Though the original title does not appear
in this version, this is (apart from the preface) a
translation of: "Brevisima relacion de la destruction
de las Indias", by Bartolome de las Casas, originally
published in Seville in 1552.
[Introduction to the English Translation]
Composed first
in Spanish by Bartholomew de las Casas, a
Bishop there, and Eye-Witness of most of these Barbarous
Cruelties; afterward Translated by him into Latin,
then by other hands, into High-Dutch, Low-Dutch,
French, and now Taught to Speak Modern English.
London, Printed for R. Hewson at the Crown
in Cornhil, near the Stocks-Market. 1689.
________________________________________
America was discovered
and found out Ann. Dom. 1492, and the Year insuing
inhabited by the Spaniards, and afterward a multitude
of them travelled thither from Spain for the
space of Nine and Forty Years. Their first attempt was
on the Spanish Island, which indeed is a most
fertile soil, and at present in great reputation for
its Spaciousness and Length, containing in Circumference
Six Hundred Miles: Nay it is on all sides surrounded
with an almost innumerable number of Islands, which
we found so well peopled with Natives and Forreigners,
that there is scarce any Region in the Universe fortified
with so many Inhabitants: But the main Land or Continent,
distant from this Island Two Hundred and Fifty Miles
and upwards, extends it self above Ten Thousand Miles
in Length near the sea-shore, which Lands are some of
them already discover'd, and more may be found out in
process of time: And such a multitude of People inhabits
these Countries, that it seems as if the Omnipotent
God has Assembled and Convocated the major part of Mankind
in this part of the World.
Now this infinite multitude of Men are
by the Creation of God innocently simple, altogether
void of and averse to all manner of Craft, Subtlety
and Malice, and most Obedient and Loyal Subjects to
their Native Sovereigns; and behave themselves very
patiently, sumissively and quietly towards the Spaniards,
to whom they are subservient and subject; so that finally
they live without the least thirst after revenge, laying
aside all litigiousness, Commotion and hatred.
This is a most tender and effeminate people,
and so imbecile and unequal-balanced temper, that they
are altogether incapable of hard labour, and in few
years, by one Distemper or other soon expire, so that
the very issue of Lords and Princes, who among us live
with great affluence, and fard deliciously, are not
more effminate and tender than the Children of their
Husbandmen or Labourers: This Nation is very Necessitous
and Indigent, Masters of very slender Possessions, and
consequently, neither Haughty, nor Ambitious. They are
parsimonious in their Diet, as the Holy Fathers were
in their frugal life in the Desert, known by the name
of Eremites. They go naked, having no other Covering
but what conceals their Pudends from publick sight.
An hairy Plad, or loose Coat, about an Ell, or a coarse
woven Cloth at most Two Ells long serves them for the
warmest Winter Garment. They lye on a coarse Rug or
Matt, and those that have the most plentiful Estate
or Fortunes, the better sort, use Net-work, knotted
at the four corners in lieu of Beds, which the Inhabitants
of the Island of Hispaniola, in their own proper
Idiom, term Hammacks. The Men are pregnant and
docible. The natives tractable, and capable of Morality
or Goodness, very apt to receive the instill'd principles
of Catholick Religion; nor are they averse to Civility
and good Manners, being not so much discompos'd by variety
of Obstructions, as the rest of Mankind; insomuch, that
having suckt in (if I may so express my self) the the
very first Rudiments of the Christian Faith, they are
so transported with Zeal and Furvor in the exercise
of Ecclesiastical Sacraments, and Divine Service, that
the very Religioso's themselves, stand in need of the
greatest and most signal patience to undergo such extream
Transports. And to conclude, I my self have heard the
Spaniards themselves (who dare not assume the
Confidence to deny the good Nature praedominant in them)
declare, that there was nothing wanting in them for
the acquisition of Eternal Beatitude, but the sole Knowledge
and Understanding of the Deity.
The Spaniards first assaulted the
innocent Sheep, so qualified by the Almighty, as is
premention'd, like most cruel Tygers, Wolves and Lions
hunger-starv'd, studying nothing, for the space of Forty
Years, after their first landing, but the Massacre of
these Wretches, whom they have so inhumanely and barbarously
butcher'd and harass'd with several kinds of Torments,
never before known, or heard (of which you shall have
some account in the following Discourse) that of Three
Millions of Persons, which lived in Hispaniola
itself, there is at present but the inconsiderable remnant
of scarce Three Hundred. Nay the Isle of Cuba,
which extends as far, as Valledolid in Spain
is distant from Rome, lies now uncultivated,
like a Desert, and intomb'd in its own Ruins. You may
also find the Isles of St. John, and Jamaica,
both large and fruitful places, unpeopled and desolate.
The Lucayan Islands on the North Side, adjacent
to Hispaniola and Cuba, which are Sixty
in number, or thereabout, together with with those,
vulgarly known by the name of the Gigantic Isles, and
others, the most infertile whereof, exceeds the Royal
Garden of Sevil in fruitfulness, a most Healthful
and pleasant Climat, is now laid waste and uninhabited;
and whereas, when the Spaniards first arriv'd
here, about Five Hundred Thousand Men dwelt in it, they
are now cut off, some by slaughter, and others ravished
away by Force and Violence, to work in the Mines of
Hispanioloa, which was destitute of Native Inhabitants:
For a certain Vessel, sailing to this Isle, to the end,
that the Harvest being over (some good Christian, moved
with Piety and Pity, undertook this dangerous Voyage,
to convert Souls to Christianity) the remaining gleanings
might be gathered up, there were only found Eleven Persons,
which I saw with my own Eyes. There are other Islands
Thirty in number, and upward bordering upon the Isle
of St. John, totally unpeopled; all which are
above Two Thousand miles in Lenght, and yet remain without
Inhabitants, Native, or People.
As to the firm land, we are certainly
satisfied, and assur'd, that the Spaniards by
their barbarous and execrable Actions have absolutely
depopulated Ten Kingdoms, of greater extent than all
Spain, together with the Kingdoms of Arragon
and Portugal, that is to say, above One Thousand
Miles, which now lye wast and desolate, and are absolutely
ruined, when as formerly no other Country whatsoever
was more populous. Nay we dare boldly affirm, that during
the Forty Years space, wherein they exercised their
sanguinary and detestable Tyranny in these Regions,
above Twelve Millions (computing Men, Women, and Children)
have undeservedly perished; nor do I conceive that I
should deviate from the Truth by saying that above Fifty
Millions in all paid their last Debt to Nature.
Those that arriv'd at these Islands from
the remotest parts of Spain, and who pride themselves
in the Name of Christians, steer'd Two courses principally,
in order to the Extirpation, and Exterminating of this
People from the face of the Earth. The first whereof
was raising an unjust, sanguinolent, cruel War. The
other, by putting them to death, who hitherto, thirsted
after their Liberty, or design'd (which the most Potent,
Strenuous and Magnanimous Spirits intended) to recover
their pristin Freedom, and shake off the Shackles of
so injurious a Captivity: For they being taken off in
War, none but Women and Children were permitted to enjoy
the benefit of that Country-Air, in whom they did in
succeeding times lay such a heavy Yoak, that the very
Brutes were more happy than they: To which Two Species
of Tyranny as subalternate things to the Genus, the
other innumerable Courses they took to extirpate and
make this a desolate People, may be reduced and referr'd.
Now the ultimate end and scope that incited
the Spaniards to endeavor the Extirptaion and
Desolation of this People, was Gold only; that thereby
growing opulent in a short time, they might arrive at
once at such Degrees and Dignities, as were no wayes
consistent with their Persons.
Finally, in one word, their Ambition and
Avarice, than which the heart of Man never entertained
greater, and the vast Wealth of those Regions; the Humility
and Patience of the Inhabitants (which made their approach
to these Lands more facil and easie) did much promote
the business: Whom they so despicably contemned, that
they treated them (I speak of things which I was an
Eye Witness of, without the least fallacy) not as Beasts,
which I cordially wished they would, but as the most
abject dung and filth of the Earth; and so sollicitous
they were of their Life and Soul, that the above-mentioned
number of People died without understanding the true
Faith or Sacraments. And this also is as really true
as the praecendent Narration (which the very Tyrants
and cruel Murderers cannot deny without the stigma of
a lye) that the Spaniards never received any
injury from the Indians, but that they rather
reverenced them as Persons descended from Heaven, until
that they were compelled to take up Arms, provoked thereunto
by repeated Injuries, violent Torments, and injust Butcheries.
Of the Island
HISPANIOLA.
In this Isle, which, as we have said,
the Spaniards first attempted, the bloody slaughter
and destruction of Men first began: for they violently
forced away Women and Children to make them Slaves,
and ill-treated them, consuming and wasting their Food,
which they had purchased with great sweat, toil, and
yet remained dissatisfied too, which every one according
to his strength and ability, and that was very inconsiderable
(for they provided no other Food than what was absolutely
necessary to support Nature without superfluity, freely
bestow'd on them, and one individual Spaniard
consumed more Victuals in one day, than would serve
to maintain Three Families a Month, every one consisting
of Ten Persons. Now being oppressed by such evil usage,
and afflicted with such greate Torments and violent
Entertainment they began to understand that such Men
as those had not their Mission from Heaven; and therefore
some of them conceal'd their Provisions and others to
their Wives and Children in lurking holes, but some,
to avoid the obdurate and dreadful temper of such a
Nation, sought their Refuge on the craggy tops of Mountains;
for the Spaniards did not only entertain them
with Cuffs, Blows, and wicked Cudgelling, but laid violent
hands also on the Governours of Cities; and this arriv'd
at length to that height of Temerity and Impudence,
that a certain Captain was so audacious as abuse the
Consort of the most puissant King of the whole Isle.
From which time they began to consider by what wayes
and means they might expel the Spaniards out
of their Countrey, and immediately took up Arms. But,
good God, what Arms, do you imagin? Namely such, both
Offensive and Defensive, as resemble Reeds wherewith
Boys sport with one another, more than Manly Arms and
Weapons.
Which the Spaniards no sooner perceived,
but they, mounted on generous Steeds, well weapon'd
with Lances and Swords, begin to exercise their bloody
Butcheries and Strategems, and overrunning their Cities
and Towns, spar'd no Age, or Sex, nay not so much as
Women with Child, but ripping up their Bellies, tore
them alive in pieces. They laid Wagers among themselves,
who should with a Sword at one blow cut, or divide a
Man in two; or which of them should decollate or behead
a Man, with the greatest dexterity; nay farther, which
should sheath his Sword in the Bowels of a Man with
the quickest dispatch and expedition.
They snatcht young Babes from the Mothers
Breasts, and then dasht out the brains of those innocents
against the Rocks; others they cast into Rivers scoffing
and jeering them, and call'd upon their Bodies when
falling with derision, the true testimony of their Cruelty,
to come to them, and inhumanely exposing others to their
Merciless Swords, together with the Mothers that gave
them Life.
They erected certain Gibbets, large, but
low made, so that their feet almost reacht the ground,
every one of which was so order'd as to bear Thirteen
Persons in Honour and Reverence (as they said blasphemously)
of our Redeemer and his Twelve Apostles, under which
they made a Fire to burn them to Ashes whilst hanging
on them: But those they intended to preserve alive,
they dismiss'd, their Hands half cut, and still hanging
by the Skin, to carry their Letters missive to those
that fly from us and ly sculking on the Mountains, as
an exprobation of their flight.
The Lords and Persons of Noble Extract
were usually expos'd to this kind of Death; they order'd
Gridirons to be placed and supported with wooden Forks,
and putting a small Fire under them, these miserable
Wretches by degrees and with loud Shreiks and exquisite
Torments, at last Expir'd.
I once saw Four or Five of their most
Powerful Lords laid on these Gridirons, and thereon
roasted, and not far off, Two or Three more over-spread
with the same Commodity, Man's Flesh; but the shril
Clamours which were heard there being offensive to the
Captain, by hindring his Repose, he commanded them to
be strangled with a Halter. The Executioner (whose Name
and Parents at Sevil are not unknown to me) prohibited
the doing of it; but stopt Gags into their Mouths to
prevent the hearing of the noise (he himself making
the Fire) till that they dyed, when they had been roasted
as long as he thought convenient. I was an Eye-Witness
of these and and innumerable Number of other Cruelties:
And because all Men, who could lay hold of the opportunity,
sought out lurking holes in the Mountains, to avoid
as dangerous Rocks so Brutish and Barbarous a People,
Strangers to all Goodness, and the Extirpaters and Adversaries
of Men, they bred up such fierce hunting Dogs as would
devour an Indian like a Hog, at first sight in
less than a moment: Now such kind of Slaughters and
Cruelties as these were committed by the Curs, and if
at any time it hapned, (which was rarely) that the Indians
irritated upon a just account destroy'd or took away
the Life of any Spaniard, they promulgated and
proclaim'd this Law among them, that One Hundred Indians
should dye for every individual Spaniard that
should be slain.
Of the Kingdoms
contained in Hispaniola.
This Isle of Hispaniola was made
up of Six of their greatest Kingdoms, and as many most
Puissant Kings, to whose Empire almost all the other
Lords, whose Number was infinite, did pay their Allegiance.
One of these Kingdoms was called Magua, signifying
a Campaign or open Country; which is very observable,
if any place in the Universe deserves taking notice
of, and memorable for the pleasantness of its Situation;
for it is extended from South to North Eighty Miles,
in breadth Five, Eight, and in some parts Ten Miles
in length; and is on all sides inclosed with the highest
Mountains; above Thirty Thousand Rivers, and Rivulets
water her Coasts, Twelve of which prodigious Number
do not yield in all in magnitude to those famous Rivers,
the Eber, Duer, and Guadalquivir; and
all those Rivers which have their Source or Spring from
the Mountains lying Westerly, the number whereof is
Twenty Thousand) are very rich in Mines of Gold; on
which Mountain lies the Province of rich Mines, whence
the exquisite Gold of Twenty Four Caracts weight, takes
denomination. The King and Lord of this Kingdom was
named Guarionex, who governed within the Compass
of his Dominions so many Vassals and Potent Lords, that
every one of them was able to bring into the Field Sixteen
Thousand Soldiers for the service of Guarionex
their Supream Lord and Soverain, when summoned thereunto.
Some of which I was acquainted with. This was a most
Obedient Prince, endued with great Courage and Morality,
naturally of a Pacifick Temper, and most devoted to
the service of the Castilian Kings. This King
commanded and ordered his Subjects, that every one of
those Lords under his Jurisdiction, should present him
with a Bell full of Gold; but in succeeding times, being
unable to perform it, they were commanded to cut it
in two, and fill one part therewith, for the Inhabitants
of this Isle were altogether inexperienced, and unskilful
in Mine-works, and the digging Gold out of them. This
Caiu proferred his Service to the King of Castile,
on this Condition, that he would take care, that those
Lands should be cultivated and manur'd, wherein, during
the reign of Isabella, Queen of Castile,
the Spaniards first set footing and fixed their
Residence, extending in length even to Santo Domingo,
the space of Fifty Miles. For he declar'd (nor was it
a Fallacie, but an absolute Truth,) that his Subjects
understood not the practical use of digging in Golden
Mines. To which promises he had readily and voluntarily
condescended, to my own certain knowledge, and so by
this means, the King would have received the Annual
Revenue of Three Millions of Spanish Crowns,
and upward, there being at that very time in that Island
Fifty Cities more ample and spacious than Sevil
it self in Spain.
But what returns by way of Remuneration
and Reward did they make this so Clement and Benign
Monarch, can you imagine, no other but this? They put
the greatest Indignity upon him imaginable in the person
of his Consort who was violated by a Spanish
Captain altogether unworthy of the Name of Christian.
He might indeed probably expect to meet with a convenient
time and opportunity of revenging this Ingominy so unjuriously
thrown upon him by preparing Military Forces to attaque
him, but he rather chose to abscond in the Province
De los Ciquayos (wherein a Puissant Vassal and
subject of his Ruled) devested of his Estate and Kingdom,
and there live and dye an exile. But the Spaniards
receiving certain information, that he had absented
himself, connived no longer at his Concealment but raised
War against him, who had received them with so great
humanity and kindness, and having first laid waste and
desolate the whole Region, at last found, and took him
Prisoner, who being bound in Fetters was convey'd on
board of a ship in order to his transfretation to Castile,
as a Captive: but the Vessel perished in the Voyage,
wherewith many Spaniards were also lost, as well
as a great weight of Gold, among which there was a prodigious
Ingot of Gold, resembling a large Loaf of Bread, weighing
3600 Crowns; Thus it pleased God to revenge their enormous
impieties.
A Second Kingdom was named Marien,
where there is to this day a Haven, upon the utmost
Borders of the Plain or open Countrey toward the North,
more fertil and large than the kingdom of Portugal;
and really deserving constant and frequent Inahbitants:
For it abounds with Mountains, and is rich in Mines
of Gold and Orichalcum, a kind of Copper Mettal
mixt with Gold; The Kings name of this place was Guacanagari,
who had many powerful Lords (some whereof were not unknown
to me) under his subjection. The first that landed in
this Kingdom when he discovered America was an
Admiral well stricken in years, who had so hospitable
and kind a reception from the aforesaid Gracanagari,
as well as all those Spaniards that accompanied
him in that Voyage, giving them all imaginable help
and assisstance (for the admiral's vessel was sunk on
their Coasts) that I heard it from his own mouth, he
could not possibly have been entertained with greater
Caresses and Civilities from his own parents in his
own Native Country. But this King being forced to fly
to avoid the Spanish slaughter and Cruelty, deprived
of all he was Master of, died in the Mountains; and
all the rest of the Potentates and Nobles, his subjects,
perished in that servitude and Vassalage; as you shall
find in this following Treatise.
The Third Kingdom was distinguished by
the Appellation of Maquana, another admirable,
healthful and fruitful Region, where at present the
most refined sugar of the Island is made. Caonabo
then reigned there, who surmounted all the rest in Power,
State, and the splendid Ceremonies of His Government.
This King beyond all expectation was surpriz'd in his
own Palace, by the great subtilty and industry of the
Spaniards, and after carried on board in order
to his transportation to Castile, but there being
at that time six Ships Riding in the Haven, and ready
to set Sail such an impetuous storm suddenly arose,
that they as well as the Passengers and Ships Crew were
all lost, together with King Canabao loaded with
Irons; by which judgement the Almighty declared that
this was as unjust and impious an Act as any of the
former. This Kind had three or four Brothers then Living,
Men of strength and Valour, who being highly incensed
at the Captivity of their King and Brother, to which
he was injuriously reduc'd, having also intelligence
of the Devastations and Butcheries committed by the
Spaniards in other Regions, and not long after
hearing of their Brothers death, took up Arms to revenge
themselves of the Enemy, whom the Spaniards met
with, and certain party of Horse (which proved very
offensive to the Indians) made such havoc and
slaughter among them, that the half of this Kingdom
was laid waste and depopulated.
Xaraqua is the Fourth Kingdom,
and as it were the Centre and Middle of the whole Island,
and is not to be equalled for fluency of Speech and
politeness of Idiom or Dialect by any Inhabitants of
the other Kingdoms, and in Policy and Morality transcends
them all. Herein the Lords and Peers abounded, and the
very Populace excelled in in stature and habit of Body:
Their King was Behechio by name and who had a
Sister called Anacaona, and both the Brother
as well as Sister had loaded the Spaniards with
Benefits and singular acts of Civility, and by delivering
them from the evident and apparent danger of Death,
did signal services to the Castilian Kings. Behechio
dying the supreme power of the Kingdom fell to Anacaona:
But it hapned one day, that the Governour of an Island,
attended by 60 Horse, and 30 Foot (now the Cavalry was
sufficiently able to unpeople not only the Isle, but
also the whole Continent) he summoned about 300 Dynasta's,
or Noblemen to appear before him, and commanded the
most powerful of them, being first crouded into a Thatcht
Barn or Hovel, to be exposed to the fury of the merciless
Fire, and the rest to be pierced with Lances, and run
through with the point of the Sword, by a multitude
of Men: And Anacaona her self who (as we said
before,) sway'd the Imperial Scepter, to her greater
honor was hanged on a Gibbet. And if it fell out that
any person instigated by Compassion or Covetousness,
did entertain any Indian Boys and mount them
on Horses, to prevent their Murder, another was appointed
to follow them, who ran them through the back or in
the hinder parts, and if they chanced to escape Death,
and fall to the ground, they immediately cut off his
Legs; and when any of those Indians, that survived
these Barbarous Massacres, betook themselves to an Isle
eight miles distant, to escape their Butcheries, they
were then committed to servitude during Life.
The Fifth Kingdom was Hiquey, over
whom Queen Hiquanama, a superannuated Princess,
whome the Spaniards Crucified, did preside and
Govern. The number of those I saw here burnt, and dismembered,
and rackt with various Torments, as well as others,
the poor Remnants of such matchless Villanies, who surviving
were enslaved, is infinite. But because so much might
be said concerning the Assassinations and Depopulating
of these people, as cannot without great difficulty
be published in Writing (nor do I conceive that one
fragile part of 1000 that is here contained can be fully
displayed) I will only add one remark more of the prementioned
Wars, in lieu of a Corollary or Conclusion, and aver
upon my Conscience, that notwithstanding all the above-named
Injustice, profligate Enormities and other Crimes which
I omit, (tho sufficiently known to me) the Indians
did not, nor was it in their power to give any greater
occasion for the Commission of them, than Pious Religioso's
Living in a well regulated Monastic Life did afford
for any Sacrilegeous Villains to deprive them of their
Goods and Life at the same time, or why they who by
flight avoided death should be detain'd in perpetual,
not to be ransom'd Captivity and Slavery. I adde farther,
that I really believe, and am satisfied by certain undeniable
conjectures, that at the very juncture of time, when
all these outrages were commited in this Isle, the Indians
were not so much guilty of one single mortal sin of
Commission against the Spaniards, that might
deserve from any Man revenge or require satisfaction.
And as for those sins, the punishment whereof God hath
reserved to himself, as the immoderate desire of Revenge,
Hatred, Envy or inward rancor of Spirit, to which they
might be transported against such Capital Enemies as
the Spaniards were, I judge that very few of
them can justly be accused of them; for their impetuosity
and vigor I speak experimentally, was inferior to that
of Children of ten or twelve years of age: and this
I can assure you, that the Indians had ever a
just cause of raising War against the Spaniards,
and the Spaniards on the contrary never raised
a just was against them, but what was more injurious
and groundless then any undertaken by the worst of Tyrants.
All which I affirm of all their other Transactions and
passages in America.
The Warlike Engagements being over, and
the Inhabitants all swept away, they divided among themselves
the Young Men, Women, and Children reserved promiscuously
for that purpose, one obtained thirty, another forty,
to this Man one hundred were disposed, to the other
two hundred, and the more one was in favor with the
domineering Tyrant (which they styled Governor) the
more he became Master of, upon this pretence, and with
this Proviso, that he should see them instructed in
the Catholick Religion, when as they themselves to whom
they were committed to be taught, and the care of their
Souls instructed them were, for the major part Idiots,
Cruel, Avaritious, infected and stained with all sorts
of Vices. And this was the great care they had of them,
they sent the Males to the Mines to dig and bring away
the Gold, which is an intollerable labor; but the Women
they made use of to Manure and Till the ground, which
is a toil most irksome even to Men of the strongest
and most robust constitutions, allowing them no other
food but Herbage, and such kind of unsubstantial nutriment,
so that the Nursing Womens Milk was exsiccated and so
dryed up, that the young Infants lately brought forth,
all perished, and females being separated from and debarred
cohabitation with Men, there was no Prolification or
raising up issue among them. The Men died in Mines,
hunger starved and oppressed with labor, and the Women
perished in the Fields, harrassed and broken with the
like Evils and Calamities: Thus an infinite number of
Inhabitants that formerly peopled this Island were exterminated
and dwindled away to nothing by such Consumptions. They
were compelled to carry burthens of eighty or one hundred
pound weight, and that an hundred or two hundred miles
compleat: and the Spaniards were born by them
on the Shoulders in a pensil Vehicle or Carriage, or
kind of Beds made of Net-work by the Indians;
for in Truth they made use of them as Beasts to carry
the burthens and cumbersom baggage of their journeys,
insomuch that it frequently happened, that the Shoulders
and Backs of the Indians were deeply marked with
their scourges and stripes, just as they used to serve
a tired Jade, accustomed to burthens. And as to those
slashes with whips, blows with staves, cuffs and boxes,
maledictions and curses, with a Thousand of such kind
of Torments they suffered during the fatigue of their
laborious journeys it would require a long tract of
time, and many Reams of Paper to describe them, and
when all were done would only create Horror and Consternation
in the Reader.
But here is is observable, that the desolation
of these Isles and Provinces took beginning since the
decease of the most Serene Queen Isabella, about
the year 1504, for before that time very few of the
Provinces situated in that Island were oppressed or
spoiled with unjust Wars, or violated with general devastation
as after they were, and most if not all these things
were concealed and masked from the Queens knowledge
(whom I hope God hath crowned with Eternal Glory) for
she was transported with fervent and wonderful zeal,
nay, almost Divine desires for the Salvation and preservation
of these people, which things so exemplary as these
we having seen with our eyes, and felt with our hands,
cannot easily be forgotten.
Take this also for a general Rule, that
the Spaniards upon what American Coasts
soever they arrived, exercised the same Cruelties, Slaughters,
Tyrannies and detestable Oppressions on the most innocent
Indian Nation, and diverting themselves with
delights in new sorts of Torment, did in time improve
in Barbarism and Cruelty; wherewith the Omnipotent being
incensed suffered them to fail by a more desperate and
dangerous lapse into a reprobate state.
Of the Isles
of St. John and Jamaica.
In the Year 1509, the Spaniards
sailed to the Islands of St. John and Jamaica
(resembling Gardensa and Bee-hives) with the same purpose
and design they proposed to themselves in the Isle of
Hispaniola, perpetrating innumerable Robberies
and Villanies as before; whereunto they added unheard
of Cruelties by Murdering, Burning, Roasting, and Exposing
Men to be torn to pieces by Dogs; and Finally by afflicting
and harassing them with un-exampled Oppressions and
torments in the Mines, they spoiled and unpeopled this
Contrey of these Innocents. These two Isles containing
six hundred thousand at least, though at this day there
are scarce two hundred men to be found in either of
them, the remainder perishing without the knowledge
of Christian Faith or Sacrament.
_Of the Isle of
_Cuba.
In the Year of our Lord 1511. They passed
over to Cuba, which contains as much ground in
length as there is distance between Valledolid
and Rome, well furnished with large and stately
Provinces and very populous, against whom they proceeded
with no more humanity and Clemency, or indeed to speak
truth with greater Savageness and Brutality. Several
memorable Transactions worthy observation, passed in
this Island. A certain Cacic a potent Peer, named
Hathney, who not long before fled Hispaniola
to Cuba for Refuge from Death, or Captivity during
Life; and understanding by certain Indians that
the Spaniards intended to steer their course
thither, made this Oration to all his People Assembled
together.
You are not ignorant that there is a rumor spread abroad
among us of the Spaniards Arrival, and are sensible
by woeful experience how such and such (naming them)
and Hayti (so they term Hispaniola in
their own language) with their Inhabitants have been
treated by them, that they design to visit us with equal
intentions of committing such acts as they have hitherto
been guilty of. But do you not know the cause and reason
of their coming? We are altogether ignorant of it, they
replied, but sufficiently satisfied that they are cruelly
and wickedly inclined: Then thus, he said, they adore
a certain Covetous Deity, whose cravings are not to
be satisfied by a few moderate offerings, but they may
answer his Adoration and Worship, demand many unreasonable
things of us, and use their utmost endeavors to subjugate
and afterwards murder us. Then taking up a Cask or Cabinet
near at hand, full of Gold and Gems, he proceeded in
this manner: This is the Spaniards God, and in
honour of him if you think well of it, let us celebrate
our Arcytos (which are certain kinds of Dances
and caprings used among them); and by this means his
Deity being appeas'd, he will impose his Commands on
the Spaniards that they shall not for the future molest
us; who all unanimously with one consent in a loud tone
made this reply. Well said, Well said, and thus they
continued skipping and dancing before this Cabinet,
without the least intermission, till they were quite
tired and grown weary: Then the Noble Hathney
re-assuming his discourse, said, if we Worship this
Deity, till ye be ravished from us, we shall be destroyed,
therefore I judge it convenient, upon mature deliberation,
that we cast it into the River, which advice was approved
of by all without opposition, and the Cabinet thrown
in to the next River.
When the Spaniards first touched this
Island, this Cacic, who was thoroughly acquainted
with them, did avoid and shun them as much as in him
lay, and defended himself by force of Arms, wherever
he met with them, but at length being taken he was burnt
alive, for flying from so unjust and cruel a Nation,
and endeavuoring to secure his Life against them, who
only thirsted after the blood of himself and his own
People. Now being bound to the post, in order of his
Execution a certain Holy Monk of the Franciscan
Order, discours'd with him concerning God and the Articles
of our Faith, which he never heard of before, and which
might be satisfactory and advantagious to him, considering
the small time allow'd him by the Executioner, promising
him Eternal Glory and Repose, if he truly believ'd them,
or other wise Everlasting Torments. After that Hathney
had been silently pensive sometime, he askt the Monk
whether the Spaniards also were admitted into
Heaven, and he answering that the Gates of Heaven were
open to all that were Good and Godly, the Cacic
replied without further consideration, that he would
rather go to Hell then Heaven, for fear he should cohabit
in the same Mansion with so Sanguinary and Bloody a
Nation. And thus God and the Holy Catholick Faith are
Praised and Reverenced by the Practices of the Spaniards
in America.
Once it so hapned, that the Citizens of
a Famous City, distant Ten Miles from the place where
we then resided, came to meet us with a splendid Retinue,
to render their Visit more Honourable, bringing with
them delicious Viands, and such kind of Dainties, with
as great a quantity of Fish as they could possibly procure,
and distributing them among us; but behold on a sudden,
some wicked Devil possessing the minds of the Spaniards,
agitated them with great fury, that I being present,
and without the least Pretence or Occasion offered,
they cut off in cold Blood above Three Thousand Men,
Women and Children promiscuously, such Inhumanities
and Barbarisms were committed in my sight, as no Age
can parallel.
Some time after I dispatch Messengers
to all the Rulers of the Province of Havana,
that they would by no means be terrified, or seek their
refuge by absence and flight, but to meet us, and that
I would engage (for they understood my Authority) that
they should not receive the least of Injuries; for the
whole Country was extremely afflicted at the Evils and
Mischiefs already perpetrated, and this I did with the
advice of their Captain. As soon as we approached the
Province, Two and Twenty of their Noblemen came forth
to meet us, whom the Captain contrary to his Faith given,
would have expos'd to the Flames, alledging that it
was expedient they should be put to Death, who were,
at any time, capacitated to use any Stratagem against
us, but with great difficulty and much adoe, I snatcht
them out of the fire.
These Islanders of Cuba, being
reduc'd to the same Vasselage and Misery as the Inhabitants
of Hispaniola, seeing themselves perish and dy
without any redress, fled to the Mountains for shelter,
but other Desperado's, put a period to their days with
a Halter, and the Husband, together with his Wife and
Children, hanging himself, put an end to those Calamities.
By the ferocity of one Spanish
Tyrant (whom I knew) above Two Hundred Indians
hang'd themselves of their own accord; and a multitude
of People perished by this kind of Death.
A certain Person here in the same Isle
constituted to exercise a kind of Royal Power, hapned
to have Three Hundred Indians fall to his share,
of which in Three Months, through excessive labour,
One Hundred and Sixty were destroy'd, insomuch that
in a short space there remained but a tenth part alive,
namely Thirty, but when the number was doubled, they
all perisht at the same rate, and all that were bestow'd
upon him lost their lives, till at length he paid his
last Debt to Nature and the Devil.
In Three or Four Months time I being there
present, Six Thousand
Children and upward were murder'd, because they had
lost their Parents
who labour'd in the Mines; nay I was a Witness of many
other stupendous
Villanies.
But afterward they consulted how to persecute
those that lay hid in the Mountains, who were miserably
massacred, and consequently this Isle made desolate,
which I saw not long after, and certainly it is a dreadful
and depolorable sight to behold it thus unpeopled and
laid waste, like a Desert.
Of the
CONTINENT.
In the Year 1514, a certain unhappy Governour
Landed on the firm Land or Continent, a most bloody
Tyrant, destitute of all Mercy and Prudence, the Instrument
of God's Wrath, with a Resolution to people these parts
with Spaniards; and although some Tyrants had
touched here before him, and Cruelty hurried them into
the other World by several wayes of Slaughter, yet they
came no farther than to the Sea Coast, where they comitted
podigious Thefts and Robberies, but this Person exceeded
all that ever dwelt in other Islands, though execrable
and profligate Villains: for he did not only ravage
and depopulate the Sea-Coast, but buried the largest
Regions and most ample Kingdoms in their own Ruins,
sending Thousdands to Hell by his Butcheries. He made
Incursions for many Miles continuance, that is to say,
in those Countries that are included in the Territories
of Darien and the Provinces of Nicaraqua,
where are near Five Hundred Miles of the most Fertil
Land in the World, and the most opulent for Gold of
all the Regions hitherto discover'd. And although Spain
has bin sufficiently furnished with the purest Gold,
yet it was dig'd out of the Bowels and Mines of the
said Countries by the Indians, where (as we have
said) they perished.
This Ruler, with his Complices found out
new inventions to rack, torment, force and extort Gold
from the Indians. One of his Captains in a certain
Excursion undertaken by the Command of his Governeur
to make Depraedations, destroy'd Forty Thousand Persons
and better exposing them to the edge of the Sword, Fire,
Dogs and variety of Torments; of all which a Religious
Man of the Order of St. Francis, Franciscus de S.
Romano, who was then present was an Eye-Witness.
Great and Injurious was the blindness
of those praesided over the Indians; as to the
Conversion and Salvation of this People: for they denyed
in Effect what they in their flourishing Discourse pretended
to, and declar'd with their Tongue what they contradicted
in their Heart; for it came to this pass, that the Indians
should be commanded on the penalty of a bloody War,
Death, and perpetual Bondage, to embrace the Christian
Faith, and submit to the Obedience of the Spanish
King; as if the Son of God, who suffered Death for the
Redemption of all Mankind, had enacted a Law, when he
pronounced these words, Go and teach all Nations
that Infidels, living peaceably and quietly in their
Hereditary Native Country, should be impos'd upon pain
of Confiscation of all their Chattels, Lands, Liberty,
Wives, Children, and Death itself, without any precedent
instruction to Confess and Acknowledge the true God,
and subject themselves to a King, whom they never saw,
or heard mention'd before; and whose Messengers behav'd
themselves toward them with such Inhumanity and Cruelty
as they had done hitherto. Which is certainly a most
foppish and absurd way of Proceeding, and merits nothing
but Scandal, Derision, nay Hell itself. Now suppose
this Notorious and Profligate Governour had bin impower'd
to see the Execution of these Edicts perform'd, for
of themselves they were repugnant both to Law and Equity;
yet he commanded (or they who were to see the Execution
thereof, did it of their own Heads without Authority)
that when they phansied or proposed to themselves any
place, that was well stor'd with Gold, to rob and feloniously
steal it away from the Indians living in their
Cities and Houses, without the least suspicion of any
ill Act. These wicked Spaniards, like Theives
came to any place by stealth, half a Mile off of any
City, Town or Village, and there in the Night published
and proclaim'd the Edict among themselves after this
manner:
You Cacics and Indians of this Continent,
the Inhabitants of such a Place, which they named; We
declare or be it known to you all, that there is but
one God, one hope, and one King of Castile, who
is Lord of these Countries; appear forth without delay,
and take the oath of Allegiance to the Spanish
King, as his Vassals.
So about the Fourth Watch of the Night,
or Three in the Morning these poor Innocents overwhelm'd
with heavy Sleep, ran violently on that place they named,
set Fire to their Hovels, which were all thatcht, and
so, without Notice, burnt Men, Women and Children; kill'd
whom they pleas'd upon the Spot; but those they preserv'd
as Captives, were compell'd throughTorments to confess
where they had hid the Gold, when they found little
or none at their Houses; but they who liv'd being first
stigmatized, were made Slaves; yet after the Fire was
extinguisht, they came hastily in quest of the Gold.
Thus did this Wicked Man, devoted to all the Infernal
Furies, behave himself with the Assistance of Profligate
Christians, whom he had lifted in his Service from the
14th to the 21. or 22. Year, together with his Domestick
Servants and Followers, from whom he received as many
Portions, besides what he had from his Slaves in Gold,
Pearls, and Jewels, as the Chief Governor would have
taken, and all that were constituted to execute any
kind of Kingly Office followed in the same Footsteps;
every one sending as many of his Servants as he could
spare, to share in the spoil. Nay he that came hither
as Biship first of all did the same also, And at the
vory time (as I conjecture) the Spaniards did
depraedate or rob this Kingdom of above Ten Hundred
Thousand Crowns of Gold: Yet all these their Thefts
and Felonies, we scarce find upon Record that Three
Hundred Thousand Castilian Crowns ever came into
the Spanish King's Coffers; yet there were above
Eight Hundred Thousand Men slain: The other Tyrants
who governed this Kingdom afterward to the Three and
Thirtieth year, depriv'd all of them of Life that remain'd
among the Inhabitants.
Among all those flagitious Acts committed
by this Governour while he rul'd this Kindom, or by
his Consent and Permission this must by no means be
omitted: A certain Casic, bestowing on him a
Gift, voluntarily, or (which is more probably) induced
thereunto by Fear, about the weight of Nine Thousand
Crowns, but the Spaniards not satisfied with
so fast a Sum of Money, sieze him, fix him to a Pole;
extended his Feet, which being mov'd near the Fire,
they demanded a larger Sum; the Casic overcome
with Torments, sending home, procur'd Three Thousand
more to be brought and presented to them: But the Spaniards,
adding new Torments to new Rage and Fury, when they
found he would confer no more upon them, which was because
he could not, or otherwize because he would not, they
expos'd him for so long to that Torture, till by degrees
of heat the Marrow gusht out of the Soles of his Feet,
and so he dyed; Thus they often murder'd the Lords and
Nobles which such Torments to Extort the Gold from them.
One time it hapned that a Century or Party
of One Hundred Spaniards making Excursions, came
to a Mountain, where many People shunning so horrid
and pernicious an Enemy conceal'd themselves, who immediately
rushing on them, putting all to the Sword they could
meet with, and then secur'd Seventy or Eighty Married
Women as well as Virgins Captives; but a great Number
of Indians with a fervent desire of recovering
their Wives and Daughters appear'd in Arms against the
Spaniards, and when they drew near the Enemy,
they unwilling to lose the Prey, run the Wives and Maidens
through with their Swords. The Indians through
Grief and Trouble, smiting their Breasts, brake out
into these Exclamations. O perverse Generation of Men!
O Cruel Spaniards! What do you Murder las
Iras? (In their Language they call Women by the
Name of las Iras as if they had said: To slay
Women is an Act of bloody minded Men, worse than Brutes
and Wild Beasts.
There was the House of a Puissant Potentate
scituated about Ten or Fifteen Miles from Panama,
whose name was Paris, very Rich in Gold; and
the Spaniards gave him a visit, who were entertained
with Fraternal Kindness, and Courteously received, and
of his own accord, presented the Captain with a Gift
of Fifteen Thousand Crowns; who was of opinion, as well
as the rest of the Spaniards, that he who bestow'd
such a quantity of Money gratis, was the Master
of vast Treasure; whereupon they counterfeit a pretended
Departure, but returning about the Fourth Night-Watch,
and entring the City privily upon a surprize, which
they thought was sufficiently secur'd, consecrated it
with many Citizens to the Flames, and robb'd them of
Fifty or Sixty Thousand Crowns. The Dynast or
Prince escaped with his Life, and gathering together
as great a Number of Men as he could possibly at that
instant of time, and Three or Four Days being elapsed,
pursued the Spaniards, who had depriv'd him also
by Violence and Rapine of a Hundred and Thirty or Forty
Thousand Crowns, and pouring in upon them, recover'd
all his Gold with the destruction of Fifty Spaniards,
but the remainder of them having receiv'd many Wounds
in that Rencounter betook them to their Heels and sav'd
themselves by flight: but in few days after the Spaniards
return, and fall upon the said Casic well-arm'd
and overthrow him and all his Forces, and they who out-liv'd
the Combat, to their great Misfortune, were expos'd
to the usual and frequently mention'd Bondage.
Of the Province
of NICARAQUA.
The said Tyrant An. Dom. 1522.
proceeded farther very unfortunately to the Subjugation
of Conquest of this Province. In truth no Person can
satisfactorily or sufficiently express the Fertility,
Temperateness of the Climate, or the Multitude of the
Inhabitants of Nicaraqua, which was almost infinite
and admirable; for this Region contain'd some Cities
that were Four Miles long; and the abundance of Fruits
of the Earth (which was the cause of such a Concourse
of People) was highly commendable. The People of this
place, because the Country was Level and Plain, destitute
of Mountains, so very delightful and pleasant, that
they could not leave it without great grief, and much
dissatisfaction, they were therefore tormented with
the greater Vexations and Persecutions, and forced to
bear the Spanish Tyranny and Servitude, which
as much Patience as they were Masters of: Add farther
that they were peaceable and meek spirited. This Tyrant
with these Complices of his Cruelty did afflict this
Nation (whose advice he made use of in destroying the
other Kingdoms) with such and so many great Dammages,
Slaughters, Injustice, Slaver, and Barbarisme, that
a Tongue, though of Iron, could not express them all
fully. He sent into the Province (which is larger than
the County of Ruscinia) Fifty Horse-Men, who
put all the People to the Edge of the Sword, sparing
neither Age nor Sex upon the most trivial and inconsiderable
occasion: As for Example, if they did not come to them
with all possible speed, when called; and bring the
imposed burthen of Mahid (which signifies Corn
in their Dialect) or if they did not bring the Number
of Indians required to his own, and the Service
or rather Servitude of his Associates. And the Country
being all Campaign or Level, no Person was able to withstand
the Hellish Fury of their Horses.
He commanded the Spaniards to make
Excursions, that is, to rob other Provinces, permitting
and granting these Theiving Rogues leave to take away
by force as many of these peacable People as they could,
who being iron'd (that they might not sink under the
Burthen of Sixty or Eighty Pound weight) it frequently
hapned, that of Four Thousand Indians, Six only
returned home, and so they dyed by the way; but if any
of them chanced to faint, being tired with over-weighty
Burthens, or through great Hunger and Thirst should
be siezed with a Distemper; or too much Debility and
Weakness, that they might not spend time in taking off
their Fetters, they beheaded them, so the Head fell
one way, and the Body another: The Indians when
they spied the Spaniards making preparations
for such Journeys, knowing very well, that few, or none
returned home alive, just upon their setting out with
Sighs and Tears, burst out into these or the like Expressions.
Those were Journeys, which we travelled
frequently in the service of
Christians, and in some tract of time we return'd to
our Habitations,
Wives and Children: But now there being no hope of a
return, we are for
ever depriv'd of their Sight and Conversation.
It hapned also, that the same President
would dissipate or disperse the Indians de novo
at his own pleasure, to the end (as it was reported)
he might violently force the Indians away from
such as did infest or molest him; and dispose of them
to others; upon which it fell out, that for the space
of a Year complete, there was no sowing or planting:
And when they wanted Bread, the Spaniards did
by force plunder the Indians of the whole stock
of Corn that they had laid up for the support of their
Families, and by these indirect Courses above Thirty
Thousand perished with Hunger. Nay it fortun'd at one
time, that a Woman opprest with insufferable Hunger,
depriv'd her own Son of his Life to preserve her own.
In this Province also they brought many
to an untimely End, loading their Shoulders with heavy
planks and pieces of Timer, which they were compell'd
to carry to a Haven Forty Miles distant, in order to
their building of Ships; sending them likewise unto
the Mountains to find out Hony and Wax, where they were
devour'd by Tygers; nay they loaded Women impregnated
with Carriage and Burthens fit for beasts.
But no greater pest was there that could
unpeople this Province, than the License granted the
Spaniards by this Governour, to demand Captives
from the Casics and Potentates of this Region;
for at the Expiration of Four or Five Months, or as
often as they obtain'd leave of the Governour to demand
them, they deliver'd them up Fifty Servants, and the
Spaniards terrified them with Menaces, that if
they did not obey them in answering their unreasonable
Demands, they should be burnt alive, or baited to Death
by Dogs. Now the Indians are but slenderly stor'd
with Servants; for it is much if a Casic hath
Three or Four in his Retinue, therefore they have recourse
to the Subjects; and when they had, in the first place,
seized the Orphans, they required earnestly and instantly
one Son of the Parent, who had but Two, and Two of him
that had but Three, and for the Lord of the place satisfied
the desires of the Tyrant, not without the Effusion
of Tears and Groans of the People, who (as it seems)
were very careful of their Children. And this being
frequently repeated in the space between the Year 1523,
and 1533, the Kingdom lost all their Inhabitants, for
in Six or Seven Years time there were constantly Five
or Six Ships made ready to be fraighted with Indians
that were sold in the Regions of Panama and Perusium,
where they all dyed; for it is by dayly Experience prov'd
and known, that the Indians when Transported
out of their Native Country into any other, soon dye;
because they are shortned in their allowance of Food,
and the Task impos'd on them no ways dimished, they
being only bought for Labour. And by this means, there
have been taken out of this Province Five Hundred Thousand
Inhabitants and upward, who before were Freemen, and
made Slaves, and in the Wars made on them, and the horrid
Bondage they were reduc'd unto Fifty or Sixty Thousand
more have perished, and to this day very many still
are destroy'd. Now all these Slaughters have been committed
within the space of Fourteen years inclusively, possibly
in this Province of Nicaraqua there remains Four
or Five Thousand Men who are put to Death by ordinary
and personal Opressions, whereas (according to what
is said already) it did exceed other Countries of the
World in multitude of People.
Of new
SPAIN.
New Spain was discovered Anno
Dom. 1517. and in the detection there was no first
or second Attempt, but all were exposed to slaughter.
The year ensuing those Spaniards (who style themselves
Christians) came thither to rob, kill and slay, though
they pretend they undertook this Voyage to people the
Countrey. From this year to the present, viz.
1542. the Injustice, Violence and Tyranny of the Spaniards
came to the highest degree of extremety: for they had
shook hands with and bid adieu to all fear of God and
the King, unmindful of themselves in this sad and deplorable
condition, for the Destructions, Cruelties, Butcheries,
Devastations, the Domolishing of Cities, Depradations,
&c. which they perpetrated in so many and
such ample Kingdoms, are such and so great, and strike
the minds of Men with so great horror, that all we have
related before are inconsiderable comparatively to those
which have been acted from the year 1518 to 1542, and
to this very month of September that we now live
to see the most heavy, grievous and detestable things
are committed, that the Rule we laid down before as
a Maxim might be induputably verified, to wit, that
from the beginning they ran headlong from bad to worse,
and were overcome in their Diabolical acts and wickedness
only by themselves.
Thus from the first entrance of the Spaniards
into New Spain, which hapned on the 18th day
of April in the said month of the year 1518,
to 1530, the space of ten whole years, there was no
end or period put to the Destruction and Slaughters
committed by the merciless hands of the Sanguinary and
Blood-thirsty Spaniard in the Continent, or space of
450 Miles round about Mexico, and the adjacent
or neighboring parts, which might contain four or five
spatious Kingdoms, that neither for magnitude or fertility
would give Spain her self the pre-eminance. This
intire Region was more populous then Toledo, Sevil,
Valedolid, Saragoza, and Faventia; and there
is not at this day in all of them so many people, nor
when they flourisht in their greatest height and splendor
was there such a number, as inhabited that Region, which
embraceth in its Circumference, four hundred and eighty
Miles. Within these twelve years the Spaniards have
destroyed in the Said Countinent, by Spears, Fire and
Sword, computing Men, Women, Youth, and Children above
Four Millions of people in these their Acquests or Conquests
(for under that word they mask their Cruel Actions)
or rather those of the Turk himself, which are reported
of them, tending to the ruin of the Catholick Cause,
together with their Invasions and Unjust Wars, contrarty
to and condemned by Divine as well as Human Laws; nor
are they reckoned in this number who perished by their
more then Egyptian Bondage and usual Oppressions.
There is no Tongue, Art, or Human knowledge
can recite the horrid Impieties, which these Capital
Enemies to Government and all Mankind have been guilty
of at several times and in several Nations; nor can
the circumstantial Aggravations of some of their wicked
Acts be unfolded or display'd by any manner of Industry,
time or writing, but yet I will say somewhat of every
individual particular thing, which this protestation
and Oath, that I conceive I am not able to comprehend
one of a Thousand.
Of New
Spain in Particular.
Among other Slaughters this also they
perpetrated in the most spacious City of Cholula,
which consisted of Thirty Thousand Families; all the
Chief Rulers of that Region and Neighboring places,
but first the Priests with their High Priest going to
meet the Spaniards in Pomp and State, and to the end
they might give them a more reverential and honourable
reception appointed them to be in the middle of the
Solemnity, that so being entertained in the Appartments
of the most powerful and principal Noblemen, they might
be lodged in the City. The Spaniards presently consult
about their slaughter or castigation (as they term it)
that they might fill every corner of this Region by
their Cruelties and wicked Deeds with terror and consternation;
for in all the Countries that they came they took this
course, that immediately at their first arrival they
committed some notorious butcheries, which made those
Innocent Sheep tremble for fear. To this purpose therefore
they sent to the Governours and Nobles of the Cities,
and all Places subject unto them, together with their
supream Lord, that they should appear before them, and
no soner did they attend in expectation of some Capitulation
or discourse with the Spanish Commander, but they were
presently seized upon and detained prisoners before
any one could advertise or give them notice of their
Captivity. They demanded of them six thousand Indians
to drudge for them in the carriage of their bag and
baggage; and as soon as they came the Spaniards
clapt them into the Yards belonging to their Houses
and there inclosed them all. It was a thing worthy of
pity and compassion to behold this wretches people in
what a condition they were when they prepared themselves
to receive the burthens laid on them by the Spaniards.
They came to them naked, their Privities only vail'd,
their Shoulders loaden with food; only covered with
a Net, they laid themselves quietly on the ground, and
shrinking in their Bodies like poor Wretches, exposed
themselves to their Swords: Thus being all gathered
together in ther Yards, some of the Spaniards Armed
held the doors to drive them away if attempting to approach,
and others with Lances and Swords Butcher these Innocents
so that not one of them escaped, but two or three days
after some of them, who hid themselves among the dead
bodies, being all over besprinkled with blood and gore,
presented themselves to the Spaniards, imporing their
mercy and the prolongation of their Lives with tears
in their Eyes and all imaginable submission, yet they,
not in the least moved with pity or compassion, tore
them in pieces: but all the Chief Governours who were
above one hundred in number, were kept bound, whom the
Captain commanded to be affixed to posts and burnt;
yet the King of the whole Countrey escaped, and betook
himself with a Train of thirty or forty Gentlemen, to
a Temple (called in their Tongue Quu) which he
made use of as a Castle or Place of Defence, and there
defended himself a great part of the day, but the Spaniards
who suffer none to escape out of their clutches, especially
Souldiers, setting fire to the Temple, burnt all those
that were there inclosed, who brake out into these dying
words and exclamations. O profligate Men, what injury
have we done you to occasion our death! Go, go to Mexico,
where our supream Lord Montencuma will revenge
our cause upon your persons. And 'tis reported, while
the Spaniards were engated in this Tragedy destroying
six or seven thousand Men, that their Commander with
great rejoycing sang this following Ayre;
Mira Nero de Tarpeia, Roma como se
ardia, Gritos de Ninos y Vieyot, y el de nadase
dolia.
From the Tarpeian still Nero espies Rome
all in Flames with unrelenting Eyes, And hears
of young and old the dreadful Cries.
They also committed a very great Butchery
in the City Tepeara, which was larger and better
stored with Houses than the former; and here they Massacred
an incredible number with the point of the Sword.
Setting sail from Cholula, they
steer'd their course to Mexico, whose King sent
his Nobles and Peers with abundance of Presents to meet
them by the way, testifying by divers sorts of Recreations
how grateful their arrival was and acceptable to him:
but when they came to a steep Hill, his brother went
forward to meet them accompanied with many Noblemen
who brought them many gifts in Gold, Silver, and Robes
Emboidered with Gold and at their entrance into the
City, the King himself carried in a golden Litter, together
(with the whole Court) attended them to the Palace prepared
for their reception; and that very day as I was informed
by some persons then and there present by a grand piece
of Treachery, they took the very great King Montencuma,
never so much as dreaming of any such surprize, and
put him into the custody of eighty Soldiers, and afterward
loaded this Legs with irons; but all these things being
passed over with a light pencil of which much might
be said, one thing I will discover acted by them, that
may merit your obervation. When the Captain arrived
at the Haven, to fight with a Spanish Officer, who made
War against him, and left another with an hundred Soldiers,
more or less as a Guard to King Montencuma, it
came into their heads, that to act somewhat worth remembrance,
that the dread of their Cruelty might be more and more
apprehended, and greatly increased.
In the interim all the Nobility and Commonality
of the City thought of nothing else, but how to exhilarate
the Spirit of their Captive King, and solace him during
his Confinement with varity of diversions and Recreations;
and among the rest this was one, viz., Revellings
and Dances which they celebrated in all Streets and
Highways, by night and they in their Idiom term Mirotes,
as the Islanders do Arcytos; to these Masques
and nocturnal Jigs they usually go with all their Riches,
Costly Vestments and Robes, together with any thing
that is pretious and glorious, being wholly addicted
to this humor, nor is there any greater token among
them then this of their extraordinary exultation and
rejoycing. The Nobles in like manner, and Princes of
the Blood Royal every one according to his degree exercise
these Masques and Dances, in some place adjoyning to
the House where their King and Lord is detained Prisoner.
Now there were not far from the Palace about 2000 Young
Noblemen who were the issue of the greatest Potentates
of the Kingom, and indeed the flower of the whole Nobility
of King Motencuma, and a Spanish Captain
went to visit them with some Soldiers, and sent others
to the rest of the places in the City where these Revellings
were kept, under pretence only of being spectators of
the solemnity. Now the Captain had commanded, that,
at a certain hour appointed they should fall upon these
Revellers, and he himself approaching the Indians
very busie at their Dancing, said, San Jago (that
is St. James it seems that was the Word) Let
us rush in upon them, which was no sooner heard,
but they all began with their naked Swords in hand to
pierce their tender and naked Bodies, and spill their
generous and Noble blood, till not one of them was left
alive on the place, and the rest following his example
in other parts, (to their inexpressible stupefaction
and grief) seized on all these Provinces. Nor will the
Inhabitants till the General conflagration ever discontinue
the Celebration of these Festivals, and the Lamentation
and Singing with certain kind of Rhythmes in their Arcytos,
the doleful ditty of the Calamity and Ruin of this Seminary
of the antient Nobility of the whole Kingdom, which
was their frequent Pride and Glory.
The Indians seeing this not to
be exampled cruelty and iniquity executed against such
a number of guiltless persons, and also bearing with
incredible patience the unjust Imprisonment of their
King, from whom they had an absolute Command not to
take up Arms against the Spaniard, the whole
City was suddenly up in Arms fell on the Spaniards
and wounded many of them, the rest hardly escaping;
but they presenting the point of a Sword to the Kings
Breast, threatned him with death unless he out of the
Window commanded them to desist; but the Indians
for the present disobeying the Kings Mandate, proceeded
to the Election of a Generalissimo, or Commander in
Chief over all their Forces; and because that the Captain,
who went to the Port returned Victor, and brought away
a far greater number of Spaniards then he took
along with him, there was a Cessation of Arms for three
or four days, till he re-entred the City, and then the
Indians having gatherered together and made up
a great Army, fought so long and so strenuously, that
the Spaniards despairing of their safety, called
a Council of War and therein resolv'd to retreat in
the dead time of night and so draw off their Forces
from the City: which coming to the knowledge of the
Indians they destroyed a great number Retreating
on the Bridges made over their Lakes in this just and
Holy War, for the causes above-mentioned, deserving
the approbation of every upright Judge. But afterward
the Spaniards having recruited and got together
in a Body, they resolved to take the City and carried
it at last, wherein most detestable Butcheries were
acted, a vast number of the people slain, and their
Rulers perished in the Flames.
All these horrid Muders being commited
in Mexico and other Cities ten, fifteen and twenty
miles distant. This same Tyranny and Plague in the abstract
proceeded to infest and lay desolate Panuco;
a Region abounding with Inhabitants even to admiration,
nor were the slaughters therein perpetrated less stupendous
and wonderful. In the same manner they utterly laid
wasate the Provinces of Futepeca, Ipilcingonium
and Columa, every one of them being as large
as the Kingdoms of Leon, and Castile.
It would be very difficult or rather impossible to relate
the Cruelties and Destruction there made and committed,
and prove very nauseous and offensive to the Reader.
'Tis observable, that they entred upon
these Dominions and laid waste the Indian Territories,
so populous, that it would have rejoyced the hearts
of all true Christians to see their number upon no other
title or pretense, but only to enslave them; for at
their first arrival they compel'd them to swear the
Oath of Obedience and Fealty to the King of Spain,
and if they did not condescend to it, they menace them
with death and Vassalage, and they who did not forthwith
appear to satisfie the unequitable Mandates, and submit
to the will and pleasure of such unjust and Cruel Men
were declared Rebels, and accu's of that Crime before
our Lord the King; and blindess or ignorance of those
who were set over the Indians as Rulers did so
darken their understanding that they did not apprehend
that known and incontrovertible Maxim in Law, That
no Man can be called a Rebel, who is not first proved
to be a subject. I omit the injuries and prejudice
they do to the King himself, when they spoil and ravage
his Kingdoms, and as much as in them lies, diminish
and impair all his Right and Title to the Indians,
nay in plain English invalidate and make it null and
void. And these are the worthy Services which the Spaniards
do for our Kings in those Countries, by the injust and
colourable pretences aforesaid.
This Tyrant upon the same pretext sent
two other Captains, who exceeded him in impiety and
cruelty, if possible to the most flourishing and Feril
(in Fruits and Men) Kingdoms of Guatemala, Situate
toward the South, who had also received Orders to go
to the Kingdoms of Naco, Hondera, and Guaymura,
verging upon the North, and are Borderers on Mexico
three hundred miles together. The one was sent by Land
and the other by Sea, and both well furnished with Horse
and Foot.
This I declare for a Truth, that the outrages
committed by these two, particularly by him that went
to Guatimala (for the other not long after his
departure died a violent Death) would afford matter
sufficient for an entire Volume, and when completed
he so crouded with slaughters, injuries, butcheries
and inhuman Desolations, so horrid and detestable as
would Ague-shake the present as well as future ages
with terror.
He that put out to Sea vexed all the Maritime
Coasts with his cruel Incursions; now some inhabitants
of the Kingdom of Jucatan which is seated in
the way to the Kingdoms of Naco and Naymura,
to which places he steered his course, came to meet
him with burthens of Presents and Gifts: and as soon
as he approacht them, sent his Captains with a party
of Soldiers to depopulate their Land, who committed
great spoils and made cruel slaughters among them; and
in particular a Seditious and Rebellious Officer who
with three hundres Soldiers entred a Neighboring Country
to Guatimala, and there firing the Cities and
Murdering all the Inhabitants, violently deprived them
of all their goods, which he did designedly, for the
space of an hundred and twenty miles; to the end that
if his Companions should follow them, they might find
the Country laid wast, and so be destroyed by the Indians
in revenge for the dammage they had received by him
and his Forces which hapned accordingly: for the Chief
Commander whose order the abovesaid Captain had disobey'd
and so became a Rebel to him, was there slain. But many
other bloody Tyrants succeeded him, who from the year
1524 to 1535. did unpeople and make a Desert of the
Provinces of Naco and Hondura (as well
as other places) which were lookt upon as the Paradise
of delights, and better peopled then other Regions;
insomuch that within the Term of these eleven years
there fell in those Countries above two Millions of
Men, and now there are hardly remaining Two Thousand,
who dayly dye by the severity of their Slavery.
But to return to that great Tyrant, who
outdid the former in cruelty (as hinted above) and is
equal to those that Tyrannize there at present, who
travelled to Guatimala; he from the Provinces
adjoyning to Mexico, which according to his prosecuted
journey (as he himself Writes and testifies with his
own hand in Letters to the Prince of Tyrants) are distant
from Guatimala four hundred miles, did make it
to his urgent and dayly business to procure Ruin and
Destruction by slaughter, Fire and Depopulations, compelling
all to submit to the Spanish King, whom they lookt upon
to be more unjust and cruel then his inhumane and bloodthirsty
Ministers.
Of the Kingdom
and Province of GUATIMALA.
This Tyrant at his first entrance here
acted and commanded prodigious Slaughters to be perpetrated:
Notwithstanding which, the Chief Lord in his Chair or
Sedan attended by many Nobles of the City of Ultlatana,
the Emporium of the whole Kingdom, together with Trumpets,
Drums and great Exultation, went out to meet him, and
brought with them all sorts of Food in great abundance,
with such things as he stood in most need of. That Night
the Spaniards spent without the City, for they
did not judge themselves secure in such a well-fortified
place. The next day he commanded the said Lord with
many of his Peers to come before him, from whom they
imperiously challenged a certain quantity of Gold; to
whom the Indians return'd this modest Answer,
that they could not satisfie his Demands, and indeed
this Region yeilded no Golden Mines; but they all, by
his command, without any other Crime laid to their Charge,
or any Legal Form of Proceeding were burnt alive. The
rest of the Nobles belonging to other Provinces, when
they found their Chief Lords, who had the Supreme Power
were expos'd to the Merciless Element of Fire kindled
by a more merciless Enemy; for this Reason only, becauase
they bestow'd not what they could not upon them, viz.
Gold, they fled to the Mountains, (their usual Refuge)
for shelter, commanding their Subjects to obey the Spaniards,
as Lords, but withal strictly and expressly prohibiting
and forbidding them, to inform the Spaniards
of their Flight, or the Places of their Concealment.
And behold a great many of the Indians addrest
themselves to them, earnestly requesting, they would
admit them as Subjects, being very willing and ready
to serve them: The Captain replyed that he would not
entertain them in such a Capacity, but instead of so
doing would put every individual Person to Death, if
they would not discover the Receptacles of the Fugitive
Governours. The Indians made answer that they
were wholly ignorant of the matter, yet that they themselves,
their Wives and Children should serve them; that they
were at home, they might come to them and put them to
Death, or deal with them as they pleas'd. But the Spaniards,
O wonderful! went to the Towns and Villages, and destroy'd
with their Lances these poor Men, their Wives and Children,
intent upon their Labour, and as they thought themselves,
secure and free from danger. Another large Village they
made desolate in the space of two hours, sparing neither
Age, nor Sex, putting all to the Sword, without Mercy.
The Indians perceiving that this
Barbarous and Hard-hearted People would not be pacified
with Humility, large Gifts, or unexampled Patience,
but that they were butcher'd without any Cause, upon
serious Consultation took up a Resolution of getting
together in a Body, and fighting for their Lives and
Liberty; for they conceiv'd it was far better, (since
Death to them was a necessary Evil) with Sword in Hand
to be kill'd by taking Revenge of the Enemy, then be
destroy'd by them without satisfaction. But when they
grew sensible of their wants of Arms, Nakedness and
Debility, and that they were altogether incapable of
the management of Horses, so as to prevail against such
a furious Adversary, recollecting themselves, they contriv'd
this Strategm, to dig Ditches and Holes in the High-way
into which the Horses might fall in their passage, and
fixing therein purposely sharp and burnt Posts, and
covering them with loose Earth, so that they could not
be discern'd by their Riders, they might be transfixed
or gored by them. The Horses fell twice or thrice into
those holes, but afterward the Spaniards took
this Course to prevent them for the future; and made
this a Law, that as many of the Indians of what
Age or Sex soever as were taken, should be cast into
these Ditches that they had made. Nay they threw into
them Women with Child, and as many Aged Men as they
laid hold of, till they were all fill'd up with Carkasses.
It was a sight deserving Commiseration, to behold Women
and Children gauncht or run through with these Posts,
some were taken off by Spears and Swords, and the remainder
expos'd to hungry Dogs, kept short of food for that
purpose, to be devour'd by them and torn in pieces.
They burnt a Potent Nobleman in a very great Fire, saying,
That he was the more Honour'd by this kind of Death.
All which Butcheries continued Seven Years, from 1524,
to 1531. I leave the Reader to judge how many might
be Massacred during that time.
Among the Innumerable Flagitious Acts
done by this Tyrant and his Co-partners (for they were
as Barbarous as their Principal) in this Kingdom, this
also occurs worthy of an Afterism in the Margin. In
the Province of Cuztatan in which S. Saviour's
City is seated, which Country with the Neighbouing Sea-Coasts
extends in Length Forty or Fifty Miles, as also in the
very City of Cuzcatan, the Metropolis of the
whole Province, he was entertain'd with great Applause:
For about Twenty or Thirty Thousand Indians brought
with them Hens and other necessary Provisions, expecting
this coming. He, accepting their Gifts, commended every
single Spaniard to make choice of as many of
these People, as he had a mind to, that during their
stay there, they might use them as Servants, and forced
to undergo the most servile Offices they should impose
on them. Every one cull'd out a Hundred, or Fifty, according
as he thought convenient for his peculiar service, and
these wretched Indians did serve the Spaniards
with their utmost strength and endeavour; so that there
could be nothing wanting in them but Adoration. In the
mean time this Captain requir'd a great Sum of Gold
from their Lords (for that was the Load-stone attracted
them thither) who answered, they were content to deliver
him up all the Gold they had in possession; and in order
thereunto, the Indians gathered together a great
Number of Spears gilded with Orichalcum, (which
had the appearance of Gold, and in truth some Gold in
them intermixt) and they were presented to him. The
Captain ordered them to be toucht, and when he found
them to be Orichalcum or mixt Metal, he spake
to the Spaniards as followeth. Let that Nation
that is without Gold be accursed to the Pit of Hell.
Let every Man detain those Servants he Elected, let
them be clapt in Irons, and stigmatiz'd with the Brand
of Slavery, which was accordingly done, for they were
all burnt, who did no excape with the King's Mark. I
my self saw the Impression made on the Son of the Chiefest
Person in the City. Those that escap'd, with other Indians,
engaged the Spaniards by Force of Arms, but with
such ill success, that abundance of them lost their
Lives in the Attempt. After this they return'd to Gautimala,
where they built a City, which God in his Judgement
with Three Deluges, the First of Water, the Second of
Earth, the Third of Stones, as big as half a score Oxen,
all concurring at one and the same time, laid Level
with its own Ashes. Now all being slain who were capable
of bearing Arms against them, the rest were enslav'd,
paying so much per Head for Men and Women as
a Ransom; for they use no other servitude here, and
then they were sent into Pecusium to be sold,
by which means together with their slaughters committed
upon the Inhabitants, they destroy'd and made a Desert
of this Kingdom, which in Breadth as well as Length
contains One Hundred Miles; and with his Associates
and Brethren in Iniquity, Four Millions at least in
Fifteen or Sixteen Years, that is, from 1524, to 1540
were murdered, and dayly continues destroying the small
residue of that People with his Cruelties and Brutishness.
It was the usual Custom of this Tyrant,
when he made War with any City or Province, to take
along with himas many of those Indians he had
subjugated as he could, that they might fight with their
Country-men; and when he had in his Army Twenty, or
sometimes Thirty Thousand of them, and could not afford
them sustenance, he permitted them to feed on the Flesh
of other Indians taken Prisoners in War; and
so kept a Shambles of Man's Flesh in his Army, suffered
Children to be kill'd and roasted before his Face. They
butcher'd the Men for their Feet and Hands only; for
these Members were accounted by them Dainties, most
delicious Food.
He as the Death of many by the intolerable
Labour of Carrying Ships by Land, causing them to Transport
those Vessels with Anchors of a vast weight from the
Septentrional to the Mediterranean Sea,
which are One Hundred and Thirty Miles distant; as also
abundance of great Guns of the largest fort, which they
carried on their bare, naked shoulders, so that opprest
with many great and ponderous Burthens, (I say no more
than what I saw) they dyed by the way: He separated
and divided Families, forcing Married Men from their
Wives, and Maids from their Parents, which he bestow'd
upon his Marriners and Soldiers, to gratifie their burning
Lust. All his Ships he freighted with Indians,
where Hunger and Thirst discharg'd them of their Servitude
and his Cruelty by a welcome Death. He had two Companies
of Soldiers who hackt and tore them in pieces, like
Thunder from Heaven speedily. O how many Parents has
he robb'd of their Children, how many Wives of their
Husbands, and Children of their Parents? How many Adulteries,
Rapes, and what Libidinous Acts hath he been guilty
of? How many hath he enslav'd and opprest with insufferable
Anguish and unspeakable Calamities? How many Tears,
Sighs and Groans hath he occasion'd? To how many has
he bin the Author of Desolation, during their Peregrination
in this, and of Damnation in the World to come, not
only to Indians, whose Number is numberless,
but even to Spaniards themselves, by whose help
and assistance he committed such detestable Butcheries
and flagitious Crimes? I supplicate Almighty God, that
he would please to have Mercy on his Soul, and require
no other satisfaction than the violent Death, which
turn'd him out of this World.
A farther Discourse
of New Spain: And some Account of Panuco
and Xalisco.
After the perpetration of all the Cruelties
rehearsed in New Spain and other places, there
came another Rabid and Cruel Tyrant to Panuco,
who acted the part of a bloody Tragedian as well as
the rest, and sent away many Ships loaden with these
Barbarians to be sold for Slaves, made this Province
almost a Wilderness, and which was deplorable, Eight
Hundred Indians, that had Rational Souls were
given in Exchange for a Burthen-bearing-Beast, a Mule,
or Camel. Well, He was made Governour of the City of
Mexico, and all New Spain, and with him
many other Tyrants had the Office of Auditors confer'd
upon them: Now they had already made such a progress
toward the Desolation of this Region, that if the Franciscans
had not vigorously opposed them, and that by (the King's
Council, the best and greatest Encourager of Vertue)
it had not speedily bin prevented, that which hapned
to Hispaniola in Two Years, had bin the Fate
of Hispania nova, namely to be unpeopled, deferred,
and intomb'd in its own Rules. A Companion of this Governour
employed Eight Thousand Indians in Erecting a
wall to inclose his Garden, but they all dyed, having
no Supplies, nor Wages from him, to support themselves,
at whose Death he was not in the least concern'd.
After the first Captain before spoken
of had absolutely profliaged and ruin'd the Panuconians,
Fifteen Thousand whereof perished by carrying their
Bag and Baggage: At length he arriv'd at the Province
of Machuacan, which is Forty Miles Journey from
Mexico, and as Fertile and Populous: The King
to honour him in the Rencounter, with a Multiple of
People, marcheth toward him, from whom he had received
One Thousand Services and Civilities very considerable,
who gratefully requited him with Captivity, because
Fame had nois'd it abroad, that he was a most Opulent
Prince in Gold and Silver; and to the end he might export
from, and purge him of his Gold, he was cruciated with
Torments after this manner; his Body was extended, Hands
bound to a Post, and his Feet put into a pair of Stocks,
they all the while applying burning Coals to his Feet
at a tormenting distance, where a Boy attended, who
by little and little sprinkled them with Oyl, that his
Flesh might roast the better: Before him there stood
a Wicked Fellow, presenting a Bow to his Breast charged
with a Mortal Arrow, (if let fly) behind him, another
with Dogs held in with Chains, which he threatned to
let loose at him, which if done, he had bin torn to
pieces in a moment; and with these kind of Torments
they racked him to extort a Confession, where his Treasures
lay; till a Franciscan Monk came and deliver'd
him from his Torments, but not from Death, for he departed
this miserable Life not long after: And this was the
severe Fate of many Cacics and Indian
Lords, who dyed with the same Torments which they were
expos'd to by the Spaniards, in order to the
engrossing of their Gold and Sliver to themselves.
At this very time, A certain Visiter of
Purses rather than Souls hapned to be here present,
who (finding some Indian Idols which were hid;
for they were no better instructed in the Knowledge
of the true God by reason of the Wicked Documents and
Dealings of the Spaniards) detain'd Grandees
as Slaves, till they had deliver'd him all their Idols,
for he phancied they were made of Gold or Silver, but
his Expectation being frustrated, he chastised them
with no less Cruelty than Injustice; and that he might
not depart bubbled out of all his hopes, constrain'd
them to redeem their Idols with Money, that so they
might, according to their Custom, Adore them. These
are the Fruits of the Spanish Artifices and Juggling
Tricks among the Indians, and thus they promoted
the honour and worship of God.
This Tyrant from Mechuacam arrives
at Xalisco, a Country abounding with People very
fruitful, and the Glory of the Indians in this
respect, that it had some Towns Seven Miles long; and
among other Barbarisms equal to what you have read,
which they acted here, this is not to be forgotten,
that Women big with Child, were burthen'd with the Luggage
of Wicked Christians, and being unable to go out their
usual time, through extremity of Toil and Hunger, were
necessitated to bring them forth in the High-wayes,
which was the Death of many Infants.
At a certain time a profligate Christian
attempted to devirginate a Maid, but the Mother being
present, resisted him, and endeavouring to free her
from his intended Rape, whereat the Spaniard
enrag'd, cut off her Hand with a short Sword, and stab'd
the Virgin in several places, till she Expir'd, because
she obstinately opposed and disappointed his inordinate
Appetite.
In this Kingdom of Xalisco (according
to report) they burnt Eight Hundred Towns to Ashes,
and for this Reason the Indians growing desperate,
beholding the dayly destruction of the Remainders of
their matchless Cruelty, made an Insurrection against
the Spaniards, slew several of them justly and
deservedly, and afterward fled to the insensible Rocks
and Mountains (yet more tender and kind than the stony-hearted
Enemy) for Sanctuary; where they were miserably Massacred
by those Tyrants who succeeded, and there are now few,
or none of the Inhabitants to be found. Thus the Spaniards
being blinded with the Lustre of their Gold, deserted
by God, and given over to a Reprobate Sense, not undrestanding
(or at least not willing to do so) that the Cause of
the Indians is most Just, as well by the Law
of Nature, as the Divine and Humane, they by Force of
Arms, destroying them, hacking them in pieces, and turning
them out of their own Confines and Dominions, nor considering
how unjust those Violences and Tyrannies are, wherewith
they have afflicted these poor Creatures, they still
contrive to raise new Wars against them: Nay they conceive,
and by Word and Writing testifie, that those Victories
they have obtain'd against those Innocents to their
ruine, are granted them by God himself, as if their
unjust Wars were promoted and managed by a just Right
and Title to what they pretend; and with boasting Joy
return Thanks to God for their Tyranny, in imitation
of those Tyrants and Robbers, of whom the Prophet Zechariah
part of the Forth and Fifth Verses. Feed the Sheep
of the slaughter, whose Possessors slay them, and hold
themselves not guilty, and they that sell them say,
Blessed by the Lord, for ye are rich.
_Of the Kingdom
of _JUCATAN.
An Impious Wretch by his Fabulous Stories
and Relations to the King of Spain was made praefect
of the Kingdom of Jucatan, in the Year of our
Lord 1526; And the other Tyrants to this very day have
taken the same indirect Measures to obtain Offices,
and screw or wheedle themselves into publick Charges
or Employments, for this praetext, and Authority, they
had the greater opportunity to commit Theft and Rapine.
This Kingdom was very well peopled, and both for Temperature
of Air, and the Plenty of Food and Fruits, in which
respect it is more Fertile than Mexico, but chiefly
for Hony and Wax, it exceeds all the Indian Countries
that hath hitherto bin discover'd. It is Three Hundred
Miles in Compass. The Inhabitants of this place do much
excel all other Indians, either in Politie or
Prudence, or in leading a Regular Life and Morality,
truly deserving to be instructed in the Knowledge of
the true God. Here the Spaniards might have Erected
many fair Cities, and liv'd as it were in a Garden of
Delights, if they had not, through Covetousness, Stupidity,
and the weight of Enormous Crimes rendred themselves
unworthy of so great a Benefit. This Tyrant, with Three
Hundred Men began to make War with these Innocent People,
living peaceably at home, and doing injury to none,
which was the ruine of a great Number of them: Now because
this Region affords no Gold; and if it did the Inhabitants
would soon have wrought away their lives by hard working
in the Mines, that so he might accumulate Gold by their
bodies and Souls, for which Christ was Crucified: For
the generality he made slaves of those whose lives he
spared, and sent away such Ships as were driven thither
by the Wind of report, loaden with them, exchanging
them for Wine, Oyl, Vinegar, Salt Pork, Garments, Pack
Horses and other Commodities, which he thought most
necessary and fit for his use. He proposed to them the
choice of Fifty Virgins, and she that was the fairest
or best complexioned he bartered for a small Cask of
Wine, Oyl, Vinegar or some inconsiderable quantity of
salt Pork, the same exchange he proferred of Two or
Three Hundred well-disposed Young Boys, and one of them
who had the Mind or presence of a Princes Son, was given
up to them for a Cheese, and One Hundred more for a
Horse. Thus he continued his flagitious courses from
1526 to 1533, inclusively, till there was news brought
of the Wealth and Opulence of the Region of Perusia,
whither the Spaniards marcht, and so for some
time there was a Cessation of this Tyranny; but in a
few days after they returned and acted enormous Crimes,
robbed, and imprisoned them and committed higher offences
against the God of Heaven; nor have they ye done, so
that now these Three Hundred Miles of Land so populous
(as I said before) lies now uncultivated and almost
deserted.
No Solifidian can believe the particular
Narrations of their Barbarism, and Cruelty in those
Countreys. I will only relate two or three Stories which
are fresh in my memory. The Spaniards used to
trace the steps of the Indians, both Men and
Women with curst Currs, furious Dogs; an Indian
Woman that was sick hapned to be in the way in sight,
who perceiving that she was not able to avoid being
torn in pieces by the Dogs, takes a Cord that she had
and hangs her self upon a Beam, tying her Child (which
she unforunately had with her) to her foot; and no sooner
had she done, yet the Dogs were at her, tearing the
Child, but a Priest coming that way Baptiz'd it before
quite dead.
When the Spaniards left this Kingdom,
one of them invited the Son of some Indian Governour
of a City or Province, to go along with him, who told
him he would not leave or desert his Native Countrey,
whereupon he threatned to cut off his ears, if he refus'd
to follow him: But the Youth persisting resolutely,
that he would continue in the place of his Nativity,
he drawing his Sword cut off each Ear, notwithstanding
which he persever'd in his first opinion, and then as
if he had only pincht him, smilingly cut off his Nose
and Lips.
This Rogue did lasciviously boast before
a Priest, and as if he had merited the greatest applause,
commended himself to the very Heavens, saying, "He had
made it his chief Trade or Business to impregnate Indian
Women, that when they were sold afterward, he might
gain the more Money by them."
In this Kingdom or (I'm certain) in some
Province of New Spain, A Spaniard Hunting
and intent on his game, phancyed that his Beagles wanted
food; and to supply their hunger snatcht a young little
Babe from the Mothers breast, cutting off his Arms and
Legs, cast a part of them to every Dog, which they having
devour'd, he threw the remainder of the Body to them.
Thus it is plainly manifest how they value these poor
Creatures, created after the image of God, to cast them
to their Canibal Curs. But that which follows is (if
possible) a sin of a deeper dye.
I pretermit their unparallel'd Impieties,
&c. and only close all with this one Story
that follows. Those haughty obdurate and execrable Tyrants,
who departed from this Countrey to Fish for Riches in
Perusia, and four Monks of the Order of St. Francis,
with Father James who Travelled thither also
to keep the Countrey in Peace, and attract or mildly
perswade by their Preaching the remnant of Inhabitants,
that had outlived a septennial Tyranny, to embrace the
knowledge of Christ. I conceive these are the persons
who in the year 1534, Travelling by Mexico were
sollicited by several Messengers from the Indians,
to come into their Countrey, and inform them in the
knowledge of one God, the true God, and Lord of the
whole World: to this end they appointed Assemblies and
Councils to examine and understand what Men they were,
who called themselves Fathers and Friers, what they
intended and what difference there was between them
and the Spaniards, by whom they had been so molested
and tormented: but they received them at length upon
this condition that they should be admitted alone, without
any Spaniards, which the Fathers promised; for
they had permission, nay an express Mandate from the
President of New Spain to make that promise,
and that the Spaniards should not do them the
least detriment or injury. Then they began, to Preach
the Gospel of Christ, and to explicate and declare the
pious intention of the King of Castile, of all
which they had notice by the Spaniards for seven
years together, that they had no King nor no other but
him, who oppressed them with so much Tyranny. The Priests
continued there but forty days, but behold they bring
forth all their Idols to be committed to the flames;
and then their Children which they tendred as the apple
of the Eye, that they might be instructed. They also
erected Temples and Houses for them and they were desired
to come to other Provinces and Preach the Gospel, and
introduce them into the knowledge of God, and the Great
(as they stiled him) King of Castile: And the
Priests perswasions wrought so effectually on them,
that they condescended to that which was never done
in India before (for whatsoever those Tyrants
who wasted and consumed these large Kingdoms and Provinces,
did misrepresent and falsifie, was only done to bring
an odium and disgrace upon the Indians). For
Twelve or Fifteen Princes of spatious and well-peopled
Regions assembled, every one distinct and separate from
the rest, with his own subjects, and by their unanimous
consent upon Council and Advice, of their own accord
sumitted themselves to the Government of the Castilian
Kings and accepted of them as their Prince and Protector,
obliging themselves to obey and serve them as subjects
to their Lawful Liege Lord.
In Witness whereof I have in my custody,
a certain Instrument Signed and Attested by the aforesaid
Religioso's.
Thus to the great joy and hope of these
Priests reducing them to the knowledge of Christ they
were received by the Inhabitants of this Kingdom, that
surviv'd the heat and rage of the Spanish Cruelties:
but behold eighteen Horse and Twelve Footmen by another
way crept in among them, bringing with them many Idols,
which were of great weight, and taken out of other Regions
by Force. The Commander in chief of these Spaniards
summoned one of the Dynasts or Rulers of that Province
which they entred into, to appear before him, and command
him to take these Idols with him, distribute them through
his Countrey and exchange every single Idol for an Indian
Man or Woman, otherwise he would make War against him.
The abovesaid Lord compelled to it by fear did so accordingly
with a command, that his Subjects should adore Worship
and Honour them, and in compensation send Indians Male
and Female into servitude. The terrified People delivered
up their Children, and by this means there was an end
made of this Sacrilegious Merchandize, and thus the
Casic satisfied the greedy desires of the (I
dare not say Christian) Spaniards. One of these
Sacrilegious Robbers was John Garcia by name,
who being very sick and at the point of dath, had several
Idols hid under his Bed, and calling his Indians
that waited on him, as a Nurse, commanded her not to
part with those Idols at a small rate for they were
of the better sort, and that she should not dispose
of them without one Indian, for each Idol by
way of Barter. Thus by this his private and Nuncupative
last Will and Testament distracted with these carking
cares, he gave up the Ghost: And who is it that will
not fear his being tormented in the darkest and lowest
Hell? Let us now consider what progress in Religion
the Spaniards made, and what examples of Christianism
they gave, at their first arrival in America,
how devoutly they honoured God, and what expence of
sweat and toil they were at to promote his Worship and
Adoration among the Infidels. Let it be also taken into
serious consideration, whose sin is the greater, either
Joroboam's, who made all Israel to sin,
and caused two Golden Calves to be erected, or the Spaniards
who traffick and Trade in Idols like Judas, who
was the occasion of such great scandals. These are the
good Deeds of the Spanish Dons, who often, nay
very often to feed their Avarice, and accumulate Gold
have sold and still do sell, denied and still do deny
Jesus Christ our Redeemer.
The Indians now findint the Promises
of the Religious, that the Spaniards should not
enter into this Countrey, null and void; nay that the
Spaniards brought Idols from other places to be put
off there; when as they had delivered up their own to
the Priests to be burnt, that there might be only Worship
of the true God established among them; they were highly
incensed against these Friars, and addressed themselves
to them in these Words following: Why have you deceived
us, binding your promises with false protestations,
that the Spaniards shoudl not be admitted to come hither?
And why have you burnt our Gods, when others are brought
from other Regions by the Spaniards? Are the Gods of
other Provinces more sacred than ours? The Friers as
well as they could (though they had little to return
in answer) endevour'd by soft Language to appease them;
and went to these Thirty Spaniards, declaring the evil
actions they were guilty of, humbly supplicating them
to withdraw themselves from that place. Which they would
by no means condescend to, and what is most flagitious
and wicked perswaded the Indians, that they were
introduc'd by those Priests; Which being made known
to them, These Indians resolved to be the death
of these Monks, but having notice thereof by some courteous
Indians, they stole away from thence by night,
and fled; but after their departure the truth of the
matter and the Spanish Malice being understood; they
sent several Messengers who followed them fifty Miles
distant beseeching them in the name of the Indians,
to return and begging pardon for that ignorant mistake.
The Priests relying on their words, returned,
and were caress'd like Angels sent from Heaven; and
continued with them, (from whom they received a Thousand
kindnesses) four or five months. But when the Spaniards
persisted in their resolution not to quit the place,
although they Vice-Roy did use all endeavours and fair
means to recall them, they were Proclaim'd Traitors,
guilty of High Treason; and because they continued still
exercising Tyranny and perpetrated nefandous Crimes,
the Priests were sensible they would study revenge,
though it might be some considerable time before they
put it in execution, fearing that it might fail upon
their own heads, and since they could not exercise the
function of their Ministry securely and undisturbed
by reason of the continual Incursions and Assaults made
by the Spaniards, they consulted about their departure,
and did leave this Kingdom accordingly which remain'd
destitute of all Christian Doctrin and these poor Souls
are at this day involv'd in the obscurity of their former
Misery and Ignorance, they being deprived by these accursed
Spaniards, of all hopes of remedy, and the irrigatioon
of Divine knowledge, just like young withering Plants
for want of Water: for in that very juncture of time,
when these Religioso's took leave, they embraced the
Doctrine of our Faith with the greatest Fervency and
Eagerness imaginable.
_Of the Province
of St. _MARTHA.
The Province of St. Martha was
rich in the Neighbouring Golden Mines, and a fruitful
Soil, nay the People were very expert and industrious
in those Mine-works: Upon this Account, or Temptation
it was, that from the Year 1540, to 1542, abundance
of Tyrants sailed thither, laying waste the whole Country
by their Depredations, slaughtering the Inhabitants
at a prodigious and bloody rate; and robbing them of
all their Gold, who dayly fled to their Ships for Refuge,
moving sometime to one place, and sometime to another.
And thus those Provinces were laid waste, the greatest
Outrages being committed on the Sea-shore, which lasted
till the Year 1523, whither the Spaniards then
came to seat themselves, and fis their intended Habitation.
And becuase it is a plentiful Region and Opulent withal;
it was subjected to several Rulers, who like Infernal
Fiends contended who should obtain the Palm, by out-staining
the Sword of his Predecessor in Innocent Blood; insomuch,
that from the Year 1529 to this very day, they have
wasted and spoiled as much good ground as extended Five
Hundred Miles, and unpeopled the Countrey.
If I design'd to enumerate all the Impieties,
Butcheries, Desolations, Iniquities, Violences, Destructions
and other the Piacula and black Enormities committed
and perpetrated by the Spaniards in this Province,
against God, the King, and these harmless Nations; I
might compile a Voluminous History, and that shall be
compleated, if God permit my Glass to run longer, in
his good time. It may suffice for the present to relate
some passages written in a Letter to our King and Lord
by a Revernd Bishop of these Provinces, Dated the 20th
of May, An. Dom. 1541. wherein among other matters
he thus words it.
I must acquaint your Sacred Majesty, that the only way
to succour and support this tottering Region is to free
it from the Power of a Father in Law, and marry it to
a Husband who will treat her as she ought to be, and
lovingly entertain her, and that must be done with all
possible Expedition too, if not, I am certain that she
will suddenly decay and come to nothing by the covetous
and sordid Deportment of the Governours, &c.
And a little after he writes thus, By this Means your
Majesty will plainly know and understand how to depose
the Prefects or Governours of those Regions from their
Office if they deserve it, that so they may be alleviated
and eas'd of such Burthens; which if not perform'd,
in my Opinion, the Body Politick will never recover
its Health. And this I will make appear to your Majesty
that they are not Christians, but Devils; not Servants
of God and the King, but Traitors to the King and Laws,
who are Conversant in those Regions. And in reality
nothing can be more obstructive to those that live peacably,
then Inhumane and Barbarous Usage, which they, who lead
a quiet and peacable Life, too frequently undergo, and
this is so fastidious and nauseous to them, that there
can be nothing in the World so odious and detestable
among them, as the Name of a Christian: for they term
the Christians in their Language Yares, that
is, Devils; and in truth are not without reason; for
the Actions of those that reside in these Regions, are
not such as speak them to be Christians or Men, gifted
with Reason, but absolute Devils; hence it is, that
the Indians, perceiving these Actions committed
by the Heads as well as Members, who are void of all
Compassion and Humanity, do judge the Christian Laws
to be of the same strain and temper, and that their
God and King are the Authors of such Enormities: Now
to endeavour to work upon them a contrary perswasion
is to no purpose; for this would afford them a greater
Latitude and Liberty to deride Jesus Christ and his
Laws. Now the Indians who protect and defend
themselves by force of Arms, think it more eligible,
and far better to dye once, than suffer several and
many Deaths under the Spanish Power. This I know
experimentally, Most Invicible Casar, &c.
And he adds farther, Your Majesty is more Powerful in
Subjects and Servants, who frequent these Kingdoms,
then you can imagin. Nor is there one Soldier among
them all, who does not publickly and openly profess,
if he robs, steals, spoils, kills, burns His Majesties
Subjects, 'tis to purchase Gold: He will not say that
he therein does your Majesty great Service, for they
affirm they do it to obtain their own Share and Dividend.
Wherefore, Most Invincible Casar, it would be
a very prudential Act for your Majesty to testifie by
a rigid Correction and severe Punishment of some Malefactors,
that it is disservice to you for your Subjects to commit
such Evil Acts, as tend to the Disobedience and Dishonour
of the Almighty.
What you have read hitherto is the Relation
of the said Bishop of St. Martha, Epitomized
and Extracted from his Letters, whereby it is manifest,
how Savagely they handle these mild and affable People.
They term them Warlike Indians, who betake themselves
to the Mountains to secure themselves from Spanish
Cruelty; and call them Country Indians, or Inhabitants,
who by a dreadful Massacre are delivered up to Tyrannical
and Horrible Servitude, whereby at length they are become
depopulated, made desolate, and utterly destroy'd; as
appears by the Epistle of the praementioned Bishop,
who only gives us a slight Account or Essay of their
persecution and Sufferings. The Indians of this
Country use to break out into such Words as these, when
they are driven, loaded like Brutes through the uncouth
wayes in their Journeys over the Mountains, if they
happen to faint through Weakness, and miscarry through
extremity of Labour, (for then they are kicked and cudge'd,
their Teeth dasht out with the Pummels of their Swords
to raise them up again, when tired and fallen under
weighty Burthens, and force them to go on without Respiration,
or Time to take Breath, and all this with the following
increpation, or upbraiding and taunting words, O
what a wicket Villain art thou?) I say they burst
out into these Expressions, I am absolutely tir'd, kill
me, I desire to dye, being weary of my Life as well
as my Burthen and Journey: And this not without deep
Heart-breaking Sighs, they being scarce able to draw
or breathe out their words, which are the Characteristical
Notes, and infallible of the Mind drowned in Anguish
and Sorrow. My it please our Merciful God to order the
discovery of these Crimes to be manifested to those
Persons, who are able and oblig'd to redress them.
Of the Province
of CARTHAGENA.
This Province is distant Fifty Miles from
the Isle of St. Martha Westward, and situated
on the Confines of the Country of Cenusia, from
whence it extends One Hundred Miles to the Bay of Uraba,
and contains a very long Tract of Land Southward.
These Provinces from the Year 1498 to this present time
were most barbarously us'd, and made desert by Murder
and Slaughter, but that I may the sooner conclude this
brief summary. I will not handle the particulars, to
the end I may the better give an Account of the detestable
Villanies that ruin'd other Regions.
_Of the _Pearl-Coast,
PARIA, and TRINITY-ISLE.
The Spaniards made great Spoils
and Havock from the Parian Coast to the Bay of
Venecuola, exclusively, which is about Two Hundred
Miles. It can hardly be exprest by Tongue or Pen how
many, and how great Injuries and Injustices, the Inhabitants
of this Sea-shore have endur'd from the year 1510, to
this day. I will only relate Two or Three Piacular and
Criminal Acts of the First Magnitude, capable of comprehending
all other Enormities that deserve the sharpest Torments,
Wit and Malice can invent, and so make way for a deserved
Judgment upon them.
A Nameless Pirate of the Year 1510, accompanied
with a parcel of Sixty or Seventy, arriv'd at Trinity-Island,
which exceeds Sicile, both in Amplitude and Fertility,
and is contiguous to the Continent on that side where
it toucheth upon Paria, whose Inhabitants, according
to their Quality, are more addicted to Probity and Vertue,
than the rest of the Indians; who immediately
published an Edict, that all the Inhabitants should
come and cohabit with them. The Indian Lords
and Subjects gave them a Debonair and Brotherly Reception,
serving them with wonderful Alacrity, furnishing them
with dayly Provisions in so plentiful a manner, that
they might have sufficed a more numerous Company; for
it is the Mode among Indians of this New World,
to supply the Spaniards very bountifuly with
all manner of Necessaries. A short time after the Spaniards
built a stately House, which was an Appartment for the
Indians, that they might accomplish their praemeditated
Designs, which was thus effected. When they were to
thatch it, and had rais'd it two Mens height, they inclos'd
several of them there, to expedite the Work, as they
pretended, but in truth that they who were within, might
not see those without; thus part of them surrounded
the House with Sword in Hand that no one should stir
out, and part of them entred it, and bound the Indians,
menacing them with Death, if they offered to move a
Foot; and if any one endeavoured to escape, he was presently
hackt in pieces; but some of them partly wounded, and
partly unwounded getting away, with others who went
not into the House, about One Hundred and Two Hundred,
betook themselves to another House with Bows and Arrows;
and when they were all there, the Spaniards secur'd
the Doors, throwing in Fire at another place, and so
they all perished. From hence they set Sail to the Island
of St. John with near upon One Hundred and Eighty
Slaves, whom they had bound, where they sold one half
of them, and thence to Hispaniola, where they
dispos'd of the rest. Now when I taxed this Captain
with Wickedness and Treachery in the very Isle of St.
John, he dismist me with this Answer; Forbear
good Sir. I had this in commission from those who
sent me hither, that I should surprize them by the spetious
pretense of Peace, whom I could not sieze by open Force,
and in truth this same Captain told me with his own
Mouth, that in Trinity-Isle alone, he had met
with a Father and Mother in Civil usage, which he uttered
to his greater Confusion and the aggravation of his
Sins. The Monks of our Order of St. Dominic on
a certain time held a Consult about sending one of their
Fraternity into this Island, that by their Preaching
they might instruct them in the Christian Faith, and
teach them the way to be sav'd, of which they were wholly
Ignorant. And to this end they sent thither a Religious
and Licentiate in Theologie, (or Doctor in Divinity,
as we term it among us) a Man Famous for his Vertue
and Holiness with a Laic his Associate, to visit
the Country, converse with the Inhabitants, and find
out the most convenient places for the Erection of Monasteries.
As soon as they were arriv'd according to custom, they
were entertain'd like Coelestial Messengers, with great
Affection, Joy and Respect, as well as they could, for
they were ignorant of their Tongue, and so made use
of signs, for the present. It hapned that after the
departure of that Vessel that brought these Religious
Men, another came into the Port, whose Crew according
to their Hellish Custom, fraudulently, and unknown to
the Religious brought away a Prince of that Province
as Captive, who was call'd Alphonsus, (for they
are ambitious of a Christian Name,) and forthwith desire
without farther Information, that he would Baptize him:
But the said Lord Alphonsus was deceitfully overperswaded
to go on board of them with his Wife and about Seventeen
more, pretending that they would give hime a Collation;
which the Prince and they did, for he was confident,
that the Religious would by no means suffer himo be
abus'd, for he had no so much Confidence in the Spaniards;
but as soon as they were upon Deck, the perfidious Rogues,
set Sail for Hispaniola, where they were sold
as Slaves. The whole Country being extreamly discompos'd,
and understanding that their Prince and Princess were
violently carried away, addressed themselves to these
Religioso's, who were in great danger of losing their
Lives: But they being made to understand this unjust
Action, were extraordinarily afflicted, and 'tis probable
would have suffered Death, rather than permit the Indians
to be so injuriously dealt with, which might prove an
Obstruction to their receiving of, and believing in
God's Word. Yet the Indians were sedated by the
promises of the Religious; for they told them, they
would send Letters by the first Ship that was bound
for Hispaniola, whereby they would procure the
Restitution and Return of their Lord and his Retinue.
It pleased God to send a Ship thither forthwith, to
the greater confirming of the Governours Damnation,
where in the Letters they sent to the Religious of Hispaniola,
Letters containing repeated Exclamations and Protestations,
and protest against such Actions, but those that received
them denyed them Justice, for that they were partakers
of that Prey, made of those Indians so injustly
and impiously captivated. But when the Religious, who
had engag'd to the Inhabitants, that their Lord Alphonsus
should be restor'd within Four Moneths, and found that
neither in Four, nor Eight Moneths he was return'd,
they prepar'd themselves for Death, and to deliver up
their Life to Christ, to whom they had offer'd it before
their departure from Spain: Thus the Innocent
Indians were revenged on the Innocent Priests;
for they were of Opinion, that the Religious had a hand
in the Plot, partly, because they found their Promises
that their Lord should return within Four Moneths, ineffectual,
and partly because the Inhabitants made no difference
between a Religious Frier and a Spanish Rogue.
At another time it fell out likewise, through the Rampant
Tyrrany and Cruel Deeds of evil-minded Christians, that
the Indians put to Death two Dominican
Friers, of which I am a faithful Witness, escaping my
self, not without a very great Miracle, which Transaction
I resolve silently to pass over, lest I should terrifie
the Reader with the Horror of the Fact.
In these Provinces, there was a City seated
on the Bay of Codera, whose Lord was call'd Higueroto,
a Name, either proper to Persons or common to the Rulers
of that Place. A Cacic of such signal Clemency,
and his Subjects of such noted Vertue, that the Spaniards
who came thither, were extraordinarily welcom, furnished
with Provisions, enjoying Peace and Comfort, and no
Refreshment wanting: But a perfidious Wretch got many
of them on board, and sold them to the Islanders of
St. John. At the same time I landed upon that
Island, where I obtained a sight of this Tyrant, and
heard the Relation of his Actions. He utterly destroy'd
that Land, which the rest of the Spaniards took
very unkindly at his Hands, who frequently playd the
Pirate, and rob'd on that shore, detesting it as a wicked
thing, because they had lost that place, where they
use to be treated with as great Hospitality and Freedom,
as if they had been under their own Roof: Nay they transported
from this place, among them, to the Isles of Hispaniola
and St. John Two Millions of Men and upward,
and made the Coast a Desert.
It is most certainly true, that they never
ship off a Vessel freighted with Indians, but
they pay a third part as Tribute to the Sea, besides
those who are slaughter'd, when found in their own Houses.
Now the Soarce and Original of all this is the ends
they have propos'd to themselves. For there is a necessity
of taking with them a great number of Indians,
that they may gain a great sum of Mony by their Sale,
now the Ships are very slenderly furnished with Provisions
and Water in small Quantity, to satisfie few, left the
Tyrants, who are term'd Owners or Proprietors of Ships
should be at too great expence in Victualling their
Vessels, nay they scarce carry Food enough with them
to maintain the Spaniards that manage the Vessel,
which is the reason so many Indians dye with
Hunger and Thirst, and of necessity they must be thrown
over-board: Nay one of them told me this for a Truth,
that there being such a Multitude of Men thus destroy'd,
a Ship may sail from the Isle of Lucaya to Hispaniola,
which is a Voyage of Twenty Leagues and upward, without
Chart or Compass, by the sole Direction or Observation
of dead fluctuating Carkasses.
But afterward, when arriv'd, and driven
up into the Isle whither they are brought to be sold,
there is no Person that is in some small measure compassionate,
but would be extreamly mov'd and discompos'd at the
sight; viz. to spie old Men and Women, together
with Naked Children half starv'd. Then they separate
Parents from Children, Wives from their Husbands, about
Ten or Twenty in a Company, and cast lots for them,
that the Detestable Owners of the Ships may have their
share; who prepare Two or Three Ships, and equip them
as a Fleet of Pirates, going ashore ravaging and forcing
Men out of their Houses, and then robbing them: But
when the lot of any one of them falls upon a parcel,
that hath an aged or diseased Man; the Tyrant, whose
Allotment he is, usually bursts out, as followeth. Let
this old Fellow be Damm'd, why do you bestow him upon
me; must I, think you; be at the charge of his Burial?
And this sickly Wretch, how comes he to be one of my
alloted portion must I take care for his cure? Not I.
Hence you may guess what estimate and value the Spaniards
put upon Indians, and whether they practise and
fulful that Divine and Heavenly precept injoyning mutual
Love and Society.
There can be nothing more cruel and detestable
then the Tyrannical usage of the Spaniards towards
the Indians in their Pearl-Fishing; for the Torments
undergone in the unnatural Exenteration and tearing
out with Paracidal hands the richer bowels of our common
Mother, or the inward cruciating racks of the most profligate,
Heaven daring Desperado can admit of no comparison
with these, although the extracting or digging for Gold
is one of the sharpest subterranean Drudgeries, they
plunge them down four or five ells deep under Water,
where swimming about without breathing, they eradicate
and pull up Oisters, wherein the Pearls are engendred.
Sometimes they rise up to the superfities of the Water
with Nets full of Oisters for respiration and Air, but
if these miserable Creatures stay but a little more
then is Ordinary to rest themselves the Hangman is immediately
upon them in a Canow or small Boat, who beating
them with many stripes drag them by the hair of the
head under Water, that they may drudge again at their
expilcation or Pearl Fishing. Their Food is Fish, and
the same which contains the Pearls and Cassabus
made of Roots with a few Mahids, the Bread of
that Countrey; in the former there is little or no nutriment
or substance, and the other is not made without great
trouble, nor for all this have they a sufficient allowance
thereof to support nature. Their Lodging or Bed is the
Earth confined to a pair of Stocks, for fear that they
should run away: And it frequently happens that they
are drown'd with the toil of this kind of Fishing and
never more seen, for the Tuberoms and Maroxi
(certain Marine Monsters that devour a complete proportioned
Man wholly at once) prey upon them under Water. You
must consider withall, that it is impossible for the
strongest constitution to continue long under Water
without breathing, and they ordinarily dye through the
extream rigor of the Cold, spitting Blood which is occasioned
by the too great compression of the Breast, procreated
by a continued holding breath under Water, for by too
much cold a profluvium of blood follows. Their hair
naturally black is changed into a combust, burnt or
Sun-colour like that of the Sea Wolves, their shoulders
and backs covered, or overspread with a saltish humor
that they appear rather like Monsters in humane shape
then Men.
They have destroy'd all the Lucayans
by this intolerable or rather Diabolical exercise, for
the accustomary emolument or gain of lucre, and by this
means gain'd the value of fifty, sometime one hundred
Crowns of every individual Indian. They sell
them (though it is prohibited) publickly; for the Lucayans
were excellent Swimmers, and several perished in this
Isle that came from other Provinces.
Of the River
Yuya Pari.
This River washeth the Province arising
from its head or fountain in another Region, Two Hundred
miles off and better, By this a wretched Tyrant entred
it and laid waste the Land for the space of many miles,
and murder'd abundance of them by Fire and Sword, &c.
At length he died violently, and all his Forces moldred
away of themselves, many succeeded him in his iniquity
and cruelty and so dayly destroy them, sending to Hell
the Souls redeemed by the blood of the Son of God.
_Of the Kingdom
of _Venecuela.
Our Sovereign Lord the King in the Year
1526, over-perswaded by fallacious appearances (for
the Spaniards use to conceal from His Majesties
knowledge the dammages and detriments, which God himself,
the Souls and state of the Indians did suffer)
intrusted the Kingdom of Venecuela longer and
larger then the Spanish Dominions, with its Government
and absolute Jurisdiction to some German Merchants,
with power to make certain Capitulations and Conventions,
who came into this Kingdom with Three Hundred Men, and
there found a benign mild and peaceable people, as they
were throughout the Indies till injured by the
Spaniards. These more cruel then the rest beyond
comparison, behav'd themselves more inhumanely then
rapacious Tygres Wolves and Lyons, for they had the
jurisdiction of this Kingdom, and therefore possessing
it with the greater freedom from controul; lay in wait
and were the more vigilant with greater care and avarice
to understand the practical part of heaping up Wealth,
and robbing the Inhabitants of their Gold and Sliver,
surpassing all their Predecessors in those indirect
ways, rejecting wholly both the fear of their God and
King, nay forgetting that they were born men with reasonable
Faculties.
These incarnate Devils laid waste and
desolate Four Hundred miles of most Fertile Land, containing
vast and wonderful Provinces, most spatious and large
Valleys surrounded with Hills, forty Miles in Length,
and many Towns richly abounding in Gold and Silver.
They destroy'd so many and such considerable Regions,
that there is not one supernumerary witness left to
relate the Story, unless perchance some that lurkt in
the Caverns and Womb of the Earth to evade death by
their inhumane Swords embrew'd in Innocent Indian
blood, escaped. I judge that they by new invented and
unusual Torments ruinated four or five Millions of Souls
and sent them all to Hell. I will give a taste of two
or three of their Transactions, that hereby you may
guess at the rest.
They made the supream Lord of the Province
a Slave, to squeeze his Gold from him, racking him to
extort his confession who escaping fled into the Mountains,
their common Sanctuary, and his Subjects lying absconded
in the Thickets of the Woods, were stir'd up to Sedition
and Tumult or Mutiny. The Spaniards follow and
destroy many of them, but those that were taken alive
and in their power were all publickly sold for Slaves
by the Common Crier.
They were in all Provinces they came into
entertained and welcomed by the Indians with
Songs, Dances and Rich Presents but Rewarded very ungratefully
with bloodshed and Slaughter. The German Captain and
Tyrant caused several of them to be clapt into a Thatcht
House, and there cut in pieces; but some of them to
avoid falling by their bloody and merciless Swords,
climb'd up to the beams and Rafters of the House, and
the Governour, hearing it (O cruel Brute?) commanded
Fire to be put to it and burnt them all alive, leaving
the Region desert and desolate.
They also came to another stately Province,
bordering on St. Martha; whose inhabitants did
them many egregious and notable services, bestowing
on them innumerable quantities of Gold besides many
other gifts, but when they were upon departure, in retribution
of their Civil Treating and Deportment the German Tyrant,
commanded that all the Indians, with their Wives and
Children if possible, should be taken into Custody;
inclosed in some large capacious place, and that there
it should be signified unto them, whosoever desired
to be set at Liberty should redeem himself at the Will
and Pleasure (as to price;) of the unjust Governour,
or at a certain rate imposed upon himself, his wife
and every Childs head; and to expedite the business
prohibited the administration or allowance of any food
to them, till the Gold required for Redemption was paid
down to the utmost grain. Several of them sent home
to discharge the demanded price of their Redemption,
and procur'd their Freedom, as well as they could by
one means or other, that so they might return to their
Livelihood and profession, but not long after he sent
other Rogues and Robbers among them to enslave those
that were Redeemed.
To the same Gaol they are brought a second
time, being instigated or rather constrained to a speedy
Redemption by hunger and thirst; Thus many of them were
twice or thrice taken, captiv'd and Redeedmed; but some
who were not capable of Depositing such a sum, perished
there. Farthermore this Tyrant was big with an itching
desire after the discovery of the Perusian Mines,
which he did accomplish. Nay should I enumerate the
particular Cruelties, Slaughters, &c. committed
by him though my discourse would not in the least be
contrariant to the Truth, yet it would not be beleived
and only stupifie and amaze the Reader.
This course the other Tyrants took who
set sail from Venecuela and St. Martha
(with the same Resolution of detecting the Perusian
Golden, Consecrated Houses as them they esteemed) who
found the fruitful Region so desolate, deserted, and
wasted by Fire and Sword, that those Cruel Tyrants themselves
were smitten with wonder and astonishment at the traces
and ruins of such prodigious Devastations.
All these things and many more were prov'd
by Witness in the Indian Exchequer, and the Records
of their Testimony were entred in that Court, though
these execrable Tyrants burnt many of them that there
might be little or nothing prov'd as a cause of those
great Devastations and Evils perpetrated by them. For
the Minister of Justice who have hitherto lived in India,
through their obscure and damnable blindness, were not
much sollicitous about the punishment of the Crimes
and Butcheries which have been and are still committed
by these Tyrants, only they may say possibly because
such a one, and such a one hath wickedly and barbarously
dealt with the Indians, that is the reason so
great a summ of Crowns in Money is diminished already
or retrenched from His Majesties Annual Revenue, and
this general and confused proof is sufficient (as they
worthily conceive) to purge or repress such great and
hainous Crimes. And though they are but few, are not
verified as they ought to be, nor do they attribute
and lay upon them that stress and weight as they ought
to do, for if they did perform their Duty to God and
the King; it could not be made apparent as it may be,
that these German Tyrants have cheated and rob'd
the King of Three Millions of Gold and upward; and thus
these Enemies to God and the King began to depopulate
these Regions and destroy them, cheating his Majesty
of Two Millions of Gold per Annum, nor can it
be expected, that the Detriment done to his Majesty
can possibly be retriev'd, as long as the Sun and moon
endures, unless God by a Miracle should raise as many
Thousands from Death to Life, as have bin destroy'd.
And these are the Temporal Dammages the King suffers.
It would be also a Work worthy the inquiry into, to
consider how many cursed Sacriledges and Indignities
God himself hath been affronted with to the dishonour
of his Name. And what Recompence can be made for the
loss of so many Souls as are now tormented in Hell by
the Cruelty and Covetousness of these Brutish German
Tyrants. But I will conclude all their Impiety and Barbarisme
with one Example, viz. That from the time they
entred upon this Country to this very day, that is,
Seventeen Years, they have remitted many Ships fraighted
with Indians to be sold as Slaves to the Isles
of St. Martha, Hispaniola, Jamaica, and St. John,
selling a Million of Persons at the least, I speak modestly,
and still do expose to Sale to this very Year of our
Lord 1542, the King's Council in this Island seeing
and knowing it, yet what they find to be manifest and
apparent they connive at, permit and countenance, and
wink at the horrid Impieties and Devastations innumerable
which are committed on the Coasts of this Continent,
extending Four Hundred Miles in Length, and continues
still together with Venecuela and St. Martha
under their Jurisdiction, which they might easily have
remedied and timely prevented.
Of the Provinces
of FLORIDA
Three Tyrants at several times made their
entrance into these Provinces since the Year 1510, or
1511, to act those Crimes which others, and two of these
Three made it their sole business to do in other Regions,
to the end, that they might advance themselves to higher
Dignities and Promotions than they could deserve, by
the Effusion of Blood and Destruction of these People;
but at length they all were cut off by a violent Death,
and the Houses which they formerly built and erected
with the cement of Human Blood, (which I can sufficiently
testifie of these three) perished with them, and their
memory roten, and as absolutely washed away from off
the Face of the Earth, as if they had never had a being.
These Men deserted these Regions, leaving them in great
distraction and confusion, nor were they branded with
less notes of infamy, by the certain Slaughters they
perpetrated, though they were but few in number than
the rest. For the Just God cut them off before they
did much Mischief, and reserv'd the Castigation and
Revenge of those Evils which I know, and was an Eye-Witness
of, to this very Time and Place. As to the Fourth Tyrant,
who lately, that is, in the Year 1538, came hither well-furnished
with Men and Ammunition, we have received no account
these Three Years last past; but wer are very confident,
that he, at his first Arrival, acted like a bloody Tyrant,
even to extasie and madness, if he be still alive with
his Follower, and did injure, destroy, and consume a
vast Number of Men (for he was branded with infamous
Cruelty above all those who with their Assistants committed
Crimes and Enormities of the first Magnitude in these
Kingdoms and Provinces) I conceive, God hath punished
him with the same Violent Death, as he did other Tyrants:
But because my Pen is wearied with relating such Execrable
and Sanguinary Deeds (not of Men but Beasts) I will
trouble my self no longer with the dismal and fatal
Consequences thereof.
These People were found by them to be
Wise, Grave, and well dispos'd, though their usual Butcheries
and Cruelties in opressing them like Brutes, with heavy
Burthens, did rack their minds with great Terror and
Anguish. At their Entry into a certain Village, they
were welcomed with great Joy and Exultation, replenished
them with Victuals, till they were all satisfied, yielding
up to them above Six Hundred Men to carry their Bag
and Baggage, and like Grooms to look after their Horses:
The Spaniards departing thence, a Captain related
to the Superiour Tyrant returned thither to rob this
(no ways diffident or mistrustful) People, and pierced
their King through with a Lance, of which Wound he dyed
upon the Spot, and committed several other Cruelties
into the bargain. In another Neighboring Town, whose
Inhabitants they thought, were more vigilant and watchful,
having had the News of their horrid Acts and Deeds,
they barbarously murdered them all with their Lances
and Swords, destroying all, Young and Old, Great and
Small, Lords and Subject without exception.
The Chief Tyrant caused many Indians
(above Two Hundred as 'tis noised abroad) whom he summon'd
to appear before him out of another town, or else, who
came voluntarily to pay their Respects to him, to have
their Noses and Lips to the very Beard, cut off; and
thus in this grievous and wretched Condition, the Blood
gushing out of their Wounds, return'd them back, to
give an Infallible Testimony of the Works and Miracles
wrought by these Preachers and Ministers baptized in
the Catholick Faith.
Now let all Men judge what Affection and
love they bear to Christianity; to what purpose, or
upon what account they believe there is a God, whom
they preach and boast of to be Good and Just, and that
his Law which they profess (and indeed only profess)
to be pure and immaculate. The Mischiefs acted by these
profligate Wretches and Sons of Perdition were of the
deepest die. At last this Captain devoted to Perdition
dyed impenitent, nor do we in the least question, but
that he is overwhelmed and buried in Darkness Infernal,
unless God according to his Infinite Mercy and boundless
Clemency, not his own Merits, (he being contaminated
and poison'd with Execrable Deeds,) be pleas'd to compassionate
and have Mercy upon him.
Of the
Plate-River, _that is, the _Silver-River.
Some Captains since the Year 1502 to 1503
undertook Four or Five Voyages to the River of Plate,
which embraceth within its own Arms great Kingdoms and
Provinces, and is peopled by rational and well-temper'd
Inhabitants. In the general we are certified, that they
were very injurious and bloody to them; but they being
far distant from those Indians, we frequently
discourse of, wer are not able to give you a particular
account of their Transactions. Yet beyond all Controversie,
they did, and still do go the same way to work, as others
in several Regions to this present time do, and have
done; for they are the same, (and many in number too)
Spaniards who went thither, that were the wicked
Instruments of other Executions, and all of them aim
at one and the same thing, namely to grow Rich and Wealthy,
which they can never be, unless they steer the same
Course which others have followed, and tread the same
paths in Murdering, Robbing and Destroying poor Indians.
After I had committed to Writing what
I have prementioned, it was told me for a great Truth,
that they had laid waste in those Countreys great Kingdoms
and Provinces, dealing Cruelly and Bloodily with these
harmless People, at a horrid rate, having a greater
Opportunity and Convenience to be more Infamous and
Rigid to them, then others, they being very remote from
Spain, living inordinatly, like Debauches, laying
aside, and bidding farewel to all manner of Justice,
which is indeed a Stranger in all the American
Regions, as is manifest by what hath been said already.
But among the other Numerous Wicked Acts following this
is one that may be read in the Indians Courts.
One of the Governours commanded his Soldiers to go to
a certain Village, and if they denyed them Provisions,
to put all the Inhabitants to the Sword: By Vertue of
this Authority away they march, and because they would
not yield to them above Five Thousand Men as Enemies,
fearing rather to be seen, then guilty of Illiberality,
were cut off by the Sword. Also a certain number of
Men living in Peace and Tranquillity proffered their
services to him; who, as it fell out, were call'd before
the Governour, but deferring their appearance a little
longer than ordinary, that he might infix their minds
with a remark of horrible Tyranny, he commanded, they
should be deliver'd up, as Prisoners to their Mortal
Indian Enemies, who beg'd with loud Clamours
and a Deluge of Tears, that they might be dispatcht
out of this World by their own Hands, rather than be
given up as a prety to the Enemy; yet being resolute,
they would not depart out of the House wherein they
were, so the Spaniards hackt them in pieces Limb
by Limb, who exclaim'd and cryed aloud, "We came to
visit and serve you peaceably and quietly, and you Murder
us; our Blood with which these Walls are moistned and
sprinkled will remain as an Everlasting Testimony of
our Unjust Slaughter, and your Barbarous Cruelty. And
really this Piaculum or horrid Crime deserves
a Commemoration, or rather speak more properly, the
Commiseration of all Persons."
_Of the vast Kingdoms
and Spatious Provinces of _PERUSIA.
A notorious Tyrant in the Year 1531, entred
the Kingdoms of Perusia with his Complices, upon
the same Account, and with the same pretences, and beginning
at the same Rate as others did; he indeed being one
of those who were exercised, and highly concern'd in
the Slaughters and Cruelties committed on the Continent
ever since the Year 1510, he increased and heightned
the Cruelties, Butcheries, and Rapine; destroying and
laying waste (being a False-hearted Faithless Person)
the Towns and Villages, and Murdering the Inhabitants,
which occasion'd all those Evils, that succeeded in
those Regions afterward: Now to undertake the Writing
of a Narrative of them, and represent them lively and
Naturally to the Readers view, and perusal, is a work
altogether impossible, but must lie concealed and unknown
until they shall more openly and clearly appear, and
be made visible to every Eye, at the day of Judgement.
As for my part, if I should presume to unravel, in some,
measure the Deformity, Quality and Circumstances of
those Enormities, I must ingenuously confess I could
by no means perform so burthensom a Task, and render
it compleat and as it ought to be.
At his first admission into these parts,
he had laid waste some Towers, and rob'd them of a great
quantity of Gold, this he did in the Infancy of his
Tyrannical Attempts, when he arriv'd at Pugna
a Neighbouring Isle so called, he had the Reception
of an Angel; but about Six Months after, when the Spaniards
had spent all their Provisions, they discover'd and
opened the Indians Stores and Granaries, which
were laid up for the sustenance of themselves, Wives
and Children against a time of Dearth and Scarcity,
brought them forth with Tears and Weepings, to dispose
of at pleasure: But they rewarded them with Slaughter,
Slavery and Depopulation as formerly.
Thence they betook themselves to the Isle
Tumbala, scituate on the firm Land, where they
put to Death all they met with. And because the People
terrified with their abominable Sins of Commission,
fled from their Cruelty, they were accused of Rebellion
against the Spanish King. This Tyrant made use
of this Artifice, he commanded all that he took, or
that had bestowed Gold, Silver and other rich Gifts
on him, still to load him with other Presents, till
he found they had exhausted their Treasures, and were
grown naked and incapable of affording him farther supplies,
and then he declared them to be the Vassals and Subjects
of the King of Spain, flattering them, and proclaiming
twice by sound of Trumpet, that for the future he would
not captivate or molest them any more, looking upon
it as lawful to rob, and terrifie them with such Messages
as he had done, before he admited them under the King's
protection, as if from that very time, he had never
rob'd, destroy'd or opprest them with Tyrannical Usage.
Not long after Ataliba the King
and Supreme Emperor of all these Kingdoms, leading a
great Number of Naked Men, he himself being at the Head
of them, armed with ridiculous Weapons, and wholly ignorant
of the goodness of the Spaniards Bilbo-Blades,
the Mortal Dartings of their Lances, and the Strength
of their Horse, whose Use and Service was to him altogether
unknown, and never so much as heard of before, and that
the Spaniards were sufficiently weapon'd to rob
the Devils themselves of Gold, if they had any, came
to the place where they then were; saying, Where are
these Spaniards? Let them appear, I will not
stir a foot from hence till they give me satisfaction
for my Subjects whom they have slain, my Towns they
have reduc'd to Ashes, and my Riches they have stoln
from me. The Spaniards meet him, make a great
Slaughter of his Men, and seize on the Person of the
King Himself, who was carried in a Chair or Sedan on
Mens Shoulders. There was a Treaty had about his Redemption,
the King engaged to lay down Four Millions of Crowns,
as the purchase of his Freedom, but Fifteen were paid
down upon the Nail: They promise to set him at Liberty,
but contrary to all Faith and Truth according to their
common Custom (for they always violated their promises
with the Indians) they falsly imposed this upon
him, that his People were got together in a Body by
his Command; but the King was made answer, That throughout
his Dominions, not so much as a Leaf upon a Tree durst
move without his Authority and Pleasure, and if any
were assembled together, they must of necessity believe
that it was done without his Order, he being a Captive,
it being in their power to deprive him of his LIfe,
if any such thing should be ordered by him: Notwithstanding
which, they entred into a Consultation to have him burnt
alive, and a little while after the Sentence was agreed
upon, but the Captain at the intreaty of some Persons
commanded him first to be strangled, and afterward thrown
into the fire. The King understanding the sentence of
Death past upon him, said; Why do you burn me? What
Fact have I committed deserving Death? Did you not promise
to set me free for a Sum of Gold. And did I not give
you a far larger quantity than I promised? But if it
is your pleasure so to do, send me to your King of Spain,
and thus using many words to the same purpose, tending
to the Confusion and Detestation of the Spanish
Injustice, he was burnt to Death. And here let us take
into serious Consideration the Right and Title they
had to make this War, the Captivity, Sentence, and Execution
of this Prince, and the Conscience wherewith these Tyrants
have possessed themselves of vast Treasures, which they
have surreptitiously and fraudulently taken away from
this King, and a great many more of the Rulers of these
Kingdoms. But as to the great number of their Enormities
committed by those who stile themselves Christians in
order to the extirpation of this People, I will hear
repeat some of them, which in the very beginning were
seen by a Franciscan, confirm'd by his own Letters,
and signed with his Hand and Seal, sending some of them
to the Perusian Provinces, and others to the
Kingdom of Castile: A Copy whereof I have in
my Custody, Signed with his Hand, as I said before;
the Contents whereof follow.
I Frier Marcus de Xlicia, of the Franciscan
Order, and Praefect of the whole Fraternity residing
in the Perusian Provinces, one of the first among the
Religious, who arriv'd with the Spaniards in
these parts. I decalre with incontrovertible and undeniable
Testimony, those Transactions, which I saw with my own
Eyes, and particularly such as relate to the usage of
the Inhabitants of this Region. In the first place I
was an Eye-Witness, and am certainly assur'd, that these
Perusians are a People, who transcend all other
Indians in Meekness, Clemency, and Love to Spaniards;
and I have seen the Indians bestow very liberally
on them Gold, Silver, and Jewels, being very serviceable
to them many other wayes. Nor did the Indians
ever betake themselves to their Arms in an Hostile manner,
till by infinite Injuries and Cruelties they were compell'd
thereunto: For on the contrary, they gave the Spaniards
an amicable and honourable Reception in all their Towns,
and furnished them with Provisions, and as many Male
and Female Servants as they required.
I can also farther testifie, that the Spaniards,
without the least provocation on their part, as soon
as they entred upon these Territories, did burn at the
Stake their most Potent Caciq Ataliba, Prince
of the whole Country, after they had extorted from him
above Two Millions of Gold, and possessed themselves
of his Province, without the least Opposition: and Cochilimaca,
his Captain General, who with other Rulers, came peaceably
into them, follow'd him by the same fiery Tryal and
Death. As also some few days after, the Ruler of the
Province of Quitonia, who was burnt, without
any Cause given, or Crime laid to his Charge. They likewise
put Schapera, Prince of the Canaries to
the same Death, and in like manner, burnt the Feet of
Alvidis, the greatest of all the Quitonian
Lords, and rackt him with other Torments to Extract
from him a discovery of Ataliba's Treasure, whereof
as appear'd after, he was totally ignorant. Thus they
treated Cocopaganga, Governour of all the Provinces
of Quitonia, who being overcome with the Intreaties
of Sebastian Bernalcarus, the Governours Captain,
went peaceably to pay them a Visit; but because he could
not give them as much Gold as they demanded, they burnt
him with many other Casics and Chief Persons
of Quality. And as I understnad, did it with this evil
Intention, that they might not leave one surviving Lord
or Peer in the whole Countrey.
I also affirm that I saw with these Eyes of mine the
Spaniards for no other reason, but only to gratifie
their bloody mindedness, cut off the Hands, Noses, and
Ears, both of Indians and Indianesses,
and that in so many places and parts, that it would
be too prolix and tedious to relate them. Nay, I have
seen the Spaniards let loose their Dogs upon
the Indians to bait and tear them in pieces,
and such a Number of Villages burnt by them as cannot
well be discover'd: Farther this is a certain Truth,
that they snatched Babes from the Mothers Embraces,
and taking hold of their Arms threw them away as far
as they would from them: (a pretty kind of barr-tossing
Recreation.) They committed many other Cruelties, which
shook me with Terror at the very sight of them, and
would take up too much time in the Relation.
I likewise aver, That the Spaniards gathered
together as many Indians as fill'd Three Houses,
to which, for no cause, (or a very inconsiderable one)
they set fire, and burnt every one of them: But a Presbyter,
Ocana by Name, chanced to snatch a little baby
out of the fire, which being observ'd by a Spaniard,
he tore him out of his Arms, and threw him into the
midst of the Flames, where he was with the rest, soon
burnt to Ashes, which Spaniard the same day he
committed that Fact, returning to his Quarters, dyed
suddenly by the way, and I advised them not to give
him Christian Burial.
Farthermore I saw them send to several Casics
and Principal Indians, promising them a protecting
Passeport to travel peaceably and securely to them,
who, no sooner came, but they were burnt; Two of them
before my Face, one at Andonia, and the other
at Tumbala, nor could I with all my perswasions
and preaching to them prevail so far as to save them
from the Fire. And this I do maintain according to God
and my own Conscience, as far as I could possibly learn,
that the Inhabitants of Perusia never promoted
or raised any Commotion or Rebellion, though as it is
manifest to all Men, they were afflicted with Evil Dealings
and Cruel Torments: And they, not without Cause, the
Spaniards breaking their Faith and Word, betraying
the Truth and Tyrannically contrary to all Law and Justice,
destroying them and the whole Country, inflicting on
them great Injuries and Losses, were more reay to prepare
themselves for Death, than still to fall at once into
such great and irrecoverable Miseries.
Nay I do declare, according to Information from the
Indians themselves, that there are to this day
far greater Quantities of Gold kept hid and concealed
than ever were yet detected or brought to light, which
by means of the Spanish Injustice and Cruelty,
they would not then, nor ever will discover so long
as they are so barbarously treated, but will rather
chose to dye with the Herd. Whereat the Lord God is
highly offended and the King hath very ill Offices done
him, for he is hereby defrauded of this Region, which
was sufficiently able to furnish all Castile
with Necessaries, the Recovery whereof can never be
expected without great difficulty and vast Expenses.
Thus far I have acquainted you with the
very words of this Religious Franciscan, ratified
by the Bishop of Mexico, who testifieth that
the said Frier Marc did affirm and maintain what
is above-mentioned.
Here it is to be observ'd what this said
Frier was an Eye-Witness of; for he travelled up in
this Countrey Fifty or a Hundred Miles, for the space
of Nine or Ten Years, when as yet, few Spaniards
had got footing there, but afterward, at the noise of
Gold to be had there in great plenty, Four or Five Thousand
came thither, who spread themselves through those Kingdoms
and Provinces the space of Five or Six Hundred Miles,
which they made wholly desloate, committing the same,
or greater Cruelies than are before recited; for in
reality they destroyed from that time to these very
days, above an Hundred Thousand poor Souls more than
he gives an Account of, and with less fear of God and
the King, nay with less Mercy have they destroyed the
greatest part of Mankind in these Kingdoms, above Four
Millions suffering by violent Death.
A few days after they darted to Death
with Arrows made of Reeds a Puissant Queen, the Wife
of a Potentate, who still sways the Imperial Scepter
of that Kingdom, whom the Spaniards had a design
to take, which instigated him to raise a Rebellion,
and he still continues a Rebel. They seized the Queen
his Consort, and contrary to all Law and Equity murdered
her, as is said before, who was then, as report, big
with Child, only for this Reason, that they might add
fresh Affliction and Grief to her Husband.
Of the New
Kingdom of Granada
Many Tyrants there were, who set Sail
from Venecuela, St. Martha, and Carthagena,
hastening to the Conquest of Perusia, Anno Dom.
1539. and they accompanied with many more going farther
from this Region, endeavored to penetrate into the Heart
of this Countrey, where they found about Three Hundred
Miles from Carthagena and St. Martha,
many admirable Provinces and most fruitful Land, furnished
with an even-tempered or meek-spirited People, as they
are in other parts of India; very rich in Gold
and those sorts of precious Stones known by the name
of Emralds: To which Province they gave the Name of
Granada, upon this account, because the Tyrant
who first arrived in these Regions, was born in the
Kingdom of Granada belonging to these parts;
now they that spoiled these Provinces with their rapine
being wicked, cruel, infamous Butchers, and delighting
in the effusion of Humane Blood, having practically
experimented the piacular and grand Enormities perpetrated
among the Indians; and upon this account their
Diabolical Actions are so great, so many in number,
and represented so grievously horrid by circumstantial
aggravations, that they exceed all the villanies committed
by others, nay by themselves in other Regions, I will
only select and cull out a few out of so great a number
which have bene transacted by them within these three
years, for my present purpose.
A certain Governour, because he that went
to commit depredations and spoils in the Kingdom of
Granada, would not admit him, as a Companion
in his Robberies and Cruelties, set up an Inquisition,
and produced proofs confirmed by great evidence, whereby
he palpably lays open, and proves the Slaughters and
Homicides he committed, and persists in to this very
day, which were read in the Indian Courts of
Judicature, and are there now Recorded.
In this Inquisition the Witnesses depose,
that when all these Kingdoms enjoy'd Peace and Tranquillity,
the Indians serv'd the Spaniards, and
got their living by contstnat day-labour in Tilling
and Manuring the Ground, bringing them much Gold, and
many Gems, particularly Emeralds, and what other Commodities
they could, and possessed, their Cities and Dominions
being divided among the Spaniards, to procure
which is the chiefest of their care and pains; and these
are the proper measures they take to obtain their proposed
ends, to wit, heaping and treasuring up of Gold and
Riches.
Now when all the Indians were under
their accustomed Tyranny: A certain Tyrant, and Chief
Commander, took the King and Lord of the whole Countrey,
and detain'd him Captive for six or seven moneths, demanding
of him, without any reason, store of Gold and Emeralds.
The said King, whose name was Bogoca, though
fear, promised him a House of Gold, hoping, in time,
to escape out of his clutches, who thus plagu'd him,
and sent some Indians for Gold, who frequently,
and at several times, brought him a great quantity of
Gold, and many Jewels; but because the King did not,
according to his promise, bestow upon him an Apartment
made of pure Gold, he must therefore forfeit his Life.
The Tyrant commanded himto be brought to Tryal before
himself, and so they cite and summon to a Tryal the
greatest King in the whole Region; and the Tyrant pronounced
this Sentence, that unless he did perform his Golden
Promise he should be exposed to severe Torments. They
rackt him, poured boiling Soap into his Bowels, chain'd
his Legs to one post, and fastened his Neck to another,
two men holding his Hands, and so applyed the scorching
heat of the Fire to his Feet; the Tyrant himself often
casting his eye upon him, and threatning him with death,
if he did not give him the promised Gold; and thus with
these kind of horrid torments, the said Lord was destroy'd;
which while they were doing, God being willing to manifest
how displeasing these Cruelties are to His Divine Majesty,
the whole City, that was the Stage on which they were
acted, was consumed by fire; and the rest of the Captains
following his example, destroy'd all the Lords of that
Region by Fire and Faggot.
Once it fell out, that many Indians
addressed themselves to the Spaniards with all
Humility and Simplicity, as they use to do, who thinking
themselves safe and secure, behold the Captain comes
into the City, where they were to do their work, and
commands all these Indians, sleeping and taking
their rest, after Supper, being wearied with the heavy
drudgery of the day, to be slain by the Sword: And this
stratagem he put in practice, to make a greater impression
of fear on all the minds of the Inhabitants; and another
time a certain Captain commanded the Spaniards
to declare upon Oath, how many Casics and Indians
every individual person had in his Family at home, who
were presently lead to a publick place, and lost their
Heads; so there perisht, that bout, four or five hundred
Men. The Witnesses depose this of a particular Tyrant,
that by beating, cutting off the Hands and Noses of
many Women as well as Men, and destroying several persons
in great numbers, he exercised horrid Cruelties.
Then one of the Captains sent this bloody
Tyrant into the Province of Bogata, to inquire
who succeeded that Prince there, whom he so barbarously
and inhumanely Murder'd, who traveling many miles in
this Countrey, took as many Indians as he could
get, some of which, because they did not tell him who
was Successor of this Deceased Prince, had their Hands
cut off, and others were exposed to hunger- starv'd
Currs, to be devour'd by them, and as many of them perished
miserably.
Another time about the fourth Watch, early
in the morning he fell upon several Casics, Noblemen
and other Indians, who lookt upon themselves
to be safe enough, (for they had their faith and security
given, that none of them should receive any damage or
injury) relying upon this, they left the Mountains their
lurking places, without any suspition or fear, and returned
to their Cities, but he seized on them all, and commanding
them to extend their hands on the ground, cut them off
with his own Sword, saying, that he punished them after
this maner, because they would not inform him what Lord
it was, that succeeded in that Kingdom.
The Inhabitants of one of these Provinces,
perceiving that four or five of their Governours were
sent to the other World in a fiery Vehicle or Chariot,
being terrified therewith, took to the Mountains for
Sanctuary, there being four or five thousand in number,
as appears by good Evidence; and the aforesaid Captain
sends a Tyrant, more cruel than any of the rest after
them. The Spaniards ascend the Mountains by force
(for the Indians were naked an unarm'd) Proclaiming
Peace, if they would desist and lay down their Arms,
which the Indians no sooner heard, but quitted
their Childish Weapons; and this was no sooner done
but this Sanguinary Spaniard sent some to possess
themselves of the Fortifications, and they being secur'd,
to attaque the Indians. Thus they, like Wolves
and Lyons, did rush upon this flock of Sheep, and were
so tired with slaughter, that they were forced to desist
for a while and take breath, which done, the Captain
commands them to fall to it again at the same bloody
rate, and precipitate all that survived the Butchery,
from the top of the Mountain, which was of a prodigious
height; and that was perform'd accordingly. And the
Witnesses farther declare upon Oath, that they saw the
bodies of about seven hundred Indians falling
from the Mount at one time, like a Cloud obscuring the
Air, who were all broken to pieces.
This very Tyrant came once to the city
Cota, where he surprized abundance of Men, together
with fifteen or twenty Casics of the highest rank and
quality, whom he cast to the Dogs to be torn Limb-meal
in pieces, and cut off the Hands of several Men and
Women, which being run through with a pole, were exposed
to be viewed and gaz'd upon by the Indians, where
you might see at once seventy pair of hands, transfixed
with Poles; nor is it to be forgotten, that he cut off
the Noses of many Women and Children.
The Witnesses farther depose, that the
Cruelties and great Slaughters committed in the aforesaid
new Kingdom of Granada, by this Captain, and
other Tyrants, the Destroyers of Mankind, who accompany
him, and have power still given them by him to exercise
the same, are such and so hainous, that if his Majesty
does not opportunely apply some remedy, for the redress
and prevention of such mischiefs for the future, (since
the Indians are daily slaughtered to accumulate
and enrich themselves with Gold, which the Inhabitants
have been so rob'd of, that they are now grown bare,
for what they had, they have disposed to the Spaniards
already) this Kingdom will soon decay and be made desolate,
and consequently the Land being destitute of Indians,
who should manure it, will lye fallow and incultivated.
And here is to be noted, how pestilential
and inhumane the cruelty of these Tyrants hath been,
and how violently exercised, when as in two or three
years space, they were all slain, and the Country wholly
desolate and deserted, as those that have been Eye-witnesses
can testifie; they having acted like Merciless Men,
not having the fear of God and the King before their
Eyes, but by the instigation of the Devil; so that it
may well be said and affirmed, not one Person will be
left alive, unless his Majesty does retard, and put
a stop to the full career of their Cruelties, which
I am very apt to believe, for I have seen with these
very eyes of mine, many Kingdoms laid waste and depopulated
in a small time. There are other stately Provinces on
the Confines of the New Kindgom of Granada, as
Popayan and Cali, together with three
or four more above five hundred miles in length, which
they destroyed, in the same manner, as they have done
other places, and laid them absolutely waste by the
prementioned Slaughters, who were very Populous, and
the Soil very Fruitful. They who came among us from
those Regions report, that nothing can be more deplorable
or worthy of pity and commiseration, then to behold
such large and great Cities totally ruinated, and intombed
in their own Ashes, and that in a City adorn'd with
1000 or 2000 Fabricks, there are hardly now to be seen
50 standing, the rest being utterly demolished, or consum'd
and levelled to the ground by Fire and in some parts
Regions of 100 miles in length, (containing spacious
Cities) are found absolutely destroyed and consumed
by Fire.
Finally many great Tyrants who came out
of the Perusian Kingdoms by the Quitonians
Travelled to the said new Kindgom of Granada
and Popayan, and by Carthagena and the
Urabae, they directed their course to Calisium,
and several other Tyrants of Carthagena assault
Quito, who joyn'd themselves in an intire Body
and wholly depopulated and laid waste that Region for
the space of 600 miles and upward, with the loss of
a prodigious number of poor Souls; nor as yet do they
treat the small remnant of so great and innocent a people
with more humanity then formerly.
I desire therefore that the Readers who
have or shall peruse these passages, would please seriously
to consider whether or no, such Barbarous, Cruel and
Inhumane Acts as these do not transcend and exceed all
the impiety and tyrrany, which can enter into the thoughts
or imagination of Man, and whether these Spaniards
deserve not the name of Devils. For which of these two
things is more eligible or desirable whether the Indians
should be delivered up to the Devils themselves to be
tormented or the Spaniards? That is still a question.
Nor can I here omit one piece of Villany,
(whether it ought to be postpon'd or come behind the
cruelty of Brute Animals, that I leave to decision).
The Spaniards who are conversant among the Indians
bred up curst Curs, who are so well instructed and taught
that they at first sight, fly upon the Inhabitants tearing
them limb by limb, and so presently devour them. Now
let all persons whether Christians or not consider,
if ever such a thing as this reacht the ears of any
Man, they carry these Dogs with them as Companions where
ever they go, and kill the fettered Indians in
multitudes like Hogs for their Food; thus sharing with
them in the Butchery. Nay they frequently call one to
the other, saying, lend me the fourth part of one of
your Slaves to feed my Dogs, and when I kill one, I
will repay you, as if they had only borrowed a quarter
of a Hog or Sheep. Others, when they go a Hunting early
in the morning, upon their return, if you ask them what
sport had you to day at the Game? They will answer,
enough, enough, for my Dogs have killed and worried
15 or 20 Indian Vassals. Now all these things
are plainly prov'd upon those Inquisitions and Examinations
made by one Tyrant against another. What I beseech you,
can be more horrid or barbarous?
But I will desist from Writing any longer
at this time, till some Messenger brings an account
of greater and blacker Impieties (if greater can be
committed) or else till we come to behold them again,
as we have done for the space of forty two years with
our own Eyes. I will only make this small addition to
what I have said that the Spaniards, from the
beginning of their first entrance upon America
to this present day, were no more sollicitous of promoting
the Preaching of the Gospel of Christ to these Nations,
then if they had been Dogs or Beasts, but which is worst
of all, they expressly prohibited their addresses to
the Religious, laying many heavy Impositions upon them,
dayly afflicting and persecuting them, that they might
not have so much time and leasure at their own disposal,
as to attend their Preaching and Divine Service; for
they lookt upon that to be an impediment to their getting
Gold, and raking up riches which their Avarice stimulated
them so boundlessly to prosecute. Nor do they understand
any more of a God, whether he be made of Wood, Brass
or Clay, then they did above an hundred years ago, New
Spain only exempted, which is a small part of
America, and was visited and instructed by the
Religious. Thus they did formely and still do perish
without true Faith, or the knowledge and benefit of
our Religious Sacraments.
I Frier Bartholomeas de las Casas
or Casaus of the Order of St. Dominick,
who through the mercy of God am Arriv'd at the Spanish
Court, Cordially wishing the expulsion of Hell or these
Hellish Acts out of the Indies; fearing least
those Souls redeemed by the pretious Blood of Christ,
should perish eternally, but heartily desiring that
they may acknowledge their Creator and be saved; as
also for the care and compassion that I ever had for
my Native Countrey Castile, dreading least God
should destroy it for the many sins committed by the
Natives her Children, against Faith, Honour and their
Neighbours: I have at length upon the request of some
Persons of great Quality in this Court, who are fervently
zealous of the Honour of God, and moved with pitty at
the Calamities and Afflictions of their Neighbours (though
I long since proposed it within my self, and resolved
to accomplish it, but could not, being distracted with
the avocations of multiplicity of constant Business
and Employment, have leisure to effect it) I say I have
at length finished this Treatise and Summary at Valencia,
Decemb. 8. An. Dom. 1542, when they were
arrived at the Height, and utmost Degree of executing
Violences, Oppressions, Tyrrany, Desolations, Torments,
and Calamities in all the aforesaid Regions, Inhabited
by the Spaniards (though they are more Cruel
in some places than other) yet Mexico with its
Confines were more favourably treated than the rest
of the Provinces.
And indeed no Man durst openly and publickly
do any injury to the Inhabitants; for there some Justice,
(which is no where else in India) though very
little is done and practiced; yet they are grievously
opprest with intolerable Taxes. But I do really believe,
and am fully perswaded that our Sovereign Lord Charles
the Fifth, Emperour and King of Spain, our Lord
and Prince, who begins to be sensible of the Wickedness
and Treacheries, which have been, and still are committed
against this Miserable Nation, and distressed Countries
contrary to the Will and Pleasure of God, as well as
His Majesties that he will in time, (for hitherto the
Truth hath been concealed and kept from his Knowledge,
with as great Craft, as Fraud and Malice) totally extirpate
and root up all these Evils and Mischiefs, and apply
such proper Medicines as may purge the Morbifick and
peccant Humours in the Body Politick of this New World,
committed to his Care and Government as a Lover and
Promoter of Peace and Tranquility. God preserve and
bless him with Renown and a happy Life in his Imperial
State, and prosper him in all his Attempts, that he
may remedy the Distempers of the Christian Church, and
Crown him at last with Eternal Felicity, Amen.
After I had published this Treatise, certain
Laws and Constitutions, enacted by his Majesty then
at Baraclona in the Month of December, An.
Dom. 1542, promulgated and published the Year ensuing
in the City of Madera, whereby it is provided,
(as the present Necessities requir'd) that a period
be put to such great Enormities and Sins, as were committed
against God and our Neighbours, and tended to the utter
Ruine and Perdition of this New World. These Laws were
published by his Majesties Order, several Persons of
highest Authority, Councellors, Learned, and Conscientious
Men, being assembled together for that purpose, and
many Debates made at Valedolid about this weighty
Affair, at length by the unanimous Consent and Advice
of all those who had committed their Opinions to Writing,
they were made publick who traced more closely therein
the Laws of Christ and Christianity, and were judged
Persons pure, free from and innocent of that stain and
blemish of depriving the Indians of their Treasures
by Theft and Rapine, which Riches had contaminated and
sullied the Hands, but much more the Souls of those
who were enslav'd by those heaps of Wealth and Covetousness,
now this obstinate and hot pursuit after Wealth was
the Original of all those Evils committed without the
least Remorse or Check of Conscience.
These Laws being thus promulgated, the
Courtiers who promoted these Tyrants, took care
that several Copies should be transcribed, (though they
were extremely afflicted to see, that there was no farther
hopes or means to promote the former Depredations and
Extortions by the Tyranny aforesaid) and sent them to
several Indian Provinces. They, who took upon
them the Trouble and Care of Extirpating, and Oppressing
by different ways of Cruelty, as they never observed
any Method or Order, but behav'd themselves most inordinately
and irregularly, having perused these Diplomata or Constitutions,
before the new made Judges, appointed to put them in
Execution, could Arrive or be Landed, they by the assistance
of those (as 'tis credibly rumour'd, nor is it repugnant
to truth) who hitherto favour'd their Criminal and Violent
Actions, knowing well that these Laws and Proclamations
must necessarily take effect, began to grow mutinous,
and rebel, and when the Judges were Landed, who were
to Execute these Mandates, laying aside all manner
of Love and Fear of God, were so audacious as to contemn
and set at nought all the Reverence and Obedience due
to their King, and so became Traytors, demeaning themselves
like Blood-Thirsty Tyrants, destitute and void of all
Humanity.
More particularly this appear'd in the
Perusian Kingdoms, where An. Dom. 1542,
they acted such Horrid and Stupendous Enormities, that
the like were never known or heard in America,
or throughout the whole World before that time: Nor
were they only practised upon the Indians, who
were mostly destroy'd, but upon themselves also, God
permitting them by his just Judgement to be their own
Executioners, and sheath their Swords in one anothers
Bowels. In like manner the other parts of this New World
being moved by the Example of these Rebels, refused
to yield Obedience to those Laws. The rest pretending
to petition his Majesty turn Rebellious themselves;
for they would not voluntarily resign those Estates,
Goods and Chattels they have already usurped, nor willingly
manumit those Indians, who were doomed to be
their Slaves, during Life; and where they restrain'd
the Murdering Sword from doing Execution, they opprest
them gradually with personal Vassalage, injust and intolerable
Burthens; which his Majesty could not possibly hitherto
avert or hinder, because they are all universally, some
publickly and openly, others clancularly and secretly,
so naturally addicted to Rob, Thieve and Steal; and
thus under pretext of serving the King, they dishonour
God, and defraud his Imperial Majesty.
Here the Author having finished the matter
of Fact in this Compendious History, for Confirmation
of what he has here written, quotes a tedious and imperfect
Epistle (as he styles it) beginning and ending anonymous
withal, containing the Cruelties committed by the Spaniards,
the same in effect as our Author has prementioned, now
in regard that I judge such reiterated Cruelties and
repeated Barbarisms are Offensive to the Reader, he
having sailed already too long, and too far in an Ocean
of Innocent Indian blood: I have omitted all
but Two or Three Stories not taken notice of by the
Author. One of the Tyrants, (who followed the steps
of John Ampudia, a notorious Villain) gave way
to a grat Slaughter of Sheep the chief Food and Support
of the Spaniards as well as Indians, permitting
them to kill Two or Three Hundred at a time, only for
their Brains, Fat, or Suet, whose Flesh was then altogether
useless, and not fit to be eaten; but many Indians,
the Spaniards Friends and Confederates followed
them, desiring they might have the hearts to feed upon,
whereupon they butchered a great many of them, for this
only Reason, because they would not eat the other parts
of the Body. Two of their gang in the Province of Peru
kild Twenty Five Sheep, who were sold among the Spaniards
for Twenty Five Crowns, merely to get the fat and brains
out of them: Thus the frequent and extraordinary Slaughter
of their Sheep above a Hundred Thousand Head of Cattel
were destroy'd. And upon this Account the Region was
reduced to great penury and want, and at length perished
with Hunger. Nay the Province of Quito, which
abounded with Corn beyond Expression, by such proceedings
as these, was brought to that Extremity that a Sextarie
or small Measure or Wheat was sold for Ten Crowns, and
a Sheep at as dear a rate.
This Captain taking leave of Quito
was followed by a poor Indianess with loud Cries
and Clamours, begging and beseeching him not to carry
away her Husband; for she had the charge of Three Children,
and could not possibly supply them with Victuals, but
they must inevitably dye with hunger, and though the
Captain repulsed her with an angry brow at the
first; yet she approacht him a second time with repeated
Cries, saying, that her Children must perish for want
of Food; but finding the Captain inexorable and altogether
unmov'd with her Complaints, and her Husband not restor'd,
through a piquant necessity wedded to despair; she cut
off the Heads of her Children with sharp Stones, and
so dispatcht them into the other World.
Then he proceeded farther to another City,
and sent some Spaniards that very Night, to take
the Indians of the City of Tulilicui,
who next day brought with them above a Hundred Persons;
some of which (whom he lookt upon to be able to carry
burthens) he reserved for his own and his Soldiers service,
and other were chain'd, and perished in their Fetters:
but the little Infants he gave to the Casic of
Tulilicui, abovesaid to be eaten up and devoured,
whose skins are stuft with Ashes and hung up in his
House to be seen at this very day. And in the close
of this Letter he shuts up all with these words, 'tis
here very remarkable and never to be forgotten, that
this Tyrant (being not ignorant of the Mischiefs and
Enormities executed by him) boastingly said of himself,
They who shall travel in these Countreys Fifty years
hence, and hear the things related of me, will have
cause to say or declare, that never such a Tyrant as
I am marched through these Regions, and committed the
like Enormities.
Now not to quit the Stage without one
Comical Scene or Action whereon such Cruelties have
been lively personated, give me leave to acquaint you
with a Comical piece of Grammatical Learning in a Reverend
Religioso of these parts, sent thither to convert the
West-Indies Pagans, which the Author mentions
among his Reasons and Replications, and all these I
pass by as immaterial to our purpose, many of them being
repeated in the Narrative before.
The weight and burthen of initiating the
Indians into the Christian Faith lay solely on
the Spaniards at first; and therefore Joannes
Colmenero in Santa Martha, a Fantastic, Ignorant,
and Foppish Fellow, was under Examination before us
(and he had one of the most spatious Cities committed
to his Charge as well as the Care and Cure of the Souls
of the Inhabitants) whether he understood how to fortifie
himself with the sign of the Cross against the Wicked
and Impious, and being interrogated what he taught,
and how he instructed the Indians, whose Souls
were intrusted to his Care and Conduct; he return'd
this Answer, That if he damn'd them to the Devil
and Furies of Hell, it was sufficient to retrieve them,
if he pronounced these Words, Per Signin Sanctin
Cruces. A Fellow fitter to be a Hogherd than a Shepherd
of Souls.
This Deep, Bloody American Tragedy
is now concluded, and my Pen choakt up with Indian
Blood and Gore. I have no more to say, but pronounce
the Epilogue made by the Author, and leave the Reader
to judge whether it deserves a Plaudite.
The Spaniards first set Sail to
America, not for the Honour of God, or as Persons
moved and merited thereunto by servent Zeal to the True
Faith, nor to promote the Salvation of their Neighbours,
nor to serve the King, as they falsely boast and pretend
to do, but in truth, only stimulated and goaded on by
insatiable Avarice and Ambition, that they might for
ever Domineer, Command, and Tyrannize over the West-
Indians, whose Kingdoms they hoped to divide and
distribute among themselves. Which to deal candidly
in no more or less intentionally, than by all these
indirect wayes to disappoint and expel the Kings of
Castile out of those Dominions and Territories,
that they themselves having usurped the Supreme and
Regal Empire, might first challenge it as their Right,
and then possess and enjoy it.
FINIS.