Spanish and Portuguese South America during the Colonial Period; Vol. 2 of 2
CHAPTER X.
_PROGRESS OF THE COLONY._
1604-1792.
[Sidenote: 1604.]
_Don_ Garcia Raymon was once more appointed to the government of _Chili_, and received one thousand soldiers from Europe and a fourth of that number from _Mexico_. He thus found himself at the head of three thousand regular troops, besides auxiliaries. With such a force at his disposal, it was natural that he should once more invade _Arauco_, in which territory he erected a fort; the existence of which, however, was of short duration, it being abandoned to the Araucanians. Raymond divided his force into two parts, both of which were successively attacked and defeated by the new _Toqui_, Huenecura, so complete being the rout that every single person was killed or taken. Such was the dread entertained of the Araucanians that, in 1608, orders were issued from Spain that a force of two thousand regular troops should constantly be maintained on the frontier. For this purpose a sum of about three hundred thousand _dollars_ was to be paid annually from the treasury of _Peru_.
[Sidenote: 1610.]
In the following year the Court of Royal Audience was re-established at _St. Iago_. The Captain-General, Raymon, who once more took the field, ended his days at _Conception_, greatly regretted, not only by those whom he had commanded and governed, but likewise by the Araucanians, whom, when prisoners, he invariably treated with humanity. In consequence of the representations of a Jesuit missionary, named Louis Valdivia, respecting the injurious influence exercised by the long-continued struggle on the progress of conversion, the pious Philip III. sent orders to the government of _Chili_ to discontinue the war and to establish peace, taking the _Bio-bio_ as a frontier. Louis Valdivia returned to _Chili_ in 1612, the bearer of a letter from the King to the Araucanian congress, with which he hastened to the frontier. In the presence of fifty chiefs he made known the object of his errand. He was thanked for his exertions, and received the promise of a favourable report to the _Toqui_.
So zealous was King Philip in the object of converting the Araucanians that, with the view the better to carry it out, he proposed not only to raise the missionary Valdivia to the episcopal dignity, but further to appoint him governor of _Chili_. But Valdivia’s was not a worldly ambition. He declined the King’s offers; whilst he obtained the nomination of a governor who was likely to carry out his views. This was no other than Rivera, who had been removed from _St. Iago_ to _Tucuman_. Rivera now besought the _Toqui_ to meet him at _Paicavi_ in order to confer respecting peace. The _Toqui_ brought with him to the appointed place a number of his Spanish prisoners, whom he released without ransom: his conditions were accepted by the governor, and all promised a speedy result; when the negotiations were interrupted by an unlooked-for accident.
Ancanamon was compelled, before concluding peace, to consult four of his chiefs. He was on his way to seek them, when he learned that his Spanish wife had taken the opportunity of his departure to make her escape and to take refuge with the governor with her two children. She brought with her two others, his wives, and likewise his two daughters, three out of the four having become Christians. This incident naturally changed the purpose of the _Toqui_, who at once returned to the Spanish quarters to seek the restoration of his family. This was, however, refused to him, on the ground of concern for their religious welfare, although, by the refusal, the object of the King of Spain in the negotiation with the Araucanians was imperilled. All that Ancanamon could obtain was the restoration of one of his daughters, who had not yet been baptized.
A new actor now appeared upon the scene in the person of the _arch-Ulmen_, _Utiflami_, who, out of gratitude to Valdivia for the release of one of his sons, undertook to manage the negotiation. He proceeded, with this object, to the quarters of the _Toqui_, taking with him three missionaries. On their appearance, however, Ancanamon was so exasperated that, without listening to their arguments, he ordered them to be put to death, together with Antiflami. Thus, out of care for the souls of the refugees, the negotiations for peace and proselytizing were brought to an end, and the war recommenced, with greater fury than ever. Ancanamon, desirous of avenging the affront he had received, never ceased to harass the Spanish provinces; and Rivera, up till his death in 1617, had no other opportunity of carrying out the special object with which he had been reappointed governor of _Chili_.
[Sidenote: 1618.]
Rivera’s successor, Lope de Ulloa, had to encounter a daring adversary in the _Toqui_ Lientur, who was invariably successful in his encounters with the Spaniards, till, worn out by age and fatigues, he resigned his command, in 1625, to Putapichion, who pursued a like daring course. The war continued, with occasional successes on either side, for many years longer. A new governor was appointed to _Chili_ in the person of _Don_ Francisco Laso, who, having failed to obtain peace, carried on hostilities continuously, until at length, in 1632, Putapichion was slain in battle.
Laso had greatly at heart the fulfilment of the promise which he had made to his King of putting an end to the war. From his talents and experience no one was more capable of doing so; but he had to do with an invincible people. Their love of their country has probably never been exceeded, and was so strong that life had no charm for them beyond the limits of _Araucania_. All prisoners were after a time deported by Laso to _Peru_. When they came in sight of land they threw themselves overboard, in the hope of swimming ashore, and many succeeded in this manner in effecting their escape. Even from _Callao_ many escaped, following, with incredible fatigue, the immense line of coast which separated them from their native country.
[Sidenote: 1641.]
The court of Spain, owing to the long duration of the war and the great losses on their side, declined to retain Laso any longer in command, and appointed as his successor _Don_ Francisco Zuniga, to whom was reserved the honour of concluding peace. Zuniga arrived in _Chili_ in 1630, and sought a personal conference with Lincopichion, the _Toqui_ of the Araucanians. On the 6th of January of the following year a solemn treaty was concluded, putting a period to a war which had lasted for ninety years. The Marquis de Baydes was attended by ten thousand persons to the village of _Quillin_ in _Puren_, the place fixed for the ratification; whilst Lincopichion came at the head of four hereditary _Toquis_ and a large number of _Ulmenes_. The ratification was celebrated by a three days’ festival on either side, all prisoners being released.
[Sidenote: 1643.]
Amongst the clauses of the treaty was one by which the Araucanians engaged not to permit the landing of any strangers upon their coast, nor to furnish such with supplies, and the prudence of this clause was not long in being made apparent. Three years previously the Dutch had made a second fruitless attempt to form an alliance with the Araucanians. Their squadron, consisting of four ships, was dispersed by a storm; and two boats’ crews were put to death. In 1643 the Dutch made a last attempt to possess themselves of _Chili_. Having set out from _Brazil_ with a numerous fleet, they took possession of the deserted harbour of _Valdivia_, and began to fortify the entrance to the river. The Araucanians were invited to an alliance; but they honourably adhered to the terms of their treaty with the Spaniards, thus forcing the Dutch to retire in consequence of hunger. On their retreat a fleet under the command of the Marquis de Mancura, son of the Viceroy of _Peru_, arrived with ten ships of war, and fortified the harbour and the island which bears his family name.
[Sidenote: 1665.]
From some cause which is not recorded hostilities once more broke out, after an interval of fifteen years, between the Chilians and their neighbours. They were continued with great violence for ten years, but were terminated, in 1665, by a more permanent peace; and from this time the records of this portion of South America are of a less stirring nature. In consequence of the war of the Spanish succession the French obtained, for a time, all the external commerce of _Chili_, its ports having been crowded with their vessels between the years 1707 and 1717. At this period many of this nation settled in the country, which possesses, in consequence, a portion of French blood.
[Sidenote: 1722.]
A peace of upwards of fifty years’ duration had naturally given room for the development of a country possessed of such abundant natural advantages as is _Chili_. Its interruption was owing to the missionaries who were sent amongst the Araucanians, and to the officers who were appointed to protect them, whose presence and pretensions the Araucanians resented; and, in 1722, it was determined to have recourse to arms. The _Toqui_, Vilumilla, even at this late date adopted so vast a project as that of the expulsion of the Spaniards from _Chili_. Having killed three or four of the missionaries’ protectors, he despatched messengers to the Chilians in the Spanish provinces, inviting them to rise on the appearance of signal-fires. The native Chilians, however, declined to respond to the _Toqui’s_ invitation. The _Toqui_, nothing daunted, set out at the head of his troops to attack the Spanish settlements; but he was careful to give information to the missionaries, in order that, by retiring from the country, they might avoid ill-treatment. It is unnecessary to give the details of this short war, which was terminated by the peace of _Negrete_, where the treaty of _Quillin_ was once more confirmed, and the title of Captain of Friends or protector of missionaries abolished.
[Sidenote: 1742.]
_Chili_ was ruled over for fifteen years with wisdom and humanity by _Don_ Gabriel Cano; and his successor received instructions to gather the Spanish inhabitants into more compact societies. For this purpose he founded, in 1742, the cities of _Copiapo_, _Aconcagua_, _Melipilla_, _Rancagua_, _St. Fernando_, _Curico_, _Talca_, _Tutuben_, and _Angeles_, and was rewarded by the dignity of Viceroy of _Peru_. From 1753 date _Santa Rosa_, _Guasco-alto_, _Casablanca_, _Bella-Isla_, _Florida_, _Coulemu_, and _Quirigua_; whilst at the same time a settlement was formed on the island of _Juan Fernandez_, which till then had been the retreat of pirates.
[Sidenote: 1773.]
_Don_ Antonio Gonzaga, whilst governor of _Chili_, undertook to bring the Araucanians to live in cities, with the only result, however, of forcing that brave people to take up arms once more in defence of their liberties. An accommodation was at length arrived at, by which things reverted to their previous state, the Araucanians, in acknowledgment of their autonomy, being conceded the right of keeping a minister-resident in _St. Iago_. Thus has this brave people, although inconsiderable in point of numbers, succeeded in maintaining its independence, after having cost Spain a greater sacrifice of blood and treasure than sufficed for all her conquests in the New World.
[Sidenote: 1792.]
The Spaniards in _Chili_ now confined their views to consolidating their settlements in the region lying between the southern frontiers of _Peru_ and the _Bio-bio_, a sufficiently extensive area, since it occupied the space between degrees 24 and 36½ of southern latitude. This territory was divided into thirteen provinces. The Captaincy-General of _Chili_ likewise included the fortress of _Valdivia_, the archipelago of _Chiloë_, and the island of _Juan Fernandez_. The Captain-General[12] was responsible to the King alone, unless in case of war, when he had to act in subordination to the Viceroy of _Peru_. The provinces were respectively governed by prefects, who possessed jurisdiction over both civil and military affairs. In each provincial capital there existed a municipal magistracy called the _Cabildo_. The inhabitants were divided into regiments, which were obliged to march to the frontier or to the sea-coast in case of war. In the year 1792 there were in the royal service fifteen thousand eight hundred and fifty militia troops; and besides this regular force there were likewise city bands of militia; and in addition to both there was a sufficient force of imperial troops to provide for the defence of the country.
_Chili_ was divided into the two dioceses of _St. Iago_ and _Conception_, the bishops resident in these cities, respectively, being suffragans to the Archbishop of _Lima_. The Court of Inquisition of _Lima_ had a commissioner at _St. Iago_. The first ecclesiastics in _Chili_ were the monks of the Order of Mercy, who were soon followed by Dominicans and Franciscans, and later by Augustins and Hospitalers of St. John of God. The Jesuits who were introduced in 1593, with the nephew of their founder, were expelled in 1767. _St. Iago_ and _Conception_ were the only cities which, in the colonial period, contained convents of nuns. The churches were more remarkable for the wealth which they displayed than for their architecture.
The population of _Chili_ presented the usual mixture of Europeans, _Creoles_, Natives, Negroes, and _Mustees_, or half-castes. The _Creoles_, or colonial Spaniards, displayed a laudable desire for education, to complete which they, in many instances, proceeded to _Lima_. The peasantry, though for the greater part of Spanish origin, wore the Araucanian costume. Their lot was a happy one. Possessed of perfect liberty, and dwelling in a delightful climate, they lived on the produce of a fertile soil, and were robust, healthy, and lively. The language of the country was Spanish, excepting on the frontiers, when Araucanian or Chilian was likewise spoken. _Lima_ was the Paris of South America, and prescribed the fashions for _Chili_. It may be added that _Chili_ alone, of all the American provinces, could boast of two of its citizens being exalted to the dignity of _Grandee_ of Spain.
The Chilians had the reputation of being exceedingly hospitable to strangers, and of having been such good masters to their negro slaves that the greatest punishment which could be inflicted on these latter was to lose their protection; and it is stated that in many instances they refused to avail themselves of the liberty afforded to them. The masters exercised over them an authority similar to that of the Roman _pater-familias_ over his _familia_. In correcting their faults the degree of punishment was left to the master, unless in cases of capital crime. The word slavery, so repugnant to our ears, may imply widely different conditions of existence. Domestic slavery amongst the Turks, for instance, may mean that the slaves are treated merely as children--that is to say, that although a certain restriction is placed upon their movements, they receive every kindness and care, whilst as Moslem they may appeal to the laws of the _Koran_, &c. Very different, however, was the lot of the field labourer in the transatlantic colonies or of the mines in _Peru_. By all accounts the lot of the Chilian slave was of the former character, and affords a pleasing contrast to that of the natives of _Mexico_ in the hands of the conquerors.
This chapter may conclude with some notice of the native tribes which have been repeatedly alluded to as taking part in the war between the Spaniards and the Araucanians. The _Pehuenches_ inhabit that part of the Chilian _Andes_ lying between the 34th and 37th degrees of south latitude, to the east of the Spanish provinces of _Calchagua_, _Maúle_, _Chillan_, and _Huilquilemu_. The dress is very similar to that of the Araucanians, except that instead of breeches they wear round the waist a piece of cloth after the fashion of the Japanese. Their boots, or shoes, are all of one piece, and made from the skin of an ox. These mountaineers, although having occasionally shown themselves to be valiant soldiers, are nevertheless fond of decorating themselves like women. They wear ornaments of glass beads upon their arms and amongst their hair, and suspend around their heads little bells. Although possessing herds of cattle and sheep, they prefer, like the Tartars, horseflesh to any other, but, more delicate than that people, will only eat it when cooked. They dwell in tents made of skins, disposed in a circular form, leaving in the centre a spacious field in which the cattle graze during the continuance of the herbage. When that begins to fail they remove to another situation, and in this manner they traverse the valleys of the _Cordilleras_.
Each village or encampment is governed by an _Ulmen_. In their language and religion they differ not from the Araucanians. They are fond of hunting, and often, in pursuit of game, traverse the vast plains lying between the river _Plate_ and the Straits of _Magellan_. In these excursions, which sometimes extend as far as to _Buenos Ayres_, they plunder the country in that vicinity, and frequently attack the caravans of merchandise going thence to _Chili_, with such success that commerce is said to have suffered severely thereby. Their favourite weapon is the _laque_ or _lasso_, which they carry fastened to their girdles. Although of a wandering and restless disposition, the _Pehuenches_ are the most industrious and commercial of any savages. The women work cloths of various colours; the men occupy themselves in making baskets and a variety of beautiful articles of wood, feathers, or skins, which are highly prized by their neighbours. Assembling every year on the Spanish frontier, they hold a kind of fair, that usually continues for fifteen or twenty days, when, in exchange for fossil salt, gypsum, pitch, bed-coverings, _ponchos_, skins, wool, bridle-reins beautifully wrought of plaited leather, baskets, wooden vessels, feathers, ostrich eggs, horses and cattle, &c., they receive wheat, wine, and the manufactures of Europe. Being very skilful in traffic, they can with difficulty be overreached; and when indulging in the pleasures of wine, a portion of them is set apart to guard their property from plunder. They are generally humane, complacent, lovers of justice, and possess all those good qualities that are produced or perfected by commerce.
The _Chiquillanians_, whom some have erroneously supposed to be a part of the _Pehuenches_, live to the north-east of them, on the eastern border of the _Andes_, and are the most savage and least numerous of any of the Chilians. They go almost naked, merely wrapping around them the skin of the _guanaco_. It is observable that all the Chilians who inhabit the eastern valleys of the _Andes_, namely, the _Pehuenches_, the _Puelches_, the _Huilliches_, and the _Chiquillanians_, are much redder than their countrymen dwelling westward of those mountains. All the mountaineers dress themselves in skins and paint their faces; and, living in general by hunting, lead a wandering and unsettled life. They are, generally speaking, of a lofty stature and of great strength.