Some Notes on the Spanish Colonial Period in Hispaniola
Bob Corbett
1995
INDIANS
- Tribute. Columbus lied. He found bits of gold. There were/are some
traces of gold in Haiti. But, he told the court that there were large
amounts. Thus when he came on the second voyage there were expectations of
great amounts of gold to be found. The Indians were given a tribute of so
much gold that was to be paid to the kind.
- When tribute failed then service was substitute. The repartimiento and
encomienda systems were enforced.
P. 24 Chapman: "Under Bobadilla a beginning was made of the system of
repartimiento (apportionment), whereby the Indians were divided among the
colonists. In theory the main objective of the laws was that the Indians
might thereby be Christianized and civilized, but in fact its principal
feature was that they were made to serve as slaves in the fields and
mines."
Note from Hanke, SPANISH STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE
- P. 19-20. "The theory of the encomienda was simple. The
Spanish crown gave or "commended" Indians to Spaniards, who became
encomenderos, and this grant gave the Spaniards the right to exact labor
or tribute from the Indians. In return, the encomenderos were obliged to
provide religious instruction for their Indians and to protect them. The
encomenderos also, as the system developed, came to own an obligation to
the king, that of defending the land. The early encomiendas were sometimes
called repartimientos though this term later had different meanings.
"In practice, the encomienda system was established by Columbus in
1499 after the failure of his attempt to impose a definite tribute on
the Indians of Hispaniola. The pattern evolved that in the islands where
there were relatively few Indians and were thus enabled to lead a
relatively dignified and comfortable life under semi-feudal conditions.
The encomienda, then, started with Columbus, when he assigned three
hundred Indians to Spaniards. When Queen Isabella learned this, she
asked her famous question: 'By what authority does the Admiral give my
vassals away?'
"The encomienda was put on an institutional basis by the first royal
governor, Nicolas de Ovando, who arrived in April 1502 at Hispaniola,
principle seat of Spanish government during the first quarter-century
after 1492. A great company of men was with him, some twenty-five
hundred in all, but none of them had come to labor with their hands.
Ovando carried instructions to take away the Indians from Spaniards, put
them under the crown, and require them to pay tribute out of the daily
wages they would earn. This attempt failed, and by royal order of
December 20, 1503, Ovando was permitted to grant Indians."
- As these systems took effect it became clear that other areas of the
Americas were to be the source of gold and wealth--Mexico, Peru and so on.
However, Hispaniola remained the center of the Spanish world for some time
since it was first of all the stop off point on the way to Central and
South America, and it became the bread basket to supply the conquistadors.
- As the Indians died out they were, at first slowly and then much more
quickly replaced by African slaves.
- Final note on the demise of the Indians. The entire Taino population
died out. But two authors are at pains to point out that the whole blood
line could not have died out. Michel Laguerre, a Haitian anthropologist
dwells on this point, showing that there was enough time of interaction on
a small scale between the African slaves and the last of the Indian slaves
that they simply had to be children born of liaisons among them.
Hanke says: That the Spanish took Indian women as concubines and there
was a small population of mestizo children born of these unions.
However, as other authors point up, there are not only no people left
today who are anything near full-blooded Taino's, but there are no
remnants of people with noticeable Indian features, and there are
virtually no cultural influences from Indian culture on the culture of
Haiti.
SPANISH
- 1500 Francisco de Bobadilla was sent as governor. Sent
Columbus brothers back to Spain in chains.
- 1502 Nicholas de Ovando came with 30 ships + 2500
settlers. Anacaona was thought to be planning an uprising. After she gave
a greeting party she was captured, her village burned, many killed. Later
she was hung in the Santo Domingo city square. (Sherlock p. 26)
- Encomienda
Started by Ovando. Forced labor. "By the encomienda system, a Spanish
colonist could be awarded a number of Indians to work for him. In return,
the colonist was responsible for teaching them Christian principles,
paying them wages and looking after them generally. In effect the Indian
population was enslaved, and, within half a century, practically
exterminated." p. 13. Augier.
Hispaniola became the base from which the other islands were conquered
and the Indians were the help needed.
Gold and slave trading failed quickly. Hispaniola had ranching. Spanish
introduced horses, mules, cattle, pigs, sheep and goats and also the
wheel.
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