Spanish America and the Making of Latin America

The history of conquistadors and colonial rule with silver mines missions the encomienda system disease and the rise of colonial society
138 Seiten, Taschenbuch
€ 25,60
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Kurzbeschreibung des Verlags

An empire built through conquest, silver, faith, labor, and resistance transformed the Americas and shaped the foundations of modern Latin America.

Spanish America and the Making of Latin America traces the rise of Spanish colonial rule from the first Caribbean settlements to the political tensions that weakened the empire. It explains how conquistadors entered powerful Indigenous worlds, how alliances and rivalries shaped the fall of Tenochtitlán and the conquest of the Inca Empire, and why Spanish victory remained incomplete in many regions.

The story continues through the growth of colonial cities, royal government, missions, the encomienda system, forced labor, and African slavery. It follows the silver extracted from Potosí and Zacatecas as it moved through roads, ports, and merchant networks toward Europe and Asia. It also examines the devastating impact of epidemics and the ways Indigenous communities endured pressure while protecting land, family ties, languages, and traditions.

From churches and festivals to mines and markets, colonial society was shaped by conflict, adaptation, belief, and cultural exchange. Africans and their descendants, Indigenous peoples, Europeans, and mixed ancestry families all played essential roles in the creation of a new and unequal world.