西班牙美洲的黑人进贡

Norah L. A. Gharala
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摘要

从16世纪末到19世纪初,在西班牙裔美洲,那些名声或自我描述为黑人的自由个人、家庭和企业团体都要缴纳一种特定的税。皇家贡税建立了忠诚的诸侯和响应的国王之间的关系。在哈布斯堡王朝的统治下,进贡限制了黑人臣民的自由,但为那些为国王提供服务的人提供了获得特权的途径。在16和17世纪,征收税收的尝试范围很广,但收入相对较少。然而,贡品影响了西班牙美洲的许多地区,要么是通过它的收集,要么是通过黑人采取的策略来避免它或反对它的征收。黑人和地方官员对税收的反应决定了税收的执行频率和税收收入的多少。即使在失败的地方,关于贡品的争论和收集贡品的尝试也可以揭示殖民官员和普通民众对黑人的意义。波旁王朝的改革导致了对黑人进贡的财政潜力的日益重视,其中大部分集中在新西班牙的中心。成千上万的人不仅致敬,而且用新的方法登记。在贡品制度中产生的信息近似于黑人和印第安人人口的密度、分布和相互联系。除了税收和数据之外,黑人进贡的征收仍然是理解殖民地位、认同感和西班牙帝国黑人经历的基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Black Tribute in the Spanish Americas
From the late 16th to the early 19th centuries, free individuals, families, and corporate groups whose reputations or self-descriptions defined them as Black in the Spanish Americas were subject to a specific tax. The royal tribute tax established the relationship between loyal vassals and a responsive Crown. Under Habsburg rule, tribute circumscribed the freedom of Black subjects but offered a path to privileges for those who provided services to the Crown. Attempts to levy the tax in the 16th and 17th centuries were wide-ranging but yielded comparatively small amounts of revenue. Tribute, nevertheless, affected many regions of the Spanish Americas, either by its collection or via the strategies Black people took to avoid it or contest its imposition. The responses of Black people and local officials to the tax determined how regularly it was enforced and how much revenue it would generate. Even where it failed, debates over tribute and attempts to collect it can reveal what it meant to be Black for colonial officials and ordinary people. Bourbon reforms led to an increasing emphasis on the fiscal potential of Black tribute, much of which became concentrated in the heart of New Spain. Hundreds of thousands of people not only paid tribute but were registered using new methods. The information produced within the tribute regime approximated the density, distribution, and interconnectedness of Black and Indian populations. In addition to the revenue and data its collection yielded, the imposition of Black tribute remains fundamental to understanding the colonial status, sense of identity, and experiences of Black people in the Spanish Empire.
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