Question
The Colonial Order in the Americas History 111 – World History since 1500
Spring 2022
Jorge Minella ([email protected])
Recap ~1492-1560
Disastrous first contact in Hispaniola and other Caribbean Islands.
Disease, violence, encomienda.
Conquest of the Inca and Aztec Empires.
Disease, timing and circumstances, Spanish tactics.
Silver.
Portuguese Brazil.
Coastal colony.
The “Colonial Middle”
~1550-1750.
Economic and political models established.
Decreased military conflict.
Native Americans dealing with the new reality.
Enslaved Africans forming communities and resisting.
Plan of Lima, capital of the Spanish Vice- Royalty of Peru, 1744.
This Lecture
Case study: Spanish America.
Colonial Government.
Economy.
Aspects of society.
Slavery and sugar.
Brazil, Caribbean.
Resistance.
Spanish America: Colonial Government
Colonial Government
Goals: wealth and allegiance.
Europe to America: distance.
Reliable but slow communication.
Impact how to govern. Main Spanish and Portuguese Sea Routes.
Spanish Colonial Government
Council of the Indies.
Spanish subjects with interests in Spain in key positions in the colonial administration.
Viceroyalty; Provinces.
Audiencias: high appeal court.
Town Councils (Cabildos): controlled by Spanish settlers.
“Two Republics”
Survival of native communities. Tribute and labor.
The “Republic of Indians.” Indigenous self-government at village level. Indigenous town councils.
The “Republic of Spaniards.” Everything else.
Spanish America: Economy and Society
Two Republics and Stability
Traditional native elites. Colonizers – Natives intermediation.
Relatively negotiated imposition of colonial rule.
Audiencias. Some relief to grievances.
The Colonial Economy
Almost self-sufficient early on.
Ranching and farming developed quickly.
Favorable environment; workforce.
Export-focused; monopolistic trade through Seville.
Primary activity: silver mining.
Secondary export products: gold, cacao, dyes, hides, and others.
Port of Seville, Spain. All trade from Spanish America had to go through Seville.
Native Labor
Rotational labor drafts.
Communities forced to provide quotas of laborers for a certain amount of time.
New Spain: repartimiento.
Peru: mita.
Similar to native pre-conquest labor drafts, but harsher.
Facilitated by the “two republics” system.
Spanish America: Society, Race, and Religion
Race and Social Hierarchy
Race and Ethnicity in the organization of the colonies.
Natives: tribute and servitude.
Africans: slavery.
Mixed-races.
“castas.”
Also inferior by law and discriminated in practice.
But Complicated social hierarchization based on racial boundaries.
Calidad
Racial boundaries blurred by casta population.
Calidad (“quality”).
Physical.
Cultural.
And social attributes.
Position in society.
Casta painting containing complete set of 16 casta combinations. 18th
Century Mexico. Unknown author.
Catholicism
Provided some common ground.
Religious conformity expected.
Catholicism blended with indigenous and African religious practices.
Coricancha (Inca’s Golden Temple) walls with the Spanish Convent of Santo Domingo built on top of it.
Sugar and Slavery
Slavery: Where and Why?
Slavery developed where... Compulsory native labor not advantageous to colonists.
Diminished indigenous populations.
Highly profitable activities to compensate for capital investment (purchase and maintenance of slaves)
More often in export agriculture.
But also in urban settings.
Slavery in the Americas
Mass slavery, forming slave societies.
Mostly rural.
Plantations.
Some mining and ranching areas.
Auxiliary slavery, forming societies with slaves.
Urban centers.
Service sector.
Sugar Plantations
High demand in Europe for sugar.
First in Hispaniola and Mexico.
Thrived in Pernambuco and Bahia (Brazil), and later in the Caribbean.
Transitioned from enslavement of natives to massive use of enslaved Africans.
Plantations
Specialized commercial enterprises.
Large investment capital required: machinery and slaves.
Economic driving forces of Brazil and the Caribbean.
Dependent domestic economy.
Specialization of the workforce.
Harsh labor regime.
Plantation owners and transatlantic sugar merchants profited.
Early 19th century representation of a Brazilian sugar mill.
Gold and Slavery in Brazil
Gold and diamonds found in the interior.
Shaped eighteenth-century Brazil.
Interiorization.
Slavery in the mining district.
Gold collected by enslaved Africans in colonial Brazil would help fund the industrial revolution in England.
Meanwhile, in the Caribbean
17th and 18th centuries.
Dutch spread the sugar plantation model in the Caribbean after occupying sugar producing areas of Portuguese Brazil (1630-1654)
Indentured servitude replaced by large scale slavery.
Harsher than in Brazil.
Racial distinction and racist hierarchies strongly enforced in colonies controlled by northern Europeans.
Violence
Public punishment.
Center of towns and cities.
Show of power of Masters and colonial authorities.
Public Punishment. Johann Moritz Rugendas. (c. 1820s.)
Resistance
Indigenous Resistance
Flight to the margins.
Refusal and rebellion. Faced Spaniard
violence.
Legal action.
Page of the Codex Tepetlaoztoc, c. 1550.
Urban Slavery
Services, workshops, construction, transportation.
Regional capitals and port cities.
Increased social tension.
Public torture and execution.
Urban Blacks and Freedom Strategies
Some access to money.
Self-Purchase.
Still, uncertainty faced freed individuals and urban Black communities.
Jean-Baptiste Debret. Urban Slavery, early 19th century Rio de Janeiro.
Black Lay Brotherhoods
Support and solidarity networks.
From the 18th century, common in urban centers and mining districts (Brazil).
Secured funds to purchase freedom.
Additionally, sought to provide:
Health assistance.
Pay for decent burials.
Legal advice.
Rural Slaves
Self-purchase more difficult.
Harsher labor regimes.
Less access to monetized transactions.
Formation of runaway communities.
Main strategy towards freedom.
Frequent in plantation zones.
Quilombos in Portuguese America.
Palenques in Spanish America.
Maroon Communities.
Maroon Communities
Free Black communities.
Formed by runaway slaves since the beginning of colonization.
Frequent formation in plantation zones.
Threat to the established colonial order.
Map of Pernambuco, Brazil, representing the maroon community of Palmares. Frans Post, 1647.
Quilombo of Palmares
Largest of the Americas.
Formed during the Dutch invasion of Brazil (1630-1654)
Sugar-growing area.
Confederation.
10,000 to 20,000 people.
Zumbi of Palmares (Leader)
Defeated in 1694, after decades of fight and negotiation.
Monument to Zumbi, leader of the Parlmares maroon Community. Downtown Salvador, Brazil.
Native and African Resistance
Rural zones: free maroon communities.
Urban centers: self-purchase and lay brotherhoods.
Indigenous Americans also resisted.
Shaped colonial societies.
Today: fight against the legacy of slavery, overexploitation, and displacement.
- The Colonial Order in the Americas
- Recap ~1492-1560
- The “Colonial Middle”
- This Lecture
- Spanish America: Colonial Government
- Colonial Government
- Spanish Colonial Government
- “Two Republics”
- Spanish America: Economy and Society
- Two Republics and Stability
- The Colonial Economy
- Native Labor
- Spanish America: Society, Race, and Religion
- Race and Social Hierarchy
- Calidad
- Número do slide 16
- Catholicism
- Sugar and Slavery
- Slavery: Where and Why?
- Slavery in the Americas
- Sugar Plantations
- Plantations
- Gold and Slavery in Brazil
- Meanwhile, in the Caribbean
- Violence
- Resistance
- Indigenous Resistance
- Urban Slavery
- Urban Blacks and Freedom Strategies
- Black Lay Brotherhoods
- Rural Slaves
- Maroon Communities
- Quilombo of Palmares
- Native and African Resistance