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• 1490s: America was discovered; Columbus seeks gold then empire building. Missionaries join him. Encomienda system began. Conquest of the Americas • Early 1500s: Some missionaries speak out about poor treatment of Natives. Native temples are burned & churches built on top of them. The Pope declares that Native Americans have souls. Smallpox & Typhus epidemics ravage Native Empires. The Aztecs were conquered (in part by smallpox). The Hacienda System began. French, Dutch, begin exploring the Americas. African slaves begin to arrive in the New World. • Late 1500s: Missionaries debate whether or not Natives should be converted by force. Smallpox & Influenza epidemics ravage Native communities. European colonies in the Americas are established. • Early 1600s: Diphtheria & Measles Epidemics ravage Native communities (95% of the Native population has been killed by disease at this point). • So how did Europeans conquer America?? Mayan Urban Centers - For trade mostly • • • • Chichen Itza • Chichen Itza Mayan Culture • Religion: Tikal (Guatemala) Copan Palenque Uxmal – (oosh-mal) Conquest timeline – Pantheistic; good & bad gods – Ceremonies involved dance, competition, performance, prayer, & sacrifice • God’s needed nourishment from humans to work. • offerings of food, flowers, incense, gold, jade, humans, etc. Pierced and cut bodies to make blood offerings – Elaborate afterlife • Developed an accurate solar calendar Chichen Itza Tikal – Partially due to maize growing – World created five times and destroyed four times. • Developed advanced math & astronomy. • Only advanced writing system in the Americas Palenque – 800 hieroglyphic symbols – Wrote books on bark-paper (3 survive today) • Physical Beauty Copan Uxmal The Aztecs • Homeland: Valley of Mexico (Mountain base 7500 ft. above sea level) – Long, backward sloping forehead – Crossed-eyes The Aztecs • Arrived 1200 CE & adopted local ways (including warring & blood sacrifices) 1 The Inca • Homeland: South American. Andean Mountains. Centered in Southern Peru. Incan Urban Centers • Master engineers: no iron tools, no wheel, huge block stone walls, no mortar, still standing • Machu Picchu, Cuzco • All roads led to Cuzco (through mountains from Ecuador to Chile; tunnels, bridges) • Aqueducts • Advanced medicine & surgery • Kingdom established around 1200 CE. Incan Dominance • 1438 Incan King conquered neighboring land. • By 1500 – empire was 2,500 miles long, 80 provinces, 16 million people • Conquered through diplomacy & military force. – Allowed territories to keep customs & surrender promising loyalty to Incan state • • • • Created extensive roads to tie empire together One official language: Quechua Founded schools to teach Incan ways Government controlled all economic activity – Regulated production & distribution of goods – Little to no private trade allowed • All subjects: forced labor (mita) for certain number of days each year – Public works projects: state farmland, craft goods for state warehouses, Incan roads Three Complex Cultures Disappeared • 1521: Aztecs conquered by Spanish through War & Disease, led by Cortez. • 1532: Incas conquered by Spanish through War & Deception, led by Cortez’s cousin, Pizarro. • 1697: Maya (with no centralized political center) had been subdued in the Yucatan & Guatemala through multiple Wars & Disease. Incan Culture • Social Structure = inflexible & Hierarchical with emperor at the top. • Government took care of its people – Stored surplus food for famines – Dependent on central authority • Kept records on knotted strings (quipu) • Developed elaborate calendar • Religion: Top: Quipu Bottom: Incan Mummy – pantheistic, Incan ruler considered descendent of sun god – religious orders like monks & nuns – Heaven, hell, resurrection of body after death After the conquest of the Aztec & Inca • Former Aztec & Mayan lands = Viceroyalty of New Spain – Viceroy: governor (vice roi = assistant to the king) • Former Incan lands = Viceroyalty of Peru • Spaniards made themselves regional chieftains – 1/5 of wealth discovered/stolen belonged to Spain – Remainder belonged to conquistadores – Agriculture (new crops + free labor!) 2 Economic Systems • Encomienda System – 1493 until 1791 – Spanish had the right to demand uncompensated labor & tribute – Riches of the land should belong to Christians – Led to the abuses discussed by Las Casas & the “Black Legend” – Ended partially due to Mestizo population & disease • Could not be enslaved • Became harder to tell who was Native and who was European. Economic Systems • Trade – Goods from Spanish colonies had to be carried in Spanish ships twice a year • Tried to prevent piracy • Restricted what was taken from colonies – Once a year a shipload of gold/silver to Spain – Much more silver than Aztec gold until 1640s • So much Spanish silver was used to buy goods from China, that for a while pesos were accepted as legal tender. • Caused inflation & decline in Spain Economic Systems • Hacienda System – Hacienda = a grant of land • Can refer to plantations, mines, even factories (later) • More about Status than creating real wealth • Owner of the land = Patron • Those who worked the land were serfs = Peones – 1529: Spanish crown gave Cortes Oaxaca (current day Moralos) • right to all Indians on the land & power of life/death over them – Catholic Church was given huge haciendas • Linked the Church with the landowning class – Existed until 1917 when abolished during the revolution (but traces still exist today) Political Systems • Started with unlimited power being given to conquistadors • Then replaced by royal council & governor (viceroy) – Military and judicial matters = council – administration dominated by peninsulares (nobles) – Avenue for upward mobility – Europeans filled top tier positions 2nd Viceroy of Peru 3 Society & Culture A Class System based on purity of Spanish blood • Peninsulares – born in Spain – felt superior to criollos – Held highest positions in society • Criollos – Many descendants of conquistadores • Pure Spanish, but born in Americas – Owned haciendas and mines – Often richer – Focused on intellectual and literary pursuits; read works of the Enlightenment (although banned by Church) Society & Culture A Class System based on purity of Spanish blood • Women (Criollo) – Patriarchal society – No legal status – Family Honor depended on good behavior – Tried to marry daughters of criollos to new peninsulares – Educated by tutors at home, no higher education – Widows had considerable power; often ran family business successfully Society & Culture A Class System based on purity of Spanish blood • Mestizos – Created roles for themselves in society – Originally despised; “mongrols” – Became intermediaries and interpreters between elites and Indians – Excluded from universities, church positions, gov’t – Could be soldiers; not officers – Could be artisans apprentice; not master – Could be tenant farmers or hacienda managers – Many other categories of “mixed blood” people had less rights Society & Culture A Class System based on purity of Spanish blood Virgen de Guadalupe • African Americans & surviving Indians – At the bottom – Enslaved – Non-Spanish women less restricted because Indian & African societies were less patriarchal – Some Indians lived in remote towns whose only contact was priests and tribute collector, until needed for labor – Indians were seen as “children” in the eyes of the Church – Eventually adopted Christianity • Identified with consoling figure of the Virgin Mary (like their earth goddess) • Identified with crucified Christ (suffering was like their own) • Catholic saints blended with pre-Columbian gods • Sometimes Incan or Aztec deity sculptures were hidden under statue's skirts • Legend: – Seen by Juan Diego (saint) in 1531 – Spoke Nahuatl – Told him to build an Abbey • Mexico” "La Virgen Morena“ – "The brown-skinned Virgin" • meant to represent both the Virgin Mary and the indigenous Mexican goddess Tonantzin – a way for 16th c. Spaniards to gain converts – may have allowed 16th c. natives to practice their native religion 4 After the conquest of the Aztec & Inca • Native American populations did not start to recover until the mid-17th c. • 19th c. population of Americas recovered, but as a mix of black, white, and native population. 5