranching
  • Mining also an essential
    activity
  • Commercial enterprise
  • Exchange of manufactured
    goods for raw materials
  • Caused Latin America to become dependent

24
Silver Heart of Empire
  • Silver major commodity
  • Mines in Mexico Peru
  • Forced Native American labor
  • First as slaves then as paid labor
  • Govt. monopoly with individual investment
  • Owed the crown one fifth of production.
  • Potosi Bolivia largest mine.

25
Haciendas
  • New Spain
  • Agricultural mining economy
  • Spanish rural estates emerged with decline of
    native populations
  • Haciendas become source of aristocratic wealth.

26
Industry Commerce
  • Herding economy sheep
  • Led to women working in sweatshops textiles
  • Silver ruled commercial system
  • Caused major inflation in Europe.
  • Spain controlled trade and commerce
  • Manila Galleons
  • Galleons transport b/w China New World
  • Employed convoy system to protect silver fleets
    from pirates

27
Political Systems
  • Church State
  • Papal land grants / conversion
  • Treaty of Tordesillas 1494
  • Viceroys represented king / legislative /
    judicial / military power
  • Council of the Indies
  • Clergy both secular religious function
  • Inquisition controlled morality orthodoxy.

28
Plantation Economy
  • Portuguese in Brazil
  • 1500
  • After French show interest Portuguese nobles move
    on the area
  • Granted captaincies
  • Jesuits arrive
  • Indian resistance broken b/c
  • Disease military force missionary action

29
Sugar Slavery
  • Brazil world leader in sugar
  • Very expensive
  • Very labor intensive / single crop
  • Hierarchy
  • Nobles priests
  • Merchants Govt. officials bureaucrats
  • Bureaucracy gt lawyers

30
Labor Force
  • MISSIONARIES
  • Ran ranches, mills and schools
  • Mixed bloods, poor whites, Indians Africans who
    were gt artisans, small farmers, herders or free
    workers
  • Slaves at the bottom 1/2 pop.
  • 1st Native American
  • African

31
Brazil Gold
  • Brazil lost its place as leader. . .sugar
  • Gold discovered by Paulistas
  • Minas Gerais in Brazil
  • Mines controlled by Portugal
  • Does not contribute to Portuguese economic
    development
  • Allowed them to import manufactured goods instead
    of making their own.
  • Very costly mistake. Big Stupid??

32
Hapsburg Rule
  • 1580 1640 Portugal Spanish share Hapsburg
    ruler
  • Netherlands in revolt
  • War of Spanish Succession
  • British, French, Dutch create sugar plantations
    in Caribbean
  • Spain looses sugar monopoly

33
Multiracial Societies
  • SOCIEDAD DE LAS CASTAS
  • European men Native American women
  • Mestizo population
  • Similar process with African slaves
  • Social Hierarchy
  • PENINSULARES- European born settlers
  • CREOLES - New World born Europeans
  • Would later lead independence movements
  • MESTIZOS Mixed races European Native Am.
    Africans any combination

34
Peninsulares
Creoles
Mestizos
Slaves
35
18th C. Reforms
  • Spain Portugal
  • 18th C. Intellectual movement
  • New demographic economic trends
  • European population increases
  • Pressure valve colonies
  • Long term important consequences detrimental
  • Amigos del pais - reformers

36
Shifting Balance of Power Trade
  • Spain weakened
  • Poor rulers, foreign wars, internal civil
    economic problems
  • France Britain Holland rise
  • Spain mercantile political system I
  • War of Spanish Succession
  • Treaty of Utrecht 1713
  • Bourbon rule in Spain

37
Pombal Brazil
  • Marquis of Pombal
  • Portuguese reformer
  • 1755 1776
  • Suppressed opposition
  • Jesuits expelled 1759
  • Agricultural monopolies stimulation
  • Mixed marriages encouraged
  • Little change effected

38
Reforms to Revolts
  • Iberian colonies shared global growth
  • Economic boom gtend of 18th C.
  • Reforms disrupt power patterns
  • Revolts
  • Comunero Revolt N. Granada
  • Tupac Amaru revolt in Peru Indians
  • Illustrates local dissatisfaction with Imperial
    policies.

39
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40
Latin America Global Context
  • Portugal Spain
  • Very large colonies
  • Global interaction
  • Recreated Iberia w/ local influences
  • Surviving Indian populations multicultural
    multiethnic society
  • Slavery Africangt role in society
  • Latin American transition is distinct from the
    west but related to it.

41
Enduring Questions
  • Trace patterns of economic political
    development in New Spain.
  • Examine how those patterns impact Latin America
    throughout the time periods.
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