Sunday, January 5, 2020

The Conquistadors Ventured To The America’S In Approximately

The conquistadors ventured to the America’s in approximately the 1500s. During the process of settlement the conquistadors, led by Hernan Cortez encountered numerous natives who originally inhabited the land. When two unfamiliar civilizations encounter each other the end result can be unpredictable. Each human being has an unique thought process. Therefore numerous spaniards viewed the native americans as a peaceful, and kind civilization, while on the other side of the bridge, several spaniards like Hernan Cortez viewed the indians as a threat to their wellbeing. However, Bartolome de las Casas viewed the native Indians in a different manner. Bartolome de las Casas viewed the natives as a genuinely kind civilization, therefore the people†¦show more content†¦Also it could spare the lives of spanish citizens who could flee from the disease which was killing their people. Bartolome de las Casas’s Brief Account of the Devastation of the Indes opens with a short, yet detailed account of the land which the native americans inhabited. He informs the audience that of the nature of the Indians. The nature of the Indians from Bartolome’s standpoint was one that described the natives as kind, intelligent, and innocent people, but he also uses the words weak and complacent to describe them. Subsequently he describes the living arrangements of the native americans. They dressed very lightly, almost completely naked, they do not own beds, however they sleep on bambacas. Bambacas, to put it in simplest form are hammocks. Afterwards, Bartolome informs that the indians were not rejective of Christianity, the religion of the spanish. In fact they were jubilant and intrigued to participate in the faith. The natives insisted in partaking in the sacraments. He then reminds the audience of the goodness the native people possessed. Next, he begins to descri be the invasion of the conquistadors who ransacked the civilizations, describing the awful actions of the spaniards. The present day islands of Cuba, San Juan, and Jamaica were entirely deserted after the invasion. The spaniards killed

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