Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

Why The Spanish Came To The New World

Good Essays
659 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Why The Spanish Came To The New World
The background of the Spanish?s journey to the new world is one of personal gain, exploration, and religious conversion of the natives. In the 1500?s the first Spanish settlers set sail for the New World in search of the opportunity to start a new life. What they encountered was a friendly welcoming from the natives. Amongst the reasons Spanish settlers left their own country to go to a foreign land was in search of treasure, expansion of their empire and conversion of the natives to the Spanish version of Roman Catholicism.

The Spanish were in a race with the English, French and Dutch to claim the New World and extend their empire. As it is, the Spanish landed first because Christopher Columbus discovered the New World whilst searching for a westward passage to India on behalf of the Spanish Crown. The first permanent settlement in the present day United States was St Augustine, Florida, founded by the Spanish in 1565. It is the oldest city in the United States of America.

The Spanish sent anyone who wanted to go to the New World, but mainly soldiers of fortune looking for gold or any money making activity and missionaries initially went. The Spanish were also accompanied by many members of the clergy intent on converting the natives to Spanish Catholicism.

A centaury after Columbus?s landing some 200,000 Europeans, mainly Spaniards had settled in the New World, and another 125,000 Africans had been forced to travel from their homeland to work on Spanish plantations. This dreadful act of disrespect for human life and freedom was the slave trade. This non-selective process which the Spanish used was probably to their advantage, but also came with disadvantages. The main one being with all the soldiers of fortune and clergy present, there was very limited knowledge in the community, and once they discovered that not much was being found, they didn?t have a backup plan. Many Spaniards took up farming from scratch; this did not prove to be the best way of doing it, but they survived.

The impact that the Spanish had on the natives was huge and underestimated at the time. The Spanish brought many diseases from Europe, as well as many of the common viruses, e.g., colds and flu. Many of the diseases brought by the Spanish would prove to be deadly to the natives because they never encountered such diseases, and their immune system could not protect them against the new diseases. The diseases the Spanish brought to the New World eventually killed off half the native population in 125 years. However, the Spanish brought more than just diseases: they brought the institution of slavery, which would lead to hostility.

Not all the Spanish induced impacts were bad. The Spaniards brought new foods, grains, livestock, firearms, and a host of other things. All these items could be used to trade with the natives, and proved to be a good way of obtaining what they needed. Also, with the introduction of firearms to the natives, food from the hunting of animals became more plentiful and easier than with bow and arrow and trapping.

The Spanish did not set out with the right intentions, but they were successful even though many of them had to resort to making a living doing things they had never done before. The Spanish should have sent more people of different abilities and skills with the explorers, soldiers of fortune and clergy. In so doing, they would have had an alternative settlement/survival plan to fall back on if the original one did not prove viable. As history shows, they managed, but it is also obvious the Spanish were not prepared for the tasks of survival and colonisation that lay ahead.

The natives, although severely disadvantaged by conquest and many deaths due to diseases brought by the Spanish, were eventually able to gain some advantage when they could trade whatever was needed by the Spanish for weapons which they could use against other, tribal enemies.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    First English colonizers came to settle in Massachusetts and Virginia, where as the French colonies were in Newfoundland, and the Mississippi river. Spanish colonies settled in California along the coastline, as well as New Mexico, and Florida.…

    • 329 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Spaniards, when they arrived and had heard of the nearby gold, they began to go to extremes to be able to get to and find the gold, even if that meant killing off the natives. Not to mention, they began going to extremes (including killing) to have their empire, the glory, that they wanted so badly to have. “The story of the Spanish warriors…is also a story of remarkable brutality and greed. The conquistadores subjugated and, in some areas (through a combination of warfare and disease), almost exterminate the native populations. In this horrible way, they made possible the creation of a vast Spanish empire in the New World.” (17). The English were motivated to go to the New World in order to find a new life and to have the freedom to practice whichever religion they please. “In addition to these economic motives for colonization, there were also religious ones, rooted in the events of European and English Reformations.” (27). They were also going in hopes of finding gold. “Perhaps most important, colonial commerce would allow England to acquire products from its own new territories for which the nation had previously been dependent on foreign rivals-products such as lumber, naval stares, and, above all, silver and gold.” (27). As for the French, one of the main reasons they went to the Americas was to do missionary work. “French Jesuit missionaries were among the first to penetrate…

    • 979 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Spanish, French, Dutch, and English are the European countries that settled in the Americas by colonizing the area. The Spanish colonized the Aztecs, Mayans, Incas, some parts of the South America and Southwest of North America, the French colonized Canada, the Dutch colonized New Netherland, and the English colonized Virginia and Plymouth among the others.…

    • 264 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Spain’s effort to colonize the new world was based solely on spreading the word of God. Spain at the time of Columbus’s expedition was “the most loyal Roman Catholic nation in Europe” (Gaustad’s pg.16) and therefore spreading the gospel was a main focus. It was said by General Treausrer Sanchez “the expedition could prove to be a great service to God” (gaustad’s pg.16). Spain wanted to see if there was more land to claim and if there was, they wanted to make sure that said people were brought to God through salvation (Gaustad’s pg. 17). Once new Land was acquired, Spain pushed for a complete conversion of other religions and practices to follow suit of the Catholic Church. The purification of land by fire was the harsh way Spain got their intension of change to the people habiting the different lands. The cruel ways were used by Spain when trying to “covert and isolate the Jews”(Gaustad’s pg 17).…

    • 787 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    How did the Spanish establish colonies on the borderlands? While France and England were building colonies in North America, Spain’s colonies in the Americas were already hundreds of years old. The Spanish established colonies on the borderlands by building missions, presidios, and pueblos. Early in the 1500s, Spanish explorers reached Florida, but at first they did not build permanent settlements. Fearing that France might take over the area, Spain built a fort called St. Augustine in northern Florida. St. Augustine was the first permanent European settlement in the present-day United States. Spanish control was threatened as English colonies spread southward. To weaken the English colonies, in 1693 the Spanish offered refuge and free land to enslaved Africans who escaped to Florida. During the 1700s, hundreds of African slaves fled to Florida.…

    • 427 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Spaniards came to the new world in search of more land to expand the country. The voyage was under the command of Christopher Columbus. Originally Columbus had wanted to sail to Asia and conquer more land with financial support from Isabella and Ferdinand, Spanish royalty. Upon arrival on the coast of the "New World" Columbus made contact with the Native Americans. When those back in Spain wanted updates, Columbus and his men put their "encounters" with the Natives as delicately as possible. These encounters were really what Columbus and the other men did to the Natives. When the Natives refused to work for the Spaniards, the natives were brutally attacked. Some small wars broke out between the Spaniards and Natives causing more casualties to the Natives than the Spaniards. When the news of these casualties finally reached Spain, the pope decided to take control of the situation, sending over missionaries and teacher to compensate for the early harsh treatment to the Natives.…

    • 583 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Therefore the Spanish were obviously not the first set of people to discover the new world…

    • 290 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Thinking back to Ferdinand and Isabella’s choice to colonize the New World, I believe they made the right decision. Even though I now know the terrible consequences that their decision inflicted on the native people, my position remains that colonization was worth the cost. Columbus’ letter described the New World; Hispana like it was a place for the gods. Perhaps, in the eyes of Europeans it was a paradise. Europe was suffering from a lack of resources, polluted rivers, and overpopulated landscapes, which led to a major crisis.…

    • 675 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The first pull factor for the settlement in North America is the freedom of religion. “Catholic leaders in Spain often burned heretics—nonbelievers—in public during the Inquisition of the 1400s and 1500s.” “Heretics” or "nonbelievers" were burnt because of the lack of a religion they followed. Going to a new land, North America would allow them to practice whatever religion they want.…

    • 287 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The motivations for the Spanish to migrate were to get money/gold, spread the religion and control new land. On page 46 it says, "Cortes had heard of a wealthy land to the west", which made him want to explore it and rule it. When the Spanish arrived they were welcomed, but they quickly took advantage of their kindness and killed the leader of the new land. The Spanish were successful because they built an empire and brought in tons of gold and they "operated many plantations" (page 52).…

    • 255 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The colonists who came to the New World all have a similar quality. They all used slavery in one way or another to achieve their goals. The colonists would depend on other people or groups in order to sustain a suitable lifestyle the choose. This is why so many colonists thought that working the slaves and indentured servants and giving them very austere living conditions was morally correct. Also, the government is a Democracy so since the majority of the people are colonists, the government is pro-slavery and pro-indentured servants. However, there were three main reasons why settlers came to the New World: for Gold, for Glory, and for God. All these people have a similar justification on the treatment of African slaves, indentured servants, and Native Americans and that is that their conditions of living is very harsh and that they will strip them of their possessions.…

    • 810 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Once Christopher Columbus had discovered the New World many other European colonists decided to leave behind their old countries and take leave to the new continent. Many people had their different reasons for leaving, but often times it was due to religious freedom, lack of resources, trading, and simply to gain money. In many cases people fled to the New World for religious freedom since many religions were being ostracized. In Europe the Protestants and the Catholics began to fight over their religions, as one source states, “They differed, sometimes violently, on matters such as infant baptism; the degree to which they should reject catholic ritual, iconography, theology; how they should govern their churches; and what was the proper…

    • 291 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Famous Spanish explorers who first first discovered/used the New World include: Juan Ponce de Leon, Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca, Hernando de Soto, Francisco Vasquez de Coronado, Gaspar de Portola and Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo. The Spanish created the first (related to Europe) settlements in America, first in St. Augustine, Florida, and then in Santa Fe, New Mexico. For hundreds of years the Hispanic communities established by the Spanish in California, New Mexico and Texas remained self-ruling until the United States won (by force) these land. Following the Mexican-American War, the Agreement (between countries) of Guadalupe Hidalgo granted (living in a country you were born in, or having the same rights in a country as someone who was born there) and (rights guaranteed by the Constitution) to the Hispanic…

    • 861 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Spaniards initial and primary reason for travelling to the New World was for the discovery of gold and for power (Zinn, 2005). In addition to looking for gold and power, the Spaniards came looking for new land to claim (Locke et al, n.d.). The Spaniards came looking to conquer the new land for their profitable gain. Much of this conquering was very brutal and to the Native people’s disadvantages, especially when there wasn’t much gold to be had. “When it became clear that there was no…

    • 1092 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Columbus came to the New World for a variety of reasons. A few of these reasons included: wealth, converting non-Christians and to prove the theory of the earth being round.…

    • 382 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays