The Conquistadors: Exploration, Greed, and Destruction — Fexingo History
In 1513, Spanish officials drafted the Requerimiento, a legal document read to indigenous peoples before any attack. Written in Spanish and Latin, it demanded submission to the Spanish Crown and the Catholic Church—under threat of enslavement and war. In practice, it was often read from ship decks or to empty villages, a bizarre ritual that reveals the legalistic mindset behind the conquest. This episode explores the origins of the Requerimiento in the aftermath of Antonio de Montesinos's 1511 sermon, its composition by jurist Juan López de Palacios Rubios, and the dramatic first reading by conquistador Pedrarias Dávila in Panama. We follow its use by Hernán Cortés in Mesoamerica, including a famous incident at Cempoala where Cortés staged a reading before the Totonac leaders, with Malinche translating into Nahuatl—and the indigenous response of confused silence. We also examine the document's critics: Bartolomé de las Casas, who called it unjust, and the Salamanca School theologian Francisco de Vitoria, who questioned its legal basis. The episode ends by asking: was the Requerimiento a genuine legal formality or a cynical cover for violence? A story about the strange intersection of law, religion, and empire. #Requerimiento #Conquistadors #SpanishEmpire #IndigenousRights #BartoloméDeLasCasas #JuanLópezDePalaciosRubios #PedrariasDávila #HernánCortés #Malinche #Cempoala #AntonioDeMontesinos #FranciscoDeVitoria #SalamancaSchool #Nahuatl #Mesoamerica #16thCentury #LegalHistory #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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