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Taíno genocide

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Taíno genocide
A 16th-century illustration by Flemish ProtestantTheodor de Bry forBartolomé de las Casas'Brevísima relación de la destrucción de las Indias, depicting Spanish torture and murder of Indigenous peoples during the conquest ofHispaniola.
LocationWest Indies
Date1493–1550
TargetTaíno
Attack type
Genocide,mass murder,forced displacement,ethnic cleansing,slavery,starvation,collective punishment,torture,genocidal rape,forced conversion,cultural genocide
Deaths8,000 to 900,000
Between 80% and 90% of the Taíno population died in the first 30 years.[1][2][page needed]
PerpetratorsSpanish Empire
MotiveSettler colonialism
Spanish imperialism
Religious discrimination
Eurocentrism
Proto-racism
Colorism
Lookism
Part ofa series on
Genocide of
indigenous peoples
Issues

TheTaíno genocide was committed against theTaíno Indigenous people by the Spanish during theircolonization of the Caribbean during the 16th century.[3] The population of the Taíno before the arrival of theSpanish Empire on the island ofQuisqueya orAyití in 1492,[4] whichChristopher Columbus namedHispaniola (present-dayHaiti and theDominican Republic), is estimated to be between 10,000 and 1,000,000.[3][5] Following the deposition of the last Taíno chief in 1504, the Spanish began subjecting the local population to slavery, massacres and other forms of violence. By 1514, the Taíno population had reportedly been reduced to about 32,000 people,[3] by 1565 to 200, and by 1802 they were officially declared extinct by Spanish colonial authorities. However, mixed-race and other Taíno descendants continue to live, and their disappearance from records may be more the result of colonial classification practices than evidence of true extinction.[6]

History

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The Taíno people were the descendants of theArawak people who arrived in the Caribbean approximately 4000 years before the conquest,[6] and they lived in theBahamas, theGreater Antilles and theLesser Antilles.[7] In 1492, Christopher Columbus was looking for a direct sea route connectingEurope toEast Asia, hoping to open profitable oceangoing trade networks. When he landed on the island ofSan Salvador, he originally thought he had arrived in the islands of theEast Indies. When he realized that he had stumbled upon a previously unknown continent, he began to consider other potential sources of profit, focusing primarily on gold and slaves. Upon arriving on Hispaniola, a confrontation occurred between thecrew of the Santa María and the Taíno after the crewsexually abused Taíno women.[4]

Although disease played a significant role in the decrease in the Taino population, violence and famine were also important factors. The tribute system was imposed to gain gold and other goods, yet came with devastating effects for the Taino population. The presence of the Spanish devastated crops and livestock further worsening the conditions for the Tainos and the Spanish. The Spanish began to run low on supplies. To fulfill the need for food, they would negotiate withcaciques to provide food to the Spanish through a tribute system. Others found it easier to steal food from natives, thus worsening famine.[8] Yet as conditions continued to worsen, caciques would refuse to pay tribute in protest. Spaniards would intentionally capture caciques to gain more control and power over the Tainos. As tensions between the Taino and Spaniards grew, Tainos began to rebel against the Spanish more frequently, contributing to the Taino death toll.

Hispaniola

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Chiefdoms of Hispaniola.
Spanish fortresses in Hispaniola.

When Columbus heardCaonabo, the cacique in Maguana, was planning an attack, he sent four hundred men into the interior to attack and instill fear into the natives, further increasing tensions.  

In one instance in early 1495, a subchief killed ten people and set fire to huts with sick Spaniards.[9] In response, Christopher Columbus led an expedition resulting in the capture of over 1500 Taino’s that were to be sent to Spain to be sold and an unknown number of deaths, resulting in the first open form of enslavement in Hispaniola. Since only 150 could fit on the ships, according to Michele Cuneo, by Columbus’s orders, “whoever wanted them could take as many as he please,”[10] resulting in over 600 being allotted to Spaniards. The remaining 400 were to be released and around half the captives aboard the ship died.[11][12]

Alonso de Ojeda murders Indians in hopes of finding gold, by Theodor de Bry.

At the end of February 1495, Caonabo led an expedition against Magdalena and Santo Tomas, which would be held under siege for a month. Sometime after, Caonabo would be captured byAlonso de Ojeda.[13] The capture of Caonabo angered many Tainos, resulting in an alliance between caciques. On March 24, 1495, hundreds of soldiers and about 20 dogs gathered and killed many Tainos and captured Caonabo’s brother, resulting in Vega Real being under Spanish control. Caonabo and his brother were to be sent to Spain as prisoners, yet they died either during the voyage or when a hurricane hitLa Isabela’s harbor.Anacaona, Caonabo’s widow and Behechio’s sister, would return toJaragua to govern with her brother, the current cacique, where she later became a cacica. According toFerdinand Columbus, the attack “improved the position of the Christians... He [Christoper Columbus] reduced the Indians to such obedience and tranquility that they all promised to pay tribute.” Christopher Columbus ordered people 14 years old and older near the gold mines to provide gold and everyone else twenty-five pounds of cotton. Those who paid tribute were required to wear a token on his neck and anyone found without one was subject to punishment.[14]

In a visit to Jaragua,Bartolome Columbus requested tribute from Behecchio and Anacaona. Beheccio lied, claiming they could not pay tribute because his people do not know where gold can be found or what it is, and that Jaragua did not have gold.[15] Since the Spanish struggled to feed their people, the value of food was very high. They agreed to provide goods like cotton, cassava, and dried fish.

Jaragua Massacre

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Enslavement throughout Hispaniola resulted in many rebellions and many Tainos fleeing to Jaragua since 1496. Samuel M. Wilson, archaelogist and historical anthropologist, suggests theJaragua massacre was carried out not to suppress rebellion but to “subjugate a somewhat separatist community.”[16]

In 1503, when Anacaona, now governing Jaragua after the death of her brother in 1502, received news thatNicolás de Ovando was arriving to Jaragua she gathered local Taino leaders and caciques, and people from surrounding towns to Jaragua. Ovando took with him 300 soldiers and 70 horsemen. It is said many came and celebrated with feasts, dance, and games.Bartolomé de las Casas wrote about the Jaragua massacre in Historia de las Indias. According to las Casas, one Sunday, Ovando told all the leaders to gather at Anacaona’s home because she wished to speak with them. When they arrived him and his men drew their swords on Anacaona and some eighty leaders. They were all bound and Anacaona was carried out of her home. The Spaniards then blocked all exits and set fire to her home. Locals and individuals who came to Jaragua for the reception were killed, disemboweled, impaled, and dismembered. Horsemen ran through the town attacking Tainos with apike. Spaniards that resided in Jaragua also were attacked, approximately 50 were killed during this massacre. Las Casas reported, some Spaniards placed children on their horses, he was unsure if it was either to shield them or to kill the children themselves, but horsemen rode behind them and impaled them. When the children fell from the horses, the Spaniards would hold them to the ground and cut off their legs.[17]

The end of Anacaona’s life is contested. Some sources suggest she was hung by Spaniards instead of burning with the other leaders as a sign of respect. Some sources say she was taken to Santo Domingo for trial, where she was later hung after three months. Few sources, mainly French, say she was tortured in Santo Domingo before she was hung.  

The Massacre of Queen Anacaona and Her Subjects. Illustrated byJoos van Winghe, engraved byTheodor de Bry, for the first Latin edition ofA Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies byBartolome de las Casas.

For several months after the massacre,Nicolás de Ovando continued a campaign of persecution against the Taíno until their numbers became very small,[4] according to historian Samuel M. Wilson in his bookHispaniola. Caribbean Chiefdoms in the Age of Columbus. The Taíno suffered physical abuse in the gold mines and sugar cane fields, as well as religious persecution during theSpanish Inquisition, along with theexposure to diseases that arrived with the colonizers.[6] Others were captured and taken to Spain to be traded as slaves, which resulted in numerous deaths due to poor human conditions during the journey.[18]

In thirty years, between 80% and 90% of the Taíno population died.[1][2] Because of the increased number of people (Spanish) on the island, there was a higher demand for food. Taíno cultivation was converted to Spanish methods. In hopes of frustrating the Spanish, some Taínos refused to plant or harvest their crops. The supply of food became so low in 1495 and 1496 that some 50,000 died from famine.[19] Some historians have determined that the massive decline was due more to infectious disease outbreaks than any warfare or direct attacks.[20][21] By 1507, their numbers had shrunk to 60,000. Scholars believe thatepidemic disease (smallpox,influenza,measles, andtyphus) was an overwhelming cause of the population decline of the Indigenous people,[22] and also attributed a "large number of Taíno deaths...to the continuing bondage systems" that existed.[23][24]

Academic discourse

[edit]

Academics, such as historianAndrés Reséndez of theUniversity of California, Davis, assert that disease alone does not explain the destruction of Indigenous populations of Hispaniola. While the populations of Europe rebounded following the devastating population decline associated with theBlack Death, there was no such rebound for the Indigenous populations of the Caribbean. He concludes that, even though the Spanish were aware of deadly diseases such as smallpox, there is no mention of them in the New World until 1519, meaning perhaps they did not spread as fast as initially believed, and that, unlike Europeans, the Indigenous populations were subjected to enslavement, exploitation, and forced labor in gold and silver mines on an enormous scale.[25] Reséndez says that "slavery has emerged as a major killer" of the Indigenous people of the Caribbean.[26] AnthropologistJason Hickel estimates that the lethal forced labor in these mines killed a third of the Indigenous people there every six months.[27]

Subsequently, in the United States,Yale University classified the atrocities which the Spanish Empire committed against the Taíno as a "genocide" and it also included the Taíno genocide in its Genocide Studies Program.[3]

Raphael Lemkin considered Spain's abuses of the native population of the Americas to constitute cultural and even outright genocide including the abuses of theencomienda system.[28]University of Hawaii historianDavid Stannard describes theencomienda as a genocidal system which "had driven many millions of native peoples in Central and South America to early and agonizing deaths."[29] Scholars Bridget Conley andAlex de Waal highlight the weaponisation of starvation employed by conquistadors against the Taíno as being a contributing factor to the genocide,[30] and historianHarald E. Braun highlights theJaragua massacre in 1503 as a case of genocidal massacre.[31]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ab"La tragédie des Taïnos" [The Tragedy of the Tainos].L'Histoire (in French) (322): 16. July–August 2007.
  2. ^abDiaz Soler, Luis Manuel (1950).Historia De La Esclavitud Negra en Puerto Rico (Thesis). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. RetrievedJanuary 12, 2021.
  3. ^abcd"Hispaniola".Genocide Studies Program.Yale University. Archived fromthe original on May 22, 2024.
  4. ^abcPichardo, Carolina (October 12, 2022)."Anacaona, the Aboriginal chieftain who defied Christopher Columbus and was sentenced to a tragic death".BBC News.
  5. ^Fernandes, Daniel M.; Sirak, Kendra A.; Ringbauer, Harald; Sedig, Jakob; Rohland, Nadin; Cheronet, Olivia; Mah, Matthew; Mallick, Swapan; Olalde, Iñigo; Culleton, Brendan J.; Adamski, Nicole (February 2021)."A genetic history of the pre-contact Caribbean".Nature.590 (7844):103–110.Bibcode:2021Natur.590..103F.doi:10.1038/s41586-020-03053-2.ISSN 1476-4687.PMC 7864882.PMID 33361817.
  6. ^abcBaracutei Estevez, Jorge (October 15, 2019)."Conoce a los supervivientes de un «genocidio sobre el papel»" [Meet the survivors of a "genocide on paper"].National Geographic (in Spanish). Archived fromthe original on June 28, 2024.
  7. ^Méndez, Luis (October 12, 2022)."Los taínos: los indígenas que se extinguieron en el Caribe tras la conquista española" [The Taínos: the indigenous people who became extinct in the Caribbean after the Spanish conquest].La Noticia (in Spanish). Archived fromthe original on May 31, 2024.
  8. ^Deagan, Kathleen; Cruxent, José María (2002).Columbus’s Outpost among the Taínos: Spain and America at La Isabela, 1493-1498. Yale University Press. p. 66.ISBN 978-0-300-09040-6.
  9. ^Colombo, Fernando; Keen, Benjamin; Colombo, Fernando; Colombo, Fernando (1992).The life of the admiral Christopher Columbus by his son Ferdinand (Reprint ed.). New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers Univ. Press. p. 151.ISBN 978-0-8135-1801-5.
  10. ^Morison, Samuel Eliot (January 1, 1963).Journals and Other Documents on the Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus (Reprint ed.). Heritage Press. p. 226.ASIN B002KR8WPQ.
  11. ^Deagan, Kathleen; Cruxent, José María (2002).Columbus’s Outpost among the Taínos: Spain and America at La Isabela, 1493-1498. Yale University Press. pp. 60–61.ISBN 978-0-300-09040-6.
  12. ^Phillips, William D.; Phillips, Carla Rahn (2002).The worlds of Christopher Columbus (Digital printing of reprinted ed. 1992 ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press. p. 207.ISBN 978-0-521-44652-5.
  13. ^Casas, Bartolomé de las; Casas, Bartolomé de las (1996).The devastation of the Indies: a brief account (Repr. ed.). Baltimore: Hopkins Univ. Press. p. 38.ISBN 978-0-8018-4430-0.
  14. ^Colombo, Fernando; Keen, Benjamin; Colombo, Fernando; Colombo, Fernando (1992).The life of the admiral Christopher Columbus by his son Ferdinand (Reprint ed.). New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers Univ. Press. p. 153.ISBN 978-0-8135-1801-5.
  15. ^Wilson, Samuel M. (1990).Hispaniola: Caribbean Chiefdoms in the Age of Columbus. University of Alabama Press. pp. 125–126.doi:10.2307/jj.30347032.ISBN 978-0-8173-0462-1.
  16. ^Wilson, Samuel M. (1990).Hispaniola: Caribbean Chiefdoms in the Age of Columbus. University of Alabama Press. p. 133.doi:10.2307/jj.30347032.ISBN 978-0-8173-0462-1.
  17. ^Casas, Bartolomé de las (2016-09-30).Historia de las Indias (vol. 3 de 5) (in Spanish).
  18. ^Haczek, Ángela Reyes (October 11, 2022)."Cómo la Conquista de América se cobró la vida de más de 50 millones de personas" [How the Conquest of America claimed the lives of more than 50 million people].CNN in Spanish (in Spanish). Archived fromthe original on October 28, 2022.
  19. ^D'Anghiera 2009, p. 108.
  20. ^D'Anghiera 2009, p. 160.
  21. ^Aufderheide, Arthur C.; Rodríguez-Martín, Conrado; Langsjoen, Odin (1998).The Cambridge encyclopedia of human paleopathology.Cambridge University Press. pp. 204.ISBN 978-0-521-55203-5.Archived from the original on 2016-02-02. Retrieved2016-01-05.
  22. ^Watts, Sheldon (2003).Disease and medicine in world history.Routledge. pp. 86, 91.ISBN 978-0-415-27816-4.Archived from the original on February 2, 2016. RetrievedJanuary 5, 2016.
  23. ^Schimmer, Russell."Puerto Rico".Genocide Studies Program.Yale University.Archived from the original on September 8, 2011. RetrievedDecember 4, 2011.
  24. ^Raudzens, George (2003).Technology, Disease, and Colonial Conquests, Sixteenth to Eighteenth Centuries.Brill. p. 41.ISBN 978-0-391-04206-3.Archived from the original on February 2, 2016. RetrievedJanuary 5, 2016.
  25. ^Treuer, David (May 13, 2016)."The new book 'The Other Slavery' will make you rethink American history".The Los Angeles Times.Archived from the original on June 23, 2019. RetrievedJune 22, 2019.
  26. ^Reséndez 2016, p. 17.
  27. ^Hickel, Jason (2018).The Divide: A Brief Guide to Global Inequality and its Solutions. Windmill Books. p. 70.ISBN 978-1786090034.
  28. ^"Raphael Lemkin's History of Genocide and Colonialism".United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.[permanent dead link]
  29. ^Stannard 1993, p. 139.
  30. ^Conley & de Waal 2023, pp. 128–129.
  31. ^Braun 2023, pp. 626–628.

Works cited

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