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Conquest of Chile

The Conquest of Chile is a period in Chilean historiography that starts with the arrival of Pedro de Valdivia to Chile in 1541 and ends with the death of Martín García Óñez de Loyola in the Battle of Curalaba in 1598, and the destruction of the Seven Cities in 1598–1604 in the Araucanía region.

This was the period of Spanish conquest of territories, founding of cities, establishment of the Captaincy General of Chile, and defeats ending its further colonial expansion southwards. However the continued attack never improved, thus the Arauco War continued, and the Spanish were never able to recover their short control in Araucanía south of the Bío Bío River. The Battle of Guadalgo in 1566 was a huge blow to Spanish morale.

Background edit

Chile at the time of the Spanish arrivals edit

 
Synthesis map of the development of the Inca Empire in Chile in the decades before the Spanish arrival.

According to traditional historiography, the Spanish first came to Central Chile the territory had been under Inca rule for about than 60 years.[1] There are however dissenting views, recent works suggest at least 130 years of Inca presence in Central Chile,[1] and historian Osvaldo Silva posits remarkably short chronologies of direct Inca rule and military involvement. According to Silva the last Inca push towards the south were made as late as in the 1530s.[2] The main settlements of the Inca Empire in Chile lay along the Aconcagua River, Mapocho River, and the Maipo River.[3] Quillota in Aconcagua Valley was likely their foremost settlement.[3] As it appear to be the case in the other borders of the Inca Empire, the southern border was composed of several zones: first, an inner, fully incorporated zone with mitimaes protected by a line of pukaras (fortresses) and then an outer zone with Inca pukaras scattered among allied tribes.[4] This outer zone would according to historian José Bengoa have been located between the Maipo and Maule Rivers.[4]

However the largest indigenous population were the Mapuches living south of the Inca borders in the area spanning from the Itata River to Chiloé Archipelago.[5] The Mapuche population between the Itata River and Reloncaví Sound has been estimated at 705,000–900,000 in the mid-16th century by historian José Bengoa.[6][note 1] Mapuches lived in scattered hamlets, mainly along the great rivers of Southern Chile.[7][8] All major population centres lay at the confluences of rivers.[9] Mapuches preferred to build their houses on hilly terrain or isolated hills rather than on plains and terraces.[8] The Mapuche people represented an unbroken culture dating back to as early as 600 to 500 BC.[10] Yet Mapuches had been influenced over centuries by Central Andean cultures such as Tiwanaku.[11][12] Through their contact with Incan invaders Mapuches would have for the first time met people with state-level organization. Their contact with the Inca is thought to have gavin them a collective awareness to distinguishing between them and the invaders and uniting them into loose geopolitical units despite their lack of state organization.[13]

Mapuche territory had an effective system of roads before the Spanish arrival as evidenced by the fast advances of the Spanish conquerors.[14] According to Zavala and co-workers (2021) the widespread gold-related toponyms in Mapuche lands and early Spanish reports of gold objects, plus the easiness for the Spanish to find gold mines suggests that gold mining did occur in Pre-Hispanic Chile south of Itata River, well beyond the borders of the Inca Empire.[1]

First Spaniards in Chile edit

The first Spanish subjects to enter the territory of what would become Chile were the members of the Magellan expedition that discovered the Straits of Magellan before completing the world's first circumnavigation.

Gonzalo Calvo de Barrientos left Peru for Chile after a quarrel with the Pizarro brothers. The Pizarro brothers had accused Calvo de Barrientos of theft and had him cropped as punishment. Antón Cerrada joined Calvo de Barrientos in his exile.

Diego de Almagro ventured into present-day Bolivia and the Argentine Northwest in 1535. From there he crossed into Chile at the latitudes of Copiapó. Almagro's expedition was a failure as he did not find the riches he expected. Almagro's failed expedition gave the lands of Chile a bad reputation among the Spanish in Peru.[15]

Pedro de Valdivia edit

Expedition to Chile edit

 
Pedro de Valdivia

In April 1539, Francisco Pizarro authorized Pedro de Valdivia as his lieutenant governor with orders to conquer Chile. That did not include monetary aid, which he had to procure on his own. Valdivia did so, in association with the merchant Francisco Martínez Vegaso, captain Alonso de Monroy, and Pedro Sanchez de la Hoz. Sanchez was the longtime secretary to Pizarro, who had returned from Spain with authorization from the king to explore the territories south of the Viceroyalty of Peru to the Strait of Magellan, also granting Valdivia the title of governor over lands taken from the indigenous people. This was the last campaign for the Spanish in Chile.

 
The Juan Bautista Pastene expedition to southern Chile in 1544.

Valdivia came to the Valley of Copiapo and took possession in the name of the King of Spain and named it Nueva Extremadura, for his Spanish homeland of Extremadura. On February 12, 1541, he founded the city of Santiago de la Nueva Extremadura on Huelen hill (present-day Santa Lucia Hill).

Governor edit

Valdivia had rejected the position and titles due him while Pizarro was alive, as it could have been seen as an act of treason. He accepted the titles after the death of Francisco Pizarro. Pedro de Valdivia was named Governor and Captain-General of the Captaincy General of Chile on June 11, 1541. He was the first Governor of Chile.

For long time Valdivia was preoccupied about other Spanish conquistadors disputing him what he saw as his domains. As long as he did not have a royal assignment this could very much happen.[15] The Strait of Magellan was important in Valdivia's design for the Conquest of Chile, as perceived it was part of his Chilean albeit he never reached so far south.[15]

Valdivia organized the first distribution of encomiendas and of indigenous peoples among the Spanish immigrants in Santiago. The Chilean region was not as rich in minerals as Peru, so the indigenous peoples were forced to work on construction projects and placer gold mining. The "conquest" was a challenge, with the first attack of Michimalonco in September 1541, burning the new settlement to the ground.

Valdivia authorized Juan Bohon to found the city of La Serena in 1544. The Juan Bautista Pastene expedition ventured to unexplored southern Chile in 1544. Arriving at the Bio-Bio River, started the Arauco War with the Mapuche people. The epic poem La Araucana (1576) by Alonso de Ercilla describes the Spanish viewpoint.

The Spanish won several battles, such as the Andalien battle, and Penco battle in 1550. The victories allowed Valdiva to found cities on the Mapuche homelands, such as Concepcion in 1550, La Imperial, Valdivia, and Villarrica in 1552, and Los Confines in 1553.

According to Pedro de Valdivia the Mapuche identified the Spanish as "ingas", meaning Incas, a word that stuck is now known under the form wingka meaning new-Inca.[1] At the time of the initial contact Mapuches called horses "hueque ingas" in reference to the hueque according to Valdivia's letter to the Emperor.[1]

Lautaro led the Mapuche rebellion that killed Pedro de Valdivia in the battle of Tucapel in 1553.

Aspects of the Spanish conquest edit

Background of the conquistadores edit

Most conquistadores were Spanish men. A few where from elsewhere, like Juan Valiente who was a black-skinned African. Juan de Bohon (Johann von Bohon), the founder of La Serena and Barlolomeo Flores (Barotholomeus Blumental) are said to have been Germans.[16] Navigator Juan Bautista Pastene was of Genoese origin. Inés Suárez stands out as a rare female conquistadora.

Founding of cities edit

The conquest of Chile was not carried out directly by the Spanish Crown but by Spaniards that formed enterprises for those purposes and gathered financial resources and soldiers for the enterprise by their own.[17] In 1541 an expedition (enterprise) led by Pedro de Valdivia founded Santiago initiating the conquest of Chile. The first years were harsh for the Spaniards mainly due to their poverty, indigenous rebellions, the poor battle terrain, and frequent conspiracies.[18] The inhabitants of Santiago in the mid-16th century were notoriously poorly dressed as result of a lack of armour and food supplies, with some Spanish even resorting to dress with hides from dogs, cats, sea lions, and foxes.[19] The second founding of La Serena in 1549 (initially founded in 1544 but destroyed by natives) was followed by the founding of numerous new cities in southern Chile halting only after Valdivia's death in 1553.[18]

The Spanish colonization of the Americas was characterized by the establishments of cities in the middle of conquered territories. With the founding of each city a number of conquistadores became vecinos of that city being granted a solar and possibly also a chacra in the outskirts of the city, or a hacienda or estancia in more far away parts of the countryside. Apart from land, natives were also distributed among Spaniards since they were considered vital for carrying out any economic activity.[20]

The cities founded, despite defeats in the Arauco War, were: Santiago (1541), La Serena (1544), Concepción (1550), La Imperial, Valdivia, Villarrica (1552), Los Confines (1553), Cañete (1557), Osorno (1558), Arauco (1566), Castro (1567), Chillán (1580), and Santa Cruz de Oñez (1595).

The destruction of the Seven Cities in 1600, and ongoing Arauco War stopped Spanish expansion southward.

Use of yanacona edit

Gold mining edit

Early Spaniards extracted gold from placer deposits using indigenous labour.[21] This contributed to usher in the Arauco War as native Mapuches lacked a tradition of forced labour like the Andean mita and largely refused to serve the Spanish.[22] The key area of the Arauco War were the valleys around Cordillera de Nahuelbuta where the Spanish designs for this region was to exploit the placer deposits of gold using unfree Mapuche labour from the nearby and densely populated valleys.[14] Deaths related to mining contributed to a population decline among native Mapuches.[22] Another site of Spanish mining was the city of Villarrica. At this city the Spanish mined gold placers and silver.[23] The original site of the city was likely close to modern Pucón.[23] However at some point in the 16th century it is presumed the gold placers were buried by lahars flowing down from nearby Villarrica Volcano. This prompted settlers to relocate the city further west at its modern location.[23]

Mining activity declined in the late 16th century as the richest part of placer deposits, which are usually the most shallow, became exhausted.[21] The decline was aggravated by the collapse of the Spanish cities in the south following the battle of Curalaba (1598) which meant for the Spaniards the loss of both the main gold districts and the largest indigenous labour sources.[24]

Compared to the 16th and 18th centuries, Chilean mining activity in the 17th century was very limited.[25]

Southern limit of the conquests edit

Pedro de Valdivia sought originally to conquer all of southern South America to the Straits of Magellan (53° S). He did however only reach Reloncaví Sound (41°45' S). Later in 1567 Chiloé Archipelago (42°30' S) was conquered, from there on southern expansion of the Spanish Empire halted. The Spanish are thought to have lacked incentives for further conquests south. The indigenous populations were scarce and had ways of life that differed from the sedentary agricultural life the Spanish were accustomed to.[26] The harsh climate in the fjords and channels of Patagonia may also have deterred further expansion.[26] Indeed, even in Chiloé did the Spanish encounter difficulties to adapt as their attempts to base the economy on gold extraction and a "hispanic-mediterranean" agricultural model failed.[27]

Timeline of events edit

Year Date Event
1540 December Pedro de Valdivia takes possession of Chile in the name of the King of Spain.
1541 February 12 Santiago is founded.
September 11 Destruction of Santiago. Michimalonco leads a Picunche attack on Santiago, the city is severely damaged but the attack is repelled.
1544 September 4 La Serena is founded by Juan Bohón.
1549 January 11 La Serena is destroyed by natives.
August 26 La Serena is refounded.
1551 October 5 Concepción is founded.
1552 San Felipe de Rauco, La Imperial and Villarrica are founded.
February 9 The city of Valdivia is founded by Pedro de Valdivia.
1553 Los Confines is founded.
December 25 The battle of Tucapel takes place, governor Pedro de Valdivia is killed after the battle.
1554 February 23 The battle of Marihueñu takes place, Concepción is abandoned and destroyed.
October 17 Jerónimo de Alderete is appointed governor of Chile in Spain by the king but dies on his journey to Chile.
1557 April 1 Francisco de Villagra defeats the Mapuches and kills their leader Lautaro at the battle of Mataquito.
April 23 The new governor García Hurtado de Mendoza arrives in La Serena.
June García Hurtado de Mendoza arrives in the bay of Concepcion and builds a fort at Penco, then defeats the Mapuche army trying to dislodge him.
October 10 García Hurtado de Mendoza defeats the Mapuche army in the Battle of Lagunillas.
November 7 García Hurtado de Mendoza defeats Caupolicán in the Millarupe.
1558 January 11 Cañete founded by Mendoza.
February 5 Pedro de Avendaño captured the Mapuche toqui Caupolicán, later executed by impalement in Cañete.
March 27 Osorno is founded.
December 13 Battle of Quiapo, Mendoza defeats the Mapuche and San Felipe de Araucan rebuilt.
1559 January 6 Concepción is refounded.
1561 Francisco de Villagra succeeds García Hurtado de Mendoza as governor.
1563 Cañete is abandoned.
July 22 Francisco de Villagra dies and is succeeded as governor by his cousin Pedro de Villagra. San Felipe de Araucan is soon abandoned.
August 29 The territories of Tucumán are separated from the Captaincy General of Chile and transferred to the Real Audiencia of Charcas.
1564 February Concepción is unsuccessfully sieged by native Mapuches.
1565 A Real Audiencia is established in Concepción.
1566 January San Felipe de Araucan is refounded.
1567 With the founding of Castro the dominions of the Captaincy General of Chile are extended into Chiloé Archipelago.
1570 February 8 The 1570 Concepción earthquake affects all of south-central Chile.
1575 The Real Audiencia of Concepción is abolished.
December 16 The 1575 Valdivia earthquake affects all of southern Chile.
1576 April Valdivia is flooded by a Riñihuazo caused by the 1575 Valdivia earthquake.
1578 December 5 Valparaíso is plundered by Francis Drake, the first corsair in Chilean waters.
1580 June 26 Chillán is founded.
1584 March 25 Rey Don Felipe is founded in the Straits of Magellan by Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa.
1587 Thomas Cavendish finds Rey Don Felipe as a ruin city.
1594 May Fort of Santa Cruz de Oñez is founded and becomes the city of Santa Cruz de Coya the following year.
1598 December 21 The battle of Curalaba takes place, governor Martín García Óñez de Loyola is killed during the battle.
1599 Los Confines, Santa Cruz de Coya and Valdivia are destroyed.
The Real Situado, an annual payment to finance the Arauco War, is established.
1600 La Imperial is destroyed.
1602 Villarrica is destroyed.
March 13 A fort is established in the ruins of Valdivia.
1603 February 7 The last inhabitants of Villarrica surrender to the Mapuches and became captives.
1604 Arauco and Osorno are destroyed.
February 3 The fort at Valdivia is abandoned.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Note that the Chiloé Archipelago with its large population is not included in this estimate.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Zavala, José Manuel; Dillehay, Tom D.; Daniel M., Stewart; Payàs, Gertrudis; Medianero, Francisco Javier (2021). "Los mapuche de Concepción y la frontera inca: revisión de fuentes tempranas y nuevos datos" [The Mapuche of Concepción and the Inca Frontier: Review of Early Sources and New Data]. Revista de Historia (in Spanish). 28 (2): 138–168. doi:10.29393/rh28-30mcjf50030.
  2. ^ Silva Galdames, Osvaldo (1983). "¿Detuvo la batalla del Maule la expansión inca hacia el sur de Chile?". Cuadernos de Historia (in Spanish). 3: 7–25. Retrieved January 10, 2019.
  3. ^ a b Bengoa 2003, pp. 37–38.
  4. ^ a b Bengoa 2003, p. 39.
  5. ^ Otero 2006, p. 36.
  6. ^ Bengoa 2003, p. 157.
  7. ^ Bengoa 2003, p. 29.
  8. ^ a b Dillehay, Tom D. (2014). "Archaeological Material Manifestations". In Dillehay, Tom (ed.). The Teleoscopic Polity. Springer. pp. 101–121. ISBN 978-3-319-03128-6.
  9. ^ Bengoa 2003, p. 56–57.
  10. ^ Bengoa 2000, pp. 16–19.
  11. ^ Moulian, Rodrígo; Catrileo, María; Landeo, Pablo (2015). "Afines quechua en el vocabulario mapuche de Luis de Valdivia" [Akins Quechua words in the Mapuche vocabulary of Luis de Valdivia]. Revista de lingüística teórica y aplicada (in Spanish). 53 (2): 73–96. doi:10.4067/S0718-48832015000200004. Retrieved January 13, 2019.
  12. ^ Dillehay, Tom D.; Pino Quivira, Mario; Bonzani, Renée; Silva, Claudia; Wallner, Johannes; Le Quesne, Carlos (2007) Cultivated wetlands and emerging complexity in south-central Chile and long distance effects of climate change. Antiquity 81 (2007): 949–960
  13. ^ Bengoa 2003, p. 40.
  14. ^ a b Zavala C., José Manuel (2014). "The Spanish-Araucanian World of the Purén and Lumaco Valley in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries". In Dillehay, Tom (ed.). The Teleoscopic Polity. Springer. pp. 55–73. ISBN 978-3-319-03128-6.
  15. ^ a b c Pérez, Ezequiel (2020). "Versiones del Estrecho de Magallanes. El paso interoceánico desde la primera circunnavegación del mundo hasta la conquista del reino de Chile (1520-1552)" [Versions of the strait of Magellan. The interoceanic passage from the first circumnavigation of the world to the conquest of the kingdom of Chile (1519-1520-1552)]. Magallania (in Spanish). 48 (especial): 29–44. doi:10.4067/S0718-22442020000300029.
  16. ^ Elisabeth-Isabel Bongard. Migrante y protagonista de la Reforma Educacional. p. 64
  17. ^ Villalobos et al. 1974, p. 87.
  18. ^ a b Villalobos et al. 1974, pp. 97–99.
  19. ^ León, Leonardo (1991). La merma de la sociadad indígena en Chile central y la última guerra de los promaucaes (PDF) (in Spanish). Institute of Amerindian Studies, University of St. Andrews. pp. 13–16. ISBN 1873617003.
  20. ^ Villalobos et al. 1974, pp. 109–113.
  21. ^ a b Maksaev, Víctor; Townley, Brian; Palacios, Carlos; Camus, Francisco (2006). "6. Metallic ore deposits". In Moreno, Teresa; Gibbons, Wes (eds.). Geology of Chile. Geological Society of London. pp. 179–180. ISBN 9781862392199.
  22. ^ a b Bengoa, José (2003). Historia de los antiguos mapuches del sur (in Spanish). Santiago: Catalonia. pp. 252–253. ISBN 956-8303-02-2.
  23. ^ a b c Petit-Breuilh 2004, pp. 48–49.
  24. ^ *Salazar, Gabriel; Pinto, Julio (2002). Historia contemporánea de Chile III. La economía: mercados empresarios y trabajadores (in Spanish). LOM Ediciones. p. 15. ISBN 956-282-172-2
  25. ^ Villalobos et al. 1974, p. 168.
  26. ^ a b Urbina Carrasco, Ximena (2016). "Interacciones entre españoles de Chiloé y Chonos en los siglos XVII y XVIII: Pedro y Francisco Delco, Ignacio y Cristóbal Talcapillán y Martín Olleta" [Interactions between Spaniards of Chiloé and Chonos in the XVII and XVII centuries: Pedro and Francisco Delco, Ignacio and Cristóbal Talcapillán and Martín Olleta] (PDF). Chungara (in Spanish). 48 (1): 103–114. Retrieved December 21, 2019.
  27. ^ Torrejón, Fernando; Cisternas, Marco; Alvial, Ingrid and Torres, Laura. 2011. Consecuencias de la tala maderera colonial en los bosques de alece de Chiloé, sur de Chile (Siglos XVI-XIX)*. Magallania. Vol. 39(2):75–95.

Sources edit

  • Pedro de Valdivia, , University of Chile: Diarios, Memorias y Relatos Testimoniales: (on line in Spanish)
  • Jerónimo de Vivar, ARTEHISTORIA REVISTA DIGITAL; Crónicas de América (on line in Spanish)
  • Alonso de Góngora Marmolejo,, University of Chile: Document Collections in complete texts: Cronicles (on line in Spanish)
  • Pedro Mariño de Lobera,Crónica del Reino de Chile , escrita por el capitán Pedro Mariño de Lobera....reducido a nuevo método y estilo por el Padre Bartolomé de Escobar. Edición digital a partir de Crónicas del Reino de Chile Madrid, Atlas, 1960, pp. 227-562, (Biblioteca de Autores Españoles ; 569-575). Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes (on line in Spanish)
  • Melchor Jufré del Águila; Compendio historial del Descubrimiento y Conquista del Reino de Chile (Historical compendium of the Discovery and Conquest of the Kingdom of Chile), University of Chile: Document Collections in complete texts: Cronicles (on line in Spanish)
  • Diego de Rosales, “Historia General del Reino de Chile”, Flandes Indiano, 3 tomos. Valparaíso 1877 - 1878.
    • [ Historia general de el Reyno de Chile: Flandes Indiano Vol. 1]
    • Historia general de el Reyno de Chile: Flandes Indiano Vol. 2[permanent dead link]
    • [ Historia general de el Reyno de Chile: Flandes Indiano Vol. 3]
  • Vicente Carvallo y Goyeneche, , University of Chile: Document Collections in complete texts: Chronicles (on line in Spanish)

conquest, chile, period, chilean, historiography, that, starts, with, arrival, pedro, valdivia, chile, 1541, ends, with, death, martín, garcía, Óñez, loyola, battle, curalaba, 1598, destruction, seven, cities, 1598, 1604, araucanía, region, this, period, spani. The Conquest of Chile is a period in Chilean historiography that starts with the arrival of Pedro de Valdivia to Chile in 1541 and ends with the death of Martin Garcia onez de Loyola in the Battle of Curalaba in 1598 and the destruction of the Seven Cities in 1598 1604 in the Araucania region This was the period of Spanish conquest of territories founding of cities establishment of the Captaincy General of Chile and defeats ending its further colonial expansion southwards However the continued attack never improved thus the Arauco War continued and the Spanish were never able to recover their short control in Araucania south of the Bio Bio River The Battle of Guadalgo in 1566 was a huge blow to Spanish morale Contents 1 Background 1 1 Chile at the time of the Spanish arrivals 1 2 First Spaniards in Chile 2 Pedro de Valdivia 2 1 Expedition to Chile 2 2 Governor 3 Aspects of the Spanish conquest 3 1 Background of the conquistadores 3 2 Founding of cities 3 3 Use of yanacona 3 4 Gold mining 4 Southern limit of the conquests 5 Timeline of events 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 SourcesBackground editChile at the time of the Spanish arrivals edit nbsp Synthesis map of the development of the Inca Empire in Chile in the decades before the Spanish arrival See also Mapuche history and Incas in Central Chile According to traditional historiography the Spanish first came to Central Chile the territory had been under Inca rule for about than 60 years 1 There are however dissenting views recent works suggest at least 130 years of Inca presence in Central Chile 1 and historian Osvaldo Silva posits remarkably short chronologies of direct Inca rule and military involvement According to Silva the last Inca push towards the south were made as late as in the 1530s 2 The main settlements of the Inca Empire in Chile lay along the Aconcagua River Mapocho River and the Maipo River 3 Quillota in Aconcagua Valley was likely their foremost settlement 3 As it appear to be the case in the other borders of the Inca Empire the southern border was composed of several zones first an inner fully incorporated zone with mitimaes protected by a line of pukaras fortresses and then an outer zone with Inca pukaras scattered among allied tribes 4 This outer zone would according to historian Jose Bengoa have been located between the Maipo and Maule Rivers 4 However the largest indigenous population were the Mapuches living south of the Inca borders in the area spanning from the Itata River to Chiloe Archipelago 5 The Mapuche population between the Itata River and Reloncavi Sound has been estimated at 705 000 900 000 in the mid 16th century by historian Jose Bengoa 6 note 1 Mapuches lived in scattered hamlets mainly along the great rivers of Southern Chile 7 8 All major population centres lay at the confluences of rivers 9 Mapuches preferred to build their houses on hilly terrain or isolated hills rather than on plains and terraces 8 The Mapuche people represented an unbroken culture dating back to as early as 600 to 500 BC 10 Yet Mapuches had been influenced over centuries by Central Andean cultures such as Tiwanaku 11 12 Through their contact with Incan invaders Mapuches would have for the first time met people with state level organization Their contact with the Inca is thought to have gavin them a collective awareness to distinguishing between them and the invaders and uniting them into loose geopolitical units despite their lack of state organization 13 Mapuche territory had an effective system of roads before the Spanish arrival as evidenced by the fast advances of the Spanish conquerors 14 According to Zavala and co workers 2021 the widespread gold related toponyms in Mapuche lands and early Spanish reports of gold objects plus the easiness for the Spanish to find gold mines suggests that gold mining did occur in Pre Hispanic Chile south of Itata River well beyond the borders of the Inca Empire 1 First Spaniards in Chile edit The first Spanish subjects to enter the territory of what would become Chile were the members of the Magellan expedition that discovered the Straits of Magellan before completing the world s first circumnavigation Gonzalo Calvo de Barrientos left Peru for Chile after a quarrel with the Pizarro brothers The Pizarro brothers had accused Calvo de Barrientos of theft and had him cropped as punishment Anton Cerrada joined Calvo de Barrientos in his exile Diego de Almagro ventured into present day Bolivia and the Argentine Northwest in 1535 From there he crossed into Chile at the latitudes of Copiapo Almagro s expedition was a failure as he did not find the riches he expected Almagro s failed expedition gave the lands of Chile a bad reputation among the Spanish in Peru 15 Pedro de Valdivia editExpedition to Chile edit nbsp Pedro de ValdiviaIn April 1539 Francisco Pizarro authorized Pedro de Valdivia as his lieutenant governor with orders to conquer Chile That did not include monetary aid which he had to procure on his own Valdivia did so in association with the merchant Francisco Martinez Vegaso captain Alonso de Monroy and Pedro Sanchez de la Hoz Sanchez was the longtime secretary to Pizarro who had returned from Spain with authorization from the king to explore the territories south of the Viceroyalty of Peru to the Strait of Magellan also granting Valdivia the title of governor over lands taken from the indigenous people This was the last campaign for the Spanish in Chile nbsp The Juan Bautista Pastene expedition to southern Chile in 1544 Valdivia came to the Valley of Copiapo and took possession in the name of the King of Spain and named it Nueva Extremadura for his Spanish homeland of Extremadura On February 12 1541 he founded the city of Santiago de la Nueva Extremadura on Huelen hill present day Santa Lucia Hill Governor edit Valdivia had rejected the position and titles due him while Pizarro was alive as it could have been seen as an act of treason He accepted the titles after the death of Francisco Pizarro Pedro de Valdivia was named Governor and Captain General of the Captaincy General of Chile on June 11 1541 He was the first Governor of Chile For long time Valdivia was preoccupied about other Spanish conquistadors disputing him what he saw as his domains As long as he did not have a royal assignment this could very much happen 15 The Strait of Magellan was important in Valdivia s design for the Conquest of Chile as perceived it was part of his Chilean albeit he never reached so far south 15 Valdivia organized the first distribution of encomiendas and of indigenous peoples among the Spanish immigrants in Santiago The Chilean region was not as rich in minerals as Peru so the indigenous peoples were forced to work on construction projects and placer gold mining The conquest was a challenge with the first attack of Michimalonco in September 1541 burning the new settlement to the ground Valdivia authorized Juan Bohon to found the city of La Serena in 1544 The Juan Bautista Pastene expedition ventured to unexplored southern Chile in 1544 Arriving at the Bio Bio River started the Arauco War with the Mapuche people The epic poem La Araucana 1576 by Alonso de Ercilla describes the Spanish viewpoint The Spanish won several battles such as the Andalien battle and Penco battle in 1550 The victories allowed Valdiva to found cities on the Mapuche homelands such as Concepcion in 1550 La Imperial Valdivia and Villarrica in 1552 and Los Confines in 1553 According to Pedro de Valdivia the Mapuche identified the Spanish as ingas meaning Incas a word that stuck is now known under the form wingka meaning new Inca 1 At the time of the initial contact Mapuches called horses hueque ingas in reference to the hueque according to Valdivia s letter to the Emperor 1 Lautaro led the Mapuche rebellion that killed Pedro de Valdivia in the battle of Tucapel in 1553 Aspects of the Spanish conquest editBackground of the conquistadores edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2019 Most conquistadores were Spanish men A few where from elsewhere like Juan Valiente who was a black skinned African Juan de Bohon Johann von Bohon the founder of La Serena and Barlolomeo Flores Barotholomeus Blumental are said to have been Germans 16 Navigator Juan Bautista Pastene was of Genoese origin Ines Suarez stands out as a rare female conquistadora Founding of cities edit The conquest of Chile was not carried out directly by the Spanish Crown but by Spaniards that formed enterprises for those purposes and gathered financial resources and soldiers for the enterprise by their own 17 In 1541 an expedition enterprise led by Pedro de Valdivia founded Santiago initiating the conquest of Chile The first years were harsh for the Spaniards mainly due to their poverty indigenous rebellions the poor battle terrain and frequent conspiracies 18 The inhabitants of Santiago in the mid 16th century were notoriously poorly dressed as result of a lack of armour and food supplies with some Spanish even resorting to dress with hides from dogs cats sea lions and foxes 19 The second founding of La Serena in 1549 initially founded in 1544 but destroyed by natives was followed by the founding of numerous new cities in southern Chile halting only after Valdivia s death in 1553 18 The Spanish colonization of the Americas was characterized by the establishments of cities in the middle of conquered territories With the founding of each city a number of conquistadores became vecinos of that city being granted a solar and possibly also a chacra in the outskirts of the city or a hacienda or estancia in more far away parts of the countryside Apart from land natives were also distributed among Spaniards since they were considered vital for carrying out any economic activity 20 The cities founded despite defeats in the Arauco War were Santiago 1541 La Serena 1544 Concepcion 1550 La Imperial Valdivia Villarrica 1552 Los Confines 1553 Canete 1557 Osorno 1558 Arauco 1566 Castro 1567 Chillan 1580 and Santa Cruz de Onez 1595 The destruction of the Seven Cities in 1600 and ongoing Arauco War stopped Spanish expansion southward Use of yanacona edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2019 Gold mining edit Early Spaniards extracted gold from placer deposits using indigenous labour 21 This contributed to usher in the Arauco War as native Mapuches lacked a tradition of forced labour like the Andean mita and largely refused to serve the Spanish 22 The key area of the Arauco War were the valleys around Cordillera de Nahuelbuta where the Spanish designs for this region was to exploit the placer deposits of gold using unfree Mapuche labour from the nearby and densely populated valleys 14 Deaths related to mining contributed to a population decline among native Mapuches 22 Another site of Spanish mining was the city of Villarrica At this city the Spanish mined gold placers and silver 23 The original site of the city was likely close to modern Pucon 23 However at some point in the 16th century it is presumed the gold placers were buried by lahars flowing down from nearby Villarrica Volcano This prompted settlers to relocate the city further west at its modern location 23 Mining activity declined in the late 16th century as the richest part of placer deposits which are usually the most shallow became exhausted 21 The decline was aggravated by the collapse of the Spanish cities in the south following the battle of Curalaba 1598 which meant for the Spaniards the loss of both the main gold districts and the largest indigenous labour sources 24 Compared to the 16th and 18th centuries Chilean mining activity in the 17th century was very limited 25 Southern limit of the conquests editPedro de Valdivia sought originally to conquer all of southern South America to the Straits of Magellan 53 S He did however only reach Reloncavi Sound 41 45 S Later in 1567 Chiloe Archipelago 42 30 S was conquered from there on southern expansion of the Spanish Empire halted The Spanish are thought to have lacked incentives for further conquests south The indigenous populations were scarce and had ways of life that differed from the sedentary agricultural life the Spanish were accustomed to 26 The harsh climate in the fjords and channels of Patagonia may also have deterred further expansion 26 Indeed even in Chiloe did the Spanish encounter difficulties to adapt as their attempts to base the economy on gold extraction and a hispanic mediterranean agricultural model failed 27 Timeline of events editYear Date Event1540 December Pedro de Valdivia takes possession of Chile in the name of the King of Spain 1541 February 12 Santiago is founded September 11 Destruction of Santiago Michimalonco leads a Picunche attack on Santiago the city is severely damaged but the attack is repelled 1544 September 4 La Serena is founded by Juan Bohon 1549 January 11 La Serena is destroyed by natives August 26 La Serena is refounded 1551 October 5 Concepcion is founded 1552 San Felipe de Rauco La Imperial and Villarrica are founded February 9 The city of Valdivia is founded by Pedro de Valdivia 1553 Los Confines is founded December 25 The battle of Tucapel takes place governor Pedro de Valdivia is killed after the battle 1554 February 23 The battle of Marihuenu takes place Concepcion is abandoned and destroyed October 17 Jeronimo de Alderete is appointed governor of Chile in Spain by the king but dies on his journey to Chile 1557 April 1 Francisco de Villagra defeats the Mapuches and kills their leader Lautaro at the battle of Mataquito April 23 The new governor Garcia Hurtado de Mendoza arrives in La Serena June Garcia Hurtado de Mendoza arrives in the bay of Concepcion and builds a fort at Penco then defeats the Mapuche army trying to dislodge him October 10 Garcia Hurtado de Mendoza defeats the Mapuche army in the Battle of Lagunillas November 7 Garcia Hurtado de Mendoza defeats Caupolican in the Millarupe 1558 January 11 Canete founded by Mendoza February 5 Pedro de Avendano captured the Mapuche toqui Caupolican later executed by impalement in Canete March 27 Osorno is founded December 13 Battle of Quiapo Mendoza defeats the Mapuche and San Felipe de Araucan rebuilt 1559 January 6 Concepcion is refounded 1561 Francisco de Villagra succeeds Garcia Hurtado de Mendoza as governor 1563 Canete is abandoned July 22 Francisco de Villagra dies and is succeeded as governor by his cousin Pedro de Villagra San Felipe de Araucan is soon abandoned August 29 The territories of Tucuman are separated from the Captaincy General of Chile and transferred to the Real Audiencia of Charcas 1564 February Concepcion is unsuccessfully sieged by native Mapuches 1565 A Real Audiencia is established in Concepcion 1566 January San Felipe de Araucan is refounded 1567 With the founding of Castro the dominions of the Captaincy General of Chile are extended into Chiloe Archipelago 1570 February 8 The 1570 Concepcion earthquake affects all of south central Chile 1575 The Real Audiencia of Concepcion is abolished December 16 The 1575 Valdivia earthquake affects all of southern Chile 1576 April Valdivia is flooded by a Rinihuazo caused by the 1575 Valdivia earthquake 1578 December 5 Valparaiso is plundered by Francis Drake the first corsair in Chilean waters 1580 June 26 Chillan is founded 1584 March 25 Rey Don Felipe is founded in the Straits of Magellan by Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa 1587 Thomas Cavendish finds Rey Don Felipe as a ruin city 1594 May Fort of Santa Cruz de Onez is founded and becomes the city of Santa Cruz de Coya the following year 1598 December 21 The battle of Curalaba takes place governor Martin Garcia onez de Loyola is killed during the battle 1599 Los Confines Santa Cruz de Coya and Valdivia are destroyed The Real Situado an annual payment to finance the Arauco War is established 1600 La Imperial is destroyed 1602 Villarrica is destroyed March 13 A fort is established in the ruins of Valdivia 1603 February 7 The last inhabitants of Villarrica surrender to the Mapuches and became captives 1604 Arauco and Osorno are destroyed February 3 The fort at Valdivia is abandoned nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Conquista de Chile See also editIncas in Central Chile Spanish colonization of the Americas Spanish conquest of Peru Viceroyalty of PeruNotes edit Note that the Chiloe Archipelago with its large population is not included in this estimate References edit a b c d e Zavala Jose Manuel Dillehay Tom D Daniel M Stewart Payas Gertrudis Medianero Francisco Javier 2021 Los mapuche de Concepcion y la frontera inca revision de fuentes tempranas y nuevos datos The Mapuche of Concepcion and the Inca Frontier Review of Early Sources and New Data Revista de Historia in Spanish 28 2 138 168 doi 10 29393 rh28 30mcjf50030 Silva Galdames Osvaldo 1983 Detuvo la batalla del Maule la expansion inca hacia el sur de Chile Cuadernos de Historia in Spanish 3 7 25 Retrieved January 10 2019 a b Bengoa 2003 pp 37 38 a b Bengoa 2003 p 39 Otero 2006 p 36 Bengoa 2003 p 157 Bengoa 2003 p 29 a b Dillehay Tom D 2014 Archaeological Material Manifestations In Dillehay Tom ed The Teleoscopic Polity Springer pp 101 121 ISBN 978 3 319 03128 6 Bengoa 2003 p 56 57 Bengoa 2000 pp 16 19 Moulian Rodrigo Catrileo Maria Landeo Pablo 2015 Afines quechua en el vocabulario mapuche de Luis de Valdivia Akins Quechua words in the Mapuche vocabulary of Luis de Valdivia Revista de linguistica teorica y aplicada in Spanish 53 2 73 96 doi 10 4067 S0718 48832015000200004 Retrieved January 13 2019 Dillehay Tom D Pino Quivira Mario Bonzani Renee Silva Claudia Wallner Johannes Le Quesne Carlos 2007 Cultivated wetlands and emerging complexity in south central Chile and long distance effects of climate change Antiquity 81 2007 949 960 Bengoa 2003 p 40 a b Zavala C Jose Manuel 2014 The Spanish Araucanian World of the Puren and Lumaco Valley in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries In Dillehay Tom ed The Teleoscopic Polity Springer pp 55 73 ISBN 978 3 319 03128 6 a b c Perez Ezequiel 2020 Versiones del Estrecho de Magallanes El paso interoceanico desde la primera circunnavegacion del mundo hasta la conquista del reino de Chile 1520 1552 Versions of the strait of Magellan The interoceanic passage from the first circumnavigation of the world to the conquest of the kingdom of Chile 1519 1520 1552 Magallania in Spanish 48 especial 29 44 doi 10 4067 S0718 22442020000300029 Elisabeth Isabel Bongard Migrante y protagonista de la Reforma Educacional p 64 Villalobos et al 1974 p 87 a b Villalobos et al 1974 pp 97 99 Leon Leonardo 1991 La merma de la sociadad indigena en Chile central y la ultima guerra de los promaucaes PDF in Spanish Institute of Amerindian Studies University of St Andrews pp 13 16 ISBN 1873617003 Villalobos et al 1974 pp 109 113 a b Maksaev Victor Townley Brian Palacios Carlos Camus Francisco 2006 6 Metallic ore deposits In Moreno Teresa Gibbons Wes eds Geology of Chile Geological Society of London pp 179 180 ISBN 9781862392199 a b Bengoa Jose 2003 Historia de los antiguos mapuches del sur in Spanish Santiago Catalonia pp 252 253 ISBN 956 8303 02 2 a b c Petit Breuilh 2004 pp 48 49 Salazar Gabriel Pinto Julio 2002 Historia contemporanea de Chile III La economia mercados empresarios y trabajadores in Spanish LOM Ediciones p 15 ISBN 956 282 172 2 Villalobos et al 1974 p 168 a b Urbina Carrasco Ximena 2016 Interacciones entre espanoles de Chiloe y Chonos en los siglos XVII y XVIII Pedro y Francisco Delco Ignacio y Cristobal Talcapillan y Martin Olleta Interactions between Spaniards of Chiloe and Chonos in the XVII and XVII centuries Pedro and Francisco Delco Ignacio and Cristobal Talcapillan and Martin Olleta PDF Chungara in Spanish 48 1 103 114 Retrieved December 21 2019 Torrejon Fernando Cisternas Marco Alvial Ingrid and Torres Laura 2011 Consecuencias de la tala maderera colonial en los bosques de alece de Chiloe sur de Chile Siglos XVI XIX Magallania Vol 39 2 75 95 Sources edit Pedro de Valdivia Cartas de Pedro de Valdivia Letters of Pedro Valdivia University of Chile Diarios Memorias y Relatos Testimoniales on line in Spanish Jeronimo de Vivar Cronica y relacion copiosa y verdadera de los reinos de Chile Chronicle and abundant and true relation of the kingdoms of Chile ARTEHISTORIA REVISTA DIGITAL Cronicas de America on line in Spanish Alonso de Gongora Marmolejo Historia de Todas las Cosas que han Acaecido en el Reino de Chile y de los que lo han gobernado 1536 1575 History of All the Things that Have happened in the Kingdom of Chile and of those that have governed it 1536 1575 University of Chile Document Collections in complete texts Cronicles on line in Spanish Pedro Marino de Lobera Cronica del Reino de Chile escrita por el capitan Pedro Marino de Lobera reducido a nuevo metodo y estilo por el Padre Bartolome de Escobar Edicion digital a partir de Cronicas del Reino de Chile Madrid Atlas 1960 pp 227 562 Biblioteca de Autores Espanoles 569 575 Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes on line in Spanish Melchor Jufre del Aguila Compendio historial del Descubrimiento y Conquista del Reino de Chile Historical compendium of the Discovery and Conquest of the Kingdom of Chile University of Chile Document Collections in complete texts Cronicles on line in Spanish Diego de Rosales Historia General del Reino de Chile Flandes Indiano 3 tomos Valparaiso 1877 1878 Historia general de el Reyno de Chile Flandes Indiano Vol 1 Historia general de el Reyno de Chile Flandes Indiano Vol 2 permanent dead link Historia general de el Reyno de Chile Flandes Indiano Vol 3 Vicente Carvallo y Goyeneche Descripcion Historico Geografia del Reino de Chile Description Historical Geography of the Kingdom of Chile University of Chile Document Collections in complete texts Chronicles on line in Spanish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Conquest of Chile amp oldid 1160210820, 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