Deep Look: The Spanish Conquest
"I found very many islands filled with people without number,
and all of them I have taken possession for their Highnesses...
As soon as I arrived in the Indies, on the first Island which I found,
I took some of the natives by force in order that they might learn
and might give me information on whatever there is in these parts"
Christopher Columbus
On
December 5 or 6 1492 a fateful wind led Christopher Columbus to the
island of Haiti that he renamed Espanola thinking that it looked like
Spain. Guacanagaric, the cacique of the Marien in the northern
part of the island, warmly welcomed Columbus. He thought the Taino
looked coward and could easily be defeated and enslaved:
"They...brought us parrots and balls of cotton and spears and
many other things... They would make fine servants... With fifty
men we could subjugate them all and make them do whatever we want.
On Christmas night, his biggest ship, the Santa Maria sank
on a harbor of the island. With its remnants, Columbus built the
fortress of the Navidad. He left thirty-nine men at the fortress
and sailed to Spain on January 16, 1493 taking with him six Taino
captives and a cargo of parrots, plants and gold. The purpose of
Columbus’s second voyage was to colonize, control and exploit the
island. His goal was to bring to the Spaniards "as much gold as
they need...and as many slaves as they ask." His fleet thus comprised
17 ships and 1,300 men as well as 20 horsemen to terrorize the native
people.
When Columbus returned to Espanola, he found that the thirty men
he had left on the Navidad were all dead, killed by the Indians
after they had invaded the kingdom of the Maguana governed
by the intrepid Caonabo. Guillermo Coma who had accompanied
Columbus wrote that "bad feeling had arisen and had broken out
in warfare because of the licentious conduct of our men towards
the Indian women, for each Spaniard had five women to minister to
his pleasure." Columbus then built a new town, Isabella,
forty leagues east of Navidad, near the river where Pinzon had found
gold in the Cibao. After Isabella was built, Columbus set out for
the gold mines of Cibao with his horsemen and infantry. Several
forts were built on the way, especially in the plains of the Yaque
River, which he named Vega Real. During their invasion of
the interior of the island, thousands of Indians were killed. By
the end of 1494 the Taino were in open revolt. Columbus had hoped
to put down the resistance by kidnapping Caonabo the chief of the
Cibao region and making an exemplary spectacle of him.
Columbus sent troops to occupy the north east of the island and
had more forts built in the Cibao region. He immediately instituted
a system requiring a quarterly tribute in gold from the Taino, which
was calculated according to the number of people over the age of
fourteen. He introduced Indian slavery suggesting that it would
be lucrative enough to compensate for the meager supply of gold
found. In 1495, he and his men went on a raid in the interior of
Espanola capturing as many as fifteen hundred Taino, men,
women and children. Columbus picked the 500 best specimens and sent
them to Spain. Two hundred of these five hundreds Taino died en
route to Spain. Columbus’s reaction was to exclaim: "Let us in the
name of the Holy Trinity go on sending all the slaves that can be
sold."
Columbus and his brother Bartholomew as well as Alonso de Hojeda
undertook a series of military expeditions all over the island.
Villages that could not pay the tribute imposed on the Taino were
brutally repressed. Las Casas charged that two thirds of the population
was thus wiped out. On July 22, 1497 the Crown authorized the distribution
of lands to the Spanish colonists (Repartimiento) to sow
grain and plant gardens. This land was designed to encourage permanent
Spanish settlers in Espanola who were expected to establish small
farms with Spanish labor. Columbus on the contrary instituted a
Repartimiento where native communities were allocated to Spaniards
for their own use. This system was the first concrete measure to
colonize and annihilate the Taino population of Espanola.
The colonization of Haiti
The arrival of Nicholas Ovando in 1502 with some 2500 Spaniards infused
a new dynamism to Espanola. No sooner had they arrived that they rushed
to the gold mines. There, the close contact between large number of
Europeans and native workers provided a propitious environment for
diseases to set in. Both groups died in large numbers. Ovando set
out to pacify the island more completely than Columbus had. He instituted
more efficient and coercive systems to control the Taino. He brought
his cruelty to highest levels in dealing with the caciquat of the
Xaragua and their lovely queen Anacaona. Anacaona was the sister of
Behecchio, and widow of Caonabo whom had fallen to Columbus in an
earlier campaign. He requested a meeting with Anacaona. In 1503 Ovando
marched into the Western part of Xaragua where he and Anacaona met.
Queen Anacaona and chieftains of the province entertained him and
his men. She and her brother Behecchio had earlier offered to Bartholomew
Columbus and Roldan friendship and tribute. In the midst of festivities
in the royal house, Ovando gave the signal to massacre the Indians;
he brought his hand to his Alcantara cross on his chest. Immediately,
the Spanish soldiers seized the Xaraguayans, attached them to poles
and put fire on them. Men, women and children were cut to pieces.
Queen Anacaona herself was taken to Santo Domingo where she was hanged.
Thus perished the Xaraguayans.
In 1504 Juan de Esquivel and Ponce de Leon committed a similar
deed on the Higuey, governed by Cotubanama. By 1508 there were as
many as fifteen towns in Espanola. Ovando organized a system where
a council (Cabildo) consisting of those who held encomiendas
and repartimientos governed each Spanish town.
The boom in the mining of gold in Espanola was short-lived. The
decline in the supply of gold paralleled the decline in population.
The Spaniards soon left the island for the richer lands of Puerto
Rico, Jamaica and Cuba. Upon Ovando’s retirement in 1509, Columbus’s
son Diego Columbus became governor of Espanola.
Resistance and Revolts of the Taino
Caonabo
Although a peaceful people, the Taino did not simply sit around waiting
for the Spaniards to bring about their destruction. In fact, it did
not take long after Columbus’s arrival for the Haitian Taino to revolt
against the Spanish conquest of the island. The first offensive reaction
of the Taino against their invasion was carried out as early as in
1492 by the destruction of the Fort Navidad following Columbus’
return to Spain.
When Columbus left his men in charge of the Navidad, he had no
doubt that they would be safe for he perceived the Taino as "a
friendly and amiable race". Besides, If the native did become
hostile he was certain that his men would overcome them, for the
indigenous population was "destitute of weapons, go naked and
very cowardly". When he returned to the Navidad, he learnt that
the Taino had killed all his men in a revolt led by Caonabo,chief
of the Maguana, a caciquat in the center of the island. Theft of
their property, the rape of their women as well as an awareness
that the powerful strangers intended to remain in their island were
the main reasons the Taino turned to hostility.
A number of events confirmed the fear of the Taino. Following
the destruction of the Navidad fortress in the western tip of the
island, Columbus and the Spaniards moved their settlement to the
eastern section of Espanola where they built the town of Isabella.
A succession of forts was also built onward to the gold fields of
Vega Real in the center of the island. The Spaniards themselves
had no intention of remaining friendly in their relations with the
Taino. The incident at the Yaque River in April 1494 in which Alonso
de Hojeda humiliated Indian caciques by cutting off the ears of
a chief was a grim indication of future relations. The Spaniards
and Columbus dreaded a Taino uprising all the time. Columbus had
not forgotten the destruction of the fort of Navidad and wanted
to obtain retribution for the affair on Caonabo and his followers.
Rumors indicated that Caonabo’s headquarters were near Fort St Thomas
and the gold fields of Vega Real. Columbus thus sent a plan to Pedro
Margarite, commander of Fort St Thomas to capture Caonabo by deception:
"Treat him with words until you have his friendship, in order
to better seize him".
Margarite did not carry out Columbus’s plan, but Hojeda did. With
nine men he marched across the central range to Caonabo’s capital,
Niti. Hojeda bestowed gifts and words of friendship to Caonabo
and requested a peace treaty with the Taino leader. Hojeda persuaded
the cacique that he must accompany him to Isabella to sign the peace
treaty. To carry the cacique to their destination in a shorter time,
Hojeda furthermore convinced the leader to ride with him on his
horse. He additionally tricked him into accepting handcuffs as if
they were ceremonial bracelets. With this shameful stratagem, Hojeda
seized Caonabo. The imprisonment of the Taino leader at Isabella
led to the first large scale Native American uprising on the continent
in late 1494. His brother, Manicatex, rallied a force of more than
seven thousand Taino with the intention of attacking the
Spaniards and rescuing Caonabo.
However, the Taino were not familiar with organized warfare. Although
in larger numbers, They had to contend with 200 well-armed harquebusiers,
20 horsemen and 20 starved dogs as well as a few cannons. Very,
quickly, the native army was routed. They had never seen horses
before and thought that the cavaliers were gods. Aided with the
noise of canons, the guns and the dogs, the Spanish led by Hojeda
turned the Vega Real plain into a scene of massacre. Caonabo’s brother
and other Taino leaders were imprisoned. It was decided that Caonabo
and his brother were to be sent to Spain. Caonabo was deported to
Spain but his ship sink at sea and he died not far from the coast
of Espanola. According to the legend, The Taino deliberately sank
the ship deporting their leader to Spain in a last attempt to resist
the oppression of Columbus and the Spaniards. To escape death, Caonabo’s
wife, Anacaona, had to leave the Maguana to settle in the western
region of the Xaragua where her brother Behecchio was cacique.
Guarionex
Following the overwhelming defeat of Caonabo and his brother by
the Spaniards, the remaining Taino chiefs adopted a more realistic
attitude towards Spanish aggression and their demand for tribute
in gold. The caciques of the Xaragua, in the western part of the
island, Behecchio and Anacaona thus proposed to give cotton and
cassava bread to Bartholomew Colon since they had no gold in their
region. Other leaders adopted a similar attitude, which they hoped
would preserve their authority and autonomy.
Guarionex, cacique of the Magua, which included the Vega
Real, a region heavily involved in the mining activity, practiced
this policy. Nonetheless, some Taino did not agree with this policy
and they advocated for another uprising against the Spaniards. Meanwhile,
a division within the Spanish camp between the rival supporters
of Francisco Roldan and Columbus made the current situation different
from 1494 and gave hope to those who argued for insurrection. Since
the Spaniards had divisions within their ranks, it was perhaps possible
for the Taino to successfully carry out a revolution. Guarionex,
indeed, received support from Roldan who pressed him to attack the
fort of Conception with assistance from his troops. Guarionex
quickly massed his army near Vega Real. But Columbus’s brother,
Bartholomew, who had quickly assembled four hundred men, marched
to meet Guarionex.
Bartholomew Columbus and the Spaniards decided to attack the Taino
by surprise and caught the Taino off guard with a nightly offensive
on the surrounding villages. Taino culture prohibited battles to
be fought at night. Hence, Fourteen of the leaders, including Guarionex,
were easily captured. Guarionex was released when the Taino came
to Bartholomew in tears. Guarionex learned from this experience
to steer his policies clear of the Spanish. After a year this delicate
political situation proved too difficult to manage. He fled with
his family first to Vega Real and then to the North where Mayobanex,
chief of the northern mountain region, hid him. Bartholomew Colon
fearing that the natives might rally around him in another insurrection
pursued and captured him.
Enriquillo
The defeat of Guarionex did not mean the end of native resistance
in Espanola. The struggle of Cotubanama to preserve the autonomy
of the eastern province of Higuey against the brutality of Juan
Esquivel was proof of that. Cotubanama was ultimately hanged. Throughout
the Americas the Indians had revolted against Spanish domination.
However the revolt of Enriquillo was unique in that it worried the
Spaniards for 18 years and only ended in an agreement between the
rebel and the Spaniards; agreement that was sanctioned by Charles
V. This was the first agreement in the Americas between Europeans
and Native Americans as equals.
Enriquillo or Guarocuya was raised in a Franciscan
monastery. He returned as a cacique to his native village in the
Baoruco, region on the southern coast of Espanola. He and his wife
Mencia were married in the Christian fate. However, Enriquillo’s
life like that of any slave was not easy. He was repeatedly humiliated
by his encomendero (master), Valenzuela who ultimately raped
his wife. He complained to the governor but was threatened with
imprisonment. He carried his complaints to the court system of Santo
Domingo and was given the run around. Enriquillo got tired of being
ignored and fled to the mountains of the Bahoruco in the south of
the island where he led a full-scale rebellion from 1519
to 1538.
In the mountains, Enriquillo and his followers returned to a purely
Indian style of life. For more than a dozen years, he withstood
every Spanish contingent sent against him. With every victory, his
troops became stronger and more Taino joined the ranks of the new
cacique. He grew a strong army out of arms stolen from the Spanish.
He protected the old and women, encouraged a mode of agriculture
with shifting crops. Straw huts built in patches ten or twelve leads
apart over a surface of approximately 40 leagues. In these huts
he sheltered women, the old and children, moving their location
every time he judged it threatened by a Spanish attack. Enriquillo
and his Indians were the first maroon communities of Espanola if
not of the New World.
News of Enriquillo’s revolt reached Charles V and he saw in it
the possibility of Spain losing Espanola. The king sent Captain
Francisco Barrio-Nuevo to negotiate with Enriquillo in order to
find an issue to the crisis. In Espanola, Barrio-Nuevo presented
Enriquillo with letters bearing the agreement of Spain and the court
system of Santo Domingo allowing Enriquillo and his men to live
free on the mountains of the Bahoruco. Enriquillo accepted the peace
treaty. He died a year after the agreement. According to Las Casas,
this peace treaty between the Taino and the Spaniards lasted for
all but four to five years before the Spaniards broke it.
The Annihilation of the First Haitians
One of the main consequences of the invasion of the New World was
the genocide of the Taino on Espanola. Estimates of the native population
of Espanola before 1492 vary greatly. Bartholomew de Las Casas assessed
the numbers of Taino living on the island to as high as 3 million.
Other less trustworthy sources put the population ca. 1492 at one
million. However, as early as the second voyage, Columbus had undertaken
a census of the population for the allocation of the Taino to the
Spanish for labor and tribute. Conducted by Bartholomew Colon in 1496,
this result of this census was surely known to the archbishop of Seville,
Las Casas's superior. Therefore, Las Casas must have based his estimates
on the records of that archbishop if one realizes that the figure
of 1,100,000 that the census claimed did not include children
under 14, the aged nor the sick. In addition, by 1496, the Spaniards
had only occupied half of the island. Sherburne F Cook and Woodrow
Borah thus agree that the Indian population in 1496 was closer to
Las Casas’s estimate, between 2 500 000 and 5 million.
Since the colonization process and its human consequences actually
began in 1493 in Espanola (3 years before the census), the native
population then must have been larger then. In any case, most sixteenth
century writers agree that Espanola was densely populated at the time
of the conquest.
This reality was to dramatically change as the island was converted
into a Spanish colony beginning in 1496. The enormity of the Taino
tragedy in Espanola becomes simply overwhelming by looking at these
population counts which illustrate more than words could, the intensity
and radicalism of the genocide of the Indians in Espanola (Haiti).
| Taino Population on Espanola
from 1496-1570 |
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The population timidly surged upward between 1510 and 1520 due
to the importation of Indians from the Bahamas by the Spaniards
in a desperate attempt to palliate the inexorable loss of the original
Haitians. The Taino population thus increased from 61,600 in 1509
to 65,800 in 1510 and again, from 26,700 in 1512 to 27,800 in 1514.
A lot of reasons have been advanced explaining the disappearance
of the original Haitians. Many scholars explain the annihilation
of the Taino by pointing to the introduction of European diseases
in the Americas. Indeed, the introduction of small pox, measles,
whooping cough, bubonic plague, typhoid, influenza, Malaria, and
yellow fever wiped out an important section of the Taino population
whose immune system was not accustomed to those diseases. For example,
the outbreak of the small pox epidemic in Espanola in Dec 1518 extinguished
about one third of the native population in a few weeks. What must
however be understood is that the decline of the population also
occurred in years when there was no epidemic.
The main factor in the Taino population reduction directly results
from Spanish obsession for gold and the establishment of the Encomienda
and the Repartimiento, which destroyed the rhythm of their
lives, and their social structure. The Taino family structure was
broken up as the men were sent to work on gold mines all over the
island. They suddenly faced the obligation to spend most of their
day working for a master whose cruelty and punishments were swift
and justified by greed. Malnutrition quickly developed and the Taino
suffered from protein deficiency and overwork. Another factor was
the deliberate cruelty the Spaniards displayed towards the Indians.
In their inexorable march for conquest in the island, the Spanish
destroyed and burned entire villages. The treacherous massacre of
the Taino of Xaragua was one of the most cruel and complete mass
killings of Taino on the island.
An Indian chief who was being executed
was about to be baptized. The priest promised him that if he did
get baptized, he would go to paradise. He asked the priest:"Are
there any Spaniards in your heaven?". The priest responded
that only good ones go to heaven. At those words, the chief refused
the baptism retorting that "even the best one of
them is worth nothing; I do not want to go to any heaven where I
stand to meet one"
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