East European children, particularly Romanians, seem to have been favorites
of the fourteenth- and fifteenth-century slave trade, although many
thousands of adults were enslaved as well. Child slaves, however, were as
expensive as adults, for reasons best left to the imagination, as is
indicated by a fourteenth-century letter from a man involved in the
business: "We are informed about the little slave girl you say you
personally need," he wrote to his prospective client, "and about her
features and age, and for what you want her.... Whenever ships come from
Romania, they should carry some [slave girls]; but keep in mind that little
slave girls are as expensive as the grown ones, and there will be none that
does not cost 50 to 60 florins if we want one of any value." Those
purchasing female slaves of child-bearing age sometimes were particularly
lucky and received a free bonus of a baby on the way. As historian John
Boswell has reported: "Ten to twenty percent of the female slaves sold in
Seville in the fifteenth century were pregnant or breast-feeding, and their
infants were usually included with them at no extra cost."
The wealthy had their problems too. They hungered after gold and silver. The
Crusades, begun four centuries earlier, had increased the appetites of
affluent Europeans for exotic foreign luxuries-for silks and spices, fine
cotton, drugs, perfumes, and jewelry-material pleasures that required pay in
bullion. Thus, gold had become for Europeans, in the words of one Venetian
commentator of the time, "the sinews of all government . . . its mind, soul
. . . its essence and its very life." The supply of the precious metal, by
way of the Middle East and Africa, had always been uncertain. Now, however,
the wars in eastern Europe had nearly emptied the Continent's coffers. A new
supply, a more regular supply-and preferably a cheaper supply-was needed.
Violence, of course, was everywhere, as alluded to above; but occasionally
it took on an especially perverse character. In addition to the hunting down
and burning of witches, which was an everyday affair in most locales, in
Milan in 1476 a man was torn to pieces by an enraged mob and his dismembered
limbs were then eaten by his tormenters. In Paris and Lyon, Huguenots were
killed and butchered, and their various body parts were sold openly in the
streets. Other eruptions of bizarre torture, murder, and ritual cannibalism
were not uncommon.
Such behavior, nonetheless, was not officially condoned, at least not
usually. Indeed, wild and untrue accusations of such activities formed the
basis for many of the witch hunts and religious persecutions-particularly of
Jews-during this time. In precisely those years when Columbus was trekking
around Europe in search of support for his maritime adventures, the
Inquisition was raging in Spain. Here, and elsewhere in Europe, those out of
favor with the powerful-particularly those who were believed to be
un-Christian-were tortured and killed in the most ingenious of fashions: on
the gallows, at the stake, on the rack-while others were crushed I beheaded,
flayed alive, or drawn and quartered.
***
p63
If it sounded like Paradise, that was no accident. Paradise filled with
gold. And when he came to describe the people he had met, Columbus's Edenic
imagery never faltered:
The people of this island and of all the other islands which I have found
and ,\ seen, or have not seen, all go naked, men and women, as their mothers
bore / them, except that some women cover one place only with the leaf of a
plant or with a net of cotton which they make for that purpose. They have no
iron or steel or weapons, nor are they capable of using them, although they
are well-built people of handsome stature, because they are wondrous timid.
. . . [T]hey are so artless and free with all they possess, that no one
would believe it without having seen it. Of anything they have, if you ask
them for it, they never say no; rather they invite the person to share it,
and show as much love as if they were giving their hearts; and whether the
thing be of value or of small price, at once they are content with whatever
little thing of whatever kind may be given to them.
***
p66
I certify to you that, with the help of God, we shall powerfully enter into
your country and shall make war against you in all ways and manners that we
can, and shall subject you to the yoke and obedience of the Church and of
Their Highnesses. We shall take you and your wives and your children, and
shall make slaves of them, and as such shall sell and dispose of them as
Their Highnesses may command. And we shall take your goods, and shall do you
all the mischief and damage that we can, as to vassals who do not obey and
refuse to receive their lord and resist and contradict him.
a statement Spaniards were required to read to Indians they encountered in
the New World
***
p69
Wherever the marauding, diseased, and heavily armed Spanish forces went out
on patrol, accompanied by ferocious armored dogs that had been trained to
kill and disembowel, they preyed on the local communities- already
plague-enfeebled-forcing them to supply food and women and slaves, and
whatever else the soldiers might desire. At virtually every previous landing
on this trip Columbus's troops had gone ashore and killed indiscriminately,
as though for sport, whatever animals and birds and natives they
encountered, "looting and destroying all they found," as the Admiral's son
Fernando blithely put it. Once on Hispaniola, however, Columbus fell
ill-whether from the flu or, more likely, from some other malady-and what
little restraint he had maintained over his men disappeared as he went
through a lengthy period of recuperation. The troops went wild, stealing,
killing, raping, and torturing natives, trying to force them to divulge the
whereabouts of the imagined treasure-houses of gold.
The Indians tried to retaliate by launching ineffective ambushes of stray
Spaniards. But the combined killing force of Spanish diseases and Spanish
military might was far greater than anything the natives could ever have
imagined. Finally, they decided the best response was flight. Crops were
left to rot in the fields as the Indians attempted to escape the frenzy of
the conquistadors' attacks. Starvation then added its contribution, along
with pestilence and mass murder, to the native peoples' woes.
***
p70
The massacres continued. Columbus remained ill for months while his soldiers
wandered freely. More than 50,000 natives were reported dead from these
encounters by the time the Admiral had recovered from his sickness. And when
at last his health and strength had been restored Columbus's response to his
men's unorganized depredations was to organize them. In March of 1495 he
massed together several hundred armored troops, cavalry, and a score or more
of trained attack dogs. They set forth across the countryside, tearing into
assembled masses of sick and unarmed native people, slaughtering them by the
thousands. The pattern set by these raids would be the model the Spanish
would follow for the next decade and beyond. As
Bartolome de Las Casas, the
most famous of the accompanying Spanish missionaries from that trip
recalled:
Once the Indians were in the woods, the next step was to form squadrons and
pursue them, and whenever the Spaniards found them, they pitilessly
slaughtered everyone like sheep in a corral. It was a general rule among
Spaniards to be cruel; not just cruel, but extraordinarily cruel so that
harsh and bitter treatment would prevent Indians from daring to think of
themselves as human beings or having a minute to think at all. So they would
cut an Indian's hands and leave them dangling by a shred of skin and they
would send him on saying "Go now, spread the news to your chiefs." They
would test their swords and their manly strength on captured Indians and
place bets on the slicing off of heads or the cutting of bodies in half with
one blow. They burned or hanged captured chiefs."
At least one chief, the man considered by Columbus to be Hispaniola's
ranking native leader, was not burned or hanged, however. He was captured,
put in chains, and sent off by ship for public display and imprisonment in
Spain. Like most of the Indians who had been forced to make that voyage,
though, he never made it to Seville: he died en route.
With the same determination Columbus had shown in organizing his troops'
previously disorganized and indiscriminate killings, the Admiral then set
about the task of systematizing their haphazard enslavement of the natives.
Gold was all that they were seeking, so every Indian on the island who was
not a child was ordered to deliver to the Spanish a certain amount of the
precious ore every three months. When the gold was delivered the individual
was presented with a token to wear around his or her neck as proof that the
tribute had been paid. Anyone found without the appropriate number of tokens
had his hands cut off.
Since Hispaniola's gold supply was far less than what the Spaniards'
fantasies suggested, Indians who wished to survive were driven to seek out
their quotas of the ore at the expense of other endeavors, including food
production. The famines that had begun earlier, when the Indians attempted
to hide from the Spanish murderers, now grew much worse, while new diseases
that the Spanish carried with them preyed ever more intensely on the
malnourished and weakened bodies of the natives. And the soldiers never
ceased to take delight in killing just for fun.
Pestilence and Genocide
1 -
2
- 3
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4
Prologue /
Before Columbus /
Pestilence and Genocide /
Sex, Race and Holy War /
Epilogue