The Land We Live In

Sprednja platnica
CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 10. sep. 2013 - 134 strani
A Land Without a History-Origin of the American Indians-Their Semi-civilization-The Spanish Colonial System-The King Was Absolute Master-The Council of the Indies-The Hierarchy-Servitude of the Natives-Gold and Silver Mines-Spanish Wealth and Degeneracy- Commercial Monopoly-Pernicious Effects of Spain's Colonial Policy- Spaniards Destroy a Huguenot Colony. America presented itself as a virgin land to the original settlers from Europe. It had no history, no memories, no civilization that appealed to European traditions or associations. Its inhabitants belonged evidently to the human brotherhood, and their appearance and language, as well as some of their customs, indicated Mongolian kinship and Asiatic origin, but in the eyes of their conquerors they were as strange as if they had sprung from another planet, and the invaders were equally strange and marvelous to the natives. To the Spanish adventurer the wondrous temples of the Aztecs and the Peruvians bore no significance, except as they indicated wealth to be won, and rich empires waiting to be prey to the superior prowess and arms of the Christian aggressor; while the Englishman, the Frenchman, Hollander and Swede, who planted their colors on more northern soil, saw only a region of primeval forests inhabited by tribes almost as savage as the wild beasts upon whom they existed. It is needless, therefore, in this pen picture of our country, to go into any extended notice of its ancient inhabitants, although the writer has devoted not a little independent study to their origin and history.

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