Gold and riches were pretty strong motivators to cleanse Mexico of any Aztec impediments to Cortes getting them.
So, do you really think that the indians were not forced to labour under the aztec regime? We had this discussion some months ago iirc. The encomienda system was designed as a pretty humanitarian and for the time progressive way to reeducate the indians and convert them to Christianity ultimately turning them into full Spanish citizens. It totally forbade the encomenderos of mistreating the indians in any way. However it was rarely applied if ever, since the encomenderos, who were no others but the empowered conquistadores themselves, opposed the encomienda system and even rebelled against it in some bloddy uprisings, preferring to keep the original indian structures of servitude that gave them the right of life and death over his indian serfs.There's a pretty sizeable gap between stopping an element, or even a number of elements of a culture, and eradicating it completely. The institution of human sacrifice was a pretty central component of Mesoamerican cultures, sure, but it was not the entire culture. The culture of the United States was for a time pretty well bound up with the institution of slavery, and Nazi Germany had racial segregation and extermination as a fundamental law of its society. Yet the abandonment of those practices, even after two long and bloody wars, hardly led to the "genocide" of Southern or German culture.
As for what constitutes "barbaric" practices, that obviously depends on your moral standards. Sitting here in the 21st century I can safely declare that I find human sacrifice appalling, but I also find what the Spanish replaced the Aztecs with pretty deplorable too. One cruel, exploitative empire replaced another. Naturally, I am all for the end of practices I find abhorrent, but I'm not sure what me saying that adds to anyone's understanding of the history, or ethics in general: I haven't really got anything to offer beyond stop doing bad things, but don't just do something else bad in their place.
I'm also unconvinced that you can really view them as two different stories. The end of human sacrifice came about as part of a series of bloody, plundering conquests by the Spanish that ended with them instituting encomienda. One system replaced the other. Actions do not exist in a vacuum, and I find it unhelpful to weigh up things like "stopped human sacrifice" on the one hand against "subjected the same people to forced labour" on the other.
That's an interesting concept -
So, do you really think that the indians were not forced to labour under the aztec regime? We had this discussion some months ago iirc. The encomienda system was designed as a pretty humanitarian and for the time progressive way to reeducate the indians and convert them to Christianity ultimately turning them into full Spanish citizens. It totally forbade the encomenderos of mistreating the indians in any way. However it was rarely applied if ever, since the encomenderos, who were no others but the empowered conquistadores themselves, opposed the encomienda system and even rebelled against it in some bloddy uprisings, preferring to keep the original indian structures of servitude that gave them the right of life and death over his indian serfs.
I've never considered that "civilizing the natives" (ie. forcibly converting them to your own religion) is a just reason for war.I'm actually happy to see so much care here about whether wars for "moral causes" are justified!
I'm actually happy to see so much care here about whether wars for "moral causes" are justified!
I'd be wary of leaning to hard on disease. Genetically, the Mexica are mostly still there. A lot of them died, but Spanish migration in the sixteenth century didn't resemble that of the white settler colonies of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, it was never more than a steady trickle. Natives remained a majority into the eighteenth century, and Native or mestizo people are the majority to this day. The change was, as you indicate, cultural, but the role of disease in cultural change is much more complex than "whoops, everyone's dead". The most profound impact of disease, in cultural terms, is the way it disrupts traditions and social structures, making a people uniquely vulnerable to a project of cultural assimilation which was, by he nation-building standards of the nineteenth century, really pretty pissweak.The genocide of the Aztec population was mostly because of disease. The elimination of their culture was a feature of the Spanish culture of the time. Spanish (European?) greed for gold assured there would be no cultural co-existence.
I mean, six million people today speak a Mayan language, and over eight million speak a Quecha language. That puts them on a level with a lot of smaller European languages, like Danish or Albanian, and well ahead of Welsh or Romansh. It represents a higher absolute number of speakers than existed during the "Golden Age" of either civilisation. These people didn't go anywhere, Europeans just decided that they didn't count anymore, because they didn't hold any power.Looking back it is pretty easy to say that we wish we knew more about the Aztecs, how they lived and their achievements as a dominant culture of their day; and it would have been nice to have a remnant of that culture intact. Likewise with the Maya and Inca. But like the buffalo, that which stands in the way of greed and god get ground into dust.
I'd be wary of leaning to hard on disease. Genetically, the Mexica are mostly still there. A lot of them died, but Spanish migration in the sixteenth century didn't resemble that of the white settler colonies of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, it was never more than a steady trickle. Natives remained a majority into the eighteenth century, and Native or mestizo people are the majority to this day. The change was, as you indicate, cultural, but the role of disease in cultural change is much more complex than "whoops, everyone's dead". The most profound impact of disease, in cultural terms, is the way it disrupts traditions and social structures, making a people uniquely vulnerable to a project of cultural assimilation which was, by he nation-building standards of the nineteenth century, really pretty pissweak.
so you'd sacrifice humans to end human sacrifice?
What about Stupidity?Also two things that I think are worth genociding are female genital mutilation and child marriage.
What about Stupidity?![]()
Pffffft! I don't like context. Stupid people need to go. Foamy be with you!Whoa, whoa there, Mr. Ableist genocider.
Does my post edit make the context of what you quoted clearer now?
Sure many of the Mexica, Maya and Incans survived, but many many more died of disease. Now, I admit that it wasn't deliberate genocide by the Spanish (a la as was seen in parts of the American west) but the population reduction was pretty staggering.I've previously argued that genocide is a constitute function of and requirement for the modern state, and I haven't yet encountered a compelling reason to change my mind.
Also, re: human sacrifice, if we're going to reduce every culture to its weirdo aristocratic cults, then there isn't a complex society on the planet that doesn't come away looking profoundly barbarous. The Mexica actually come across quiet well, because their barbarism was mostly practiced by the elite against their elite; sacrifice was never realistically a professional hazard for a peasant or artisan.
I'd be wary of leaning to hard on disease. Genetically, the Mexica are mostly still there. A lot of them died, but Spanish migration in the sixteenth century didn't resemble that of the white settler colonies of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, it was never more than a steady trickle. Natives remained a majority into the eighteenth century, and Native or mestizo people are the majority to this day. The change was, as you indicate, cultural, but the role of disease in cultural change is much more complex than "whoops, everyone's dead". The most profound impact of disease, in cultural terms, is the way it disrupts traditions and social structures, making a people uniquely vulnerable to a project of cultural assimilation which was, by he nation-building standards of the nineteenth century, really pretty pissweak.
I mean, six million people today speak a Mayan language, and over eight million speak a Quecha language. That puts them on a level with a lot of smaller European languages, like Danish or Albanian, and well ahead of Welsh or Romansh. It represents a higher absolute number of speakers than existed during the "Golden Age" of either civilisation. These people didn't go anywhere, Europeans just decided that they didn't count anymore, because they didn't hold any power.
Why do you think there hasn't been a nuclear war yet?I'd like to see a return to the expectation that if you declare war, you have to actually lead the army yourself. Henry V didn't sit back while others fought and died for him. He put himself at risk, as well.
How many modern leaders would be willing to put themselves at risk, as one of the conditions of going to war?
That's just silly. The role of a modern leader is to lead, not be a pawn on the battlefield. Losing that leader needlessly in a battle would be a completely senseless blow to both, the administration, as well as the morale of the country.I'd like to see a return to the expectation that if you declare war, you have to actually lead the army yourself. Henry V didn't sit back while others fought and died for him. He put himself at risk, as well.
How many modern leaders would be willing to put themselves at risk, as one of the conditions of going to war?
You have a weird notion of how pre-nineteenth century warfare worked.That's just silly. The role of a modern leader is to lead, not be a pawn on the battlefield. Losing that leader needlessly in a battle would be a completely senseless blow to both, the administration, as well as the morale of the country.