AWA: Academic Writing at Auckland
Title: Aztec & Incan demise in face of Iberian conquest
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Copyright: Matthew Lancaster
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Description: Why did the native peoples of central and south America succumb so quickly to the Iberian conquest?
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Aztec & Incan demise in face of Iberian conquest
In 1492, Columbus sailed to the New World. On arrival, he and subsequent explorers found well embedded, sophisticated and dominant cultures; amongst others, the Aztecs in central America and the Incas in Peru. Yet, within forty years of Columbus’ arrival, subjugation of both these cultures by the Spanish was complete.[1] How such a dramatic capitulation was able to occur in such a short time was a result of multiple circumstances. This essay will argue that a combination of the relative strengths of the Spanish, the relative weaknesses of the indigenous cultures and the devastating impact of diseases, particularly smallpox, all had a part to play in the demise of those cultures. It will focus on the conquest of the Aztec and Incan empires, as they are the two instances which best exemplify the rapid subjugation. Other factors were in play for the subjugation in other areas, such as the Mayans of Central America[2] and the area covered by modern day Brazil and none of these areas succumbed nearly so dramatically.[3] Equally, while the Iberian conquest of Central and South America by definition involved both Spaniards and Portuguese, because the Aztecs and Incan conquests were solely Spanish affairs, only the Spanish influence will be discussed.
It would be nearly thirty years after Columbus’ arrival before a concerted effort to settle mainland Central and South America was attempted by the Spanish. In the interim, Spanish settlement was concentrated on the island of Hispaniola. This period was important for providing a training ground for the Spanish.[4] As Blakewell says, “It was a bridgehead into the new”.[5] The two main protagonists in the conquests were Hernan Cortes and Francisco Pizarro. Cortes was chosen to lead Spain’s foray to Central America. On previous visits, the Spanish had found large cities with substantial, permanent buildings, an established culture, and a confident and skilled military force.[6] Importantly, though, there was tantalising evidence of gold and so it was in that context that Cortes was chosen in early 1519 to lead a force to conquer the territory.[7] After gathering intelligence about the territory and how it was governed, and the state of allegiances to the Aztec state and its leader, Moctezuma, he discovered that there was a significant level of disunity, owing to what were seen as excessive tribute demands from Moctezuma.[8] After a cautious journey, Cortes arrived in Tenochtitlan, the Aztec capital.[9] Ten days later, Cortes took Moctezuma prisoner. In doing so, Cortes reckoned on two things: Moctezuma had not accurately understood the intentions of the Spanish, and Moctezuma held absolute power, such that removing him would deal an important psychological blow to the Aztec’s political system. Both reckonings proved correct.[10] A number of battles was fought over the course of the next year, none of which was conclusive, but all of which gradually wore down Cortes’ forces to the extent that he was on the brink of capitulation. It was at this time that he pivoted to diplomacy.[11] As Blakewell describes it, with a combination of military threat and persuasion, a number of the people in south-east Mexico switched allegiance to Cortes.[12] This built sufficient momentum in Cortes’ campaign at precisely the time that another decisive factor emerged: smallpox. It was an Old World disease which had crossed the Atlantic with the explorers. It arrived in Central America in 1520 and attacked the local population with impunity, striking its leaders and the general populace alike.[13] Its effect was both psychological and physical. The losses suffered were sufficient to turn the tide in favour of Cortes. In August 1521 he captured Tenochtitlan and, with it, the Mexican heartland.[14] It is important to discuss the impact of disease and understand why it was so influential in the outcomes described above. The introduction of infectious diseases - predominantly smallpox was particularly devastating for indigenous populations because they had no prior exposure to it (and therefore had acquired no immunity), and were from a relatively shallow gene pool (and so, once a disease had taken hold, it was extremely virulent).[19] But its influence spread further than just the victims it claimed. Once it took hold, it reduced the number of people who could look after those who were afflicted, leaving many to die of starvation rather from the disease itself.[20] Worse than that, having no previous experience of what it was incited fear and panic in the population. The causes were twofold: they felt that the gods had let them down; moreover, by dint of their immunity, it created an impression of the conquistadors that they were superhuman.[21] It is difficult to discern whether either of the two conquests would have been possible without the influence of smallpox. Inevitably, such a counterfactual can only be a hypothetical exercise. But there is no doubt that its influence was considerable. In preceding Pizarro’s arrival in Peru, it has been described as the “shock troops of the conquest”.[22]
The causes, then, of the rapid demise of the Aztec and Incan cultures were multi-faceted. In one respect, the Spaniards had a number of strengths. They included the recent experience the Spanish had gained from expelling the Moors from the Iberian peninsula (the Reconquista), military, strategic and diplomatic skills, and advantages in weaponry.[32] Their calculations to target the leaders of the two cultures were decisive moments in both cases. In the case of the indigenous populations, the societies were dispersed and lacked unity. Fundamentally, they were not as strategically adept as the Spaniards, making critical errors in misunderstanding their opponents’ intentions. They proved highly susceptible to diseases introduced by the conquerors. Finally, important psychological factors were in play – ones to which the indigenous people fell prey, and which the Spanish were able to recognise and exploit.
Bibliography
Bakewell, Peter, A History of Latin America: c. 1450 to the Present, 2nd ed., Malden, MA, 2004 Bray, Warwick ed., The Meeting of Two Worlds : Europe and the Americas, 1492-1650 Oxford, 1993. Cook, Noble, Born to Die: Disease and New World Conquest, 1492-1650, Cambridge, 1998. Chasteen, John Charles, Born in Blood and Fire: A Concise History of Latin America 2nd ed., New York, 2006 Diamond, Jared, Guns, Germs and Steel: a Short History of Everybody for the Last 13,000 Years, London, 1998. Porter, Roy, The Greatest Benefit to Mankind: a Medical History of Humanity from Antiquity to the Present, London, 1999. Watts, Sheldon, ‘Smallpox in the New World and in the Old: From Holocaust to Eradication, 1518 to 1977’, in Epidemics and History: Disease, Power and Imperialism, New Haven, 1999.
Footnotes: [1] Alistair Hennessy ‘The Nature of the Conquest and the Conquistadors’ in Warwick Bray ed., The Meeting of Two Worlds : Europe and the Americas, 1492-1650 Oxford, 1993, p.5. [2] John Charles Chasteen, Born in Blood and Fire: A Concise History of Latin America 2nd ed., New York, 2006, p.33. [3] ibid., p.39 [4] Peter Bakewell, A History of Latin America: c. 1450 to the Present, 2nd ed., Malden, MA, 2004, p.79. [5] ibid., p.78 [6] ibid., p.78. [7] ibid., p.79. [8] Bakewell, p.97. [9] ibid. [10] ibid. [11] ibid., p.99 [12] ibid., p.98. [13] ibid., p.99. [14] Noble Cook, Born to Die: Disease and New World Conquest, 1492-1650, Cambridge, 1998., p.67. [15] Bakewell, p.100. [16] ibid., p.101 [17] Don Brothwell ‘On Biological Exchanges Between the Two Worlds’ in Warwick Bray ed The Meeting of Two Worlds : Europe and the Americas, 1492-1650 Oxford, 1993, p.241. [18] Jared Diamond, Guns, Germs and Steel: a Short History of Everybody for the Last 13,000 Years, London, 1998, p.77 [19] Cook, p.72. [20] ibid., p.66 [21] Hennessy, p.18. [22] Brothwell, p.22. [23] Hennessy, p.12. [24] ibid., p.13. [25] Bakewell, p.104. [26] Hennessy, p.12. [27] Bakewell, p.105. [28] ibid., 106. [29] Chasteen, p.34. [30] Diamond, p.80 [31] Bakewell, p.107. [32] Hennessy, p.5 |