Main content
US history
Course: US history > Unit 1
Lesson 4: Spanish colonization- Spanish colonization
- The Spanish conquistadores and colonial empire
- Pueblo uprising of 1680
- Comparing European and Native American cultures
- Lesson summary: The Spanish empire
- Spanish colonization
- Labor, slavery, and caste in the Spanish colonial system
© 2023 Khan AcademyTerms of usePrivacy PolicyCookie Notice
Spanish colonization
In the years after Columbus's first voyage, Spanish adventurers known as conquistadores began to colonize the surrounding areas of the Caribbean and the Americas. In this video, Kim explores the social changes that Spanish colonization created in the New World.
Want to join the conversation?
- atwhat did she mean by Gigantic War Dogs? 4:47(21 votes)
- I'm pretty sure the gigantic war dogs were the dogs that the Spanish Conquistadors used in battle, and the native Americans had most likely never seen one before, so they thought of them as gigantic. This is just a theory though.(5 votes)
- So if 18 million native Americans died why don't we know about them as much as when the holocaust happened.(19 votes)
- Admitting that the Spanish killed so many native Americans would go in hand with the US admitting they did the same. It would not be great for the US to admit it was formed on genocide and therefore they try not to bring it up too much.(15 votes)
- Didn't any of the Spanish think that disturbing Native Americans was cruel?(10 votes)
- A few such as Bartolomé de las Casas, viewed the Spanish treatment of the Native Americans as inhumane. However, the majority viewed the Native Americans as barbarous savages that were less than human, and that the Europeans were right in subjugating them.(21 votes)
- How was Hernan Cortez or any other Spanish
conquistador able to understand or communicate things successfully with the natives? For example how did Hernan Cortes realize the surrounding tribes' dislike of the Aztecs??(13 votes)- The Spaniards were able to communicate with the Natives of South America mostly through translators. These translators were either Spaniards captured by the Natives, and then reclaimed, or Natives that were captured by the Spanish and taught the Spanish language.(7 votes)
- So, the Natives "won" in the Pueblo Revolt, in a way, right?(7 votes)
- yes yes they did and I agree with jillan on that they killed 400 Spaniards and drew away 2000 settlers. The Natives succeeded in driving out the Spanish for 12 years. They later came back, but if you want to be precise on the timeline, yes, they did win.but they truly didn't win because the one that time but didn't win the next fight sry i took so long to repli(5 votes)
- How is it that the Native Americans built pyramids as well as the Egyptians? For all I know, these societies never made contact, and neither have any other societies made contact.(4 votes)
- A pyramid is really just a stack of things so it's not that hard for many disparate people to think of it. Same thing with doorways- and basically all houses. Although that people lump these two types of pyramid-shaped structures into one category is sort of confirmation bias. What I mean is that the Aztec pyramid and the Egyptian pyramid are different structures and since their cultures had no contact with each other it makes sense that they would each have their own type of structure.(6 votes)
- why was they called "Conquistadors"?(2 votes)
- Conquistador, is a term used to refer to the soldiers and/or explorers of the Spanish Empire or the Portuguese Empire in a general sense.(6 votes)
- How did native people shape the course of Spanish conquest?(3 votes)
- What were the main reasons why the relationship between the Spanish and the Aztec people crumbled?(2 votes)
- What does conquistador mean? like conqueror?(2 votes)
- Yes, conquistador means a conqueror. The Spanish conquistadors conquered South America.(5 votes)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] Imagine that one day you are standing in your backyard when all of a sudden you
saw an alien ship land and the alien ship had
incredible technology and you saw aliens walking out of the ship bearing strange animals, maybe scary looking weapons and speaking a very strange language. What would you do? Would you try to be kind to the aliens, hope that maybe you could befriend them? Would you fear them and perhaps immediately try
to make war against them? Would you hope that perhaps
War of the Worlds style that they would die of the common cold or would you fear that
maybe they had some kind of common cold that you might die of? These are the choices that
were faced by Native Americans when they encountered the
Spanish at the end of the 1400s. Columbus arrived in the New World in 1492 and when he got back in 1493 the secret was out that
there were great riches to be had in the New World, so much so that as early as 1494 Spain and Portugal were trying to decide how they would divide the riches of the Old World and the New between them, so in the years after
Columbus' first voyage many Spanish conquistadors or conquerors began exploring throughout the Americas and it's not necessary for you to memorize any of these names but I want you to get a sense that in the 50 years or so after Columbus, European explorers began
checking out everything in the Caribbean, North
America and South America and their motivations, like Columbus' were the three Gs of colonization, gold, that is to get rich, glory, that is to bring
glory to one's self for one's nation and a little bit of God, that is to bring Catholicism to native peoples living in the Americas. Now, as you can see from
the many individuals here, Spanish colonization was
a very complex process taking place in many different regions but in this video I wanna focus in on just a few aspects, the conquest of Mexico by Cortes, a society that came out of this blend of Spanish and Native American culture and a little bit about the resistance to colonization that
we'll see in New Mexico with the Pueblo Revolt. Now, like Columbus, Spanish
explorers originally were looking for a passage
to Asia through the Americas but quickly learned that
there was quite a lot of riches to be found in
the Americas themselves and one place that came to the attention of the conquistadors was Tenochtitlan which was the capital of the Aztec Empire. Now, the Aztecs were not
well loved in Mexico. They ruled over a vast territory with many smaller tribes they required to give them tribute and even human captives for sacrifice, so in 1519, Hernan Cortes, a Spanish conquistador landed with a group of about 600 men in Vera Cruz and with the help of some translators he worked his way across Mexico learning of the general
dislike of the Aztec Empire so that when he finally came upon the city of Tenochtitlan he had about
20,000 Native Americans who were ready to make war on this city along with him. Now, it's hard to
imagine what Tenochtitlan would have looked like to the Spanish. It's estimated that it had about 200,000 to 300,000 inhabitants which made it one of the
larger cities in the world. There was nothing quite
so large as this city in all of Europe. It sat in the middle of a
lake with hanging gardens and an aqueduct and
had incredible pyramids that were many stories tall and at first, Moctezuma the Second who was emperor of the Aztec Empire treated the approaching
Spaniards with great kindness and generosity showering them with gifts. After all, the Spanish had things that Moctezuma had never seen before like horses and gigantic war dogs which they used to rip apart their enemies and cannons which even though
they only had a few of them and they didn't work very well were very frightening when they were fired, much like I think a ray gun
would be frightening to us now. Now, it didn't take very
long for the relationship between the Spanish and
the Aztecs to crumble and aided by their many
native American allies and also by the spread of
deadly disease like smallpox which decimated the Native
American population, by 1521 Tenochtitlan had fallen, in fact, was in ruins. Moctezuma had died and the Spanish began building
on the ruins of Tenochtitlan, Mexico City but much to the horror of the many Native American tribes that had allied with the Spanish, the Spanish would turn out to be much crueler imperial masters than the Aztecs had been and the smallpox that
had ravaged the Aztecs, ravaged the rest of the Native
American population as well as they lacked the immunity to European disease. Although much of the conquest of the Spanish Empire in the New World was done by conquistadors, adventurers, the Spanish Crown was
eager to place some control over this new territory and one way that they did was
through the Encomiendas System and the Encomiendas
System was a labor system that in a way was kind of a combination of feudalism from Europe and slavery. So, the idea was that the Spanish Crown would grant land holders
called encomenderos the right to the labor
of Native Americans, perhaps a village or two and anything that those
Native Americans produced through their slave labor, so gold if they mined it
or agricultural products if they were working on a plantation and in theory what the Native
Americans would get for this would be Christianization which to the Catholic Spanish Crown was an important goal to convert all of the world's people to Catholicism and also the protection of these Spanish feudal
lords or encomenderos. In practice the Encomiendas System was really just another
way of saying slavery and between the harsh
treatment of the Spanish lords and disease, the native
population of this region went from about 20 million when the Spanish arrived
to only about two million by 1600, so that not
very long after conquest, the Spanish began to
bring enslaved Africans to labor in the New World as the Native American
population had shrunk to a fraction of its former size. So, for the native people of Mexico the arrival of the Spanish
was about the worst outcome of an alien invasion
that you could imagine. Now, native people did resist
the Spanish in many ways. Some ways were more subtle like outwardly adopting Christianity while maintaining their
ancestral beliefs inwardly. The combination of Native American beliefs and Christianity together
is called syncretism or the blending of two
religious traditions but sometimes the Spanish
pushed native people too far as in the case of the
Pueblo Revolt in 1680 when after a few generations of being forced to shed all
of their religious beliefs in favor of Christianity or face severe punishment,
the pueblo people rose up against the Spanish led
by a man named Pope, so that sometimes the
Pueblo Revolt is also called Pope's Rebellion and they
killed Spanish priests, burned churches, replaced them with kivas, their own place of worship and drove the Spanish out so that in the next 50 years it took the Spanish to reestablish control of this region, the Spanish took a much more accommodating
approach to pueblo society. The last aspect of
Spanish colonial society that I wanna point out is
the racial caste system that developed in the New World. Because the conquistadors
were on dangerous adventures, very few Spanish women came
with them in the New World and so, Spanish men had relationships with both native women and African women and Native Americans and
Africans had relationships such that there was
really an unprecedented mixing of peoples and
cultures in the New World and to account for this
incredibly diverse society the Spanish developed a caste system that very carefully ranked individuals by how much Spanish blood they had so that people with pure Spanish blood, criollos were at the top of the hierarchy, and people who had both
Native American heritage and European heritage were
called mestizo at the time whereas people with European
heritage and African heritage were called mulatto at the time and so, as you moved up or down this scale you had more legal rights than the groups below you and this is what is
known as a casta painting which very carefully categorized where every person fell
on this hierarchy of race, so we see in the Spanish caste system the beginnings of assigning legal status to individuals based on their race but I think it's also important to note here that the casta system made a place for many
different types of people in society and that
will be important later when we contrast it with
how English settlers treated Native Americans. The Spanish sought to Christianize and incorporate and enslave native people, whereas the English sought
to completely eradicate them from the landscape.