Modern-day Spain is a largely peaceful, reasonably
prosperous nation that rarely finds itself
embroiled in wars of conquest or thrust to
the centre of world affairs.
This hasn’t always been the case.
The Spanish Empire was once one of the largest
empires the world has ever seen, spanning
almost ten percent of the world’s land mass.
It led the brutal conquest and colonisation
of the Americas, possessed immense wealth,
and shaped the modern world.
In this list we’ll take a closer look at
the Spanish Empire, and some of the reasons
it was hated by so many of its inhabitants.
10.
The Royal Family was Dangerously Inbred
The Spanish Empire became a global power under
the rulership of the Hapsburg Dynasty, which
could lay claim to be the most powerful and
influential family in the world.
At various times they ruled not only over
Spain and her colonies but also Austria, Hungary,
the vast Holy Roman empire, and even more
besides.
The Hapsburgs guarded their power jealously.
Desperate to avoid sharing it too widely they
married almost exclusively from within their
own family.
While this worked well enough for a while,
it turned out to be a very bad idea in the
long term.
The lack of new genetic material entering
the bloodline led to severe inbreeding, culminating
in the tragic story of King Charles II.
While contemporary portraits of Charles II
paint him as a relatively healthy young man,
this was an early exercise in propaganda and
very far from reality.
Charles II was mentally sound, but his genetic
makeup condemned him to a miserable existence.
He was barely able to walk or talk, suffered
from severe epilepsy, and his jaw was so malformed
he struggled to chew his food.
He was too sickly to even attend his own wedding,
which may well have been a relief to his bride
who repeatedly complained of being repulsed
by her husband’s appearance.
Charles was none the less strong enough in
body and spirit to repeatedly confound his
doctors, who had been predicting his imminent
death from the moment of his birth.
In the event Charles was unable to reproduce
and almost certainly sterile.
He died in November 1700 at the age of 38
with no clear heir, breaking the Hapsburg
Dynasty’s hold over the Spanish Empire.
9.
Spain’s Discovery of the Americas led to
Millions of Deaths
Christopher Columbus was an Italian, but he
discovered the Americas in 1492 at the head
of a voyage funded by King Ferdinand and Queen
Isabella of Spain.
Columbus dubbed the natives Indians, having
come to the entirely mistaken conclusion that
he had arrived at the Indies.
Nonetheless, he found the locals to be friendly,
and he was greeted with smiles and gifts.
The natives did not realize that many of them
would not survive the arrival of the strange
newcomers from Europe.
At this point the indigenous population of
the Americas stood at roughly 50 million people.
By the year 1600, scarcely more than a century
later, only around eight million remained.
Warfare certainly played its part in this
catastrophe, and the Spanish conquistadors
weren’t shy about slaughtering and enslaving
natives, but the diseases they brought were
an even deadlier killer.
Measles, cholera, black death, influenza and
more were all introduced by the European invaders.
Without any immunity to these diseases millions
of people died.
Another disease known as cocoliztli struck
in 1545, wiping out another 15 million people.
So many people died in such as short space
of time that it may even have led to global
climate change.
Between the 17th and 19th centuries the world
suffered under the impact of the Little Ice
Age.
Some theories suggest that so much farmland
had been abandoned and reclaimed by nature,
the huge proliferation of trees locked away
carbon and reduced the amount of the greenhouse
gas in the atmosphere.
8.
The Spanish Empire Destroyed the Aztec Empire
Located in modern day Mexico, the heart of
the Aztec Empire was an alliance between three
city states, dominated by the city of Tenochtitlan.
Through aggressive warfare the Aztec Empire
had expanded to encompass 80,000 square miles,
some 500 smaller states, and up to 16 million
people.
The Aztec Empire’s power was such that it
had dominated the region for at least a century,
but it would fall forever within just a few
years of being discovered by Spain.
In 1519 a Spanish Conquistador named Hernan
Cortez landed in Aztec territory at the head
of a small expedition of just 650 men.
Motivated by rumours of vast reserves of gold
and riches, Cortez was prepared to remove
it by force.
Despite their armor, weapons, and horses,
the conquistadors found themselves massively
outnumbered.
However, the Aztec Empire was not popular
amongst many of their subjects, and Cortez
found plenty of local allies willing to throw
their lot in with his conquistadors.
His original force of just 650 men soon swelled
to more than 70,000 strong.
To make matters worse for the Aztec Empire
it suffered a devastating outbreak of smallpox.
When the city of Tenochtitlan fell in 1521
the invaders found the streets piled high
with the dead and dying.
7.
The Spanish Empire Destroyed the Incan Empire
It’s something of a rarity for one empire
to destroy another, but in the Americas the
Spanish managed it twice almost simultaneously.
Up until the arrival of the Spanish conquistadors
the fortunes of Atahualpa, Emperor of the
Incan Empire, had been on the up-and-up.
Appointed governor by his brother, he’d
betrayed and defeated his sibling in the Incan
civil war.
Things were, however, about to go very badly
for him and the Incan Empire in Peru.
In 1532 Atahualpa received word that a small
group of strangers were advancing into his
lands.
Since he was at hand with an army of 80,000
men, with the ability to call upon many more,
the Incan emperor failed to recognize he was
in any real danger.
Splitting his army and accompanied by just
5,000 of his men, he agreed to meet with the
small advancing force of just 168 heavily
armed and armored Spaniards.
Atahualpa arrived somewhat the worse for wear
for alcohol and stumbled blindly into a trap.
What followed was more of a massacre than
a battle.
Thousands of his Incan warriors were killed
or fled, while the conquistadors didn’t
lose a single man.
In an attempt to buy his freedom, or perhaps
just to save his life, Atahualpa offered to
fill a large room once with gold and then
twice over with silver.
He was as good as his word, but even this
wasn’t enough to save him.
The conquistadors executed Atahualpa, believing
him too dangerous to be left alive.
Threatened with being burned alive, which
he believed would rob him of his soul, Atahualpa
converted to Christianity in exchange for
being strangled to death.
The Spaniards crowned Atahualpa’s brother
as emperor, but he was nothing more than a
puppet ruler installed to help rob the Incan
Empire of its treasures.
6.
The Spanish Inquisition Destroyed Lives
In the Spanish Empire it generally paid to
come from a long line of Catholics.
Religious persecution was rife; Jews were
expelled from Spain in 1492, and in 1609 Spain’s
300,000 strong population of Moriscos suffered
the same fate.
Many of them had long since converted to Christianity,
but their ancestors had been Muslims, and
this was enough to condemn them to banishment.
The Spanish Inquisition was the tool used
to carry out this cleansing.
While it was by no means the only inquisition
at work, the Spanish Inquisition’s infamy
overshadows all others.
Its purpose, which it carried out with a fanatical
devotion, was to defend and purify the Catholic
faith, root out heretics, and enforce God’s
justice.
Established in 1478, the Spanish Inquisition
operated in all of Spain’s many territories
and colonies, and it is widely remembered
as one of history’s most brutal organizations.
According to some estimates the Spanish Inquisition
may have tortured and murdered more than a
million people.
The Spanish Inquisition’s reputation has
recently undergone something of a rehabilitation.
Many historians now believe the organisation
had been victim of a highly effective propaganda
campaign undertaken by the English.
It may be that as few as 125,000 people were
tried, with only around 1% of those being
executed.
If this is accurate then it’s a definite
improvement, but little consolation for those
who did lose their life for the crime of following
the wrong religion.
5.
The Spanish Empire Took Millions of Slaves
In 1518 King Charles I, who was not only King
of Spain but also Holy Roman Emperor and Archduke
of Austria, signed an edict permitting Spanish
ships to transport slaves directly from Africa
to the Americas.
It was the first time that African slaves
were taken to the Americas without first passing
through a European port, but it would not
be the last.
The Spanish Empire was by no means the only
European power to profit through slavery,
but it was one of the pioneers, and amongst
the last to abandon the practice.
It’s estimated that around 12.5 million
Africans were enslaved and transported to
the Americas.
Conditions on the ships were so poor that
perhaps as many as 2 million didn’t survive
the journey.
The Spanish Empire by no means limited itself
to African victims.
Millions of local Indians were also enslaved,
with huge numbers forced into the lucrative
silver mines that became big business in South
America.
Just one of these, Cerro Rico, which means
“Rich Mountain” in Spanish, yielded 40,000
tons of silver for the Spanish Empire before
it was finally exhausted after almost 200
years.
Tunnel collapses were commonplace, oxygen
was in short supply deep in the mountains,
and conditions were so harsh that few survived
more than twenty years of underground toil.
It’s estimated that around eight million
slaves lost their lives in the Spanish Empire’s
mines.
4.
The Spanish Armada Could Have Changed the
Course of History
Vast fleets of warships can be a risky project
to sink vast sums of money into.
It only takes one ill-judged or unlucky battle
for that investment to literally sink to the
bottom of the sea.
Despite these risks, in 1585 Philip II of
the Hapsburg Dynasty began work on constructing
the most powerful navy the world had ever
seen.
By some estimates this Spanish Armada would
consume as much as two-thirds of the Spanish
Empire’s entire revenue.
Since the Spanish Empire was at this point,
thanks to the silver and gold flooding in
from the Americas, the wealthiest and most
powerful empire in the world, this represented
an extraordinary amount of money.
The cause of this frantic shipbuilding activity
was largely a religious spat between Philip,
the Catholic ruler of Spain, and Elizabeth
I, England’s Protestant Queen.
Philip’s ambitious goal was to defeat the
English at sea, transport an army across the
English Channel, spark a rebellion amongst
English Catholics, and topple his troublesome
protestant rival.
Philip’s newly constructed navy was finally
ready by 1588, but his invasion was a disaster.
The ships of the Spanish Armada boasted vastly
more firepower than their English opponents,
but the faster and more manoeuvrable English
ships carried the day.
Only 5 of Spain’s 130 ships were lost in
battle, but many were forced to cut their
anchors and flee.
Without their anchors, the Spanish ships were
at the mercy of storms as they attempted to
make the long journey around Scotland and
towards the safety of home.
30,000 men had set out.
A mere 10,000 of them ever returned.
Had Philip’s invasion succeeded there would
most likely never have been a British Empire,
and the course of world history would have
played out very differently.
3.
Spain Still Managed to go Bankrupt
The Spanish Empire’s conquest of so much
of the Americas, and the theft of so much
of its riches, turned it into an economic
and military powerhouse.
However, very few of the Spanish people benefitted
from this huge influx of wealth, and much
of the great fortune was squandered.
Incompetent leadership, expensive wars, the
cost of the Spanish Armada itself, and a deeply
unfair taxation system that placed the burden
almost entirely on the poorest members of
society all played their part.
Spain’s problems multiplied as her rulers
either didn’t understand or didn’t care
about the impact of inflation.
As ships laden with gold and silver arrived
prices rose, and the relative value of the
incoming riches diminished.
With her economy failing, and the impact of
droughts and the Little Ice Age being felt,
in 1607 the Spanish government declared a
moratorium on their debts.
Spain was effectively bankrupt.
The Spanish Empire was far from finished,
but its strength and influence was beginning
to wane.
2.
The Spanish Empire’s Brutality Helped Cost
her its Colonies
Spain’s early lead in discovering the Americas
established the Spanish Empire as the most
powerful empire in the world.
It was said to be the empire on which the
sun never sets, a phrase now more often attributed
to the British Empire which later came to
dominate a significant portion of the globe.
While the conquest of the Americas might have
been a blessing, at least for the richest
and most powerful families in Spain, although
certainly not for many of the natives, it
became something of a curse.
Spain’s population fell throughout the 1600s
as people left to make a new life in the Americas.
The longer they remained, the less new generations
considered themselves to be Spaniards.
The local populations, meanwhile, were understandably
not favorably disposed to the Spanish Empire
which had enslaved them and their ancestors
and stolen their wealth.
Independence movements gained strength in
many of the Spanish Empire’s colonies.
Simultaneously, and closer to home, Spain
came under attack in her home territory from
Napoleon Bonaparte, one of history’s most
brilliant military commanders.
1.
The Spanish Empire Pioneered the Use of Concentration
Camps
In 1895-1898 the island of Cuba was the stage
for one of the bloodiest revolts against the
rule of the Spanish Empire.
General Valeriano Weyler was sent from Spain
to crush the uprising.
His brutal methods soon earned him the nickname
of “the Butcher”.
The Cubans were fighting a guerilla war, deploying
hit and run tactics against the Spanish soldiers
before melting away and hiding amongst the
civilian population.
The invention of barbed wire in 1874 had made
it far easier for a relatively small number
of guards to imprison large numbers of people.
Weyler decided to use it, forcing hundreds
of thousands of civilians into concentration
camps.
Conditions were appalling, and more than 150,000
people died from starvation and disease.
Weyler was none the less unable to defeat
the uprising, and Cuba broke away from Spain
in 1898.
