Howard
J. Erlichman, Conquest, Tribute, and
Trade: The Quest for Precious Metals and the Birth of Globalization
Hurbert Herring incisively puts forth why Latin America was explored, eventually conquered, and cultivated: "Hunger for precious metal was the propulsive force which cleared the way for the Spanish American empire." [Hubert Herring, A History of Latin America: From the Beginnings to the Present. 3rd Edition. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1972, p. 194.]
Without
the eventual discovery and mining of the massive Latin American silver and gold
deposits, the commodities which were eventually produced on the Continent (sugar,
cacao, cochineal, cocaine,barbasco) would have never come into existence, as
Herring explains:
Had America offered no other
lure than fruitful valleys,
the few migrants would have
gone no farther than the
valley of Anahuac and the green
oases of the Pacific
coast. But gold beckoned men across cruel deserts,
through savage jungles, and
over forbidding mountain
passes. (Ibid.,
p. 194)
“The
pursuit of gold and silver,” writes Herring, “was the driving force which
lengthened and broadened the lines of empire.”
Gold and silver, mankind’s primordial, preeminent monies were the
catalyst for Latin America’s social, cultural and economic development:
Wherever
mines were dug, cities grew and prospered.
Farms
multiplied to supply food for miners.
Textile mills
and small industries sprang
up. Trade increased. A
middle class had its
beginnings. (Ibid., p. 195)
Because
of its silver holdings, the city of Potosi (in later Bolivia), would rival
Mexico City in its vitality and grandeur as Herring describes:
It
[Potosi] was a city of baroque churches, costly palaces,
a fine
theater, and gambling houses, and to it were drawn
daring
speculators, hardy frontiersmen, and glamorous courtesans,
who
vied with each other in amassing and wasting fortunes.
(Ibid.)
Even
after the initial discovery and the establishment of Latin American colonies,
precious metals remained the Americas' most important commodity not only as economic
goods unto themselves, but they became an integral component of the cultural
fabric which manifested itself in literature, art, and in the people's
imagination.
The
silver mined in the New World and minted into pesos became the first world-wide
currency whose stability and excellence lasted well into the nineteenth century
as Carlos Marichal describes so well in his essay, "The Spanish-American
Silver Peso: Export Commodity and Global Money of the Ancien Regime,
1550-1800," in the book he co-edited, From
Silver to Cocaine. The pesos not
only fueled the Spanish Empire, but its benefits transcended beyond the elites
enhancing the lives and well being of all.
The
greatest impact that the precious metals had in terms of world history came
about during the tumultuous sixteenth century, which is the subject of Howard
J. Erlichman's massive study, Conquest,
Tribute and Trade: The Quest for Precious Metals and the Birth of
Globalization. Since the Spanish colonial possessions held the most gold
and silver, they catapulted it into the dominant power of the age. Erlichman
chronicles the action of the Spanish Crown as it used its new found wealth to
keep Christendom together in Europe, augment its empire abroad, and maintain
its preeminent financial status. Despite
the massive precious metal finds, by the end of the sixteenth century,
financial power had shifted to the Dutch Republic. Erlichman argues that this was due, in part,
to the costly wars that Spain had engaged in which depleted its "national
wealth."
While
the decisive role that the New World's mineral wealth played in global politics
is the main thrust of the book, Erlichman devotes two fascinating chapters to
the actual mining of the metals in New Spain.
He describes how silver production techniques, which were used in
European mines, were not well suited to the "low quality ores" of
Spanish America which "varied greatly in their geological properties." (p. 243) Erlichman states: "Since native
American metallurgists had rarely mined or smelted ores deeper than one hundred
feet, it appeared that new types of smelting processes were needed to better
exploit the two largest silver works in the New World." (Ibid.) The new mining technique – "silver amalgamation"
– pioneered by Bartolome de Medina in Mexico "would make history" and
in Erlichman's mind was "arguably the most profound technological
innovation of the sixteenth century." (p. 245)
One
of the most important aspects of Amy Butler Greenfield's study (A Perfect Red) was the critical role
that native Americans played in cochineal's production,
".
. . it was the Indian peasants, cultivating cochineal in thousands of small
cactus patches, who produced most of the world's supply of the Mexican dyestuff
– not only in the sixteenth century but through the entire period of Spanish
rule." (p.92) And, it was only under their supervision that
it flourished and eventually became a worldwide staple, ". . . cochineal
seemed to do best when grown on family plots, perhaps because only small-scale
growers had the patience and personal incentive to give it the painstaking
attention it needed." (pp. 91-92)
While
not to the extent of indigenous cochineal producers that Greenfield describes,
Erlichman does note that there were a number of native Americans involved in
silver production:
. . . the fact that at least one native Bolivian
had been part
owner in one of the greatest
silver strikes
of all time is of interest. It defies
the notion that
natives were excluded entirely
from the reward
component of American
mining ventures. . . . Gualpa Guanca and
hundreds of other native Americans
defied
the odds by accumulating wealth, or at
least
livelihoods, as owners or managers of
mines,
smelters, and freighting business
opportunities
were presented to anyone with the
ability to
seize them. (p. 25)
Native
participation in mining whether entrepreneurial, as Erlichman shows, or as wage
laborers runs counter to the Marxist theme found in many of this semester's
readings (most notably Mintz) about native Americans being unaware or
"alienated" from the production processes in which they took
part. Native Americans certainly
realized what they were doing when they sought out business ventures in the
mining industry. Moreover, Erlichman
points out that the Indians which worked in the mines received higher wages
than those in other industries (albeit it was hard, backbreaking and dangerous
work). Whether they were alienated or
not, native Americans understood that silver "was where it was at!"
In nearly every book assigned, when the issue of slavery was discussed, it and the Europeans who conducted it were thoroughly condemned. The Coes were probably the most vociferous: "Until Paul III's papal bull, the Spaniards had no qualms about enslaving the native peoples of the Americas; in fact, that was an important part of Columbus's plan from the outset, . . . ."(p. 186) In another passage, they wrote: "In this heinous enterprise, . . . all [European powers] joined happily and profitably: the profits were huge on a cargo of surviving blacks from African slave ports. . . ." (Ibid.)
What
was never mentioned by the Coes, or only fleetingly, if at all, by the other
authors, and certainly without the same vehemence, was that native Americans
who had enslaved their fellow kinsmen for centuries prior to the Spanish
arrival, continued to do so afterwards. Erlichman shines
another light on the institution: "Slavery, abolished theoretically by the
New Laws of 1542, was also pervasive.
Native Indian merchants had no qualms about the slaving business and
were happy to exchange fellow Indians and Africans to the highest bidder. Some slave traders earned thousands of gold
pesos in a single day." (p. 262)
Such
balanced anecdotes can be found throughout Erlichman's informative tome.
The
importance that Latin American precious metals played not only in native
societies, but in global history was immense.
An entire commodities course on precious metals alone, incorporating an
array of tangential subjects and issues of both economic and cultural aspects
could be devised. Howard Erlichman's, Conquest, Tribute, and Trade could
easily fit into a course solely dedicated to a study of mankind's most
cherished commodity or be a part of a more generalized look at Latin American
commodities.
Your first up to bat, James. I am impressed with your review. This is a book I would like to read.
ReplyDelete