spanish empire essay

Life in the Spanish Colonies

A map shows the city of Tenochtitlán. The rendering depicts waterways, sophisticated buildings, ships, and flags. Numerous causeways connect the central city to the surrounding land.

Written by: Mark Christensen, Assumption College

By the end of this section, you will:.

  • Explain causes of the Columbian Exchange and its effect on Europe and the Americas during the period after 1492
  • Explain how the growth of the Spanish Empire in North America shaped the development of social and economic structures over time
  • Explain how and why European and Native American perspectives of others developed and changed in the period

Suggested Sequencing

This Narrative should be assigned to students after the First Contacts Narrative. Connections can be drawn between this Narrative and the Las Casas on the Destruction of the Indies, 1552 Primary Source.

The reliance of Spain on the cooperation, tribute, and labor of Native Americans and Africans drastically shaped life in colonial Spanish America. Daily life was a complex combination of compliance and rebellion, order and disorder, affluence and poverty. On the one hand, Spaniards relied on Native Americans for labor, tribute, and assistance in governing the many Native American towns. On the other hand, many Native Americans realized the benefits of accommodating the Spaniards to maintain traditional ways of life. In short, cooperation served the interests of both parties, although it was negotiated daily.

Upon their arrival in the New World, Spaniards constructed their colonies and cities upon or alongside established Native American communities such as the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan, on the site that later became Mexico City. To establish political and economic control over their new colonies, the Spaniards created two “republics”: the República de Españoles and the República de Indios . They and their enslaved Africans (and even free Africans) were in the first, and Native Americans were in the second. Although both republics fell under the purview of Spanish law, they operated semi-autonomously, with each established town having its own town council. For example, Mexico City had both a Spanish and a Native American town council.

A map shows the city of Tenochtitlán. The rendering depicts waterways, sophisticated buildings, ships, and flags. Numerous causeways connect the central city to the surrounding land.

At its height, Tenochtitlan was one of the largest cities in the world, with a population of up to 200,000. After the conquest of the Aztec empire, the Spanish appropriated this floating city as their capital. Note the flag of Imperial Spain at the top left of the island city.

The town councils governed the daily affairs of each town and its inhabitants in each respective republic. Councils in Native American towns were run by Native American officers, often those who already held positions of power. For example, the Maya ruler in most preexisting Maya towns became the governor of the colonial town council. The Native American nobility in each town filled other local government positions. In short, the establishment of the republics, their towns, and their respective town councils allowed the Native Americans a great deal of autonomy and gave the original Native American elite a way to maintain their positions of authority in daily life. The Spanish relied heavily on these Native American elites not only to maintain order in the towns but also to redirect their systems of tribute into the hands of the Spaniards and assist in the establishment of Catholicism in their towns.

As subjects of Spain, Native Americans had various daily responsibilities. As Christians, they were to attend services and send their children to daily catechism classes. They also paid various religious fees and taxes designed to support the Church in the Spanish colonies. Local priests and officers of the Inquisition (a Roman Catholic tribunal established to investigate and suppress heresy) maintained spiritual order and orthodoxy among all inhabitants of the colonies. In addition, Native Americans had labor and tribute quotas to fill. Such duties provided many opportunities for confrontation and discontent, and the local Native American elite adjudicated many such situations through the town council. Indeed, the archives are full of petitions by Native American councils against corrupt priests and Spanish officials and complaints against excessive tribute quotas. Yet the council likewise mediated local affairs, including land disputes, bills of sale, and the filling of town positions. It even meted out punishments for wrongdoing. In many ways, the town councils in the República de Indios allowed Native Americans to continue governing Native Americans.

To govern and tax the Native Americans in the early decades of colonization, the Spanish relied on the encomienda , a grant of native labor and tribute given to Spanish conquistadors and settlers. Abuse and distrust of the system led to its gradual and sometimes incomplete phasing out, with control over Native American tribute and labor reverting to the crown, which tried to control corrupt colonial officials.

Tribute varied according to region and era but included mainly goods Spaniards could ship back to Spain for profit or sell on the local or regional market. Products presented as tribute included maize from Culhuacan, silk from the Mixteca Alta region, honey from Yucatan, pearls from the Caribbean, gold from Columbia, and even cattle from Argentina. After the initial years of colonization, Spaniards in central Mexico organized Native American labor around the repartimiento , or “allotment,” system. The repartimiento required those between the ages of eighteen and fifty years to give service in a variety of projects, from laboring in a Spaniard’s field to participating in large construction projects. The Native Americans were to receive payment for their labors, but it was often insufficient or withheld. In South America, labor was organized through the mita, an Incan system in which adult Native Americans were drafted for extended periods. For example, the silver mines of Potosí required the labor of thousands of Andean laborers, who were drafted from towns hundreds of miles away and required to serve one year of every seven. Eventually, the decline in the Native American population and difficulties with the forced-labor system led to the development of wage labor.

An image shows a drawing of a mountain in Potosi with homes at the base of the mountain.

The rich silver deposits of the Cerro Rico mountain in Potosi, in present-day Bolivia, supplied Spain with immense wealth in the sixteenth century. The Spanish appropriated the Incan system of labor tribute known as the mita to ensure a constant source of labor in the mines.

Although Native American tribute and labor served as the linchpin of colonial society, Africans also contributed to the daily life of the Spanish colonies. In general, Spaniards employed native labor whenever possible. However, where the supply was insufficient, they purchased African slaves to work in the more profitable industries such as mining and sugar. For example, after the decimation of the native population in the Caribbean, Spaniards brought thousands of enslaved people from West Africa to work the islands’ sugarcane fields. This drastically altered the Caribbean’s population demographics. Not all enslaved Africans worked in the mines or sugar plantations. In the cities and large towns, they were rented out and served in other domestic roles, including as wet nurses and maids. Africans also learned the skilled trades of their owners and became proficient tailors, blacksmiths, and artisans.

Because Spanish law allowed an enslaved person to purchase his or her own freedom, Spain’s colonies boasted a sizeable portion of free blacks who engaged in myriad trades; freed slaves became sailors, merchants, and even slave owners. Many joined militias and defended thousands of miles of coastline along the Spanish colonies against pirates – another common element of life in the colonies. They served in return for a salary, social advancement, and tax exemption. Moreover, free Africans formed their own Catholic brotherhoods – common among Spaniards and Native Americans – that supported an African-Christian worldview while providing monetary support for members by funding funerals and celebrations and even serving as banks.

Spanish cities and the activities within them modeled those found in Europe. Like their counterparts in Spain, the capitals of Mexico City and Lima housed universities, cathedrals, exquisite homes, central courthouses, and exclusive shopping. Cards, music, books, plays, bullfights, and parties occupied the time of the elite. Poorer citizens also partook in such activities but on a smaller scale, enjoying local ballads, cockfights, and town gatherings on feast days. The elite dined on wheat bread, olive oil, cured meats, and wine, while commoners ate maize tortillas, manioc, chilies, turkeys, and small dogs, and drank the local indigenous intoxicant. Cities boasted the most refinement and Spanish influence, whereas the countryside was denigrated for its overwhelming “Indian” feel.

Throughout the colonial period, sexual relations between different people from the Americas, Europe, and Africa created a growing mixed-race population known as the castas . Disregarded as a minor inconvenience at first, the castas eventually threatened the social hierarchy. The Spanish sought to maintain themselves at the top and keep Native Americans and Africans at the bottom, whereas the castas were allowed a place somewhere in the middle. In daily life, however, people were often racially categorized by how well they spoke Spanish, how they dressed, what food they ate, or their social circle of acquaintances. As a result, in practice, the hierarchy allowed for some flexibility.

Part a and part b both show paintings depicting mixed race families.

Castas paintings from the mid-1700s document the cultural blending seen in Spanish colonies. Do these images support the assertion that there was a degree of social mobility in the Spanish colonies? Why or why not?

Perhaps this flexibility best reflects life in the Spanish colonies. It consisted of specific obligations, religious institutions, and social hierarchies, to be sure. Yet Native Americans, Africans, and Spaniards negotiated their own experiences, from conformity to resistance, within these limits. Most lived somewhere between the two extremes, doing their best to adapt their traditional ways of life to a diverse colonial world.

Review Questions

1. Why did the Spanish build their colonies alongside Native American communities such as the Tenochtitlan?

  • To capitalize on preexisting cities and power structures
  • To show respect for the Native American towns and villages
  • As a way to collaborate with the Native Americans and the African slaves
  • As a means to extract even more natural resources from the Native Americans

2. Under Spanish law, Native Americans were required to

  • attend church services and pay religious fees and taxes to support their conversion
  • share their Native American culture with the Spanish to create a coherent community
  • move their homes to Spanish-approved communities
  • marry Spaniards and support their families by working

3. The Native Americans were required to submit to Spanish law, but

  • many were able to preserve their culture while accommodating Spanish norms
  • most resorted to outright revolt to resist new impositions
  • many abandoned their culture to fully embrace the Spanish way of life
  • few were able to understand the new culture and therefore were punished

4. The main purpose of the encomienda system was to

  • establish a racial hierarchy for social situations
  • alleviate the disputes that occurred between Native Americans and Spaniards
  • govern and tax the Native American communities
  • create a tolerant community with multiple religions and ways of governing

5. In practice, the encomienda system created a

  • forced labor system to support plantation-based agriculture and mining
  • labor system whereby Native Americans voluntarily paid tribute to their Spanish conquistadors
  • collaborative labor system that encouraged Native Americans and Spaniards to work together
  • labor system that paid Native Americans for their labor on large Spanish construction projects

6. A result of the Native Americans’ susceptibility to European disease was

  • the importation of African slaves for labor purposes
  • the hostile resistance of Native Americans to Spanish conquest
  • the harvesting of high-caloric and diverse food stuffs for the European population
  • the rapid evolution of a capitalist system in Europe

7. The Spanish law permitting a slave to purchase freedom allowed for

  • a strict racial hierarchy in which African slaves were consistently at the bottom
  • opportunities for free blacks to become sailors, militiamen, and blacksmiths
  • additional conflicts between slaves and Spaniards
  • the establishment of a Catholic church that excluded non-Spanish people

8. In practice, the castas system was

  • very strict and rigid
  • fluid, to a certain degree
  • precisely articulated
  • based entirely on bloodline

9. The social hierarchy created by Spanish settlers and Native American people resulted in

  • the encomienda system
  • the repartimiento system
  • the castas system
  • the cabildo system

Free Response Questions

  • Explain how the Spanish relied on existing social structures to maintain order in their colonies.
  • Explain why social structure in the Spanish colonies could be considered both rigid and flexible.

AP Practice Questions

An image shows a painting of people of different races and mixed races.

An oil painting from 1777 entitled Las castas mexicanas (The Mexican Castes).

1. The image provided most likely represents

  • the enslavement of Native Americans by colonizers in the Americas
  • the dynamic social hierarchy in Spanish colonies
  • the system of forced labor created to efficiently extract precious mineral resources
  • Spanish reliance on Native Americans for political and economic advancement

2. The image provided most likely represents

Primary Sources

Bartolomé de Las Casas Describes the Exploitation of Indigenous Peoples: https://courses.lumenlearning.com/ushistory1os/chapter/primary-source-bartolome-de-las-casas-describes-the-exploitation-of-indigenous-peoples-1542/

Suggested Resources

Boyer, Richard, and Geoffrey Spurling. Colonial Lives: Documents on Latin American History, 1550-1850 . Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999.

Elliott, J.H. Imperial Spain: 1469-1716 . New York: Penguin, 2002.

Kamen, Henry. Empire: How Spain Became a World Power, 1492-1763 . New York: Harper, 2004.

Restall, Matthew. Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest . Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004.

Schwartz, Stuart B. Victors and Vanquished: Spanish and Nahua Views of the Conquest of Mexico . Boston: Bedford, 2000.

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The Rise and fall of The Spanish Empire - Essay Example

The Rise and fall of The Spanish Empire

  • Subject: History
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Extract of sample "The Rise and fall of The Spanish Empire"

The Rise and fall of The Spanish Empire al Affiliation The Rise and fall of The Spanish Empire Spain emerged as the most powerful country in Europe and used its dominancy to expand its territories overseas. The nature in which the Spanish empire expanded was more of their administrative strengths rather than their wealth capacities. Spanish king Ferdinand and wife Isabella where the formidable forces behind the success of Spain. The fall of the Spanish empire was imminent towards the end of the sixteen century.

This was attributed to factors both internal and external. In the mid 1500’s the then king Charles V ordered the expulsion of Moors of the Aragon. The successive regimes ignored the grievances of their subjects. King Philip II failure to listen to the Moriscos of grenade, led to an uprising, which lasted more than two years. The reign of Philip III saw the population being expelled from the kingdom. This had consequences to the economic status of Spain as the region lacked the needed labor to enhance economic activities.

The failures of the successive reign saw the Spain’s relationship with its neighbors and other European states worsen. The Netherlands’ revolt was evident of the decline power of the Spanish empire (Payne, 1973). The final undoing was the decision by the queen of England to denied span the use of her harbors. This was the final blow of the empire, which lead to Spain experiencing their worst economic setback (Payne, 1973). Despite these setbacks, they managed to control their territories including the Catalonia and Portuguese rebellion.

The recapture of the Catalans marked signaled their ability to control their internal territories but the rise of other European powerhouses ended the long dominance of the Spanish empire. Reference Payne, S. (1973). A history of Spain and Portugal. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press

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            The Spanish maintained a powerful and vast empire for a long period of time. The Spanish Empire was interesting and it was fascinating the way that they expanded the empire before its collapse. One of the most interesting things about the empire was how the Spanish interacted with the native people of the land during and after they were conquered. .              This paper will focus mainly on the community and social relationships within the empire. Some other topics of discussion will include issues associated with inter-community interaction, treatment of outsiders and enemies, the nature of war and expansion within the empire. .              The Spanish had a social hierarchy to sort of rank its people. At the top of this hierarchy were the penisulares. The peninsulares were those born in old Spain. People born in New Spain were called Criolles. Criolles were usually not considered as loyal as those born in old Spain and therefore were not trusted as much. Third in this order were the Mestizos. Mestizos had a percentage of Spanish blood. There was a system in place to determine how much a person had. One could purchase what was called "Certificates of Whiteness". Basically, if you had enough money you could make yourself Spanish in the eyes of the government. This goes to show how greedy the Spanish were. Next in the social order were the Indians. Indians were treated as perpetual minors and thus did not have the rights or privileges of the Spanish people. Last in the social order of people were the Castas. These were African slaves. There were very few slaves in Spain and thus most work was done without slave labor. .              Once the Spanish expanded their empire to what they called "New Spain", new problems arose. What did they do with the Indians? It seems as though they never really decided what to do with them. The Spanish finally decided on an approach. In theory they were supposed to do two things for the Indians: 1. They were supposed to introduce Christianity to them.

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spanish empire essay

The Spanish-American War The Spanish-American War had a good many causes. ... The war grew out the Cuban struggle for independence from Spain; the brutality with which Spain put down Cuban demands for independence made Americans both sympathetic and angry on the part of the Cubans. ... The sinking of the battleship Maine, was also a large factor in the United State's war with Spain. ... Even though it was never proven that Spain had anything to do with the sinking of the ship, the American public with the help the American press, assumed the Spanish sunk the Maine, which enraged th...

  • Word Count: 509
  • Approx Pages: 2

4. History of the Inca Empire

spanish empire essay

Eventually, these people came together to form what is now known as the Incan Empire. This empire boasted extreme size, sophisticated living conditions which were just shy of a utopia and technological advances which solidified them as one of the world's most impressive and underrated empires of all time. From its northern to its southern boundaries the Incan Empire was about 2,500 miles. ... (source 3) The citizens of the empire referred to it as Tahuantinsuyu, or land of the four quarters due to the fact that you could have found four different terrains across the empire; the empire co...

  • Word Count: 930
  • Approx Pages: 4

5. Spanish-American War

Spanish - American War The Spanish - American War was during the summer of 1898. ... To defend Cuba, Spain sent a fleet to Santiago, Cuba but it soon surrendered to the United States because the Spanish fleet was in bad condition. ... On July 18, 1898, Spain asked France to help put an end to the war. ... In return, the United States paid Spain twenty million dollars. As a result of the Spanish - American War, the United States became more powerful and controlled an empire that stretched from the Caribbean Sea to the Far East. ...

  • Word Count: 490

6. Spanish History

spanish empire essay

The years of 1550 through 1750, specifically, encompassed both the rise and fall of the Spanish Empire. ... As Spain became a more wealthy, powerful country, Spanish culture and belief tended to change as well. ... The Spanish capital was moved to Madrid in 1561, at the pinnacle of Spain's successful empire. ... Under the rule of Felipe II, the decline of the Spanish empire began. ... Spain continued its decline from empire status as the years progressed. ...

  • Word Count: 386

7. Spain's Intolerable Sacrifice

spanish empire essay

This also included Spain's vast overseas territories. ... Its hopes of invasion was crushed and the remnants of the Spanish Armada began their long and difficult journey back to Spain. ... The Spanish ships were, "slower and less well armed than their English counterparts, but the Spanish planned to force boarding actions if the English offered battle in hopes the superior Spanish infantry would undoubtedly prevail.... The destruction of the Spanish Armada forces Spain to become undoubtedly weaker and fragile. ... While France and England were about to accelerate their imperial adven...

  • Word Count: 1149
  • Grade Level: Undergraduate

8. What Were The Most Important Reasons For The Decline Of The Roman Empire? Why?

spanish empire essay

What were the most important reasons for the decline of the Roman Empire? ... The seemingly unstoppable Roman Empire was bound to fall after the many aspects that made Rome such a dominant empire started to fade away. ... One of the major problems with the Empire was that it was a vast city, spreading from Spain to the Persian Gulf. ... Rome was split into two empires. ... It was impossible to maintain the wealthy empire of Rome with so many economic problems and no matter what measures were tried the empire could not recover. ...

  • Word Count: 1012

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  1. The Growth of the Spanish Empire

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  3. Economic Factors that Led to the Rise of the Spanish Empire Essay

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  5. Ottoman vs Spanish Empires Essay Example

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  6. Spanish Conquest Of The Aztecs Free Essay Example

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  1. Lesson summary: The Spanish empire (article)

    A labor system in which the Spanish crown authorized Spaniards, known as encomenderos, to enslave native people to farm and mine in the Americas. Caste system. A social system in which class status is determined at birth. The Spanish had mixed-race children in the Americas with enslaved Africans and Native Americans.

  2. Spanish Empire

    The Spanish Empire, sometimes referred to as the Hispanic Monarchy or the Catholic Monarchy, was a ... especially Political Essay on the Kingdom of New Spain and scientific observations remain important sources for the history of Spanish America. Humboldt's expedition was authorized by the crown, but was self-funded from his personal fortune.

  3. Colonial Government in the Spanish Empire

    The apparatus of colonial government in the Spanish Empire consisted of multiple levels, starting with the monarchy and Council of the Indies at the top and moving down to the viceroy, audiencias, mayors, and local councils.The system was designed to extract wealth from the colonies and to spread the Christian faith, but these two aims were often in conflict, as were the various branches of ...

  4. Western colonialism

    Western colonialism - Spanish Empire, New World, Colonization: Only gradually did the Spaniards realize the possibilities of America. They had completed the occupation of the larger West Indian islands by 1512, though they largely ignored the smaller ones, to their ultimate regret. Thus far they had found lands nearly empty of treasure, populated by naked natives who died off rapidly on ...

  5. (PDF) "Reconquista". The Spanish Empire: A Historical Encyclopedia

    The Spanish Empire A Historical Encyclopedia H. Micheal Tarver, Editor Emily Slape, Assistant Editor 2 VOLUMES The Spanish Empire: A Historical Encyclopedia provides students as well as anyone interested in Spain, Latin America, or empires in general the necessary materials to explore and better understand the centuries­long empire of the Iberian kingdom.

  6. Life in the Spanish Colonies

    Connections can be drawn between this Narrative and the Las Casas on the Destruction of the Indies, 1552 Primary Source. The reliance of Spain on the cooperation, tribute, and labor of Native Americans and Africans drastically shaped life in colonial Spanish America. Daily life was a complex combination of compliance and rebellion, order and ...

  7. The Changing Interpretation of the Spanish Conquest in the Americas

    The fall in 1519 of Tenochtitlan, the capital of the Mexica or Aztec Empire, as it was later called, laid the foundation for the Spanish colonial empire on the North American mainland. It was the first time that Europeans had subjugated a highly organized state outside the world they had hitherto known. In the process, they created the basis for the first global colonial empires.

  8. The Global Spanish Empire: Five Hundred Years of Place Making and

    The Spanish Empire was a complex web of places and peoples. Through an expansive range of essays that look at Africa, the Americas, Asia, the Caribbean, and th...

  9. The Global Spanish Empire

    The Spanish Empire was a complex web of places and peoples. Through an expansive range of essays that look at Africa, the Americas, Asia, the Caribbean, and the Pacific, this volume brings a broad range of regions into conversation. The contributors focus on nuanced, comparative exploration of the processes and practices of creating ...

  10. The Spanish Empire The Good and the Bad (pdf)

    The empire also made notable contributions to art, literature, and science. The Spanish Golden Age, a period of flourishing arts and literature, produced renowned figures such as Miguel de Cervantes, Diego Velázquez, and El Greco, whose works remain influential. In science, the Spanish introduced Europe to numerous medicinal plants from the New World and contributed to the fields of astronomy ...

  11. Spanish Empire (Hispanism)

    The Spanish empire was one of the first planetary empires in human history. At its height, it held sovereignty over vast territories and populations throughout Europe, Asia, the Pacific, Africa, and the Americas. Due to its rivalry with other European powers, it commissioned explorations that would result in the "discovery" of the Americas ...

  12. The Spanish Empire, And The Empire Of The Portuguese Empire

    Spanish New World Empire Essay. Four empires embarked in the journey of exploring and conquering the New World: the Spanish, French, Dutch, and English. Among these empires, the new world was first and most vastly conquered by the Spanish. In 1492, the italian explorer Christopher Columbus sailed to America for the first time under the orders ...

  13. The Impact of the Spanish Empire on the Indigenous Peoples of ...

    This essay will explore the impact of the Spanish Empire on the indigenous peoples of the Americas and how it shaped the development of the region. The Spanish Empire arrived in the Americas with a mission to convert the indigenous peoples to Christianity and to exploit the region's natural resources.

  14. Decline and Fall of the Spanish Empire? (review essay) (Restall 2007)

    As for Silverblatt's thesis, beneath its artful argumen- tation and provocative originality, there lies an indictment of the Spanish Empire that a seventeenth-century English reader of Las Casas would have grasped and appreciated.3 A final example of a new book tinged with the old stains of the Black Legend is Karen Vieira Powers's volume on ...

  15. A Comparative Analysis Of The Portuguese And Spanish Empire Between The

    From the 15th to the 17th centuries, the Spanish and Portuguese Empires were known for their global colonization power. From trading posts in Asia to... read full [Essay Sample] for free

  16. 'How the Spanish Empire Was Built' Review: Imperial Engineering

    "The world's most successful empires have been engineers' creations." This assertion, made by Felipe Fernández-Armesto and Manuel Lucena Giraldo in "How the Spanish Empire Was Built: A ...

  17. The Rise and fall of The Spanish Empire

    The fall of the Spanish empire was imminent towards the end of the sixteen century. This was attributed to factors both internal and external. In the mid 1500's the then king Charles V ordered the expulsion of Moors of the Aragon. The successive regimes ignored the grievances of their subjects. King Philip II failure to listen to the Moriscos ...

  18. Essay On The Spanish Conquest

    735 Words3 Pages. Introduction. This essay will question how the Spanish conquest of Mexico contributes to the fall of the Aztec Empire. What was the Aztec empire like prior to the invasion?, What impacts did the conquest have on the society?, and What methods did the Spaniards use to defeat the Aztecs? will be answered in this essay as well.

  19. The Expansion Of The Spanish Empire Essay

    This essay will use Spanish imperialism to support this point of view, demonstrating how the war against the Aztec people became a battle of the gods, devastating their faith in the process. The concept of civilizing people will also be explored as well as its link to slavery and the Spanish economy. A combination of primary and secondary ...

  20. Spanish Empire Essay Examples

    Spanish Empire Essays. The Rise and Fall of Great Powers; a Case Study of the Spanish Empire, Dutch Republic and Brandenburg-Prussia. The power struggles within Early Modern Europe are among the lengthiest and most intricate of any conflict prior to the modern age. With this came fluctuations in political alliances coupled with the decline and ...

  21. Causes Of The Spanish Empire

    891 Words. 4 Pages. Open Document. In the Spanish Empire, several social, economic, and political reasons affected the rise and fall of Spain. The disunity of the empire, the taxation of its people, and the exploration of the New World are some of the main factors. Emerging forces also played a role in the fate of Spain and its empire.

  22. FREE The Spanish Empire Essay

    The Spanish Empire was interesting and it was fascinating the way that they expanded the empire before its collapse. One of the most interesting things about the empire was how the Spanish interacted with the native people of the land during and after they were conquered. . This paper will focus mainly on the community and social relationships ...