The Conquistadors: Exploration, Greed, and Destruction — Fexingo History
We've talked about the encomienda system before, but this episode digs into what came next—and what coexisted alongside it. After the New Laws of 1542 tried to phase out encomiendas, Spanish officials didn't abolish forced labor; they just rebranded it. The repartimiento system—also called the 'repartimiento de indios'—became the new mechanism for funneling indigenous workers into Spanish mines, farms, and construction projects. We trace how this system functioned in practice, from the silver mines of Zacatecas to the fields of Michoacán. We look at the 'corregidores' and 'alcaldes mayores' who administered the labor drafts, the indigenous communities that resisted or adapted, and the Crown's own contradictory policies that both condemned exploitation and depended on it. We also get into the specific case of the Huasteca region, where forced labor sparked revolts in the 1550s. And we ask: did the shift from encomienda to repartimiento actually improve anything for indigenous people, or was it just a more efficient extraction machine? #Repartimiento #Encomienda #NewLaws1542 #ForcedLabor #Huasteca #Zacatecas #Michoacan #Corregidor #AlcaldeMayor #IndigenousResistance #SpanishColonialism #Mesoamerica #SilverMines #LaborHistory #ColonialMexico #FexingoHistory #Conquistadors #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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