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4 - Mining in colonial Spanish America

from PART TWO - ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL STRUCTURES: SPANISH AMERICA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Peter Bakewell
Affiliation:
University of New Mexico
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Summary

‘Gold is the loftiest and most esteemed metal that the earth brings forth… Among other virtues which nature has bestowed on it, one is singular – that it comforts the weakness of the heart and engenders joy and magnanimity, takes away melancholy, and clears the eyes of cloudiness…’ So wrote a Spanish goldsmith half a century after the conquest of New Spain. Cortés perhaps spoke with less cynical intent than is often thought when he told Montezuma's messenger, ‘I and my companions suffer from a disease of the heart which can be cured only with gold’. But it was not so much gold as silver that awaited Spain in America. The accumulated gold of centuries was looted during the two decades, 1520–40, which saw the Spanish military conquest of Middle and South America. Thereafter, though gold was mined in varying and often substantial amounts, silver predominated in both volume and value produced.

The search for sources of both metals carried the Spaniards far and wide across the Americas, contributing much to the amazing rapidity with which they explored and settled their portion of the continent. On the promise of gold they first settled the Caribbean; finding little in the islands, they were lured on by golden visions to the Isthmus, then to New Spain, then to Peru. Both New Spain and Peru, as well as the north of New Granada, yielded gold booty. But even before Pizarro received Atahualpa's golden ransom, New Spain had begun to reveal her silver deposits, with discoveries about 1530 at Sultepec and Zumpango, close to Mexico City.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1984

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References

Agricola, Georgius De re metallica (Basle, 1556), Eng. trans. Hoover, Herbert Clark and Hoover, Lou Henry (London, 1912).
Altman, Ida and Lockhart, James (eds.), Provinces of early Mexico (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1976).
Bargalló, Modesto La minería y la metalurgía en la América española durante la época colonial (Mexico, 1955).
Bargalló, Modesto La amalgamatión de los minerales de plata en Hispanoamérica colonial (Mexico, 1969).
Brading, D. A. Miners and merchants in Bourbon Mexico, 1763–1810 (Cambridge, 1971).
de Gómara, Francisco López Cortés. The life of the conqueror by bis secretary (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1966).
Escobar, Alonso la Mota y Descripción geográfica de los reynos de Nsueva Galicia, Nueva Vizcaya y Nuevo León (MS 1605?, Guadalajara, 1966).
Haring, C. H.American gold and silver production in the first half of the sixteenth century’, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 19 (1915).Google Scholar
Jara, AlvaroLa curva de producción de metales monetarios en el Perú en el siglo xvi’, in Tres ensayos sobre economía minera bispanoamericana (Santiago de Chile, 1966).Google Scholar
Villafañe, Juan Arfe y Quilatador de la plata, oro y piedras (Valladolid, 1572; facsimile reproduction, Madrid, 1976).
von Humboldt, Alexander Ensayo politico sobre el reino de la Nueva España (Mexico, 1966), (book 4, ch. 11).

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