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  • 13 Questions About the Discovery of America

    13 Questions About the Discovery of America

    Where Did the Idea That America Exists Come From?

    Europeans did not immediately realize that the lands across the Atlantic, where they found themselves, were not Asia, but a new, unknown part of the world. However, this does not mean that by the time Columbus’s expedition was planned, Europeans had no concept of lands lying west of Europe, in the “Sea of Darkness.” On 13th to 15th-century maps, various islands were marked—some well-known, others mythical, like the Island of Saint Brendan, Antillia, and Brazil. The belief in their existence influenced Columbus’s decision to venture across the open ocean. But these were thought to be islands; it was only some time after Columbus returned from his first voyage that people began to talk about a new part of the world beyond the ocean.

    Columbus himself likely believed until his death that he had not discovered a new part of the world, but rather a new route to the countries of the East. During his last voyage (1502–1504), he sincerely believed that the distance from where he was (near the Isthmus of Panama) to the Ganges in India was only two weeks. But not everyone agreed with him. In 1499–1500, Spanish and Portuguese sailors like Alonso de Ojeda, Vicente Yáñez Pinzón, Pedro Álvares Cabral, and others discovered a continuous line of the eastern coast of South America—from the Isthmus of Panama almost to the Tropic of Capricorn. It was becoming increasingly clear that this land was not Asia, as it was known that all of Asia lay in the Northern Hemisphere.

    The first to declare the discovery of a new part of the world was the Italian Amerigo Vespucci (1454–1512), who participated in Spanish and Portuguese expeditions to the coasts of South America. Vespucci personally traced thousands of kilometers of the coastline. In 1503–1504, he described his voyages in two letters that gained enormous popularity and were reprinted many times. In these letters, he emphasized that he was speaking of a previously unknown part of the world—a “New World.”

    Vespucci may have only voiced the idea of a new part of the world; others may have surmised it earlier. For instance, such an idea could have easily occurred to the sailor and cartographer Juan de la Cosa, who participated in several voyages to the Americas. In 1500, by royal commission, he created a map that reflected the latest Spanish and Portuguese discoveries. This map aimed to define the boundaries of these countries’ territories under the Treaty of Tordesillas. It was the first to accurately depict the Greater and Lesser Antilles and a significant part of the western coastline of South, Central, and North America—contradicting contemporary understandings of Asia’s eastern coastline. De la Cosa likely realized this represented the outlines of a previously unknown part of the world, resonating with Vespucci’s letters. Thus, the idea that America existed—or more accurately, that newly discovered lands were a new, previously unknown part of the world—emerged around 1500–1503.

    In 1507, the cartographer Martin Waldseemüller from Lorraine suggested in his book “Introduction to Cosmography” that the new continent be named “America” in Vespucci’s honor. The name “America” first appeared on Waldseemüller’s map that same year, located in the southern part of South America. Gradually, it became established on maps of North America as well. Neither Vespucci nor Waldseemüller intended to deprive Columbus of his laurels as the discoverer. Initially, it was understood that Columbus and Vespucci had discovered lands in different locations and that the name “America” referred only to the lands Vespucci had discovered. It was later applied to the entire continent discovered by Columbus—without Vespucci’s knowledge and against Waldseemüller’s wishes.

    Who Discovered America and When?

    Landing of Columbus in America. Painting by John Vanderlin
    Landing of Columbus in America. Painting by John Vanderlin, 1846. Image: Architect of the Capitol

    Often, discovery is attributed to the first European visit to new lands, denying that status to those who arrived earlier, such as people from Asia who came to America via the Bering Strait. However, the situation with Europeans is not straightforward either. It is known that around the 10th–11th centuries, Vikings sailed to America, establishing settlements in Newfoundland and Greenland. However, they did not perceive the discovery of America as fundamentally different from discovering Iceland or the Faroe Islands.

    It did not have a significant impact on either the Native Americans or the Vikings themselves. Moreover, this information, apparently, did not extend beyond the Scandinavian world and was forgotten by the end of the 15th century. For historians, unlike geographers, what matters is not so much the first visitation to a territory, but the establishment of contacts—regular and significant for both parties—between the “discoverers” and the “discovered.”

    The discovery made by Columbus on October 12, 1492, quickly became a sensation across Europe, igniting a race for discoveries along the American coastlines. In the decade following Columbus’s return from his first voyage, at least twelve expeditions were undertaken by Spain, Portugal, and England. This event profoundly altered European life within a few decades. Thus, Columbus made the “true” discovery of America. However, he merely initiated the lengthy process of discovering and exploring various parts of America, involving hundreds of expeditions from many European countries.

    Were North and South America Discovered at Different Times?

    Yes, but there are nuances. First, the geographical distinction: unlike America as a continent, North and South America are separate landmasses, and Columbus’s discovery began with the Bahamas in the Caribbean, which does not belong to either North or South America. If we talk about the discovery of mainland territory, North America was discovered slightly earlier: an English expedition led by John Cabot, with his son Sebastian, seeking a northwest passage to the East, reached North America’s northeast coast in late May or early summer of 1498. During his third voyage, Columbus reached the mouth of the Orinoco River and discovered South America only in early August of that year.

    Second, we cannot be certain that modern researchers know about all the voyages of that time. It is possible (though unlikely) that information, even indirect, might emerge regarding the discovery of the mainland parts of North or South America before the summer of 1498. For example, there are theories that the Portuguese knew about Brazil even before Columbus’s first voyage and that is why they insisted on moving the demarcation line further west during the Treaty of Tordesillas negotiations. However, there is no documentary evidence to support this.

    What Were the First Colonists Like?

    Discovery of the Mississippi River by conquistador Hernando de Soto
    Discovery of the Mississippi River by conquistador Hernando de Soto in 1541. Painting by William Henry Powell, 1853. Image: Architect of the Capitol

    To better understand what the first colonists were like, it is important to consider, first, the differences between colonists from different countries. For example, settlers from Spain were quite different from the Portuguese, and even more so from the English or the French. Secondly, one must consider the conditions and circumstances they encountered in various parts of the New World. Emigration to Spanish and Portuguese colonies was strictly controlled by the authorities. For instance, for most of the three-century colonial period, one could only depart from Seville to the New World from Spain, and each colonist had to obtain an individual permit, with their name entered into a special list. However, it was very difficult to organize such control, and occasionally it was circumvented. The authorities were also very careful to ensure that only Catholics and subjects of the Spanish monarchs were allowed to settle in the colonies. Attempts by colonists from other countries to establish settlements in territories considered Spanish met with strong resistance.

    Once rumors of the riches of America were confirmed by the successes of the conquistadors in Mexico and Peru, the flow of settlers increased. Until about the mid-16th century, most of the emigrants were potential conquistadors—those who relied on their swords rather than on the plow (although farmers and artisans were also among the first colonists). Most of them were poor natives of the southwestern regions of Spain, Extremadura and Andalusia, who were migrating not out of prosperity. They were characterized by energy and persistence—others simply could not survive there. At the same time, their pragmatism was astonishingly combined with a naïve belief in miracles: they were convinced of the existence of giants and Amazons, golden cities, and a fountain of youth in the vastness of America.

    Few were lucky enough to participate in one of the few truly successful expeditions that enriched all survivors (such as the people of Francisco Pizarro, who captured the Sapa Inca Atahualpa and received a fantastic ransom for him). Even fewer among them were those who returned to Spain and lived luxuriously in palaces built from the captured treasures. The rest either quickly squandered their share or failed to amass a fortune and depended on the favors of the central government, including the grant of lands that were transferred along with the indigenous people living on them, known as encomiendas. Formally, the owners of encomiendas (encomenderos) were supposed to care for them, but in practice, they lived off the labor of the local population.

    Around the mid-16th century, when the Conquista was coming to an end, the richest silver deposits were discovered in the territory of present-day Mexico and Bolivia. From then on, their exploitation became the main goal of the Spanish crown, and agricultural development of the conquered lands receded into the background for a long time. It was at this time that the main characteristics of Spanish colonization and the Spanish colonist were finally formed: he lives near enormous riches and is significantly involved in their exploitation—organizing it, ensuring its protection, and what we would now call infrastructure; he is very dependent on the metropolis, under its constant control; survival is generally not an issue for him, and he is not always willing to earn a living through his own labor. This was also influenced by the widespread view in 16th-century Spain that manual labor was an unworthy and even despised occupation.

    Portuguese colonists were also seeking quick enrichment, but unlike the Spaniards, they did not find such deposits of silver in their territories. Later, they discovered gold and diamonds, but this occurred only at the end of the 17th and the first third of the 18th century. In the 16th century, their sources of wealth were the harvesting of valuable redwood, which was in demand in Europe, and the organization of the still technically imperfect but already profitable production of sugar from cane brought to Brazil from the Canary Islands. The idea that manual labor was ignoble also manifested itself here: the workforce in the artisanal industries, called engenhos, were dependent indigenous people and African slaves. The beginning of the mass importation of African slaves to Brazil is connected precisely with the expansion of plantation agriculture and sugar cane production, while the owners were referred to as “senhores” or “lords” of the engenhos.

    If the Spanish and Portuguese territories were an integral part of the Iberian monarchies and were all in the same legal standing relative to the metropolis, the British colonies were different from the very beginning. There were three types of colonies. Royal colonies belonged directly to the crown and were governed by officials appointed from London. In corporate colonies, the crown (or the parliament in 1649–1660) endowed a special joint-stock company with the right to govern. In proprietary colonies, these rights were given to a particular individual.

    Joint-stock companies or private individuals who received rights from the authorities to develop North American lands often concealed their real intentions on paper. For example, the Massachusetts Bay Company was founded in 1628. Its goal was to create an ideal world of Christian life in the New World in a Protestant-Calvinist interpretation (Calvinists in England were called Puritans)—a “City upon a Hill” from the Sermon on the Mount, as John Winthrop (1588–1649), the founder of Massachusetts, told the settlers before the ship departed. Six New England states in the northeastern United States emerged from Puritan colonization. The Pennsylvania colony was founded by William Penn (1644–1718) primarily for fellow Quakers, although the colony’s fundamental laws, drafted by him, stated that all settlers who believed in a single God were welcome in the new lands.

    The royal colonies were mainly populated by the poor who hoped for a better life and their own land allotment in the New World. Most of them could not pay for the trip themselves and then worked off this “loan” for 4–7 years. Therefore, they were called indentured servants. Upon completion, they received land, sometimes with agricultural tools for its cultivation. Of the roughly 75,000 people who moved to Virginia and Maryland between 1630 and 1680, two-thirds arrived as indentured servants.

    The first British settlers in North America found themselves in a completely different position compared to the Spaniards in Central and South America. Firstly, there was no gold, silver, or other wealth that attracted people with the temptation of easy profit. Although theoretical justifications for colonization soon appeared, emphasizing that the English could earn as much in these places from fishing and logging as the Spaniards did from gold and silver.

    Secondly, the natural and climatic conditions were harsh for Europeans, and aid from the metropolis was minimal. Survival was only possible through daily hard work and strict discipline. In the very first permanent colony (Jamestown, Virginia), founded in 1607, only a few dozen of the 150 colonists survived the winter and spring of 1608, and such numbers were not uncommon.

    Thirdly, relations with the Native Americans were different, and the Native Americans themselves were different. There were no highly developed civilizations here that had accumulated reserves of precious metals, as in Mexico or Peru, and there was nothing for the Europeans to take from the Native Americans except land. In the early years, contacts between colonists and Native Americans varied: from frequent bloody clashes (in the spring of 1622, Algonquin Indians killed 347 colonists—at least a quarter of Virginia’s population) to mutual assistance.

    For example, in New Plymouth in New England, the Wampanoag Indians helped the colonists survive the first winter, and in gratitude, the colonists celebrated the first harvest together with the Native Americans. This is how Thanksgiving Day came about. At the same time, the density of the Native American population in the territory of the United States and Canada was much lower than in the Aztec or Inca states, and the Native Americans quickly retreated from the coastal areas where the colonists settled.

    The first British colonists were generally hardworking and persistent, decisive, and able to stand up for themselves, deeply religious, and intolerant of religious dissent. Necessity taught them discipline. Compared to settlers from the Iberian countries, they were relatively less dependent on the metropolis and were used to relying on their own strength in everything.

    What Did They Eat and How Did They Survive?

    Hunger was a common companion for nearly all early settlers, especially in the first years. The colonists anticipated rapid wealth accumulation and support from their mother countries; plowing the land and raising livestock were often not part of their plans. Moreover, native food could be perceived as unworthy or weakening for the body. The settlers faced the dual challenge of a lack of familiar foods and an abundance of unknown ones. The diet was significantly different: while Europeans were accustomed to meat and dairy products, the indigenous people of South America (despite the variety of climate zones and economic systems in the region) relied primarily on plant-based foods, with protein coming not only from wild game and fish but also from insects. Furthermore, dairy products were unknown to the Indigenous peoples.

    Another major difference in attitudes toward food was the consumption of raw, uncooked foods. For those from the Old World, this was seen as savage and barbaric; they believed that only animals ate raw food. In addition to this, a major psychological barrier for Europeans was the absence in the New World of two crucial crops: wheat and grapevines. Since Christian worship required wheat bread and wine, local substitutes (such as corn, manioc, and fermented beverages made from them) were considered inadequate replacements.

    Initial attempts to practice European-style agriculture in the New World encountered serious difficulties: different levels of humidity and sunlight, different soil chemistry, a lack of natural pollinators, and opposite seasons in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. There was also a shortage of labor: as mentioned earlier, Spanish and Portuguese colonists brought with them the notion that manual labor was not a noble activity, and the recruitment (often forced) of Indigenous people did not always meet all their needs.

    Moreover, the Indigenous people of tropical regions, who survived through hunting, fishing, and gathering, had a completely different attitude toward work for sustenance. They did not have the drive to collect (catch or hunt) more than they would eat or to work day after day to create reserves. At the same time, colonists in both Spanish and Portuguese America wanted to extract more and more products from them. Reports sent to the Portuguese crown in the first half of the 16th century contained numerous accounts of hunger among settlers. This was due to the organization of food supply and a prejudiced attitude toward local products, not a lack of resources.

    Nevertheless, crops such as manioc, corn, and potatoes did eventually make their way into the settlers’ diets, although they were initially intended for the Indigenous peoples. In some regions of Spanish America, these products were used as a form of tax collected from the local population. Later, they continued to be consumed alongside imported wheat, rice, and certain types of legumes. As for wine, it was imported for a long time and became a luxury item. By regulating its supply, the mother countries aimed to increase the colonies’ dependence and tie them more closely to the metropolis. However, by the second half of the 16th century, grapevines began to be cultivated in Spanish territories in what is now Peru, followed by Paraguay, Argentina, and Chile. The inhabitants of Portuguese America, with its specific climate conditions, relied more on imported wine, and large-scale production began only in the 19th century.

    The first agricultural animals brought by the Spanish were pigs and cattle. These were not only kept near settlements but were also deliberately released on uninhabited Caribbean islands as a backup food source for sailors who might go off course or be shipwrecked. After being introduced to the Antilles, they were also brought to other regions of Spanish America. European pigs quickly adapted to the new environment and began feeding on tropical vegetation. Pietro Martire d’Anghiera and Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés noted with satisfaction how the new diet improved the taste of these pigs’ meat.

    Globally, the new food base for pigs and cattle allowed them to reproduce quickly, and due to the lack of natural predators, they significantly altered the ecological balance of certain regions (such as the Caribbean islands). However, European colonizers did not think in these terms: they sought to provide familiar meat-based food for themselves, the fleets arriving from the mother countries, and the conquest expeditions of Hernán Cortés, Francisco Pizarro, Hernando de Soto, and others. In addition, cattle were needed by the colonists as draft animals on plantations and in mines.

    Where Did Native Americans Come From — Have They Always Been in America or Did They Arrive from Somewhere Else?

    Four colorized engravings of Indians of various tribes
    Four colorized engravings of Indians of various tribes from James Coles Pritchard’s book The natural history of man : comprising inquiries into the modifying influence of physical and moral agencies on the different tribes of the human family. London, 1845. Image: Heritage Auctions

    North and South America were settled relatively late in human history. At the end of the Ice Age, Upper Paleolithic Siberian tribes crossed into America via the Bering land bridge (now the Bering Strait) and spread throughout both continents in about 1,000 years. Genetic analysis has shown that all Native Americans — from Aleuts and Eskimos to various tribes of Tierra del Fuego — are closely related. For a long time, the oldest archaeological culture in the New World was considered to be the Clovis culture, discovered in the 1920s and 1930s, in what is now New Mexico.

    This culture emerged around 15,000 years ago. Over the past two to three decades, the discovery of several pre-Clovis sites (most notably the Monte Verde culture in southern modern-day Chile) has shifted the date of settlement of the New World back by 2,000–3,000 years — it is now believed to have occurred around 15,000–16,000 years ago. Earlier datings (up to 31,000–26,000 BC) are disputed and, although not yet rejected by the scientific community, are not widely accepted by most researchers.

    How Many Were There, How Did Different Tribes Live, and What Do We Know About Them?

    European conquerors encountered a variety of complex societies in the New World, ranging from semi-nomadic tribes of hunters, fishers, and gatherers to powerful state entities like the Aztec and Inca empires. Over a thousand Native American languages are known, forming hundreds of diverse language families. Attempts to reconstruct a Proto-Indian language, spoken by the first settlers who crossed the Bering Strait, have not been successful so far.

    Native Americans were unable to put up significant resistance to Europeans. Despite their remarkable achievements in certain areas (such as astronomy), even the most advanced societies did not have knowledge of the wheel, gunpowder, or iron (occasional iron finds do not change the overall picture). Native Americans used bronze for making ornaments and ceremonial objects but not for weapons. This imbalance in technological development is due to the isolation of the New World from the rest of the world.

    The question of the native population’s size at the time of America’s discovery is highly ideological and tied to debates about genocide. Estimates vary widely, ranging from 8 million to more than 100 million people. Venezuelan researcher Ángel Rosenblat (1902–1984) estimated the indigenous population of the New World at the time of conquest to be around 13.3 million, and by 1650, around 10 million. In textbooks, you may often see the figure of 55 million; this data is provided by North American geographer William Denevan. In his later works from the early 1990s, he refined this estimate to 53.9 million ± 20%.

    How Did the Genocide of Indigenous Peoples Occur and Why?

    South America

    To address this complex issue, it’s essential to start with definitions. The 1948 UN Convention defines genocide as acts committed with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group. Clearly, this definition was shaped by the tragic events of the 20th century and cannot be automatically applied to earlier historical periods. At first glance, there seem to be numerous grounds for discussing the genocide of the Indigenous populations of Latin America: the fall of pre-Columbian civilizations after encountering the conquistadors; the complete disappearance of the native population in Cuba and almost complete disappearance in Argentina and Uruguay; significant losses among Indigenous peoples in the tropical and coastal zones of South America; and the massive mortality caused by diseases introduced by Europeans and by forced labor in mines and plantations.

    On the other hand, European contacts with Indigenous peoples were varied, the policies of colonial authorities were inconsistent and often contradictory, and there were significant discrepancies between laws imposed from Europe and the local conditions. This diversity prevents us from reducing the entire picture to systematic and methodical genocide. However, the tradition of attributing solely atrocities and bloodshed to the Spanish is not new and has persisted for several centuries. This is also influenced by the so-called “Black Legend”—a strongly anti-Spanish narrative spread by opponents of the Habsburg dynasty in Europe as the Spanish Empire conquered more and more territories.

    However, from a historical perspective, when the scale of the loss among the Indigenous population became apparent, one cannot help but think about the destruction of Indigenous peoples—even if it was involuntary and collateral, rather than conscious and intentional (for example, when the pretext was a war against pagans, idolaters, or those practicing human sacrifice). To call it genocide, it must be proven that the colonizers consciously intended to wipe out the Indigenous peoples rather than subjugate, pacify, or conduct a demonstrative act of intimidation, and so forth. There were instances when subjects of the Spanish king pursued policies that led to the destruction of Indigenous peoples, while the king himself condemned these “excesses” and declared that such actions contradicted service to him and God.

    Modern historians disagree on whether the term “genocide” applies to the events of the Conquista. Some remind us of a range of aggravating circumstances beyond direct massacres: the removal of leaders as a blow to communities and entire tribal alliances; the relocation of enslaved Indigenous peoples from “useless” areas to regions where labor was needed, resulting in enormous losses; ecocide, or the destruction of ecosystems in which traditional pre-state societies had been integrated for centuries; and sexual violence against women. Opponents of equating the Conquista with genocide argue that the Spaniards’ brutality was driven by the desire to subjugate and later exploit the Indigenous peoples, not to annihilate them entirely. Others emphasize that in the demographic catastrophe that befell the Indigenous population of Latin America, European-introduced infections were more to blame than the extermination by conquistadors. Finally, some point out that alongside the military actions of the conquistadors on the ground, extensive legislation was developed in Spain throughout the 16th century, declaring the protection of Indigenous peoples. Although the practice of the Conquista often involved the voluntary or involuntary extermination of Indigenous peoples, theoretically, something entirely different was proclaimed.

    Beyond the question of genocide during the Conquista, researchers address related issues: ecocide and ethnocide. The previously mentioned ecocide refers to the predatory exploitation of natural resources by Europeans in the pursuit of profit and the destruction of ecosystems in which the lives of hunter-gatherers in the Caribbean and continental tropical zones were embedded. It includes the colonization of the Caribbean islands, which led to the rapid (within a few decades) disappearance of the Taíno tribe and several others, as well as the significant reduction of Atlantic coastal forests in Brazil due to the cutting down of valuable redwood. A key element in the modern struggle for the rights of the Amazonian Indigenous peoples is the preservation of the natural environment in which they live.

    As for ethnocide, it is understood as the destruction of an ethnic group through the eradication of its culture and the prevention of the use, development, and transmission of its language and culture to subsequent generations (including religious beliefs). Indeed, it is undeniable that the Spaniards and Portuguese sought to convert the Indigenous populations of Latin America to their religion and impose a Christian way of life. None of the defenders of the Indigenous peoples in the 16th–17th centuries—be it Padre Bartolomé de las Casas or the Portuguese and Spanish Jesuits who saved the Tupi-Guarani from brutal slave hunters—questioned the superiority of Christianity over paganism and the impossibility of preserving the old rituals and way of life. They were driven by a sincere belief in the only possible salvation of the soul through the acceptance of the Catholic faith. The realities of the Conquista showed that the slogans of spreading Christianity for the good of the Indigenous peoples too often masked looting and ruthless exploitation. Nevertheless, contemporaries objected only to the methods of conversion, not to its overarching goals.

    Thus, based on the 1948 UN Convention, the actions of Europeans in South America during the Conquista and colonization were not genocide. The most comprehensive general formulation, which seems acceptable to both opponents and supporters of the idea of genocide, is as follows: a violent alteration of the destinies of peoples after the Old World discovered the New and subjugated it.

    North America

    In North America, the population density of both Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples during the colonial era was significantly lower. Nevertheless, European colonization also led to wars and the gradual displacement of Indigenous peoples deeper into the continent. The first encounters between Indigenous peoples and the Spanish and French in North America date back to the 16th century. Wars between white settlers and Algonquin Indigenous peoples began in Virginia (1622) and New England (1637, 1675–1676). Then came wars with the Iroquois, Muscogee, and Sioux (from 1675 onward). However, there were cases when European powers, on the contrary, sought to enlist the military support of the Indigenous peoples. For example, the Seven Years’ War (1754–1763) in British North America became known as the “French and Indian War.”

    In 1763, British authorities prohibited settlers from moving west of the Allegheny Mountains, explaining their decision as being in the interest of Indigenous peoples. However, this decision ultimately was not implemented—independence movements soon began.

    The true catastrophe for the Indigenous populations of the United States was linked to the rapid agricultural development of vast areas of the continent in the 19th century. In 1830, the U.S. Congress passed the “Indian Removal Act,” forcibly relocating Indigenous peoples from the Atlantic coast to lands west of the Mississippi River. A series of wars did not halt the federal government’s decision. In 1831, the U.S. Supreme Court recognized Indigenous tribes as “domestic dependent nations,” for which the U.S. government essentially bore guardianship responsibilities. Although the Supreme Court restored the tribes’ sovereignty in 1832, their relocation did not stop. The Cherokee, Creek, Seminole, Chickasaw, and Choctaw were sent along the “Trail of Tears” to what is now Oklahoma.

    The Dawes Act (1887) destroyed the rights of Indigenous communities—tribal self-government and their collective land ownership—leaving almost all of them, beyond the borders of the so-called Indian Territory, with individual plots of 160 acres (64.8 hectares), the same amount an ordinary settler could receive under the Homestead Act. This was a very large allotment for irrigated farming but did not allow for the continuation of traditional economies. Senator Henry Dawes (1816–1903) believed that his law would speed up the transformation of Indigenous hunters into progressive, prosperous farmers.

    The outcome was different. During the years the law was in effect (until 1934), Indigenous peoples lost nearly two-thirds of their lands. On December 28–29, 1890, U.S. troops crushed the Sioux uprising at Wounded Knee in South Dakota. This last armed conflict with the Indigenous population of the U.S. coincided with the end of the “moving frontier” era—the completion of the country’s internal rural colonization: vast expanses, where only recently one could encounter only Indigenous peoples, were plowed in just a few decades. If in 1800 the total Indigenous population in the U.S. was about 600,000, by 1900 it had reached the lowest point in North American statistical history—fewer than 240,000.

    The governments of not only the U.S. but also other New World countries sought to break up Indigenous communities and replace communal land ownership with private property. Their goal was to create a unified land market and eliminate “feudal remnants.” These measures were most consistently implemented in Mexico. The Lerdo Law (1856) prohibited corporate (i.e., non-individual) land ownership, which immediately dealt a powerful blow to Indigenous peoples who could not keep up with the re-registration of their land rights (another victim of the law was the Catholic Church). The Law on Colonization of “Vacant Lands” (1883), in particular, led to the direct seizure of Indigenous lands in Sonora and Yucatán. As a result, if in 1821 communal land ownership accounted for 40% of agricultural land, by 1910 it was no more than 5%. The situation of the Indigenous peoples became dire in Argentina, where, as in the U.S. and Canada, a powerful settler movement and effective market agriculture emerged in the last third of the 19th century.

    How Did Mexico, the USA, and Canada Come to Be?

    Hernán Cortés, Conquistador of the Aztec Empire.
    Hernán Cortés, Conquistador of the Aztec Empire

    Mexico

    All these modern countries are geographically part of North America, but historically and culturally they represent different regions. Mexico is part of Latin America; after the discovery of the New World, it became part of Spain’s colonial possessions. The USA emerged from British colonies, though some of its modern territories were once Spanish and even French colonies. Modern Canada includes lands that belonged to both the French and British crowns.

    Of all these countries, Mexico experienced the earliest systematic European colonization. As early as 1519–1521, the Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés (1485–1547) conquered the Aztec Empire, and in the 1540s, the Spanish subdued the Maya states. Gradually, a system of governance for Spanish America developed, and in 1535, the Viceroyalty of New Spain was established. It became the first of the viceroyalties into which Spanish possessions in America were divided. The significance of New Spain, which was one of the most densely populated and economically developed regions of the New World even before the conquest, increased with the discovery of silver mines in the 1540s.

    Like the other viceroyalties, New Spain lasted until the early 19th century. After Napoleon Bonaparte increasingly subjugated the Spanish monarchy, forcing King Charles IV of Bourbon and his heir to abdicate in favor of Napoleon’s brother Joseph in May 1808, juntas (representative bodies) began to emerge in Spain and its overseas territories. These initially ruled in the name of the rightful king, Ferdinand VII, son of Charles IV. In Mexico City, the capital of New Spain, such a junta appeared in August 1808. Unlike the viceroyalties of New Granada and Rio de la Plata, where the struggle for independence was initiated by the Creole elite—descendants of Spaniards who felt more American than European—in New Spain, the independence movement developed from below. On September 16, 1810, the priest Miguel Hidalgo from the village of Dolores in Guanajuato (central Mexico) called for a fight for freedom—known as the “Cry of Dolores.” This sparked a struggle for Mexican independence that divided the country.

    On February 24, 1821, the commander of Spanish forces in southern Mexico, Agustín de Iturbide, issued the “Plan of Iguala” (named after a town in southwestern Mexico) under the slogan “Religion, Unity, Independence.” It declared Mexico a constitutional monarchy, guaranteed the preservation of the Catholic Church’s privileges, and proclaimed equality for all Mexicans, regardless of race or origin. The “Plan of Iguala” became the historical compromise that united the forces of radicals and conservatives in the struggle against the authority of the metropole.

    On September 28, 1821, the Act of Independence of the Mexican Empire was proclaimed, but by March 1823, the republicans had overthrown Emperor Agustín I Iturbide. On October 4, 1824, the republican constitution of the United Mexican States was published.

    USA and Canada

    The first permanent British colony in the New World, Virginia, was founded in 1607. The War of Independence began in 1775 in 13 British colonies in North America—excluding Canada, which was incorporated into the British Empire only after the Seven Years’ War (1756–1763), and the island possessions in the Caribbean. The struggle concluded in 1783 with the signing of the Treaty of Paris, under which London recognized the independence of the new state—the United States of America.

    The exploration of Canada began with the Italian John Cabot (Giovanni Caboto), who landed on the coast of Newfoundland in 1497, serving the English crown. He was followed in the early 16th century by French expeditions led by the Florentine Giovanni da Verrazzano and Jacques Cartier, whom the Indigenous people guided to Canada (meaning “village” in the Iroquois language). The actual colonization of Canada by the French began with Samuel de Champlain’s establishment of Quebec City in 1608. Following the Treaty of Utrecht, which ended the War of Spanish Succession in 1713, France lost Acadia, and by the Treaty of Paris in 1763, the British Empire acquired Quebec, bringing Canada entirely under its control.

    During the Revolutionary War -or American War of Independence- (1775–1783), both new British settlers and the French in Canada remained loyal to London. It was during this time, in 1774, that the Quebec Act was passed, securing the rights of French Catholics. In 1841, the English-speaking Upper Canada and the French-speaking Lower Canada, created in 1791, were unified. In 1867, the British North America Act created the Dominion of Canada, a self-governing possession of the British Empire. The legal concept of a “Dominion,” which existed until 1949, was initially developed for Canada and later extended to Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Ireland, and Newfoundland, which was incorporated into Canada only in 1949. Canada became fully independent in 1982 with the passage of the Canada Act, despite retaining membership in the British Commonwealth.

    What is the Oldest City in America?

    Declaration of Independence
    Declaration of Independence. Painting by John Trumbull. 1819 year. Image: Architect of the Capitol

    To answer this question, we must make some clarifications. Firstly, it’s essential to distinguish between cities founded by Europeans and those of ancient American civilizations, the oldest of which likely date back to the 1st millennium BCE. These did not survive the era of the Conquest in their original form, although some cities of Spanish colonists emerged on their ruins. The most prominent example is Mexico City on the ruins of Tenochtitlan.

    If we talk about cities founded in the New World by Europeans, the undisputed primacy belongs to Santo Domingo on the island of Hispaniola. It was established in 1496 by Bartolomeo Columbus, the brother of Christopher Columbus. If we look at the mainland, the uncontested oldest city in Central America is Nombre de Dios in Panama, founded by Diego de Nicuesa in 1510. In South America, the oldest existing city (again, with the caveat that we do not consider pre-Columbian cities) appears to be Santa Marta on the current territory of Colombia, founded by Rodrigo de Bastidas in 1525.

    Finally, in North America (excluding Central America, meaning in the territories of the USA and Canada), the oldest city is St. Augustine (Spanish name San Agustín), located in what is now the state of Florida, USA. In 1564, a French fort named Fort Caroline was established there, but the following year, the Spanish admiral Pedro Menéndez de Avilés destroyed the French colony and established Fort San Agustín in its place.

    How the Discovery of America Affected the European Economy

    View of Mexico City (formerly Tenochtitlan).
    View of Mexico City (formerly Tenochtitlan). Colorized engraving by Franz Hogenberg. 1564. Image: Hebrew University of Jerusalem

    The discovery of America had a profound impact on the socio-economic development of Europe. As major trade routes shifted from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic, some regions lost their former prominence (Italy, Southern Germany), while others gained significantly in strength (Spain and Portugal, later England and the Netherlands). The large-scale importation of American precious metals doubled the amount of gold and tripled the amount of silver circulating in Europe, contributing to a rapid increase in prices for essential goods (the so-called “Price Revolution”) across Europe

    A significant portion of the precious metals arriving in Europe was immediately exported to Asia, where they were used to purchase expensive Eastern goods. However, some silver remained in Europe. The increase in the money supply, along with the potential of colonies as sources of raw materials and markets for European goods, contributed to the development of the European economy. At the same time, the causes of the “Price Revolution” and other new socio-economic processes required explanation and stimulated the development of economic thought, particularly in Spain.

    As a result of the discovery of America, not only did trade contacts with Europe rapidly expand, but systemic connections also developed between Asia and America (embodied in the Manila galleons—huge ships that sailed between Manila in the Philippines and Acapulco in Mexico), as well as between America and Africa. In the Atlantic in the 16th and 17th centuries, a triangular trade route developed: ships carried European goods to Africa, transported enslaved people to the New World, and returned to Europe with cargoes of tobacco, sugar, and other goods. All of this indicated the formation of a global market.

    Paradoxically, the economies of the Iberian countries, which were the first to establish colonies in America, ultimately found themselves at a disadvantage. First, emigration to the colonies created huge demographic problems for Spain and especially for Portugal. Second, their economies could not meet the needs of their overseas possessions, forcing authorities to open the way to America for merchants from more developed countries, who in turn began to dominate the economies of the metropolises to some extent. “These kingdoms are becoming poorer every day and are turning into Indies for foreigners,” complained deputies of the Castilian Cortes in the mid-16th century.

    Along with the economy, politics also expanded onto the vast oceans. Competition for control over trade routes, the desire of European powers to acquire their own colonies, and the struggle for their redistribution became an integral part of international relations. Thanks to the wealth of the colonies, the metropolises significantly strengthened their positions in Europe.

    How Did It Change European Culture?

    The scientific revolution of the 16th and 17th centuries became possible in large part because the discovery of America, as a key component of the Age of Discovery, led to a dramatic expansion of Europeans’ understanding of the world. In America, new extensive materials were collected for the natural sciences, ethnography, history, and linguistics. Contacts with indigenous tribes, who had different social structures, stimulated the development of social thought. By gaining experience in interacting with bearers of different cultures and religions, Europeans became more aware of their own cultural and historical unity.

    At the same time, the most critically-minded among them realized that the world is diverse, that foreign cultures and religions may be no worse than their own, and that Europeans could learn much from the inhabitants of distant lands. It is no coincidence that the famous French humanist Michel de Montaigne (1533–1592) emphasized that in terms of morality, Native Americans were in no way inferior to Europeans, and Thomas More placed his ideal island of Utopia near the shores of South America. Alonso de Ercilla, in his epic poem “La Araucana,” describing the wars of the Spaniards with the Araucanian Indians, does not question Spain’s right to subdue them but effectively presents them in a heroic light as fighters for freedom, whose truth is equated with that of the Spaniards. Spanish humanists and clergy (Bartolomé de las Casas, Vasco de Quiroga, and others) attempted to implement utopian ideas in the New World that were born in Europe. Reflections on the Golden Age and the unspoiled faith of the inhabitants of America were organically woven into the intellectual world of the Renaissance and the Reformation.

    The discovery of America and the subsequent Conquista inspired literary works of various genres: Hernán Cortés’s “Letters,” Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca’s “Shipwrecked Survivor’s Report,” and others. Innovative compilations appeared that contained information about the geography and nature of the new lands, as well as the customs and history of their peoples: “Decades of the New World” by Pietro Martire d’Anghiera, “History of the Indies” by Las Casas, “General History of the Things of New Spain” by Bernardino de Sahagún, and others. Images of America from the Age of Discovery and Conquista can also be traced in European literature and art, particularly in the works of Shakespeare and Calderón.

    And the Food?

    Florida Indians sowing corn
    Florida Indians sowing corn. Illustration for a story by Jacques Lemoine from the second volume of Theodor de Bry’s Grand Voyages. First edition 1591. Image: Jacksonville Public Library Florida Collection

    Europeans were introduced to new types of poultry (turkeys), agricultural crops (potatoes, corn, tomatoes, beans, red chili peppers, pumpkins, cocoa), and fruits (pineapple, avocado). Although the introduction of new products was delayed due to the conservative mindset of most colonists, over time, they significantly changed the diet of Europeans, causing a sort of “food revolution.” Particularly important were potatoes and corn, which significantly reduced the threat of famine. The influence of crops brought to America by Europeans and actively cultivated there for export to the Old World (coffee, sugarcane, from which not only sugar but also rum was made) was also substantial.

    Tobacco deserves special mention: it is not an edible crop, but was initially valued by Europeans as a remedy for hunger; it was also used as medicine (recall that later Robinson Crusoe used tobacco tincture for treatment on his deserted island). Eventually, chewing, sniffing, and smoking tobacco became popular in the Old World for pleasure. Tobacco became the main crop in British Virginia and Maryland in the 17th and 18th centuries.

    The Spanish also introduced bananas to the island of Haiti, which are now considered an integral part of American flora. There are hypotheses that bananas were known in South America even before the arrival of Europeans; in any case, it was the Spanish who spread them widely throughout their territories.

    European colonists also contributed to the spread of American species of cultivated plants and domesticated animals beyond their original habitats. For example, they brought the Mexican-origin turkey to Peru. Over time, the mixing of indigenous and European food products and methods of preparation led to the creation of a unique cuisine on both sides of the Atlantic. Some dishes that became traditional on both sides of the Atlantic include imported ingredients, but their American or European origins have been forgotten (for example, the Spanish potato tortilla—not to be confused with the Mexican corn tortilla—or dishes based on rice and milk from Argentina).

  • Treaty of the Pyrenees: Two Royal Houses Against Each Other

    Treaty of the Pyrenees: Two Royal Houses Against Each Other

    The conflict between France and Spain, which had begun in 1635, ended with the Treaty of the Pyrenees. It pitted two great royal houses against each other: the Bourbons ruling France and the Habsburgs ruling Spain. The Spanish were forced to negotiate an end to the conflict after their defeat at the Battle of the Dunes in 1658. This was finalized on November 7, 1659, when Cardinal Mazarin and Don Luis Méndez de Haro signed the Treaty of the Pyrenees.

    As a result of this pact, France was able to regain control of some territories in the north and southwest that had been under Spanish control. The marriage of Infanta Maria Theresa of Austria, daughter of King Philip IV of Spain, to Louis XIV of France was another consequence of this treaty. This marriage greatly strengthened France’s status on the European continent by making the French sovereign the most powerful monarch in Europe and weakening the Spanish monarchy.

    What Was the Background to the Signing of the Treaty of the Pyrenees?

    The war between France and Spain started in 1635. At the time, both Spain under the House of Habsburg and France under the Bourbons wanted to increase their sway over Europe. The bloody conflict between the two continental powers lasted over 25 years. It wasn’t until the Battle of the Dunes in 1658 that France finally managed to pull ahead. It occurred on territory controlled by the Spanish crown between Nieuport (Flanders) and Dunkirk. The Treaty of the Pyrenees was concluded on November 7, 1659, after extensive negotiations.

    What Powers Did the Treaty Bring Into Play?

    Both Spain and France were major powers in Europe during the 17th century. Several Germanic and Austrian rulers were enthroned by the House of Habsburg in Spain over the ages. On the French side, the Bourbon line wielded power. At the start of the war, Louis XIII was in charge of the French kingdom; Louis XIV took his place in 1643. France triumphed over Spain in their battle, and the Treaty of the Pyrenees was ratified by Cardinal Mazarin. King Philip IV of Spain had his Prime Minister, Don Luis Méndez de Haro, handle this responsibility.

    What Did the Treaty of the Pyrenees Establish?

    The geopolitical effects of the Treaty of the Pyrenees (1659)
    The geopolitical effects of the Treaty of the Pyrenees (1659).

    The Treaty of the Pyrenees was an important moment in European history. The House of Bourbons finally triumphed over the House of Habsburg after decades of intermittent conflict that culminated in the Franco-Spanish War. The two reigning dynasties negotiated arrangements that favored France under the Treaty of the Pyrenees. Although talks had begun in 1656, it wasn’t until the French victory at the Battle of the Dunes in 1658 that the Spanish agreed to give as much ground as they did.

    There were a total of 124 provisions in the Treaty of the Pyrenees, plus another 8 that were kept secret. There are certain articles that are more vital than others. Article 42, for example, delimits the frontier using the peaks of the Pyrenees as its boundary. Article 61 highlights Philip IV’s rejection of any right to the Alsatian provinces.

    What’s in It for the Warring Powers?

    French King Louis XIV saw the Treaty of the Pyrenees as a chance to cement his rule over the rest of Europe. The House of Habsburg was severely weakened, as was the Spanish crown. In particular, northern France and the Netherlands were two areas where Spain had to give up control. The Treaty of the Pyrenees, in particular, suggested to Spain that it was compelled to join a forced coalition.

    Louis XIV married the daughter of Emperor Philip IV of Austria, Maria Theresa. The infanta and her heirs were legally required to give up their claim to the Spanish throne as part of the marriage contract. The marriage contract was amended by Cardinal Mazarin to include a dowry provision demanding that Spain pay 500,000 gold ecus. The sum was so enormous that it was a factor in Louis XIV’s claim to the Spanish throne and the subsequent War of Devolution.

    Cardinal Mazarin adds a clause so that Spain is required to pay a dowry of 500,000 crowns for the marriage. A colossal sum that Spain will be unable to pay, which will later be used by Louis XIV to claim rights over the Spanish crown and will lead to the War of Devolution.

    How Did the Treaty of the Pyrenees Redraw the Franco-Spanish Map?

    Spain held extensive territory in what is now northern France and the Netherlands prior to the Treaty of the Pyrenees. The “Spanish Netherlands” was the name given to these territories. After defeating Spain in battle, France annexed the territory to its crown. South of it, it absorbed principalities like Catalonia, where modern-day Montpellier is situated.

    The treaty resulted in significant changes to the border between France and Spain. France gained control of territories in Catalonia and Roussillon, solidifying its control over these regions.

    The delineation of the French-Spanish border, however, was the most consequential event. In a rough sense, the Pyrenees serve as a border here. “The crests of the mountains that form the slopes of the waters” are all that is needed to define the boundary, according to the treaty. It was a complete and utter win for Louis XIV and France. The only concession granted to Spain was the renunciation of support for Portugal, then at war with its Iberian neighbor.

  • A Brief History of the Spanish Netherlands

    A Brief History of the Spanish Netherlands

    Up until the 1640s, the expanse of the Spanish Netherlands exceeded the modern-day area of Belgium. These territories were a part of the Holy Roman Empire, having a place within the Burgundian Circle, which encompassed Franche-Comté as well. Among these lands was the Duchy of Luxembourg; however, the Liège region, functioning as a neutral ecclesiastical principality, was not included. By the 17th century, the dividing line separating present-day Belgium and the Netherlands was located farther to the south compared to the boundary between the Spanish Netherlands (also referred to as the Southern Netherlands) and the United Provinces.

    From the 15th century onward, the Netherlands emerged as a prominent hub of culture, nurturing diverse religious reforms and fostering the humanist wave. Erasmus of Rotterdam played a pivotal role in guiding the latter movement. Notably, Philip the Good founded the esteemed University of Leuven in the year 1425. The inception of the inaugural printing presses in Leuven in 1473 propelled the Netherlands to the forefront of European printing innovation. Due to its intricate trade networks and sizable financial reserves, Antwerp rose to become an economic center in the early 16th century.

    Key Takeaways: Spanish Netherlands

    • The Spanish Netherlands, also known as the Southern Netherlands, was a historical region located in the Low Countries (modern-day Belgium, Luxembourg, and parts of the Netherlands and northern France).
    • The Spanish Netherlands emerged as a pivotal theater during the Eighty Years’ War (1568–1648), pitting the Spanish Habsburgs against the Dutch Republic. Ultimately, the northern provinces of the Spanish Netherlands progressed into the autonomous Dutch Republic.
    • Distinguished artists such as Peter Paul Rubens, who cast an enduring influence on European artistry, hail from this region.

    The Netherlands Entered into Opposition Against Spain

    Spanish Netherlands (grey) in 1700
    Spanish Low Countries c. 1700 (grey/green).

    The Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, also known as King Charles I of Spain, who was born in Ghent (present-day Belgium), demonstrated strong determination against the Protestant “heresy” that was gaining ground in the Netherlands in the 1520s. His fight for Christian unity was, in fact, a struggle to maintain cohesion among the scattered Habsburg possessions.

    This battle against heretics served in the construction of a centralized modern state, granting the right to intervene in religious matters. Anti-Protestant laws against “Placards” (anti-Catholic posters) were issued between 1520 and 1550. In 1555, Charles V abdicated his claims to the Netherlands and Spain in favor of his son, Philip II of Spain.

    The emperor had always been attuned to the social developments in the Netherlands; he spent his youth there and was fluent in Dutch, French, and Spanish.

    Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma, Governor of the Spanish Netherlands
    Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma, Governor of the Spanish Netherlands.

    Philip II grew up in Spain and spoke only Spanish. Under his rule, increased taxation, the fight against Calvinism, and a policy of centralization led to numerous tensions with the population of the Netherlands. Philip II offered several representatives of the Dutch nobility a role in the States General, the assembly governing the seventeen provinces of the Netherlands.

    He appointed his half-sister, Margaret of Parma, born in the Netherlands and fluent in Dutch, as the governor. By 1558, the parliament opposed Philip II’s demands by refusing to approve new taxes and demanding the withdrawal of the Spanish army.

    The dioceses of the seventeen provinces of the Netherlands, inherited from the Middle Ages, no longer corresponded to geographical realities and administrative needs. The creation of new dioceses, a demand that had persisted for decades, was finally approved in May 1559, but it was decided outside the Netherlands without consulting local religious organizations.

    The population grew concerned about the rise of Catholic religious absolutism and the strengthening of the Inquisition, which had been officially introduced in 1524. Protestant protests multiplied across the country, and in 1566, a delegation of noble members presented a petition to Margaret of Parma, urging her to halt religious persecutions.

    This signaled the start of the “Beggars’ Revolt (Geuzen),” and Calvinist-led iconoclastic riots wreaked havoc on religious structures throughout the Netherlands.

    The Breakup and the Birth of the United Provinces of the Netherlands

    The Four Days' Battle, 1666
    United Provinces of the Netherlands, The Four Days’ Battle, 1666. Image: Abraham Storck.

    Philip II’s grip on the northern regions slipped, prompting him to dispatch his military to quell the uprising. By August of 1567, the Duke of Alba had marched into Brussels, leading a formidable force of ten thousand soldiers. He established the Council of Troubles, tasked with adjudicating all those who defied the authority of the Spanish Crown.

    Commencing in 1568, William of Orange embarked on a resolute policy of resistance, culminating in the Union of Arras on January 6, 1579. This pact brought the southern provinces of the Netherlands under Philip II’s dominion. In response, the seven northern provinces—Holland, Zeeland, Gelderland, Friesland, Utrecht, Overijssel, and Groningen—retorted on January 23, 1579, forging the Union of Utrecht.

    By 1581, the seven predominantly Protestant provinces asserted their autonomy via the Act of Abjuration, effectively declaring independence and establishing themselves as the United Provinces.

    Conversely, the ten Catholic southern provinces remained under the sway of the Spanish Crown and morphed into the Spanish Netherlands. These territories, tethered to the Spanish monarchy, resisted assimilation into Iberian Spain due to their geographic separation by the expanse of the Kingdom of France.

    Bearing the legacy of the Habsburgs’ Burgundian heritage, they exhibited a distinctive political and legal identity. A strong commitment to provincial and municipal privileges as well as ingrained self-governance traditions made this uniqueness abundantly clear.

    To assert his authority, Philip II had to grapple with the political ethos of these former Burgundian domains, where a profound reverence for provincial and urban rights intertwines with deeply entrenched habits of autonomy.

    A Short-Lived Period of Prosperity

    Portrait of Isabella Clara Eugenia of Spain, Archduchess of Austria
    Portrait of Isabella Clara Eugenia of Spain, Archduchess of Austria.

    The Netherlands experienced a notably prosperous era referred to as the “Archdukes” epoch, commencing in 1598 with the ascendancy of Infanta Isabella and Archduke Albert, who were the offspring and son-in-law of Philip II.

    The sway of the Spanish continued to hold significant influence until the demise of Archduke Albert in 1621. This dominance was owed to the formidable Flemish military and the strategic geographical positioning of the Netherlands. The Archdukes asserted their authority as independent sovereigns, garnering international recognition for their rule.

    In 1621, Infanta Isabella assumed the role of the Netherlands’ governess; however, her authority waned due to the resurgence of conflict with the United Provinces. Subsequent governors followed in succession in Brussels until the passing of the final Spanish Habsburg in 1700.

    Their primary task was to uphold the Spanish king’s dominion, even as his financial and military backing progressively dwindled. Additionally, they had to navigate the influential counterforces posed by the nation’s elites: the cities, the influential clergy, and the nobility, who wielded control over governmental institutions at all tiers of the state.

    The Spanish Netherlands: A Battlefield of the European Wars of the 17th Century

    Peace of Westphalia
    The Swearing of the Oath of Ratification of the Treaty of Münster, oil on copper by Gerard Terborch, 1648.

    During the 17th century, the Spanish Netherlands were deeply entrenched in the throes of warfare. They actively participated on the European political stage, extending a warm welcome to a succession of esteemed political exiles who greatly supported the Spanish cause.

    Notable figures among them included Queen Marie de Medici and her son Gaston d’Orleans, Duke Charles IV of Lorraine, Queen Christina of Sweden, and the future King of England, Charles II.

    The conflict against the Dutch Republic persisted relentlessly until a twelve-year pause was reached in 1609. This hiatus concluded in 1621, and ultimately, in 1648, the Peace of Westphalia was established.

    Louis XIV visiting a trench during the war
    Louis XIV at Douai in the War of Devolution 1667.

    Between the 1640s and 1650s, the Dutch emerged as staunch allies, pivotal to the survival of the Spanish Netherlands. Their concerns revolved around the aspirations of the French King, whom they were apprehensive about having as their neighbor.

    The capture of Arras in 1640 by Louis XIII and Cardinal Richelieu marked a pivotal juncture, but the era of Fronde (from 1648 to 1653) enabled Philip IV of Spain’s monarchy to reclaim Dunkirk and Barcelona.

    The definitive clash unfolded near Dunkirk in 1658, where the French, in alliance with Cromwell’s English forces, achieved victory over a combined army of Spanish and royalist English troops. The Treaty of the Pyrenees in 1659 forestalled the Turenne-led French army from annexing the Spanish Netherlands.

    In orange, the Spanish Netherlands before its split. In violet, the Principality of Liège. In pink, the princely Abbey of Stavelot-Malmedy.
    In orange, the Spanish Netherlands before its split. In violet, the Principality of Liège. In pink, the princely Abbey of Stavelot-Malmedy.

    In 1662, Louis XIV reacquired Dunkirk from the English prior to initiating the Wars of Devolution (1667-1668) and subsequently the Franco-Dutch War (1672-1678). These conflicts resulted in a substantial one-third territorial loss for the Spanish Netherlands.

    The region became a focal point for intermittent conflicts and a theater of operations for the armed forces of prominent European nations. Following the culmination of the War of the Spanish Succession in 1713, the Spanish Netherlands transitioned into Austrian ownership.

  • Spanish Civil War: The bloodiest war in western Europe since World War I in 1918

    Spanish Civil War: The bloodiest war in western Europe since World War I in 1918

    The Spanish Civil War lasted from July 17, 1936, through April 1, 1939, and pitted the Spanish government against a nationalist rebellion commanded by General Francisco Franco. Spain was in the midst of severe social, economic, and political instability after a period of dictatorship and the subsequent formation of the Second Republic. The military, supported by monarchists and the extreme right, reacted violently after the Popular Front won elections in Spain in February 1936. The left-wing administration was so set on being toppled that they launched a coup d’état in July 1936, but they were unsuccessful.

    In response to the fascist danger, the socialist and communist-led republican movement strengthened its own military forces. It was the beginning of the Spanish Civil War, which pitted nationalists against republicans. Talks between the two parties continued. General Franco led the nationalists to victory, and with the help of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, they successfully crushed the Republican resistance. In a nutshell, the nationalists triumphed in the civil war in 1939, resulting in the rise to power of the Franco dictatorship.

    What were the causes of the Spanish Civil War?

    Alfonso XIIIdeEspana
    After the Republicans swept the elections on 12 April 1931, the Second Spanish Republic was officially declared on 14 April. King Alfonso XIII of Spain left the country.

    General Miguel Primo de Rivera staged a coup in Valencia in 1923. He led Spain, which was ruled by a dictatorship at the time, for seven years. When the Great Depression hit in 1929, it sent Spain into a period of economic and social unrest. Primo de Rivera’s backing dwindled over time. As King of Spain, Alfonso XIII deposed him in 1930. While the monarch made an effort to institute constitutional rule, widespread opposition to the monarchy persisted.

    There was a formal proclamation of the end of the monarchy and the beginning of the Second Republic by socialists and republicans in April 1931. Anarchist and radical currents’ anger sparked the “bienio negro,” a period of political instability. The fear of a communist takeover on the right and a fascist takeover on the left drove a wedge between the two sides of the nation.

    General Emilio Mola was the chief planner of the coup.
    General Emilio Mola was the chief planner of the coup.

    After elections in February 1936, the left-leaning “Frente Popular” (Spanish Popular Front) took control. Toppling this new administration was a concerted effort by generals such as Mola, Sanjurjo, Goded, and Franco. They began their uprising on July 17 and 18 and made their way to Madrid. In an effort to quell public support for the military, the administration has distributed weapons to the populace. Militias were formed by both the left and the right in Spain. A little over a third of the populace backed the nationalists, hence the coup d’état was a failure. Meanwhile, the Spanish social revolution saw armed workers capture enterprises and collectivize land.

    How did the Spanish Civil War unfold?

    Portrait of Francisco Franco
    Portrait of Francisco Franco

    When the Popular Front came to power, the armed forces plotted a pronunciamiento (military revolt) to remove them from office. According to their plan, the military attempted to seize power on July 17, 1936. However, the coup d’état failed because it had little popular backing. Furthermore, workers’ militias equipped with weapons fought the military and even began a social revolution.

    Both the nationalists and the republicans, who had armies of almost 500,000 men at the outset of the battle in July 1936, were split into two camps. However, the balance of power was in favor of the nationalists.

    General Francisco Franco’s nationalist camp included traditionalists, monarchists, and fascists like the Spanish Falange. Italy’s fascist government and Germany’s Nazi Party both backed the nationalist army. It was well-trained and commanded by seasoned commanders.

    There were atheists, socialists, communists, and anarchists all in the Republican camp. After the militias formed, the Spanish army became chaotic. During the month of October, the Popular Army of the Spanish Republic was formed. The Soviet Union and the International Brigades backed the movement. Nonetheless, it lacked the nationalist army’s superior training and hardware.

    The Spanish War started when Franco’s army joined Mola’s on the other side of the Strait of Gibraltar. Battles were fought on both sides from a position of strength and from an offensive standpoint. While the nationalists made significant progress in other areas, they were unable to seize Madrid from the Republicans in November 1936. Later, beginning in 1939, Franco’s army methodically eradicated all traces of resistance until the region was completely under their control.

    On both sides of the conflict, lives were lost and atrocities were committed. Leftist sympathizers and militants were targeted and killed in the nationalist zone. Union militias repressed right-wing politicians, priests, and even rich families in Republican-controlled regions. Killings in both camps reached the tens of thousands.

    The Siege of Madrid

    Nationalist soldiers raiding a suburb of Madrid during the Spanish Civil War
    Nationalist soldiers raiding a suburb of Madrid during the Spanish Civil War.

    Between November 8 and November 24, 1936, the province and city of Madrid were the site of a series of conflicts known collectively as the Siege of Madrid. On November 8, 20,000 nationalists led by Emilio Mola launched several attacks on the Spanish capital but were driven back by Republican forces. In the days that followed, the Republicans attempted counterattacks, but to no avail.

    When it came to advancing their cause on November 19, the nationalists were stopped short of the university area. Afterward, Franco chose to attack the Spanish capital. With both sides exhausted, the front stabilized. After that, the nationalists shifted their focus to other areas, namely the country’s northern regions. The Nationalists did not successfully seize the city until March 28th, 1939.

    What role did women play during the Spanish Civil War?

    Children take refuge during the Francoist bombing over Madrid (1936–1937).
    Children take refuge during the Francoist bombing over Madrid (1936–1937). 

    There was a large influx of female Republicans. People of color were often given the right to bear arms and serve as frontline soldiers in most militias. Women participated as nurses and in the back-end logistics of the movement. The republicans solicited female volunteers around Europe, with the stipulation that they had certain skills. Consequently, multinational brigades gained the services of foreign nurses. Spouses of the volunteers who went to Spain were many.

    What were the foreign interventions in the Spanish Civil War?

    Polish volunteers in the International Brigades
    Polish volunteers in the International Brigades

    Nazi Germany sent the Condor Legion (17,000 troops), and Fascist Italy sent the Volunteer Troops Corps (10,000 men) to aid the nationalists (75,000 men) during the Spanish Civil War. One legion was also dispatched from Portugal to fight with the Spanish fascists in the Spanish Civil War. In an effort to counter fascism, the Soviet Union provided aid to the Republican cause. The Soviet Union supplied both military hardware and expert advice.

    The International Brigades also fought with the Republicans. Protesters included anti-fascists, socialists, communists, and Marxists from all around the world (France, Italy, Germany, the United States, Poland, etc.). It was legally forbidden to supply arms to Spain, and France and the United Kingdom adopted a policy of non-intervention. The two nations did, however, covertly provide the Republicans with weapons.

    Which personalities took part in the Spanish Civil War?

    André Malraux was one famous figure who fought for the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War. André Malraux led the Espana Squadron from 1936 until 1937. A fellow American author and staunch Republican, Ernest Hemingway, was someone he crossed paths with about this time. For Whom the Bell Tolls is Hemingway’s classic book set during the Spanish Civil War (1940).

    In 1936, the British author George Orwell landed in Spain, where he joined the POUM (Marxist Unification Workers’ Party) militia and participated in the Spanish Civil War. After being injured in battle in 1937, he went to England, where he penned homage to Catalonia, which was released the following year.

    Who won the Spanish Civil War?

    Ruins of Guernica
    Ruins of Guernica

    Nationalist forces, commanded by Francisco Franco, ultimately triumphed in the Spanish Civil War. The Nationalists put down pockets of Republican opposition in Spain’s north and east after failing to capture Madrid in 1936. Catalonia fell under Nationalist rule in the first months of 1939. As March came to a close, Franco’s forces were able to capture Madrid. Franco declared Nationalist victory on April 1 and installed a dictatorship that would rule Spain until 1976.

    What were the results of this war?

    Together, military and civilian deaths during the Spanish War totaled close to half a million. Roughly 110,000 Republicans and 80,000 Nationalists lost their lives throughout the conflict. The civil war also threw many refugees and exiles onto the roads. The populations of France, the United Kingdom, Mexico, and the Soviet Union swelled by around 300,000. After the fall of Barcelona in 1939, Catalan republicans flooded into France seeking refuge. The term for this mass migration is “la Retirada” (Spanish for “The Retreat”).

    How to analyze Guernica, the work of Pablo Picasso

    Picasso's Guernica painting

    One of Picasso’s best-known paintings, “Guernica” depicts the destruction wrought by the Spanish Civil War in 1937. On April 26, 1937, the German air force bombed the city of Guernica, and this picture depicts that event. Picasso’s cubist depiction of a horse, a bull, a dead soldier, and bombing victims is influenced by Goya’s Tres de Mayo, Poussin’s Massacre of the Innocents, and Saint Sever’s Apocalypse. Picasso condemns Nazism and declares his aversion to war with this depiction of carnage and suffering.

    KEY DATES OF THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR

    April 12, 1931 – Triumph of the Spanish Republicans in the municipal elections

    After 8 years of tyranny, Spain conducted its first democratically organized municipal elections on April 12, 1931. Republican candidates fared very well in the elections, and the monarchy of King Alfonso XIII was toppled as a consequence. The monarch abdicated two days after the elections. It was at this point that the Second Spanish Republic was established. After this point of disarray, the Civil War broke out.

    April 14, 1931 – Proclamation of the Spanish Republic

    Largely because to their success in the April 12 regional elections, Republican candidates declared a new republic. In an abdication marked by military honors, King Alfonso XIII of Spain stepped down from his throne. So as to protect his family, he decided to take them into exile in France. When the left won the elections in June, a democratic constitution would be put into effect.

    April 14, 1931 – Proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic

    It was on April 14, 1931, after Republican candidates performed well in local elections, that Spain’s Second Republic was established. As the Spanish provisional government was being formed, the king departed Madrid. Following his election as president, Niceto Alcalá-Zamora immediately instituted an agricultural reform. Spain’s Second Republic was eventually toppled by the civil war and Franco’s dictatorship.

    October 29, 1933 – Birth of the Spanish Falange

    José Antonio Primo de Rivera, the son of Falange founder Miguel Primo de Rivera, established the group. This fascist group supported establishing a nationalist government. It supported General Franco during the Spanish Civil War. In 1936, its creator was put to death. Soon after, Franco would bring together all the factions that backed him in government, and the Falange would be one of them.

    December 29, 1934 – Lorca directed Yerma

    Federico Garca Lorca, a poet and playwright from Spain, wrote a play named Yerma. In it, a young peasant lady tries to have a kid against her husband’s strong opposition. Part of a trilogy that also includes Blood Wedding (1933) and The House of Bernarda Alba (1936), this novel was written in 1934. Margarita Xirgu, Enrique Diosdado, Ricardo Merino, Pilar Munoz, Carmen Collado, Pedro López Lagar, and Eloisa Vigo were the actors he enlisted for the play.

    February 16, 1936 – The Popular Front wins the elections in Spain

    In Spain’s most recent election, the left-leaning “El Frente Popular” alliance defeated the right-leaning National Front and the centrist Popular Party. The new administration was formed under the Republican leadership of Manuel Azana, who exiled General Franco to the Canary Islands. Soon, Spain would descend into civil war as Republicans and Nationalists clashed.

    July 13, 1936 – Calvo Sotelo is assassinated

    Jose Calvo Sotelo, a representative for the monarchist party, was murdered by Republican police in Madrid. This tragedy was the catalyst for what had been a conspiracy under Generals Sanjurjo and Mola for some time. The legitimate administration had justifiably been wary of these military officers and had expelled them.

    Exiled leaders Sanjurjo (in Portugal), Mola (in Pamplona), and Franco (in the Canary Islands) all lived in separate political isolation. The monarchist’s killing also had a role in Franco’s decision to join the insurrection. From that point on, the three generals worked together in an effort to topple the Republican government. War broke out among the people soon after the putsch failed.

    July 18, 1936 – Spanish Civil War begins

    To overthrow the Popular Front (left) government, the Melilla garrison troops rose up under the command of former army chief of staff General Francisco Franco Bahamonde. A rebellion inside the Spanish military, backed by Generals Mola and Sanjurjo, led to the countrywide outbreak of Civil War. After three years of destruction, the Republicans were defeated, and Franco’s Caudillo dictatorship was established and maintained for the next 36 years.

    August 1, 1936 – Leon Blum submits a pact of non-intervention in the Spanish War

    French Prime Minister Leon Blum decided to back the Spanish Republicans when war broke out in Spain. However, conservatives, ultraconservatives, and French radicals all opposed military involvement. Also, France’s biggest ally, the United Kingdom, desired to spare Hitler, who backed the nationalists in Spain, and did not want to back the Spanish communists. For his part, Léon Blum advocated a non-intervention agreement, whereby the nations involved would all agree to withhold supplies from Spain.

    August 14, 1936 – Franco’s troops seize Badajoz

    A few thousand captives were killed during the invasion of Badajoz by Franco’s Nationalist army. The nationalist troops from the south and the north were able to join together in a blockade and bolster their strength thanks to the military’s assistance. The capture of Madrid was the general’s first priority in his quest to topple the Popular Front administration in Spain. However, the initiative was to collide with the Republican-led Nationalist siege of the Alcázar of Toledo.

    August 19, 1936 – García Lorca was shot

    The poet and playwright Federico Garca Lorca was an early anti-fascist who sided with the Republicans during the Spanish Civil War. He moved away from Madrid to Granada to be near his friend Luis Rosales. The Nationalists, aware of the poet’s political views, detained him on August 16, 1936. Federico Garca Lorca was killed on August 19 in the Andalusian community of Alfacar.

    September 27, 1936 – End of the siege of the Alcázar in Toledo

    Nationalists of Toledo had been holding out in the Alcázar against armed Republican soldiers since July 22. Though General Franco was mulling an attack in Madrid, he instead opted to lead his troops to Toledo to aid the trapped rebels there. After two months of fighting, most of the stronghold was destroyed, and the Republicans opted to join Madrid to bolster its defenses. The nationalist rebels, for their part, were freed from their entrenchment. With this triumph under his belt, Franco would undoubtedly move closer to gaining Italy and Germany’s formal recognition.

    October 1, 1936 – Franco proclaims himself Caudillo

    In Burgos, General Franco, leader of the Spanish nationalist insurgents, was named “generalissimo” and ruler of state. In honor of the medieval Spanish knights who drove the Arabs out of Spain (Reconquista), he decided to go by the name Caudillo. Three years later, in 1939, Franco emerged victorious from Spain’s terrible Civil War against the Republican government. From 1975 until his death, he would control Spain with an iron fist.

    November 6, 1936 – The legal Spanish government fled to Valencia

    The administration of Madrid fled to Valencia when Largo Caballero was in control. Despite General Miaja’s best efforts, Franco’s army was able to launch an onslaught towards the city. The Republican organization and the intervention of the International Brigades were, however, delayed because of the siege of the Alcázar of Toledo. This meant the nationalist military invasion did not instantly succeed. Madrid finally capitulated after 28 months of struggle.

    November 20, 1936 – Death of José Primo de Rivera

    Primo de Rivera, the leader of the fascist Spanish Falange organization, was put to death by the country’s democratically elected government in 1933. Miguel Primo de Rivera, the ruler of Spain from 1923 to 1930, was his father. As soon as the Popular Front took power, they outlawed his group. Participating in the nationalist uprising of July, Rivera was arrested on the sixth day of the uprising. He was summarily tried and then shot, and was elevated to the rank of martyr by Franco’s regime.

    March 18, 1937 – The Italians were pushed back by the International Brigades in Spain

    At the outset of the Spanish Civil War, the International Brigades fought with the Republicans and were instrumental in defeating the Italian fascist troops who had joined themselves with Franco. The latter tried to take Guadalajara in order to divide the Republican territory.

    Franco had been attempting to destabilize the capital city by seizing the territory surrounding Madrid for months. Republican forces had enough self-assurance after the Nationalists’ setback at Guadalajara to seize Teruel at the beginning of the next year. Human casualties, though, were and would continue to be significant on all sides.

    April 19, 1937 – Franco unites the nationalist political parties

    In 1937, the anti-republican movement included a wide range of perspectives and ideologies, including the Phalange, monarchists, Carlists, CEDA (Spanish Confederation of Autonomous Rights), etc. The “Falange Española Tradicionalista y de las Juntas de Ofensiva Nacional Sindicalista” (FET y de las JONS a.k.a FET-JONS) was a political party founded by Francisco Franco to consolidate his control. The other political parties were dissolved. He subsequently established a fascist-style regime. In 1977, there was no longer a single party.

    April 26, 1937 – Bombing of Guernica

    More than 1,600 people were killed when the German air force bombarded the Spanish Basque town of Guernica for three hours during a market day. Hitler sided with General Franco during the Spanish Civil War and supported Franco’s plan to intimidate civilians. Later that year, Picasso created his most powerful piece on the subject of Guernica.

    1937 – Picasso creates Guernica, a painting that expresses his revolt against the war

    On April 26, 1937, Spanish painter Pablo Picasso, while residing in Paris, heard about the bombing of Guernica, a Basque village. Picasso, outraged by this act of violence, spent the period between May 1 and June 4 painting a work depicting the tragedy of the attack. One of Picasso’s most iconic works would soon be this cubist masterpiece. It was not shown in Spain until 1981, long after Franco had died and the Museum of Modern Art in New York had taken possession of it.

    May 1937 – New Spanish Republican Government

    Juan Negrín, a socialist, succeeded Largo Caballero, a Republican, as president. To keep the Spanish Civil War under control, a campaign of counterattack against the nationalist revolutionaries was implemented. Both Phalangists and Trotskyists (POUM) were put to death by the government, with the help of the communists. The new administration would meet in Barcelona, but it would likely be hampered by internal disagreements.

    June 19, 1937 – Bilbao fell to Franco’s forces

    Franco’s army, led by General Mola, had been advancing into northern Spain since March. Following their transit through the Basque Country, where the horrific bombing of Guernica took occurred, the nationalists eventually made it to the city of Bilbao (Basque Country, northern Spain). It didn’t take long for them to seize control. Franco eventually came to conquer Santander and Asturias.

    January 9, 1938 – Republican offensive on Teruel, Spain

    When the Nationalists advanced into northern Spain, the Republican army counterattacked with a victorious operation against the city of Teruel. Since 1936, Republicans and Nationalists (Franco) had been engaged in bloody combat in Spain’s Civil War. In the end, the legitimate (Republican) administration was left disappointed. When the city was bombarded by the Francoists on February 22, the forces were compelled to evacuate, resulting in heavy casualties.

    April 15, 1938 – The Republican territory was divided by Franco’s troops

    Franco’s armies reached the coast of what was now the Mediterranean Sea, effectively cutting off Valencia and the rest of Catalonia from the rest of Castile. Hence, Franco’s disastrous onslaught against Barcelona was able to commence. Catalonia was invaded on January 26, 1939, and its capital city surrendered despite fierce Republican fighting along the Ebro River. Finally, on March 28, 1939, Franco’s forces were victorious, ending the Spanish Civil War and establishing their dictatorship.

    January 26, 1939 – Barcelona falls to Franco’s forces

    The capital of Catalonia was taken by nationalist forces led by General Yagüe and Solchaga. The Republicans took refuge in France, where they were met by a flood of over half a million supporters. Rapid decline was coming to both Madrid and Valencia. By April, the Spanish Civil War would be over.

    February 27, 1939 – France recognized the Franco regime

    General Franco’s Spanish government, founded in Burgos, was acknowledged by the Chamber of Deputies after hearing Léon Bérard’s report as “chargé de mission” to the Spanish nationalists. The civil war was not yet over. They made Marshal Pétain the French envoy to the Franco regime.

    March 5, 1939 – The Republican government of Negrín is overthrown

    In Madrid, General Miaja led a junta that ousted the republicans and fought against the communists. The latter had previously been part of the resistance led by Negrín. The newly installed administration saw the need to put an end to the resistance and prioritized talks with Franco over the capitulation of the Spanish capital. As of March 28th, Madrid was peacefully invaded.

    March 28, 1939 – Republican surrender in Madrid

    The Spanish capital was invaded by General Franco’s First Nationalist Army. The military took over the government offices at lunchtime. Republicans, being on the losing side, either gave up or ran. When Madrid finally fell, the Republican and Nationalist forces in Spain’s Civil War, which had been going on since 1936, were finally defeated. From 1964 to 1976, Francisco Franco Bahamonde, better known as “Franco,” ruled as a dictator.


    Bibliography:

    1. Cox, Geoffrey (1937). The Defence of Madrid. London: Victor Gollancz. OCLC 4059942.
    2. Dawson, Ashley (2013). The Routledge Concise History of Twentieth-century British Literature. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415572453.
    3. Rust, William (2003) [1939]. Britons in Spain: A History of the British Battalion of the XV International Brigade (reprint). Pontypool, Wales: Warren & Pell.
    4. Seidman, Michael (2017). Transatlantic antifascisms : from the Spanish Civil War to the end of World War II. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1108417785.
    5. Werstein, Irving (1969). The Cruel Years: The Story of the Spanish Civil War. New York: Julian Messner.
    6. Thomas, Hugh (2001) [1961, 1987 (Penguin)]. The Spanish Civil War. London: Modern Library. ISBN 0141011610.
  • El Cid: The Legendary Spanish Knight

    El Cid: The Legendary Spanish Knight

    In medieval Spain, Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar was a Castilian knight and warlord. He fought with both Christian and Muslim forces, earning him the Arabic accolade “El Cid” and the Spanish name “El Campeador”. In 1040, he entered the world in the town of Vivar, not far from the city of Burgos. According to the saying, on June 10, 1099, El Cid was atop the battlements protecting Valencia when he was shot by a stray arrow, and his death was recounted in this way by the Latin Chronicon Malleacense (although it is most likely that he died due to natural causes): “In Spain, at Valentia, Count Rodericus died, for which there was great mourning for the Christians and joy for the pagan enemies.

    Despite his later reputation as a champion for the Reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula and a national hero, El Cid submitted to the authority of both Christian and Muslim rulers at various points in his life. Instead of fighting for a higher cause, he fought for himself, making him what some writers call a “mercenary,” or a professional soldier who does so in return for payment.

    For his personal gain, Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar served as an armed mercenary for many warlords.

    El Cid was a courageous knight

    el cid 2
    El Cid (1040-1099) ordered the execution of an enemy. 19th-century drawing. Image credit: Granger, Fine Art America.

    By defeating the Navarrese knight Jimeno of Pamplona in a single encounter to resolve the dominance of several border castles that the kings of Castile and Navarre were battling over, Rodrigo gained even more status as a royal lieutenant in the court of King Sancho II.

    In spite of his animosity towards Rodrigo Díaz following the Battles of Llantada (1068) and Golpejera (1072), which resulted in the new monarch being forced to seek refuge in the Muslim court, Alfonso VI, who succeeded Sancho II after his death in the Siege of Zamora, honored him by giving him the hand of Lady Jimena Díaz, apparently the daughter of Count Diego Fernández and a relative of the monarch himself.

    Alfonso VI showed Rodrigo respect in spite of his animosity by giving him his cousin Jimena as a bride.

    The ways of El Cid

    After a Muslim invasion of the Castle of Gormaz, “El Cid” had one of his most memorable occurrences (Soria). As soon as Rodrigo Diaz heard the news, he assembled his troops and marched into the Kingdom of Toledo to look for the perpetrators. But King Alfonso’s intentions were derailed by Rodrigo’s sudden move, and so he exiled him.

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    When King Alfonso VI of León was fighting for territory in Toledo without Rodrigo’s assistance in 1081, the Muslims invaded Gormaz (Soria) unexpectedly and won a decisive victory, taking a considerable amount of loot with them. When Rodrigo Diaz heard the news, he went straight to work looking for the perpetrators rather than waiting for instructions from the monarch. Rodrigo’s activities in Toledo, the city from which he returned with as many as 7,000 prisoners (including men and women), thwarted King Alfonso’s efforts to peacefully annex this land. The monarch’s sentence of exile did not include the confiscation of the knight’s possessions.

    El Cid was exiled twice

    The count of Vivar agreed to aid Al-Muqtadir, King of Zaragoza, in his conflict with his brother Al-Mundir, King of Lérida, Tortosa, and Denia, despite the fact that the counts of Barcelona and Ramón Berenguer II had all refused Rodrigo Díaz’s assistance. In 1082, Rodrigo Díaz won a decisive victory against Berenguer Ramon II at Almenar. Two years later, in 1084, he beat the Aragonese ruler and an Islamic force Al-Mundir, near Morella. During this time, Rodrigo Díaz earned the name “El Cid,” which came from the Arabic term sid, meaning “lord.”

    Rodrigo earned the moniker “El Cid” when he defeated Berenguer Ramon II and Al-Mundir during his first exile.

    The year 1086 was a turning point in the narrative of the Iberian Peninsula. It is believed that a sizable Almoravid army crossed the Strait of Gibraltar from the Sahara. They claimed to adhere to a strict version of Islam and were prepared to use violence to establish it. When the Almoravids besieged the Murcian citadel of Aledo in November 1088, King Alfonso VI enlisted El Cid’s assistance in breaking the siege. The Alicante region of Villena was scheduled to be the meeting site for the armies of Alfonso and El Cid, but for whatever reason, the two armies never really met.

    The epitome of the mercenary

    Because of his pivotal role in the so-called Reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula, El Cid is celebrated as a national hero. A real mercenary, however, he battled for his own interests throughout his life, sometimes on the Christian side and sometimes on the Muslim side.

    El Cid camped out at Elche, where he was informed that King Alfonso, angry that he had not gotten the desired assistance, had labeled him a traitor. This was the lowest point of a knight’s life, and the punishment was death or exile.

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    From that point on, the Cid led Levante based on his own self-interest as an autonomous leader. He assumed the dominion of the whole Levant in 1090.

    After Alfonso VI’s death, the Taifa monarch of Toledo and Valencia, Al-Qadir, began making tax payments to El Cid. El Cid expelled the Catalan count from the Levantine territory after defeating a coalition led by Al-Mundir and Berenguer Ramón II in 1090 at the Battle of Tevar.

    Conquest of Valencia

    Meanwhile, in the summer of 1092, Alfonso VI advanced on Tortosa (then a tributary of El Cid) and Valencia itself, forming an alliance with the King of Aragon, the Count of Barcelona, and the towns of Pisa and Genoa, whose respective men and ships participated in the operation. However, the grand scheme ultimately failed, and Alfonso VI was soon forced to return to Castile from Valencia. At the same time, El Cid, who was in Zaragoza seeking an alliance with the King of the Taifa, launched a severe expedition into La Rioja as revenge.

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    In the years that followed, Ibn Jahhaf, the man who would later kill Al-Qadir, led relentless operations to seize Valencia. Cid encircled the city in 1093, and conditions there quickly deteriorated. After a year-long siege in which El Cid’s army utilized war machines to severely damage the city walls, Valencia ultimately surrendered on June 17, 1094, when El Cid declared himself “Prince Rodrigo el Campeador.”

    But the Almoravids didn’t give up, and in September of that year, a force led by Muhammad ibn Tashfin reached Quart de Poblet, only five kilometers from the capital, and besieged it, only to be soundly destroyed by the Cid.

    During his reign as Prince Rodrigo el Campeador, the El Cid took control of Valencia in 1094.

    el cid Charlton Heston
    El Cid in the movies: This 1961 Italian-American co-production “El Cid” movie stars Sofia Loren and Charlton Heston as Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar. It was directed by Anthony Mann. There were three Oscar nominations for the movie.

    Jimena, El Cid’s spirited widow, kept the local resistance going for two more years after her husband’s death, until they finally capitulated to the Muslim onslaught. She took El Cid’s body with her when she fled Valencia, and buried him at the monastery of Cardea. After many trials and tribulations, El Cid’s bones were reinterred in the Cathedral of Burgos, where his grave can still be seen today.