Final - November 5 - The Conquest of Mexico and Peru Flashcards
A Wild Frontier? The first attempts at legislating the Conquest (Brief Review)
A conquest Without an Army: The “conquistador” model, an Early Modern Private-Public “partnership”?
Creating a legal framework for cohabitation: The Laws of Burgos (1512) and the regulation of colonial society
Forced Labor and Religious Salvation: The birth of the Encomienda system (Trust/Grant system)
The (cynic?) birth of the “rules of engagement”: The Requerimiento (the Demand/Requisition) (1513)
explain Encomienda system
was as brutal as slavery but had a religious connotation that slavery didnt… was managed by priests later
explain The (cynic?) birth of the “rules of engagement”: The Requerimiento (the Demand/Requisition) (1513)
document
attempted to justify exploiting the people
states what to do before engaging in battle… legally
The Catholic Queen (Isabella) is dead (1504): what happened after
The Succession Problem in Castile and its impact on the Americas
who will inherit the crown? chasers I came as king (as a child)
explain America, an afterthought?
King Ferdinand and the Search for Iberian and European Hegemony
Ferdinand’s main concern was not the americas
explain Violence, social disruption, and disease
The unfulfilled promise of gold and the beginning of the indigenous demographic collapse
spread of small pox
What about the Indes?
Charles I (also known as Charles V), The “Comunero” revolt and the Holy Roman Empire
takes him a while to realize what is happening in americas
explain Surprising news arrive
the Hernan Cortés’ letters and the conquest of Mainland America
this is what catches charles’ attention
The Conquest of Mexico (full slide)
The rise of the Aztec empire
The situation in Cuba before 1519
Cortes’ gamble: From Disobedience to (unexpected) Success
The European advantage in retrospect:
Weapons and military tactics
”Divide and Conquer”: The Alliance with other Indigenous Groups
Understanding the “Other”: Language, Knowledge, and Conquest – The figure of La Malinche
Disease and the decimation of the indigenous population
A “miraculous” victory or a Catastrophe foretold? Spanish and Indigenous accounts of the Conquest
Legitimizing the Conquest: Cortes’ Letters to Charles V
Imposing Royal Authority: Charles V reaction to the Conquest of Mexico
explain Cortes’ gamble: From Disobedience to (unexpected) Success
he didnt have official approval to do an of this so he as a traitor who it happened
explain The European advantage in retrospect
Weapons and military tactics
”Divide and Conquer”: The Alliance with other Indigenous Groups
Understanding the “Other”: Language (had a translator), Knowledge, and Conquest – The figure of La Malinche
Disease and the decimation of the indigenous population
explain Legitimizing the Conquest: Cortes’ Letters to Charles
able to legitimate fact that he did all this and disobeyed… he wrote letters to the king about dicoveries
explain Imposing Royal Authority: Charles V reaction to the Conquest of Mexico
Charles V forgave cortes, acknowledged the the lands Cortez controld, made cortez leader but stripped him of political power
cortez was a powerful man in exico at the time, why wasn’t he the king of mexico? How did charles impose himself? next class
Hero or Villain? Hernan Cortés in the Historical and Popular Imagination (full slide)
The Hegemonic perception of Cortés (until at least the 19th Century): A Christian Knight, a Military Genius, and a self-made “hero” In Historical Accounts In Painting In Drama and Opera During Francoism
From Hero to Tyrant: The multi-faceted challenge to the hegemonic perception
Spanish and Indigenous alternative Accounts: From Bernal Díaz del Castillo to he Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico
During the European Wars of Religion
The Independence of Mexico, the Mexican Revolution, and the questioning of the figure of Cortes
The Decolonization Movement and the Rise of Latin American Indigenism
Understanding Cortés beyond commonplaces :
On Religion: The Conquest as a Crusade
On Fame: The (perversion? of) the Chivalric Ideal
On Power: Cortes, Machiavelli, and Early Modern Political Thought
On Military Tactics: Conquest and Reconquest
explain The Hegemonic perception of Cortés (until at least the 19th Century): A Christian Knight, a Military Genius, and a self-made “hero”
In Historical Accounts
In Painting
In Drama and Opera
During Francoism (dictatorship in america)