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English Pages 394 [408] Year 2002
The Early History of Greater Mexico
The Early History of Greater Mexico Ida Altman University of New Orleans
Sarah Cline University of California, Santa Barbara
Juan Javier Pescador Michigan State University
Prentice Hall
Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Altman, Ida. The early history of greater Mexico / Ida Altman, Sarah Cline, Juan Javier Pescador, p. cm. Includes index. ISBN 0-13-091543-2 1. Mexico—History—To 1810. I. Cline, S. L. II. Pescador, Juan Javier. III. Title. FI 219.1 .A442 2003 972—dc21
2002020705
Acquisitions editor: Charles Cavaliere Production editor: Laura A. Lawrie Manufacturing and prepress buyer: Sherry Lewis Copy editor: Laura A. Lawrie Editorial assistant: Adrienne Paul Permissions research: Cheryl J. Gilbert Cover image specialist: Karen Sanatar Image permission coordinator: Nancy Seise Cartographer: Alice T hiede/CARTO-GRAPHICS Line art manager: Guy Ruggiero Cover design: Bruce Kenselaar Cover art: Pyramid at Teotihuacan, Mexico. Spanish Conquest of Mexico (Codex Florentino: SAHAGUN Lam CXLI, Libro XII, No. 25, LC Shelf No. F 1219 S1313 Copy 2. Cathedral, Mexico City. All images courtesy of Library of Congress. This book was set in 10/12 Palatino by DM Cradle Associates, and was printed and bound by Courier Stoughton. The cover was printed by The Lehigh Press, Inc. Prentice
Hall
© 2003 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, N ew Jersey 07458
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. Printed in the United States of America 10
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
I SBN
D-:L3-[m 543-B
Pearson Pearson Pearson Pearson Pearson Pearson Pearson Pearson Pearson
Education LTD., London Education Australia PTY, Limited, Sydney Education Singapore, Pte. Ltd Education North Asia Ltd, Hong Kong Education Canada, Ltd., Toronto Education de Mexico, S.A. de C.V. Education-Japan, Tokyo Education Malaysia, Pte. Ltd. Education, Upper Saddle River, Nezo Jersey
We dedicate this book to our parents: Teresa Cantón Abes; and, in loving memory, Ralph Altman and Jeanne Weinberger Altman; Howard F. Cline and Mary W. Cline; and Emilio Pescador Magallanes
Contents
Preface
ix
Part 1:1325-1598
1 2 3 4 5 6
Mexican Peoples and Cultures Spain in the Era of Expansion Conquest and Colonization Narratives of Conquest Mexico and the Columbian Exchange Christianity in Colonial Mexico
3 27 53 73 97 115
Part II: 1598-1700
7 8 9 10 11 12
Mesoamerican Indians under Colonial Rule Economy and Society in the Middle Period The Northern Frontier The African Presence in New Spain Elite and Popular Culture Rebellion and Crime
143 162 185 204 225 242
Part III: 1700-1824
13 14 15 16 17 18
Race, Class, and Family Economy and Society in the Late Colonial Period The Bourbon Era The Northern Borderlands The Struggle for Independence Colonial Legacies
Suggested Reading in Spanish Index
261 282 300 320 341 362 379 387
vii
Preface
This volume is intended to serve as a basic text for courses in Mexican his tory, as well as others in which the history of Mexico plays an important part. The general reader wishing to learn more of Mexico's early history and development also may find this book to be a useful introduction and guide to the fascinating story of a country that shares a border and much history in common with the United States but in many senses remains little known or understood in this country. Mexico's history is immensely rich and diverse, and writing it offers great challenges. Here we will consider the peoples and cultures who inhab ited Mesoamerica before the arrival of Europeans; the Spanish conquest and subsequent clashes and interactions among groups as they all adjusted to a changed and changing context; the rapid economic and institutional devel opment of the colony that the Spaniards called the Kingdom or Viceroyalty of New Spain; the expansion of Hispanic society and culture from central Mexico into remote areas of the north and south; and the growing complex ity of society and economy over the centuries of Spanish rule. In this volume, we examine Mexico's early history by focusing on a series of topics treated within a chronological framework, dividing the colonial period into three periods that correspond roughly to the three centuries of colonial rule. This approach makes it possible to give due consideration not only to betterknown events and aspects of that history—such as the Aztec empire and the Spanish conquest, or the establishment of the Roman Catholic church—but also to introduce the reader to important topics such as the role of Africans in colonial Mexico, the nature of marriage and family, the form and implica tions of interactions among different ethnic groups, and the causes and sig nificance of disorder and rebellion, both before and during the wars for independence. We also have made an effort to take a balanced approach to regional diversity and development. No single, relatively brief volume can claim to offer a comprehensive history of colonial Mexico. This text attempts to combine existing knowledge with the most recent scholarship in the field. Thus, we can only provide an introduction to ongoing research that is constantly modifying our under standing of colonial society. Some of the more recent trends in scholarship include the following: the use of indigenous texts to study sociopolitical structures, language patterns, gender roles, economic activities, and cultural IX
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Preface
change and continuity among Indian groups during the colonial period; the use of microhistorical analysis to understand complex socioeconomic and political processes; and a new effort to examine and integrate previously less studied groups—women, people of mixed racial and ethnic background— and relatively neglected regions (the far north and south) into the main stream of Mexican history. At the same time, incorporation of recent scholarship should not mean the neglect of essential older works that by no means have been superseded. With respect to the rich historiography of colonial Mexico, we have endeavored to take a balanced approach as well. The authors acknowledge a number of individuals who have con tributed their time, effort, and expertise to this book. Todd Armstrong, for merly of Prentice Hall, first suggested to us the idea of writing a textbook on colonial Mexican history; his successor at Prentice Hall, Charles Cavaliere, has been most helpful in seeing the project through to completion, as has Laura Lawrie. We wish to thank Pedro Santoni of California State University at San Bernardino, William C. Olson of Marist College, and John Sherman of Wright State University, who reviewed the original proposal. Patrick Grant of the University of Victoria and Michael Polushin of the University of Southern Mississippi read the entire manuscript and provided invaluable comments. William B. Taylor of the University of California at Berkeley and James Lockhart of the University of California at Los Angeles also were kind enough to read all or part of the manuscript on very short notice and to share with us their responses and suggestions. We also wish to acknowledge the understanding and encouragement of our families, friends, and colleagues. As is often true for worthwhile pro jects, this one took longer and proved to be far more demanding of every one's time and patience than anticipated. Ida Altman University of New Orleans Sarah Cline University of California, Santa Barbara Juan Javier Pescador Michigan State University
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The Early History of Greater Mexico
Part I 1 3 2 5 - 1 5 9 8
One
Mexican Peoples and Cultures
A Spanish Conqueror S e e s the Great Aztec Market, 1519 On reaching the great marketplace, w e [Spanish conquerors] were astounded at the great number of people and the quantities of merchandise, and at the orderliness and good arrangements that prevailed, for we had never seen such a thing before. . . . Every kind of merchandise was kept separate and had its fixed place marked for it. Let us begin with the dealers in gold, silver, and precious stones, feathers, cloaks, and embroidered goods, and male and female slaves who are also sold there. They bring as many slaves to be sold in that market, as the Portuguese bring Negroes from Guinea. Some are brought there attached to long poles by means of collars around their necks to prevent them from escaping, but others are left loose. Next there are those who sold coarser cloth, and cotton goods and fabrics made of twisted thread, and there were chocolate merchants with their chocolate. In this way you could see every kind of merchandise to be found any where in this land, laid out in the same way as goods are laid out in my own dis trict in Medina del Campo [Spain], a centre for fairs, where each line of stalls has its own particular sort. So it was in this great market. They have a building there also in which three judges sit, and there are officials like constables who examine the merchandise . . . We turned back to the great market and the swarm of people buying and selling. The mere murmur of their voices talking was loud enough to be heard more than three miles away. Some of our soldiers who had been in many parts of the world, in Constantinople, in Rome, and all over Italy, said that they had never seen a market so well laid out, so large, so orderly, and so full of people. Bernal Diaz del Castillo, The Conquest of New Spain [abridged edition of The True History of the Conquest of Mexico], trans. J. M. Cohen (London, 1963), pp. 232-5.
Conqueror Bernal Diaz del Castillo's 1519 description of the market in the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan conveys Spaniards's amazement at the opu lence of the capital of the Aztec Empire. The city's huge, regulated, perma nent marketplace dramatically exemplified the complexity, richness, and 3
Figure 1-1 The founding of Tenochtitlan. The wandering Mexica of Aztlan believed that they would establish a settlement where they saw an eagle perched on a cactus. Stylized burning temples indicate two Aztec conquests; symbols of the Mesoamerican calendar form the border. Permission granted by the Bodleian Library, University of Oxford, for reproduction of MS.Arch. Seiden. A. 1, fol. 2r.
4
Mexican Peoples and Cultures
5
high degree of development of society in central Mexico, comparable to that of Spain itself and other great centers of the Christian world such as Rome and Constantinople (which by then had fallen to the Turks). When Spaniards arrived in central Mexico in 1519, they found virtually all the hallmarks of a complex society. These included well-built cities with temples, palaces, and central markets; stratified social systems similar to their own, with nobles, commoners, and slaves; a structured political state with fully developed systems of taxation and law; a privileged military group; far-reaching trade networks; a religious cult with high priests; and a system of writing. True, the natives had no metallurgy or beasts of burden, and their religion called for human sacrifice, but clearly the Aztecs had achieved a high level of civilization as Spaniards understood it.
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