Rivers of Gold

Home > Other > Rivers of Gold > Page 74
Rivers of Gold Page 74

by Hugh Thomas


  ——, “El Repudio al Tratado de Tordesillas,” Congreso Nacional de la Historia, Salamanca 1992.

  ——, (ed.), La carta de Colón sobre el descubrimiento, Granada 1983.

  Ranke, L. von, The Ottoman and the Spanish Empires in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, London 1843.

  Real Díaz, José J., El sevillano Rodrigo de Bastidas, Archivo Hispalense, 2nd epoch, 36, 1962, 63ff.

  Reitz, Elizabeth J., “Dieta y alimentación hispano-americana en el caribe … en el siglo XVI,” R de I, 51, 1991.

  Remesal, Agustín, 1494, La Raya de Tordesillas, Valladolid 1994.

  Resplendence of the Spanish Monarchy, New York 1991.

  Reverte, Javier (ed.), Exploradores españoles olvidados de los siglos XVI y XVII, Madrid 2000.

  Reyes y Mecenas, Madrid 1992.

  Ricard, Robert, The Spiritual Conquest of Mexico, tr. Lesley Byrd Simpson, Berkeley 1974.

  Rodríguez Demorizi, Emilio, Los dominicos y las encomiendas en la Isla Española, Santo Domingo 1971.

  Rodríguez González, Ricardo, Mercaderes castellanos del siglo de Oro, Valladolid 1995.

  Rodríguez Moñino, A., Los pintores badajoceños del siglo XVI, Badajoz 1956.

  Rodríguez Prampolini, A., Amadises de America. La hazaña de Indias como empresa caballeresca, Mexico 1948.

  Rodríguez Sánchez, Angel, La población cacereña en el siglo XVI, Salamanca 1976.

  Rodríguez Villa, Antonio, Bosquejo biográfico de la reina Juana, Madrid 1874.

  Romoli, Kathleen, Balboa of Darien, New York 1953.

  Rosa Olivera, L. de la, “Francisco de Riberol y la colonia genovesa en Canarias,” AEA, 18, 1972, 61–198.

  Rosenblat, Angel, La población indígena y el mestizaje en América, 2 vols., Buenos Aires 1954.

  ——, La población de América en 1492, Mexico 1967.

  Rouse, Irving, The Tainos: Rise and Decline of the People Who Greeted Columbus, New Haven 1992.

  Ruiz-Domènec, José Enrique, El Gran Capitán, Barcelona 2002.

  Ruiz Rivera y Manuela, Julián, and Cristina García Bernal, Cargadores a Indias, Madrid 1992.

  Rumeu de Armas, Antonio, “Colón en Barcelona,” AEA, 1944, 437–511.

  ——, Piraterías y ataques navales contra las Islas Canarias, vol. 1, CSIC, Instituto Jerónimo Zurita, Madrid 1947.

  ——, “Cristóbal Colón y doña Beatriz de Bobadilla,” AEA, 28, 343–78.

  ——, Alonso de Lugo en la corte de los Reyes Católicos, 1496–1497, Madrid 1952.

  ——, Itinerario de los Reyes Católicos, 1474–1516, Madrid 1974.

  Rummel, Erika, Jiménez de Cisneros, Tempe 1999.

  Russell, Peter, Prince Henry the Navigator, New Haven, CT, 2000.

  Saco, José Antonio, Historia de la Esclavitud de la Raza Africana en el Nuevo Mundo, 4 vols., Havana 1938.

  Sáenz de Santa María, Carmelo, “La hueste de Alvarado en Perú,” AEA, 43, 1983.

  Salas, Alberto, Tres Cronistas de Indias, Mexico 1986.

  Sale, Kirkpatrick, The Conquest of Paradise, London 1991.

  Sánchez Blanco, Francisco, “Descubrimiento de la variedad humana … el impacto del nuevo mundo,” AEA, 45, 1985.

  Sánchez Gonzalez, António, Medinaceli y Colón, Madrid 1995.

  Santillana, el Marqués de, Los albores de la España Moderna, 4 vols., Hondarribia 2001.

  Sauer, Carl Ortwin, The Early Spanish Main, Berkeley, CA, 1966.

  Sayous, A. E., “Les débuts du commerce de l’Espagne avec l’Amérique d’aprés de minutes inédites des archives notariales de Seville,” Revue Historique, 1934.

  Scelle, Georges, La Traite négrière aux Indes de Castille, 2 vols., Paris 1906.

  Schäfer, Erns, El Consejo Real y supremo de las Indias, 2 vols., Seville 1935.

  Schick, Léon, Un grand homme d’affaires au début du XVIème siècle: Jacob Fugger, Paris 1957.

  Schwaller, John, “Tres familias mexicanas del siglo XVI,” Historia Mexicana, 122, 1981.

  Serrano, F. Luciano, Los conversos D. Pablo de Santa María y D. Alfonso de Cartagena, Madrid 1942.

  Serrano y Sanz, Manuel, Los amigos y protectores aragoneses de Cristóbal Colón, Madrid 1918, reissued Barcelona 1991.

  ——, Las orígenes de la dominación española en las Indias, Madrid 1918, reissued Barcelona 1991.

  Sicroff, Albert A., Les Controverses des statuts de pureté de sang en Espagne du XVe au XVIIè siècle, Paris 1960.

  Simpson, L. B., The Encomienda in New Spain, 1492–1550, Berkeley, CA, 1934.

  Skinner, Quentin, Visions of Politics, vol. 2: Renaissance Virtues, Cambridge 2002.

  Soisson, Jean-Pierre, Marguerite, Princesse de Bourgogne, Paris 2002.

  Spivakovsky, Erika, Son of the Alhambra: Don Diego Hurtado de Mendoza, 1504–1575, Austin 1970.

  Suárez Fernández, Luis, Historia de España: La España de los Reyes Católicos, Edad Media, Madrid 1969.

  ——, Documentos acerca de la expulsión de los judíos de España, Madrid 1991.

  ——, La expulsión de los judios de España, Madrid 1991.

  ——, Homenaje (essays), Valladolid 1991.

  ——, Isabel I, Reina, Barcelona 2000.

  ——, Enrique IV de Castilla, Barcelona 2001.

  ——, Nobleza y Monarquía, Madrid 2002.

  Subirats, Eduardo, El Continente Vacío, Mexico 1994.

  Super, John C., Food, Conquest, and Civilization in Sixteenth-Century Spanish America, Albuquerque, NM, 1988.

  Sweet, D. G., and Gary B. Nash (eds.), Struggle and Survival in Colonial America, Berkeley 1981.

  Tate, Robert B., Joan Margarit i Pau, Cardinal-Bishop of Gerona, Manchester 1955.

  Thomas, Henry, Spanish and Portuguese Romances of Chivalry, Cambridge 1920.

  Thomas, Hugh, The Conquest of Mexico, London 1993.

  ——, Quién es quién en la conquista de México, Barcelona 2001.

  Tibesaar, Fr. Antonino, “The Franciscan Order of the Holy Cross of Española, 1505–1559,” The Americas, vol. 43, 3, 1957.

  Tío, Aurelio, Nuevas Fuentes para la historia de Puerto Rico, San Germán 1961.

  Todorov, Tzvetan, La conquête de l’Amérique, Paris 1982.

  Tordesillas 1494, Madrid 1994.

  Touissant, Manuel, La conquista de Pánuco, Mexico 1948.

  Tra siviglia e Genova: notaio, documento e commercio nell’eta colombina, Milan 1994.

  Trueba, Eduardo, Sevilla Maritima, Seville 1990.

  Trueta Raspall, J., The Spirit of Catalonia, London 1946.

  Valdeón Baruque, Julio, España y el sacro imperio, Valladolid 2001.

  ——, (ed.), Isabel la Católica y la Política, Instituto de Historia Simancas, Valladolid 2001.

  Valdivieso, María, Isabel la Católica, Princesa, Valladolid 1974.

  Vaquero Serrano, María Carmen, Garcilaso, poeta de amor, caballero de la guerra, Madrid 2002.

  Varela, Consuelo, “El rol del cuarto viaje colombino,” AEA, 42, 1985.

  ——, “El testamento de Amerigo Vespucci,” Historiografía y Bibliografía Americanistas, 30, 2, Seville 1986.

  ——, “La Isabela,” R de I, 47, 3, 1987, 733ff.

  ——, Colón y los florentinos, Madrid 1988.

  ——, Cristóbal Colón, retrato de un hombre, Madrid 1992.

  Vasari, Lives of the Painters, Everyman ed., London 1927.

  Velasco Bayón, Balbino, “El conquistador de Nicaragua, Gabriel de Rojas,” AEA, 1985.

  ——, Historia de Cuéllar, 4th ed., Segovia 1996.

  Verlinden, Charles, L’esclavage dans l’Europe mediévale, vol. 1, Bruges 1955.

  ——, “La population de l’Amérique précolombienne: Une question de méthode,” in Mélanges Fernand Braudel, Toulouse 1973.

  Vicens Vives, J., Política del rey Católico en Cataluña, Barcelona 1940.

  ——, Historia Social, Barcelona 1959.

  ——, Historia crítica de la vida y reinado de Fernando II de Aragón, Saragossa 1962.

  Vinc
ent, Bernard, 1492, “L’Année admirable,” Aubier 1991.

  Voche, Henri de, John Dantiscus and His Netherlandish Friends as Revealed by the Correspondence, Louvain 1961.

  Walls y Merino, Manuel, Primer viaje alrededor del mundo, Madrid 1899.

  Washburn, Wilcomb, “The Meaning of ‘Discovery’ in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries,” AHR, Oct. 1962.

  Wauchope, Robert (ed.), Handbook of Middle American Indians, 16 vols., Austin 1964–1976.

  Weber, David J., The Spanish Frontier in North America, New Haven 1992.

  Weckman, Luis, “Las bulas alejandrinas de 1493 y la teoría política del papado medieval,” Publicaciones del Instituto de Historia, 2, Mexico 1949.

  ——, La Herencia medieval de México, Mexico 1984.

  Wilson, Edward M., and Duncan Noir, A Literary History of Spain: The Golden Age of Drama, London 1971.

  Wright, I. A., “The Commencement of the Cane Sugar Industry in America,” AHR, 21, 1916.

  ——, The Early History of Cuba, New York 1916.

  Zavala, Silvio, Sir Thomas More in New Spain, New York 1955.

  ——, Recuerdo de Vasco de Quiroga, Mexico 1965.

  ——, Las instituciones jurídicas en la conquista de América, 3rd ed., Mexico 1988.

  Zweig, Stefan, Magellan, Barcelona 1955.

  Notes

  Sources cited often are referred to by abbreviations. Otherwise, the reference is indicated as follows: the full title of a work is given at its first mention; thereafter, the book, article, or other source is shown by citing in square brackets, after the author’s name, the chapter in which the work was first mentioned, then the note number. Thus Azcona [1:21] means that the full title, etc., of the work by Azcona will be found in chapter 1, note 21. The abbreviations below refer to the editions of the work used, not necessarily the best.

  Note: Many footnotes in Spanish have been included because so often the language of the golden age in Spain has a fascination all its own.

  Abbreviations

  AEA: Anuario de Estudios Americanos

  AEM: Anuario de Estudios Medievales

  AGI: Archivo General de las Indias

  AGS: Archivo General de Simancas

  AHR: American Historical Review

  APS: Archivo de Protocolos, Seville

  BAE: Biblioteca de Autores Españoles

  BAGN: Boletín del Archivo General de la Nación, Mexico

  BRAH: Boletín de la Real Academia de la Historia, Madrid

  CDI: Colección de documentos inéditos relativos al descubrimiento, conquista, y organización de las posesiones españolas en América y Oceania, 42 vols., Madrid 1864–89, ed. Joaquín Pacheco and Francisco Cárdenas

  CDIU: Colección de documentos inéditos relativos al descubrimiento, conquista, y organización de las antiguas posesiones españolas de ultramar, 25 vols., Madrid 1880–1932

  cit: cited

  Cu: Cuadernos Americanos

  ed: edition; edited by

  f: folio

  fn: footnote

  Fr: Father, sometimes Fray

  HAHR: Hispanic American Historical Review

  intr: introduced by

  Las Casas: Bartolomé de las Casas, Historia de las Indias, ed. M. Aguilar, 3 vols., Madrid 1927

  leg: legajo

  lib: libro

  Lic.: licenciado

  mgr.: monsignor

  ms.: maravedís

  NF: Neue Folge

  Oviedo: Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo, Historia general y natural de las Indias, 5 vols., ed. Juan Pérez de Tudela, Madrid 1959

  p: pieza, i.e., piece (in archives)

  qu.: quoted by

  r.: ramo, i.e., section (in archives)

  r: recto, i.e., right side (in folio pages)

  R de I: Revista de Indias

  repr.: reprinted by

  res.: residencia of

  tr.: translation; translated by

  v: verso, the other side (in folio pages)

  vol.: volume

  Chapter 1

  1. Tr. L. P. Harvey, Islamic Spain, 1250–1500, Chicago 1990, 219.

  2. In a town once known to the Muslims as Atqua and, to the Christians, as Ojos de Huéscar. Peter Martyr reported that the fire had been caused by a piece of “candlewood,” a resinous tree used to give light, dropped in the Queen’s tent (Epistolario, in Documentos inéditos para la historia de España, Madrid 1953 [hereafter Martyr], 9, 160).

  3. In 1483, he had led 350 lances against the Moors and had been named commander (alcaide) of the fortress in the city of Jaén, when the Moors had withdrawn. He was also cousin of a famous royal minister of another generation, Álvaro de Luna. For his subsequent actions, see ch. 9 below.

  4. Martyr [1:2], 91.

  5. “el de las hazañas.” It would be interesting to know if this Pulgar, like the historian of the same name, was a converso.

  6. Martyr [1:2], 91.

  7. Ludwig von Pastor, History of the Popes, tr. Frederick Ignatius Antrobus, London 1898, 5, 338.

  8. See Petrus Christus II’s Our Lady of Granada, usually dated “c. 1500,” now in the Museo del Castillo, in Peretallada. See illustration in this book, at end of first plate section, and Diego Angulo Íñiguez, “La Ciudad de Granada, vista por un pintor flamenco,” in Al-Andalus, 5, 1940, 460–70.

  9. Antoine de Lalaing, Rélation du premier voyage de Philippe le Beau en Espagne, en 1501, Brussels 1876, 204–8.

  10. Those who had fled from Antequera had in Granada their own quartier, La Antequerela.

  11. See Ibn Khaldun, Histoire des Berbères et des dynasties musulmanes de l’Afrique septentrionale, tr. and repr., Paris 1969, 4, 74.

  12. Circular letter of King Yusuf III of Granada, c. 1415, found in Aragon and published by J. Ribera and M. Asín, Manuscritos árabes y aljamiados de la Biblioteca de la Junta, Madrid 1912, 259, cit. L. P. Harvey [1:1], 59.

  13. These figures come from Ladero Quesada in “Isabel y los musulmanes,” in Isabel la Católica y la política, Instituto de Historia de Simancas, Valladolid 2001.

  14. The more popular designation moros was often used, too, and the place where they lived, morerías. Muslims who became Christians were known as moriscos. Mudéjares were known as sarracenos in Aragon.

  15. Abu’ l’-Abbas Ahmad al-Wanshari, c. 1510, qu. Harvey [1:1], 58.

  16. Las Siete Partidas, ed. Francisco López Estrada and María Teresa López García-Berdoy, Madrid 1992, 420: “deben vivir los moros entre los cristianos en aquella misma manera que … lo deben hacer los judios; guardando su ley y no denostando la nuestra … en seguridad de ellos no les deben tomar ni robar lo suyo por fuerza.”

  17. Historia del Abencerraje y la hermosa Jarifa, perhaps Antonio Villegas, Madrid 1551–65.

  18. Six hundred eighty-three slaves were given to prelates or knights, seventy to Cardinal Mendoza. A few were sent to the Pope.

  19. Alfonso de Palencia, Crónica de Enrique IV, Historia de la guerra de Granada, ed. A. Paz y Melia, Biblioteca de Autores Españoles (hereafter BAE), vols. 257, 258, Madrid 1973–75, 57. Merlo was the Crown’s man in Seville, the asistente.

  20. Luis Suárez, Isabel I, Reina, Barcelona 2000, 221.

  21. Tarsicio Azcona, Isabel la Católica, Vida y Reinado, Madrid 2002, 184.

  22. J. Masía Vilanova, “Una política de defensa mediterránea en la España del siglo XVI,” in Fernando el Católico, pensamiento político, V Congreso de Historia de la Corona de Aragón, Saragossa 1956, 99ff. See also W. H. Prescott, The Art of War in Spain: The Conquest of Granada, 1481–92, London 1995 (a reprinted version of his chapters on the war in his life of Fernando and Isabel), 181.

  23. L.P. Harvey[1:1], 228, 256.

  24. Hernando del Pulgar, Crónica de los Reyes Católicos, Madrid 1770, 177–79.

  25. Macchiavelli, The Prince, tr. and ed. by George Bull, London 1961, 119. Macchiavelli said: “In our own time we have Fernando of Aragón the present king of Spain. He can be regarded as a new prince because, from being a weak monarch, he has
risen to being, for fame and glory, the first king of Christendom. If you study his achievements, you will find that they were all magnificent and some of them unparalleled. At the start of his reign, he attacked Granada and that campaign laid the foundation of his power.” Sir John Elliott (Imperial Spain, London 1963, 34) similarly wrote: “A vigorous renewal of the war against Granada would do more than anything else to rally the country behind its new rulers.”

  Chapter 2

  1. In the twentieth century, Don Juan told his son Don Juan Carlos that he, too, “had to be nomadic” (El País, November 20, 2000, 29).

  2. Antonio Rumeu de Armas, Itinerario de los Reyes Católicos, 1474–1516, Madrid 1974, 157–64; 179–83.

  3. See the list of such journeys in Rumeu de Armas [2:2], 14–15, and fns 3–18.

  4. The point is made by Azcona [1:21], 371.

  5. The tradition is that the Flemish fifteenth-century tapestries near the tombs of these monarchs in the cathedral at Granada were among those carried around by them. But Isabel had 370 tapestries, it is said.

  6. Suárez, [1:20], 120, uses the word “theatrical” for these.

  7. The imperial chancellor of Charles V, Gattinara, thought that the peripatetic court had a Roman precedent. See A. H. M. Jones, The Later Roman Empire, Oxford 1964, 1, 366–67. The “comitatus,” the combination of ministries attached to the Emperor, constituted “in fact a migratory body.” The dukes of Burgundy were equally nomadic, and so was the Emperor Maximilian. For their remarkable travels, see Collection des voyages des souverains des Pays-Bas, ed. M. Gachard, vol. 1, Brussels 1876, 9–104.

  8. This order had been founded in the fourteenth century and had by 1490 about thirty-five priories.

  9. The sense of a lost past is powerfully experienced today if one visits La Mejorada, where the once splendid patios are covered by mallows, and wild dogs roam the cells: “Corn is where Troy was.”

  10. According to Lorenzo Galíndez de Carvajal (Anales Breves de los Reyes Católicos, in Colección de documentos inéditos para la historia de España, Madrid 1851, vol. 18, 229–30), “Los reyes tenían un libro y en él memoria de los hombres de más habilidad y méritos para los cargos que vacasen, y lo mismo para la provisión de los obispados y dignidades eclesiásticas.”

 

‹ Prev