The Spanish Empire’s Southernmost Frontiers

E. Montanez-Sanabria, María Ximena Urbina Carrasco
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Abstract

After the 1598 Araucanian rebellion, the Bío Bío River remained as the imperial southernmost frontier during Spanish rule. However, the territory between Bío Bío River and Tierra del Fuego comprised three differentiated groups: the Araucanos, in northern Toltén River; the Huilliches, in the south; and the Austral Canoeros in the insular region, or mobile of Aysén. Although the Araucanía was traditionally considered the frontier with the Spanish Empire, the “frontera de arriba,” or Huilliche, and the mobile of Aysén, constituted the last frontier in the continent and the theater of interaction between local indigenous peoples and European privateers. This chapter examines the complexities of this region, including its condition of triple frontier as well as the attempts of privateers to forge alliances with local populations to establish colonies in the region. It argues that the interaction of these internal and external “enemies” of Spain shaped this borderland.
西班牙帝国最南端的边界
在1598年阿劳卡尼亚叛乱之后,Bío Bío河在西班牙统治期间仍然是帝国最南端的边界。然而,Bío Bío河和火地岛之间的领土由三个不同的群体组成:阿劳卡诺人,在托尔塔萨姆河北部;南方的威利切人;以及岛屿地区的南Canoeros,或ayssamen的移动地区。虽然Araucanía传统上被认为是与西班牙帝国的边界,但“抵达前线”(或称Huilliche)和ayssamen的流动构成了美洲大陆上最后的边界,也是当地土著人民与欧洲海盗之间互动的舞台。本章考察了该地区的复杂性,包括它的三重边界条件,以及私掠者试图与当地居民结成联盟,在该地区建立殖民地。它认为,这些内部和外部的西班牙“敌人”的相互作用形成了这片边界。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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