Galleon Anxiety: How Afro-Mexican Women Shaped Colonial Spirituality in Acapulco

Abstract Acapulco became a global town during the early seventeenth century, characterized not only by transpacific trade, but also by an increasingly large Afro-Mexican population residing and laboring at the port. A cohort of Afro-Mexican women gained prominence and visibility by delivering accurate predictions on the arrival of galleons to Acapulco. They adapted mixed African and Indigenous divination practices to calm port residents worried about galleon losses on the world's largest ocean. Scholarship on the Spanish Pacific has yet to investigate how the globalization of New Spain through galleon travel affected African and Afro-descendant communities. This article contends that the dangers of Pacific travel, and anxieties about them, frequently exceeded the therapeutic capacities of Catholic dogma. Black women, drawing on the profound West and West Central African estimation of female diviners, practiced clairvoyance to report on the location of galleons and whether they would arrive safely. The confluence of an increasing population of Afro-Mexicans with the economic dynamism of transpacific trade transformed spiritual life at the eastern node of Spain's Pacific empire. Black women positioned themselves at the center of these massive structural transformations and ultimately created new cultures as spiritual authorities in Acapulco.

from the global dynamism of transpacific trade. 4Writing these histories will ultimately uncover and define what constituted the early modern Black Pacific. 5 Alex R. Mayfield and Luz Alejandra Cárdenas Santana have offered important re-readings of Acapulco that accurately recharacterize it as a predominantly Afro-Mexican town during the seventeenth century. 6I argue that Black spiritualists practicing creolized medicine and magic were as fundamental to the lived experience of global Acapulco as the goods that came off the ships.The galleons were more than just conduits of labor, silk, and silver; they were fundamental to the production of knowledge. 7e Manila galleons traversed the most dangerous trade route of the early modern world, and they frequently succumbed to unruly seas.And yet, Acapulco's economic viability depended on their timely arrival.For most of the year, the port's anxious inhabitants watched the blue horizon and waited for any news of ship sightings from up the coast.During the early seventeenth century, in the absence of any indication of the galleon's arrival, a cohort of Afro-Mexican women offered the salve of information.They practiced divination and clairvoyance to predict the location and arrival of the galleons.More than mere superstitions and witchcraft, these women articulated a diasporic and socially mobile identity that reoriented spiritual authority and therefore gendered agency at the port.Thus, the boom-bust realities of life in Acapulco exceeded the therapeutic capacities of Catholic dogma and at the same time gave rise to heterodox spiritual authorities capable of mobilizing Spanish folk traditions, Indigenous spiritualities, and West and West Central African ritual. 8Most often, these leaders were Afro-Mexican women, which signals, on one hand, the understudied and yet fundamental importance of transpacific travel to the Black communities of Mexico's Pacific coast and, on the other, how Black women in such communities responded with innovation to a rapidly globalizing colonial world.This article tracks the port's development as a predominantly Black and therefore socially transgressive space, the dynamism of which produced the first mention of using divination to locate a galleon, in 1584.This article benefits from a rich scholarship, pioneered by Gonzalo Aguirre Beltrán, that foregrounds Africans and Afro-descendants as generative forces in colonial societies of the circum-Caribbean and New Spain. 9Showing them to be more than purely reactive subjects locked into a frame of oppression and resistance, scholars like Pablo Gómez have argued that enslaved and free Africans quickly adapted to colonial realities of the Caribbean tropics and highlands of Central Mexico. 10Afro-Mexicans accumulated juridical knowledge and linguistic proficiencies, formed maroon communities, founded religious confraternities, negotiated complex social hierarchies, experimented with local pharmacological cultures, and joined and led vibrant spiritual practices. 11In ports, Indigenous towns ( pueblos de indios), urban centers, mining colonies, plantations, and on mule trains en route to distant outposts, Africans and Afro-descendants unquestionably shaped the fabric of daily life in colonial Latin America. 12Locating Acapulco within this exciting scholarship highlights the port's prevailing importance during the eight months (or so) outside the trade season-the time of year colonial administrators designated the site as an intolerably unproductive and inhospitable backwater.From April to December, most of Acapulco's residents engaged with diverse multiethnic traditions that thrived beyond the Catholic church's narrow frame of acceptable religiosity.This article begins by considering the intersections of labor demands and social demographics at the transpacific port.The insalubrity of the site, colonial expectations of lucrative trade, and a majority Black population marked Acapulco as a transgressive space.Within this context, I examine how anxiety about the galleon's arrival gave rise to specific practices of divination and clairvoyance.Equally significant are the practitioners themselves and how they mobilized mixed spiritual knowledge to address the unique therapeutic needs of the port town.In so doing, I connect gendered West Central African divinatory customs and Indigenous pharmacology to the emergence of creolized Afro-Mexican spiritual communities in Acapulco.This analysis relies primarily on Inquisition denunciations and witness testimony.Though highly mediated texts, they nonetheless provide a window through which to examine otherwise undocumented social and cultural phenomena of New Spanish society. 13apulco was undeniably an epicenter of some of the most important developments in early modern global history, from unprecedented material exchange to transpacific mobility.Amid the hustle and bustle of loading and unloading the ships, other significant happenings transpired in the homes of free Black innkeepers, on nearby plantations, and on the quiet streets after nightfall.Both free and enslaved Africans and Afro-descendants like Tomas Mandinga, Cathalina Gonzalez de Santiago, Juana Moya, Cecilia, and numerous others accused of witchcraft (brujería and hechicería) and divination dominated daily spirituality at the port. 14With a couple of exceptions, all were women, socially mobile, and free.
By forming new solidarities around their spiritual knowledge, some women became visible and widely respected members of the port community.They enacted rituals involving cracking eggs into water, consuming the Indigenous hallucinogen ololiuhqui, creating love potions with herbs and menstrual blood, and using clairvoyance to ascertain the location of distant ships, whose position in the world's largest ocean was unknown.Their practices synthesized and adapted Afro-diasporic beliefs with origins in numerous African cosmological system, primarily West Central African, from the Bakongo and Mbundu peoples.They provided a necessary spiritual sustenance to the port town that it could not acquire through its limited Catholic presence and ceremonies.These individuals were innovators and collaborators, and their influence and knowledge typified life at the eastern edge of the Spanish Pacific world.

ANXIETY IN ACAPULCO, AN AFRO-MEXICAN PORT TOWN
A yearly volley of one to two galleons from Cavite, near Manila, would typically arrive sometime between December (during a good year) and February or March (during a bad year).They often failed to show up entirely.Those that did had often sustained considerable damage and loss of life.In 1613, the crown estimated that it had lost eight million pesos in ships and goods to the tumultuous Pacific, just since 1602. 15Each sunken ship represented hundreds of deaths by drowning.Crews, passengers, and residents on both sides of the Pacific lived with these grisly possibilities.
As they crept south along the Mexican coast, galleons that survived the crossing stopped in Navidad, several days' sail north of Acapulco, where they would unload a messenger (gentilhombre) to announce their arrival and any urgent news.Reports from scouts further up the coast, along with these messengers, would be the first notices of the galleon's arrival to reach the viceregal capital, Mexico City. 16Church bells would toll across the city in a gesture of thanksgiving.Once the galleon anchored in Acapulco, another messenger would ride swiftly to announce its formal arrival at port, upon which the church bells in the capital would ring out again. 17These were moments of spectacular celebration.
The most prolific early-mid colonial period diarists of Mexico City (Domingo Francisco de San Antón Muñón Chimalpahin Quauhtlehuanitzin, Gregorio Martín de Guijo, and Antonio de Robles) obsessively recorded the comings and goings of these galleons, the news they carried, the notable characters disembarking, and the state of transpacific trade. 18As early as 1574, Mexico City's cosmopolitan elite had begun marveling at the quantity, quality, and variety of Chinese goods available in the city. 19Bernardo de Balbuena delivered the best-known and most elegant stanzas on the transformative quality of the galleons on Mexico City culture and identity in his Grandeza mexicana (1604).Concluding his praise of transpacific trade, he wrote, "Mexico to the world equally divides/ and like the sun the earth to it inclines/ and in all it seems that it presides/ . . .With all it trades and corresponds/ And at its shops stores and warehouses/ the best of these worlds flows." 20From the comfort of the viceregal capital, the galleons represented opulence, luxury, and grandeur.The material cultures they seeded formed a uniquely New Spanish colonial identity and imaginary.The strength of the metropole depended on the galleons' arrival.But this was only part of the story.
Both Spanish secular and ecclesiastical authorities considered port cities to be notorious sites of spiritual infraction.They were contact zones, entrepôts of notable social diversity, from taverns of blasphemous sailors to the warehouses of wealthy merchants. 21As the crossroads through which Spain traveled to the Indies, Seville was the epicenter of the picaresque tradition, inspired by its seedy underworld of thrill-seekers, contrabandists, pickpockets, and globetrotters. 22In particular, the Triana neighborhood boasted an international multiethnic community of dockworkers and sailors who manned the galleons departing every year for the Americas. 23These seamen were the "fex maris (dregs of the sea)," rabble-rousers and miscreants, among whom loose words and looser breeches could consistently be found. 24Acapulco's history and demographics exacerbated this perception of ports as both socially and culturally subversive.Spanish settlement at Acapulco dates to a simple shipyard operation in 1528.The site was strategically desirable for both the safety and depth of its harbor, which was such that ships could be moored by tying them to trees by the waterside. 25his undertaking would grow into a small town by 1550, on the backs of enslaved Indigenous and African laborers.After Acapulco attained the monopoly on transpacific trade in 1573, Spaniards began mobilizing enslaved Africans in larger numbers to travel into the hot lowlands to service the ships and attend to sailors and passengers. 26The "extreme heat" reflecting off the mountains into the basin, the poor soil, and the lack of fresh water meant that Spaniards considered enslaved Africans uniquely suited to labor in this harsh terrain. 27is influx of bondsmen and women coincided with the years of the Iberian Union (1580-1640) and the Portuguese asiento (monopoly) in 1595, both of which significantly increased the numbers of enslaved Africans disembarking at New Spain's Atlantic-facing port, Veracruz.Over 84 percent of the legally registered enslaved were West Central Africans, identified at the time as primarily from Angola, Congo, Benguela, Anchico, and Malemba. 28According to Pablo Sierra Silva, "a West Central African captive headed to Nueva Veracruz would spend approximately ten weeks within a given slave ship," though, he notes, the journey could last as long as 15 weeks in unruly seas. 29These men, women, and children quickly outnumbered the Senegambian enslaved African population that predominated in New Spain during the mid sixteenth century. 30e Portuguese Luis Mendes de Vasconcelos's war against the Ndongo from 1618 to 1621 resulted in a spike in West Central African captives and corresponded to the most intense period of slave trading to New Spain. 31iasporic identities tended to cluster around shared linguistic and cultural traits across Bantu-speaking West Central Africa. 32Over time, the Black population in New Spain eventually transitioned into an increasingly American-born, mixed, and free demographic with extensive networks in enslaved, Indigenous, and mixed communities.As Afro-Mexicans poured into Acapulco, they became the largest population sector and easily outnumbered the Spaniards who remained during the off-season-a mere 70 in 1622.Simultaneously, the Indigenous population faced the ravages of disease, forced labor, and displacement, and by 1643, tributaries in Acapulco had declined to 185. 33ce a galleon had successfully navigated the Boca Chica channel to anchor at port, the Afro-Mexicans of Acapulco crowded onto launches pushing off the beach toward the sea-worn vessels.They transported crates upon crates of valuable silks, ceramics, textiles, and furniture.They accompanied enslaved Asians (called chinos upon arrival) and East Africans en route to be sold.They escorted dying sailors (mostly Filipinos), the exiled, grateful missionaries, administrators, and petitioners ashore. 34Survivors of the passage rushed to the Hospital de Nuestra Señora de la Consolación or to mass at the parish church if they were able. 35Black innkeepers and laborers profited from their monopoly on hospitality and services (and the desperation of sailors and travelers) to charge exorbitant rates for housing, portage, and water. 36As they acquired their freedom, Black women with years of experience in service and domestic settings gradually came to control these critical industries.From Acapulco to Callao, the labor of both enslaved and free Africans and Afro-descendants made ports and trade along Spanish America's Pacific coasts economically and infrastructurally viable. 37e castellan of the Fort of San Diego would similarly rush to sequester sailors' trunks and confiscate the goods of those who had perished at sea. 38 Seeking fortune, hundreds, if not thousands, converged on the port: muleteers, merchants, friars, beggars, and enslaved retinues. 39The trade even brought unique opportunities to socially mobile Afro-Mexicans like Juan de Zaldívar, who by 1642 had accumulated an estate of over 12,000 pesos operating a mule train across the rugged highlands separating Veracruz and Acapulco. 40melli Careri's surprise at discovering the quantity of "dark mulattos" in Acapulco was not exceptional. 41The world-traveling Spanish missionary Pedro Cubero reported in his Peregrinacion del Mvndo (1682) that Acapulco's "residents [habitadores] are negros, like Cafres [kaffirs, East Africans]." 42ubero's identification of negros with cafres is a sure reference to the influx of enslaved East Africans displaced through the Indian Ocean world and sent to Acapulco for sale in Central Mexico.Though few in number during the seventeenth century, their presence was especially pronounced around the turn of the eighteenth century after the formal ban on transpacific slave trading of Asians to the Americas in 1672 left East Africans as virtually the only enslaved passengers aboard the Manila galleons. 43capulco's Afro-Mexican population tended to live concentrated in a neighborhood called the Barrio de Guinea. 44They were the porters, dockworkers, enslaved servants and laborers, innkeepers, healers, and cowboys (vaqueros). 45During Carnival, after the mule trains laden with Asian goods departed, Gemelli Careri wrote: Negros, mulatos, and mestizos of Acapulco, after eating, ran Parejas [pairs] with more than 100 horses and so well, that it seemed that they surpassed by far the great [horsemen] that I had seen run in Madrid . . .It is not a myth that those negros ran an Italian mile, grasping each other by hand or embraced, without ever separating themselves or splitting up in that whole space.Others at a gallop picked up a hat on the ground. 46ring the seventeenth century, animal herding, riding, and caretaking had become distinctly Afro-Mexican professions, from agricultural estates to the bullfighting of Mexico City. 47Such communities were often known for rituals of divination and good fortune closely tied to Indigenous pharmacology and mixed-tradition spiritualities. 48servations of large Black populations in New Spain fed into a discourse of fear around their perceived allegiance (or lack thereof) to colonial authorities.For example, a decree from 1578 described negros, mulatos, and mestizos as "universally inclined to evil." 49 In 1608, many of Mexico City's Black "residents participated in a mock 'coronation' of a black king and queen," sparking a full investigation into an alleged conspiracy to displace Spanish colonial authorities. 50These tensions in the viceregal capital reached a feverish pitch after an abusive enslaver murdered an enslaved African woman at the end of 1611 and over a thousand Afro-Mexicans protested her death.By 1612, Spanish hysteria produced the condemnation of 28 men and seven women for alleged conspiracy against the colonial regime.The denounced hanged publicly; 29 of the 35 were subsequently decapitated and the other six quartered. 5144.Furlong, "Peasants, Servants, and Sojourners, 468."Guinea" here does not refer to ethnicity or even a specific geographic region, but all of Africa.45.Contributing to Spanish anxieties at the port were the forzados (multiethnic convict laborers) sent nearly every year to Acapulco for deportation to the Philippines.Stephanie Mawson calculates that New Spanish officials deported an average of 48 forzados via Acapulco each year during the seventeenth century. 52Forzados were typically poor Spaniards and mixed individuals, taken for criminals, sexual deviants, and vagabonds.They sometimes escaped en route to Acapulco, marking the road north to Mexico City as a space of subversion and transgression that officials attempted to curb through aggressive urban planning and customs checkpoints. 53The brutality of the journey from Mexico City to Acapulco frequently produced flight from bondage and blasphemy as protest.The 1612 case of the forzado Francisco de Santiago, a mulato from Abrantes in Portugal, is indicative.His ride on muleback was evidently so painful that, by the time he reached Tixtla (halfway), he could not but renounce God. 54On the same trip, another forzado, Melchor Gomez, escaped to an Indigenous town near Puebla but was captured and imprisoned. 55fforts to curb infractions on the road amounted to little, as the testimony of Joseph Ventura, an enslaved mulato of Taxco, attests.In 1700 at the Omitlan River, just east of the official route, Ventura came across a dark ( prieto) mulato named Antonio Santiago, who offered him an herb with the power to sleep with any woman.When Ventura refused, Santiago threatened to kill him. 56e limited missionary presence in Acapulco did little to ameliorate spiritual infractions.Although the town swelled with a seasonal influx that ranged from 22 to as many as 142 zealous missionaries and clergy en route to Asia, few remained during the off-season. 57Those who did heard sporadic reports of troubling behavior and disturbances against the strictures of Catholic faith.For example, by 1590 an old Spaniard named Pedro de Balmaceda acquired a reputation as a seducer of married women. 58Sailors regularly blasphemed, like Antonio de Herrera, a Portuguese sailor who in 1604 was so distraught by the pelagic traumas of the Pacific passage that, upon arrival, he tried to kill himself.While recovering in the home of Ysabel Muñoz (morena), he said to two Spanish sailors that "God died on the cross for the dark-skinned ( prieto) and the white-skinned (blanco) and for the small (chico) and the big (grande)." 59enunciations for such blasphemous pronouncements were, in fact, so common that they almost never proceeded to a full trial.Herrera was merely ordered to confess to the vicar, which he seems to have evaded by returning to the galleon.
Cases of transpacific bigamy were not uncommon as well.In 1609, a chino named Agustin married a mulata in Colima, but another chino living in Chacala along the Colima coast testified that Agustin had already married his aunt in the Philippines. 60In 1648, a Dominican missionary overheard the watchman of a Manila galleon bragging to two sailors that he had married twice: first in Spain and then to an Indigenous female leader (india principala) in the Visayas, Philippines. 61As a final example, in 1669 a Filipino servant named Baltazar Melchor married an enslaved mulata of his employer's estate (hacienda) named Bernarda de los Reyes.However, many Black innkeepers in Acapulco had heard from numerous Filipino sailors staying with them that Melchor had already been married in Lolo, in Cagayan, Philippines, to a Fulana Sinio. 62As in many cases of transoceanic bigamy, the Inquisition failed to verify if the overseas spouse was still alive and so did not punish.
Inquisition records make clear that spiritual infractions in Acapulco's multiethnic community were common, but as we first learned from Gemelli Careri and Cubero, it was the Afro-Mexican population that caused officials and travelers the most worry.In 1660, a Captain Pablo de Carrascosa informed the Inquisition in an alarmed letter that "the largest part of the citizens [vecinos] of this port [Acapulco] [are] dark people [gente parda], mulatos, and negros" and that they did not obey ecclesiastical reprobation (censuras) to return stolen property "due to ignorance or extreme malice." 63The response ordered negros, mestizos, and mulatos to obey the censuras under threat of excommunication and 200 lashes."People of better quality [calidad] and Spaniards" would receive a fine of 200 pesos and temporary exile. 64. "Morena" was a softer term than negra, often used by socially mobile Afro-Mexicans to distance themselves from a term that automatically implied slavery.Sierra  64."que examinare si fueren negros mestizos y mulatos además de imponerles pena de excomunión se le podrá ordenar se les imponga también de doscientos azotes . . .y si fueren personas de mejor calidad y españoles de 200 p It was precisely the simultaneous obsession with the arrival of the galleons, fear of Afro-Mexicans, the vibrant culture of port-related infractions, and multiethnic convergence that ultimately created the demand and the supply for the teeming world of ship clairvoyance and divination that dominated the social culture of the port during the early-mid seventeenth century.A handful of Afro-Mexican women placed themselves at the nexus of this dynamic activity.

THE VITALITY OF DIVINATION
The colonial economy of Central Mexico depended, in large part, on the successful arrival of the galleons, and Acapulco was no exception.Desperate for information on a ship's location, the port's residents frequently turned to Afro-Mexican healers and diviners for otherworldly information.Clairvoyance expresses both the tenuousness of early modern life in a port dependent on long-distance trade and the spiritual vitality that salved such anxieties.
By the early seventeenth century, Spanish men and women in Central Mexico regularly approached Indigenous and Afro-Mexican diviners for remedies to life's woes. 65Indeed, as María Elena Martínez writes, "The linkage of persons of African ancestry with occult practices and in particular with the Devil was one of the main tropes of Spanish colonial racial ideology." 66Major sites of Afro-diasporic and creolized spirituality like Veracruz had already caught ecclesiastical attention for the fame of their practitioners.A "professional witch" like Leonor de Islas in New Spain's Atlantic-facing port combined Indigenous pharmacology and knowledge with West and West Central African ritual. 67oing so presented no cosmological contradiction, and indeed, differentiating Indigenous and African spiritual practices in these sources is "notoriously difficult" as, often, all are simultaneously present. 68Becoming a spiritual authority represented an inversion of gendered colonial agency, "a way to survive in an increasingly cash-oriented economy," and a global convergence of spiritual intellectualism. 69 an example, the testimony of Ana Maria Vazquez (negra libre criolla) against Veracruz innkeeper Adriana Ruiz de Cabrera (negra libre criolla) described a [eso]s y destierro."Miguel de Loreto denuncia al santo tribunal el poco caso que hacen de las censuras de la iglesia los vecinos de Acapulco, Acapulco, 1660, AGN, Inquisición, vol.439, exp.20 ritual divination to locate a thief using seawater, green herbs, and paper with ritual markings like rhumb lines (raias, números, y estrellas al modo de una carta de marear).Although the Inquisition ultimately discarded Vazquez's denunciation in the face of Cabrera's overtures of Hispanicization, the use of water and herbs to discover a criminal is precisely the work of the Bakongo nganga-sènso (spirit medium with a pot). 70The reference to sacred script that appeared like rhumb lines is a likely reference to the dikenga (also called Twendwa kia Nza-n'kongo, or the Four Moments of the Sun), a Kongo cosmogram used in divination, which appears as "four cardinal points at the tips of two lines arranged in cross formation, similar to a compass." 71Read counter-clockwise, it symbolizes continuing cycles of death and rebirth, with the vertical Mukula line signifying the transfer of knowledge from the world of the dead to that of the living.Such Afro-diasporic adaptations would reemerge and develop in distinct ways in response to Acapulco's galleon anxiety during the early seventeenth century.
The first reference to ship divination in Acapulco dates to 1584.An enslaved bozal (recently arrived, considered unassimilated) negro named Tomas Mandinga, 70 years old, acquired a reputation in Acapulco for curing the enslaved, Indigenous peoples, and Spaniards with roots and herbs.He testified that he would use "guayacan de ginea . . .which is of his land" by chewing and cooking it to cure. 72Among his powers, he successfully predicted that the "Cacao ship" (from Peru) would arrive soon "and it happened that it entered in under four or five days." 73This prediction coincided with the early growth of a hemispheric economy driven by wealthy Limeño investment in trade with Acapulco to access Asian wares. 74 another occasion, when asked when ships would arrive in Acapulco, he answered that the ships would not come because they were at "Concorate Beach." 75His ability to divine the location of ships en route to Acapulco even extended to individuals on those ships.A Spaniard, Diego Núñez de Sevilla, once asked when his daughter, Maria de Celada, would arrive in Acapulco.Tomas Mandinga answered only that Celada would not arrive in a frigate ( fragata) but in a larger ship.Although we have no information about specific rituals, Tomas Mandinga's powers brought together a diverse community desperate for information about maritime arrivals.He supplied answers, and accurately.An old man, Tomas Mandinga allegedly passed on his knowledge to a Lucia Mandinga, possibly a relative.
Although the presence of an ethnonym may not indicate more than colonial stereotypes about African peoples and geographies, Tomas's transfer of knowledge to Lucia may have followed traditions identified with the Mandinka, a construction of peoples who had migrated west from former centers of the Mali Empire. 76Female Mandinka specialists in magic and divination were called nieguanmuso and were regularly consulted after natural disasters and moments of misfortune. 77Perhaps Tomas recognized Lucia as a transatlantic nieguanmuso and appropriate bearer of divination and healing knowledge.
As the port became more enmeshed in a burgeoning transpacific economy, those who could procure information on the galleons rose to prominence.During the 1620s, several Afro-Mexican sorceresses caught the attention of Acapulco's residents and ecclesiastical authorities, at the same time that Black women elsewhere had begun to appear at disproportionate rates in Inquisition cases for divination, healing, and witchcraft. 78The timing also coincides with the most intense period of slave trading to New Spain and the demographic shift from an Indigenous to a West Central African and Afro-descendant population in Acapulco. 79at Black women came to supply answers to the port's most pressing questions was no accident.West Central African communities held transatlantic gendered traditions that transplanted into New Spanish culture.Women were considered pillars of their communities.They safeguarded life as mothers and guardians in the worlds of both the living and the dead. 80They were often initiated alongside men as banganga (spirit mediums, literal expert, singular nganga) after their first menstruation cycle, like the famous Kongolese Antonian, Doña Beatriz Kimpa Vita, in the late seventeenth century. 81As mothers, they could acquire the title ngudi nganga (mother spirit medium), and were masters of the spirit world. 82Banganga served as healers, mediators, and problem-solvers for both individuals and their communities, investigating social and economic matters just as they would heal a patient. 83aling rituals revolved around balancing one's fortunes and misfortunes to restore health to a state of order and harmony.Actualizing these ideals required knowledge of ritualistic purification, divine mediumship, trances, dream interpretation, animal sacrifice, and divine invocation through music, talismans, charms, and fetishes (minkisi in Kikongo). 84For example, mediumistic practices of Luunda and Yaka divination conjured ngoomb (ancestral spirit) to provide consultations and solutions to balance fortunes. 85Knowledge transfer of divinatory rites often occurred through ancestral, matrilineal inheritance and the bangudi banganga (pl.) who presided over initiation. 86Practitioners or priests were known as xingila in Kimbundu and as nganga ngombo (spirit medium or diviner) in Kikongo.The effectiveness of cures and prognostications gave legitimacy to the practitioner. 87ring the late sixteenth century, both male and female banganga rose to prominence in the Kingdom of Ndongo under the reign of Ngola Kilombo kia Kasenda (r.1575-92), who relied on spirit mediums for protection and advice. 88 enforced. 89In the Americas, women with divinatory and healing knowledge led cults of ritual sacrifice, hallucinogenic consumption, spiritual possession, healing, love magic, protection, and of course, numerous forms of divination and clairvoyance.Continuing and adapting such practices in the Americas was fundamental to community and the construction of authority among marginalized and enslaved peoples. 90e first denunciations against Afro-Mexican women in Acapulco came against a Cecilia (negra) laboring in the Hospital Real.We know about these women because an inquisitor named Antonio Gutiérrez arrived in Acapulco in 1621 after reading reports that "the priests of the port too easily absolved cases of witchcraft."Gutiérrez was particularly concerned with collecting testimony from both the previous several years and the years of his tenure about women diviners who conjured, practiced mediumship, and hallucinated. 91In 1617, an old Spaniard, Domingo de Alberias, had testified that Cecilia gave him unusually specific information when he asked her about the Manila galleons.As a woman in the employ of the Hospital Real, she would have had regular access to sailors and travelers staying there during the trade season, as well as to the ecclesiastical community tending to the hospital and moving through its social circles.As such, she participated in Acapulco's hospitality sector, which free Black women had come to control from at least 1584. 92In response to the old Spaniard's query about the galleons, Cecilia said that the almiranta (vice-flagship) was lost at sea without mast and the sailors dead, which turned out to be true. 93 1620, during a quiet evening, Cecilia had noticed that the Dominican missionary Domingo Martinez wandered about, upset that the galleons were late.To console him, she said, "Child (hijo), do not be sad.Two ships are coming, and they left from the Philippines."Surprised, the Dominican asked why the ships were taking so long.Cecilia replied, "Because the pilot was new on the route, he gave little sail and navigated little."Martinez asked if many had died.Cecilia said, "Many of the cabin boys [grumetes] who had embarked had died."Finally, Martinez wondered if any of his religious order were coming.Cecilia replied that she "had not noticed so much as that."The wife of 89.Giovanni Antonio Cavazzi da Montecuccolo, "Missione evangelica al Regno de Congo," Book 2.8, John K. Thornton, trans., Boston University, http://www.bu.edu/afam/people/faculty/john-thornton/john-thorntons-africantexts/, a ship captain also reported that Cecilia told Martinez that the capitana (flagship) would arrive before the almiranta, due to the pilot's inexperience. 94is conversation exemplifies the therapeutic structure of ship divination for anxious port inhabitants.It further inverts, genders, and racializes the father-son framework of Catholic ritual and rhetoric.The Manila galleons failed to arrive in 1619, inciting the Dominican Martinez to worry about the fate of his colleagues returning from far-off lands.The progression of questions leaned towards specificity, beyond simply if the ships would arrive or not.The limit of Cecilia's clairvoyance came when Martinez asked if Dominicans were aboard; she could not reassure him, although she had seen that cabin boys (predominantly Filipinos) had died.Her answers were direct, her language motherly-recalling the functions of the ngudi nganga -and her clairvoyance taken to be true.The captain's wife reported that Cecilia gave the same answer that year to many others who approached her with questions.The apparent inaccuracy of her 1620 prediction evidently did not tarnish her reputation, since her answers were considered correct most of the time.Although Cecilia was also known for divining the location of hidden or buried treasure and familiarity with rock idols (perhaps references to stone spirits known as bisembi and bankita), it was divining the position and state of the Manila galleons that gave her public renown in Acapulco. 95cilia also occasionally collaborated with the other Afro-Mexican women denounced for divination and clairvoyance during the same years. 96During the 1620s, an interconnected group of Black women gained notoriety for their healing and divination.The apparent ringleaders were the cousins Cathalina Gonzalez de Santiago and Isabel de Urrego, free mulatas, though Santiago was both a citizen of the port and slave owner as well.In their circle were Juana Maria (negra and morena), Madalena (enslaved mulata), Juana Moya (mulata), and Sebastiana Juarez (española [Spaniard]), with several other mulata and india collaborators.These women supported each other materially with herbs, socially with secrecy, and spiritually with guidance and solutions.They frequently spent time out of the port town in el monte (un-Hispanicized land) and a place across the bay called Icacos.
These women adapted their spiritual and material lives to the realities of the galleon trade.For example, Santiago once swallowed an entire nutmeg (imported from the Spice Islands), passed it, cleaned it, and put it in the daily chocolate drinks of men.She also used dog semen and menstrual blood in her chocolate-drink love magic potions. 97Juana Maria was known for her connection to animals and insects-including keeping a live caiman under her bed-and in 1607 had been seen with a beetle that was "very large and seemed nothing like those from here."The beetle had apparently been brought live from the Philippines on a galleon, and Juana Maria ate it to treat heart trouble (mal de corazón), implying knowledge exchange and an informal economy between her and Filipino sailors. 98These intellectual and experiential convergences typified Afro-Asian encounters in New Spain. 99casionally, the women sought to seduce transient sailors, as Isabel de Urrego did to Pedro Juarez from Peru.She had him ingest her cooked menstrual blood in his chocolate drink and buried three of his hairs, wrapped in special leaves from a nearby lake, at his door, so that "he would never leave the said Isabel de Urrego." 100 Using love magic to make a temporary relationship permanent was another form of spiritual therapy for galleon-induced anxiety.
Although Cathalina Gonzalez de Santiago was not known primarily for divining the location of the Manila galleons, she did so on at least one occasion.In 1618, Santiago performed a dance at her cousin's house with several other women in the presence of a cooper (tonelero) named Andres Garcia and others.The testimony does not reveal the dance's purpose, but the Afro-Atlantic context suggests spirit mediumship.After performing the dance, Santiago said, "Women, take ease.Two ships are coming, one big and one small."Her prediction "happened later." 101Like Cecilia, Santiago's answers followed in West Central African mediumship traditions of giving brief and direct answers during divination queries. 102Since the galleons of 1617 failed to arrive, 1618 was an anxious year for the port.The galleons would have to arrive to maintain the port's economic viability.Santiago's words undoubtedly fell on grateful ears, and her prediction spread widely through the port, even among the garrison stationed at the fort. 103e principal galleon seer connected to the group, though, was the enslaved mulata Madalena, who divined using an Indigenous spiritual hallucinogen called ololiuhqui.She was among the first Black women in New Spain to learn the ritual consumption of the drug from the Indigenous of Mexico.The name itself refers to the seeds of a species of morning glory, which were typically ground up, mixed with an alcoholic drink, and consumed in a private setting.
According to Gonzalo Aguirre Beltrán, ololiuhqui usage in the 1620s was concentrated around Mexico, Taxco, Tepecuacuilco, Acapulco, and Chiautla.The seeds, when consumed properly, granted the omniscience of three Nahua gods commonly syncretized with the Catholic god, angels, and/or the Virgin Mary. 104 sometimes happened to other enslaved Africans or Indigenous peoples, Madalena's enslaver (a chino drummer in the garrison) requested she take ololiuhqui to divine the location of the Manila galleons that were expected that year. 105She said that two were coming.A second instance of clairvoyance provides more details.Juana Manuel, a mulata, had need for love magic and divination and so procured ololiuhqui seeds from a Spanish ship-caulker and his wife, who had bought them from a Francisca Bula negra.Juana Manuel then brought the seeds to the local ololiuhqui specialist, Madalena, who had arranged for the group to use a front-room in her enslaver's house for the ritual, around 9 or 10 pm.Madalena made an ointment from the ololiuhqui, which she smeared all over Juana Manuel's chest and face; she then had her drink the rest with the express purpose of divining the location of the ships expected from the Philippines that year.Madalena then lit two wax candles and copal in front of an image of the Virgin Mary.She wrapped herself in a blanket in front of the image, where they were to wait for the spirit of an old indio who would answer all questions.A barking dog and noisy shingles seemed to have disrupted the ritual, and Juana Manuel either never received answers to her questions or refused to disclose more details to the Inquisition. 106emographics and climate that motivated Fray Domingo Fernandez Navarrete and his informants to imagine Acapulco as the "mouth of Hell." 114 Still, more Spaniards and citizens took advantage of the spiritual prowess of these women than despised their non-dogmatic spirituality.Perhaps it was their regional influence and popularity that would inspire an old india zahorí (clairvoyant and geomancer) to offer information about the Manila galleons in Tixtla in 1650.Using different techniques, the unnamed india arrived at similar answers to similar questions.She divined through the stars that two ships were coming.She said, "The one [ship] came tossed about with much risk of being lost the past January of this year," and that it "was on the coast of Zacatula" and would arrive in two weeks.On another occasion, she predicted that only one ship would come the first week of Quaresma. 115The india required money for the predictions and claimed that she called on God's aid for information.Given the trajectory of Afro-Mexican clairvoyance in Acapulco during the 1620s, this may be one of the few documented instances during the seventeenth century of an Indigenous woman participating in a spiritual economy first developed by Afro-Mexicans in New Spain.
Although ship divination ceased to be documented in Acapulco after the 1620s, diarists in Mexico City recorded its sporadic continuance in central Mexico during the second half of the seventeenth century.On Sunday, August 8, 1655, Gregorio Martín de Guijo logged the following: and this day they say that the tribunal of the Inquisition imprisoned some mulatas who said that the fleet of San Lúcar [de Barrameda] had left for these lands on July 2, and that it would arrive safely at Veracruz, and that the two ships that had been dispatched for Spain had arrived safely at Havana, and the silver galleons of which there had been no news were anchored without risk, and that if this was not so, they [the mulatas] asked to be burned.They asked the tribunal for mercy (misericordia). 116ijo's account described the mulatas as talented and confident ship-diviners who the Inquisition ultimately reduced to supplicants of God's holy mercy to absolve themselves of sin.Significantly, Guijo did not record any punishment and cared to collect these testimonies in Acapulco.As an institution, the Inquisition had little time to prosecute and punish such frequently employed practices in smaller towns, especially as "la Gran Complicidad" (the Great Complicity) redirected attention toward alleged Judaizers during the 1640s. 120third and final possibility regards the galleon routes.Officially sanctioned galleon travel between New Spain and Peru dropped off gradually during the first half of the seventeenth century because New Spanish prices were outcompeting Spanish goods arriving via Portobelo in Panama, inciting strict regulation. 121Although transpacific travel remained just as dangerous-if not becoming more so-during the latter half of the seventeenth century, it had ceased to be as much of a novelty.It was a reality of life.
The accumulation of these factors highlights that the aforementioned therapeutic solutions to galleon anxiety expressed localized and historically contingent spiritual responses to a rapidly globalizing world.Black women utilized both transatlantic and local ritual knowledge to create nodes of authority, exchange, and community that significantly elevated their reputations in an otherwise patriarchal and race-conscious society.What endowed them with influence was precisely the accuracy of their predictions.In the absence of any other way to pinpoint ship location, they were reliable enough to be trusted.In contrast to other instances of divination at the time, these women did not provide omniscient knowledge expressly for money. 122It is certain that money was exchanged, but I suspect that their primary currencies were authority, therapy, and favor.
In New Spain-a colony uniquely positioned to receive the riches of the Atlantic and the Pacific-it was not only material cultures, cartographies, and aristocratic worldviews that expressed global connectedness from this colonial core.In a backwater colony that supposedly came alive for only three or four months a year, several Afro-Mexican women-pejoratively termed 'witches'-created a local spiritual culture of ship clairvoyance, seduction, and healing that was deeply connected to New Spain's central role in the global transformations of the early modern world.Like the ngudi nganga, they healed not only individuals but also their communities, through knowledge of the spirit world.Though they have passed largely unnoticed until now, their lives, words, and actions are nonetheless essential for understanding how individuals and communities of New Spain's Pacific coast imagined their locales as, for the first time, linked to far-off places, processes, and peoples.