西班牙亚马逊河流域(1532-1825

Cameron Jones
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摘要

从今天的委内瑞拉南部延伸到玻利维亚北部,西班牙控制的亚马逊地区代表了殖民官员的终极边界。作为数百种本土文化的家园,英国王室一直在努力将霸权扩展到该地区的大部分地区。进入的障碍既有物质上的,也有动机上的。在安第斯山脉的阴影下,茂密的植被,连绵的雨水,以及西班牙控制地区缺乏通航的河流,意味着只有最有动力的人才能到达这里最宝贵的自然资源。结果,只有最勇敢的,也许是妄想的冒险家才会尝试。在很大程度上,是宗教信仰把西班牙人带到这个地区。因此,西班牙在亚马逊地区的殖民主要是由教会来代表的,而不是帝国的其他机构。这些宗教企业在一些地方闪耀着光芒,但在其他大多数地方却举步维艰。虽然殖民化的困难意味着殖民者比美洲其他地区少,但当地居民在殖民统治下遭受苦难,这些压迫迫使他们改变传统的生活方式,实行强制性的劳动制度,并带来疾病。当地居民没有被动地接受这一点,导致了殖民时期一些最成功的起义,包括胡安·桑托斯·阿塔瓦尔帕叛乱。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Spanish Amazonia, 1532–1825
Stretching from modern-day southern Venezuela to northern Bolivia, Spanish-controlled Amazonia represented the ultimate frontier to colonial officials. Home to hundreds of native cultures, Crown authorities consistently struggled to extend hegemony to most of the region. Barriers to entry were both physical and motivational. In the shadow of the Andes, the thick vegetation, constant rains, and lack of navigable rivers from Spanish-controlled regions meant that only the most motivated could reach its most valuable natural resources. As a result, only the most intrepid, and perhaps delusional, adventurers tried. For the most part, it was religious devotion that brought Spanish subjects to the region. Therefore, Spanish colonization in Amazonia was represented largely by the mission church than any other organ of the empire. These religious enterprises fluoresced in some places, but in most others they floundered. While the difficulties of colonization meant fewer colonizers than in other parts of the Americas, the native population suffered under colonial impositions that forced changes in their traditional lifestyle, imposed coercive labor regimes, and brought disease. The native population did not accept this passively, resulting in some of the most successful uprisings in the colonial period, including the Juan Santos Atahualpa rebellion.
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