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The encomienda system and colonial racism part 1
Video transcript
- [Voiceover] Hi Kim! - [Voiceover] Hey Becca, so
what are talking about today? - [Voiceover] Today we're
gonna be talking about how a racial hierarchy was
established in the early Americas, about the encomienda system,
the early Atlantic slave trade, and how such an arbitrary
factor as race became a way that our society was organized, and we still feel the
effects of that today. - [Voiceover] Okay, interesting. - [Voiceover] So to begin we'll talk about the encomienda system. So the encomienda system was
this dependency relation system that started in Spain and
was brought to the Americas to control the labor system. Encomienda, that actually
means entrust in Spanish, Spaniards that were entrusted
with dividing up the labor within the Native American populations. So different encomenderos, those were Spanish men that
were sent to the colonies, were entrusted with dividing
up the labor between different Native American groups. - [Voiceover] Okay, so this
to me, it sounds a little bit like a feudal system,
am I getting this right? - [Voiceover] Yeah, definitely! - [Voiceover] So the feudal
system was this earlier European Medieval system
where there'd be a lord who would have the responsibility
of protecting serfs and in response he'd get their labor and a part of their wealth. - [Voiceover] So this sounds
a lot like the encomenderos and the Native Americans that
were in his jurisdiction. - [Voiceover] Okay. - [Voiceover] So the
encomenderos would offer the Native Americans in
their colony protection and they would also
offer them Catholicism. They were under this kind of god, gold, and glory motivation. - [Voiceover] I think
I've heard of that before. - [Voiceover] (chuckling)
Yeah, so god, gold, and glory were some of the reasons
that colonists wanted to come to the New World, and they
really wanted to inspire and promote Catholicism abroad. And they really wanted
to increase the practice amongst the native people. - [Voiceover] Yeah, I think
one of the things that we have to understand about this
time period is how religiously motivated many people were. I mean when it comes down
to it, gold is gonna be more of a motivator than religion
but they saw their role as Christians, as Catholics, as trying to convert the entire world. - [Voiceover] Right, and
in return the encomenderos expected from the native
people a lot of labor. So the natives had a
much better understanding of the land itself that they
were aiming to cultivate. At the time period in
the 1500s, the Spaniards, the Portuguese, the Dutch, the English, everyone's coming over and
wanting to create new markets, especially with tobacco, sugar, and the Native Americans
under the encomienda system were expected to help
the encomenderos produce at a really high rate in
which they they could send these goods back to Europe. - [Voiceover] I think it's
worthwhile to note here that we're saying, oh
they wanted the labor of the Native Americans. Well why didn't the Spanish
just send their own people to process sugar, to grow
tobacco up in the New World? And there are a couple
of reasons for that. One is that they kind of
knew that the New World was more or less a death trap. (laughter) It wouldn't be until the mid-1600s that a lot of these
places had a survival rate for settlers above 50%. So a lot of whites in
Europe wanted to avoid that. They also didn't really
see these plantations as being something they
needed to work directly. They kind of thought, I would
rather stay in the courts of Europe, I would rather be a lord. You know, many in England,
later they'll be many members of Parliament who own
plantations in the West Indies and they've never even
been to those plantations but they're sure profiting. - [Voiceover] Yeah, I think
that's definitely right. And when the encomienda system
was more officially instated with Nicolas de Ovando in 1502, that was the first
official encomienda system in the West Indies. He actually took over
after Columbus was ousted from his role in San Salvador. - [Voiceover] Why was Columbus ousted? - [Voiceover] He was a really bad leader. Ovando really took over
the encomienda system and then it started to
look a lot more like what we would call slavery. So slowly the encomenderos
would no longer offer the Native Americans protection, but instead threatened
them if they did not reach their quota. - [Voiceover] Okay, so
instead of protection they get threats. - [Voiceover] And oftentimes
that turned into extreme punishment or death, and
they were forced to do extremely hard labor. So sowing a sugar
plantation is not easy work and so they expected extreme amounts of hard labor in the hot sun. - [Voiceover] Yeah, processing
sugar is like a 24 hour a day kind of deal and it is I
think perhaps the worst kind of labor you could do. - [Voiceover] And they
weren't just trying to promote Catholicism but also
stripping Native Americans of their culture and of
their religious practices. - [Voiceover] So Catholicism,
not optional. (chuckling) - [Voiceover] Catholicism was not, not something they were offering, it was something they were
instituting with force. So as more conquistadores
come over to the West Indies, some notice this does look like slavery, and we are not treating
the Native American people with dignity or really as humans at all. Bartolome de las Casas was an encomendero but in kind of the mid-1500s
he came over to actually see his encomiendas in practice, and realized the inhumane
treatment and abuse the encomienda system promoted. He released his encomienda
and started to dedicate his life to petitioning and
lobbying the King of Spain, Charles V, to institute
new laws that would protect Native Americans against
these abusive practices. - [Voiceover] Yeah, you know
when you're looking around this time period for a
good person in this system, Bartolome de las Casas is
pretty much the only one. - [Voiceover] Yeah, he was
a good dude amongst a lot of not so good dudes. (laughter) And so in 1542 new laws,
they were literally called the New Laws, were passed by Charles V. And these laws didn't outlaw
the encomienda system, but aimed to put some regulation on these inhumane practices. The encomienda system wouldn't be outlawed completely until 1720. - [Voiceover] Oh, wow. - [Voiceover] So the effects
of the encomienda system were already really
being felt at this time and contributed to the
formation of this arbitrary racial hierarchy that we
will continue to talk about in the next video.