Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
the Inkans as tyrants and all Andeans as intrinsically backward. They
invoked St. Augustine’s criticism of pagan cultures in arguing that
conquest and authoritarian rule were necessary to force Americans
to give up unnatural practices such as idolatry, human sacrifi ces, and
cannibalism (a charge that had no merit in the Andes). Depicting New
World peoples as Aristotelian “natural slaves” lacking the ability to
reason, they characterized Spanish labor demands as progressive and
civilizing. Clerical apologists ruled conclusively that the
encomien-
deros
had a right to expect reasonable service from their subjects in
return for teaching them discipline and saving their souls. They also
ensured that the critical and indigenously Andean histories produced
by Don Felipe and Garcialaso de la Vega did not see the full light of
day. Refl ecting the need to cover up the messy realities of empire,
Spanish courtiers and imperial offi cials kept the most critical sections
of their voluminous histories out of print.
Moral debates aside, the metropolitan authorities were reluctant
to listen to Las Casas or enact serious reforms because they needed
labor to develop the overseas empire.
Encomienderos
usually used
Indian tributaries as agricultural workers, but in Peru they also
adapted Inka tribute systems to turn Andeans into miners. Nevertheless, the
encomienda
system could not produce enough labor to
meet the empire’s needs, which meant that the Spaniards inevitably
defi ed the Crown’s ban on slave raiding in the Americas. Desperate
for labor, they sent hundreds of thousands of Central American slaves
to the Caribbean sugar islands and Mexican and Andean mines in
the fi rst half of the sixteenth century. When local resistance and the
general demographic collapse of American populations dried up these
reserves, Spanish entrepreneurs turned to the African slave trade to
meet their labor needs.
Las Casas and the reformers eventually forced the Council of the
Indies, which had ultimate authority over Spanish colonies in the
Americas, to do a better job of protecting New World peoples. Spanish offi cials had few concerns about the plight of African slaves, but
they made a show of benevolence in the Americas to maintain the
moral veneer of empire. The “New Laws” of 1542 therefore renewed
the prohibition on American slave raiding, decreed that tribute be
paid in money rather than labor, and banned the creation of new
encomiendas
. Subject Americans still had to toil for the Spanish, but
128 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
the reforms required employers to provide them with reasonable pay
and working conditions. On paper, the New Laws appeared to restore
morality to Spanish imperial rule. In actuality, they were unenforceable. Metropolitan authority in the overseas empire remained weak,
and the extractive imperial economy simply had to have huge inputs
of forced labor. In New Spain, local Spanish resistance to the New
Laws convinced the viceroy not to even try to apply them; in Peru
there were
encomiendero
revolts.
Spain’s embarrassing inability to exercise real authority in the
Americas stemmed from the administrative and communication
problems confronting all early modern empire builders. It was hard
for the Crown to hold its subordinates accountable when it took eight
months for a message from the imperial court to reach Peru. Charles
V and Philip II were two of the most powerful rulers in the sixteenth
century, but they had direct control only over the Kingdom of Castile
and ruled the rest of their European realms as separate kingdoms.
The Habsburg Spanish emperors theoretically had full control of
the Americas as an inheritance from Isabella and the Crown of Castile. Initially, the Castilian Casa de Contratación (house of trade) had
responsibility for both commerce and governance in the New World,
but in 1524 the Council of Indies took over its duties. Administratively, the council divided the Spanish Americas into the viceroyalties, which they subdivided into smaller administrative units based
on the jurisdiction of district courts of appeal (
audiencias
), regional
magistracies (
corregimientos
), and urban municipalities (
cabildos
).
At fi rst glance, this formal chain of authority appeared to be a departure from the systems of indirect rule practiced by the Romans and
Umayyads. Indeed, Spanish imperial law laid out a precise hierarchy
of direct and formal bureaucratic rule in the Americas.
Predictably, however, imperial authority in the Spanish Americas was as faint and circumscribed as it was in earlier empires and
caliphates. Viceroys ignored royal instructions and laws they deemed
unworkable or disruptive simply by declaring
obedezco pero no cum-
plo
, “I obey but do not carry out.” The emperors never tried to force
the issue. They knew their reach was limited and generally tolerated
disobedience if it was accompanied by regular tribute deliveries and
affi rmations of loyalty.
The Catholic Church was another power unto itself in the Americas.
Although a 1508 papal bull gave the Spanish Crown the authority to
Spanish
Peru 129
appoint clergy and create dioceses in the New World, distance allowed
both the regular Church and Catholic religious orders considerable
freedom of action. Some clerics, such as Las Casas, were passionate
defenders of Indian rights, but most churchmen collaborated actively
with local imperial interests.
The most infl uential force in Spanish America, however, was the
settlers who followed on the heels of the conquistadors. Over time,
these colonists eclipsed imperial administrators and churchmen as the
dominant power in the New World. Ancient and medieval empires
rewarded victorious soldiers with land grants in conquered territories,
but the Spanish Empire facilitated civilian colonization on a new and
unprecedented scale. Most colonists came from Spain, but the wealth
of the Americas also attracted migrants from almost every state in
western Europe and, via the Spanish Philippines, China and South
Asia. By the turn of the seventeenth century, locally born Spaniards
(creoles) outnumbered recent immigrants, and by 1650 there were
approximately half a million settlers in the Spanish colonies who
claimed European origins.
Spanish women made this self-sustaining European New World
population possible. Initially, the conquistadors had the implicit permission of the Crown to follow the Roman and Umayyad example of
treating subject American women as imperial plunder. As in earlier
times, the resulting relationships ranged from marriage to concubinage to outright rape. In some cases conquistador leaders used local
women as translators or took Aztec and Inkan wives to stake their
claims to noble status. The resulting hybrid generation of mestizos
complicated the imperial project by unacceptably bridging the line
between citizen and subject. Charles V addressed the problem by
requiring
encomienderos
to marry and encouraging Spanish women
to immigrate to the Americas, and many young women answered his
call in the hope of inheriting the fortunes of elderly
encomienderos
.
The Americas proved such a powerful magnet because European
origins brought privilege and autonomy in colonial societies stratifi ed
on the basis of “blood.” The Inkan chronicler Don Felipe noted bitterly that even the lowest Spanish “tramps” used their exalted status
to live off the Andean populace. “Their refrain is always ‘Give me a
servant’ or ‘Give me a present.’ . . . Every day of their lives they eat
about twelve pesos’ worth of food and ride off without paying, but
still give themselves the airs of gentlemen.”17 Not only could common
130 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
Iberian-born women marry far above their social station in the New
World, but their blood also gave them authority over Andean men as
breeding trumped gender as the key marker of imperial citizenship.
Yet it was diffi cult to establish a clear distinction between Spanish
citizen and Andean subject. The conquistadors married royal Inkan
women to buttress their claims to noble status, and Spanish men of
all stripes used their privileged status to exploit Andean women sexually. The mestizo children produced by these encounters confused
imperial social boundaries and made a mockery of Spanish attempts
to defi ne identity on the basis of inheritance and blood. The situation
grew even more complicated when the Spaniards introduced African
slaves into the Andes, who in turn produced children with Europeans,
Andeans, and mestizos. In the seventeenth century, the imperial state
tried to restore a measure of social order by codifying a confusing
hierarchy of racial categories, known as
castas
, based on the percentage of a person’s European, Andean, and African ancestry.
Imperial offi cials and creoles worried constantly about the contamination of Spanish blood, but the Crown’s foremost concern was
to keep the wealth of the Americas fl owing into Spain. In an era when
mercantile-minded rulers strove to build precious metal reserves, the
Spanish Americas accounted for 80 percent of the world’s silver and
70 percent of its gold. The sixteen million kilograms of silver that
streamed into Spain between 1503 and 1660 was a windfall three
times larger than the combined silver holdings of the rest of Europe.
This bonanza helped lay the groundwork for the development of a
global monetary system by allowing Europeans to purchase goods in
Asia. The Crown claimed 20 percent of the New World bullion, which
the Habsburgs used as collateral for the enormous loans that funded
their European wars.
Mercantilism also inspired Spanish attempts to maintain a strict
monopoly on commerce within the overseas empire. For most of the
sixteenth century, transatlantic shippers had to work through the
ports of Seville and Havana and sail in strictly organized biannual
fl eets. Trade with the Philippines, which was Spain’s primary entrepôt
for trade with China and Japan, was similarly restricted to one to
two galleons that made one round trip per year between Manila and
Mexico. Otherwise, Spanish authorities forbade the colonies to trade
with each other and tried to bar all foreign merchants from its overseas territories.
Spanish
Peru 131
Spain, however, lacked the military and economic means to
enforce this closed commercial system. Spanish empire builders
bit off more than they could chew in acquiring such vast overseas
holdings. Castilian pride and nascent Spanish nationalism led them
to try to keep the imperial spoils for themselves, but they needed
foreign manpower and investment to run and develop their colonies.
This meant that New World wealth eventually fl owed to bankers, soldiers for hire, and military suppliers throughout Habsburg Europe.
Similarly, the enormous importance of early modern Europe’s trade
with Asia meant that Chinese merchants ultimately acquired nearly
half of the American silver.18
More importantly, New World plunder actually contributed to
the bankruptcy of the Spanish Crown. The fl ood of wealth into the
Iberian Peninsula allowed Spaniards to purchase the best products
Europe had to offer, but it drove up prices and destroyed the once
vital Castilian textile industry. The emperors themselves were the
worst offenders. In 1574, the Castilian treasury took in the equivalent
of six million ducats per year, but the expense of the imperial court
and Spain’s European wars required eight million. Facing insolvency,
the Spanish emperors borrowed heavily from German and Italian
bankers at high rates of interest. Cash fl ow problems often forced
them to suspend debt payments and seize incoming private cargos
of American bullion. In return, the Crown compensated the unlucky
owners with low-paying government bonds known as
juros
. No one
was exempt from these royal confi scations, and even the Pizarro family had to buy more than forty-seven thousand gold pieces’ worth
of
juros
.19
These desperate economic measures were symptomatic of the larger
problems plaguing the Spanish Habsburgs. Although they dominated
Europe from the mid-sixteenth to mid-seventeenth centuries, they
could not translate the wealth of the Americas into sustainable power
in Europe. It may seem nonsensical that the enormous wealth of the
overseas empire would be of so little benefi t to Spain, but hindsight
clearly shows that plunder and extraction had toxic consequences in
the imperial metropole. Imperial treasure was a windfall for men such
as Cortés and Pizarro, but it weakened the Spanish Habsburg regime.
Emboldened by the wealth of the Americas, Charles and Philip did not
have to make constitutional concessions to their nobles to raise revenue. As a result, they became addicted to American precious metals
132 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
and had no domestic reserves to fall back on when imports declined.