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The '''''encomienda'''''<ref>The etymology of ''encomienda'' and ''encomendero'' lies in the Spanish verb ''encomendar'', "to entrust".<ref>"encomienda." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 13 Oct. 2008 <http://search.eb.com/eb/article-9032596>.</ref></ref> system is a [[trusteeship]] labor system that was employed by the Spanish crown during the [[Spanish colonization of the Americas]] and the [[Philippines]] in order to consolidate their conquests. The status of Indians as wards of the trustees under the encomienda system served to "define the status of the Indian population"<ref>"encomienda." Encyclopedia Britannica Online. 26 Sept 2008. <http://search.ed.com/article.90325967> </ref>. [[Conquistador]]s were granted trusteeship over the [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|indigenous people]] they conquered, in an expansion of familiar medieval [[feudalism|feudal]] institutions, notably the [[commendation ceremony]], which had been established in [[New Castile]] during the [[Reconquista]], which was a period when there was "exacting of tribute from Muslims and Jews" in Spain<ref>"encomienda." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 13 Oct. 2008 <http://search.eb.com/eb/article-9032596>.</ref>. The ''encomienda'' system differed from the developed form of feudalism in that it did not entail any direct land tenure by the ''encomendero''; Indian lands were to remain in their possession, a right that was formally protected by the Crown of Castile because at the beginning of the Conquest most of the rights of administration in the new lands went to the Castilian Queen.<ref>http://muweb.millersville.edu/~columbus/papers/scott-m.html Meredith Scott, "The Encomienda system"</ref> These were laws that the Crown attempted to impose in all of the [[Spanish colonies]] in the [[Americas]] and in the [[Philippines]]. The maximum size of an ''encomienda'' was three hundred Indians, though it rarely reached near to that number. The ''encomenderos'' had the authorization to tax the people under their care and to summon them for labor, but they were not given juridical authority. In return, the ''encomenderos'' were expected to maintain order through an established military and to provide teachings in Catholicism. While it reserved the right of revoking an ''encomienda'' from the hands of an unjust ''encomendero,'' it rarely did.
{{[[Template:editprotected|editprotected]]}}<br />
The current president [[A P J Abdul Kalam|Dr. A P J Abdul Kalam]] has just recently been replace by [[Pratibha Patil]]. Please correct this on the side note panel of content page.
:[[Image:Symbol possible vote.svg|20px]] '''Already done''' by [[User:Vignan|Vignan]] ([http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Politics_of_India&diff=146957649&oldid=146359976 diff]) [[User:Nihiltres|<font color="#275CA9">Nihiltres</font>]]<sup>'''('''<span class="plainlinks">[[User talk:Nihiltres|<font color="#000">t</font>]].[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Log?user=Nihiltres <font color="#000">l</font>]</span>''')'''</sup> 02:06, 26 July 2007 (UTC)


In the papal bull ''[[Inter caetera]]'' (1493) the Borgia [[Pope Alexander VI]] had granted the western newly found lands to the Castilian Crown, on the condition that it evangelize these new lands. "...By this he allocated everything discovered by Columbus to the Crown of Castile, on the condition that the monarchs set about propagating the Christian faith there, and provided the lands concerned…"<ref>Hugh Thomas, ''Rivers of Gold'' (New York: Random House, 2004)116.</ref> Because the ultimate title of the Amerindian's land lay with the Castilian Crown{{Fact|date=April 2008}}, the system in the New World differed in that it did not entail any direct land tenure by the ''encomendero''. Amerindian lands were to remain in their possession, a right that was formally protected by the Crown of Castile's initial title.<ref>http://muweb.millersville.edu/~columbus/papers/scott-m.html Meredith Scott, "The Encomienda system"</ref>. These were laws that the Crown attempted to impose in all of the [[Spanish colonies]] in the [[Americas]] and in the [[Philippines]].
== Usage of the Indian flag ==
The template is being used not only in pages of Indian national institutions and the Constitution of India, but also in articles on individual Indian political parties like the [[DMK]]. I'm highly uncomfortable about having the Indian flag prominently in such articles. Either we should modify this template or should remove the template from those pages. -- [[User:Sundar|Sundar]] <sup>\[[User talk:Sundar|talk]] \[[Special:Contributions/Sundar|contribs]]</sup> 04:15, August 23, 2005 (UTC)


== In the New World and the Philippines ==
:The template is not supposed to be used on the party pages. There's a separate template/infobox for that. See the BJP, Congress and CPI (M) articles. [[User:Nichalp|<font color="#0082B8">=Nichalp</font>]] [[User talk:Nichalp|<font color="#0082B8">«Talk»=</font>]] 05:40, August 23, 2005 (UTC)
The Crown established the first ''encomiendas'' in the New World on [[Hispaniola]] in 1493{{Fact|date=April 2008}}. The maximum size of an ''encomienda'' was three hundred Amerindians, although they were usually much smaller. The ''encomenderos'' were similar to feudal lords in that they were entitled to demand tribute from the people under their care in the form of specie, kind, or corvee, but great distances, and the ''encomenderos'' ruthlessly exploited the people under their ostensible care. Using their influence and power as ''encomenderos'' and land owners of the [[plantation]]s that existed side-by-side with the ''encomiendas,'' they increased taxes, seized more lands from the natives, and ultimately forced many Amerindians into a quasi-[[slavery]]{{Fact|date=April 2008}}. They reasoned that riches were wasted on pagans and more properly bestowed upon Christian subjects of the Spanish king. [[Bernal Diaz]] concisely summarized his motives as "to serve God and His Majesty, to give light to those who were in darkness, and to grow rich, as all men desire to do."


By reading the ''[[Requerimiento]]'', which ordered defiant Indians, in Spanish, to accept Spanish rule and the Christian God as greater than their own. If the Indians ignored this order, they deserved the harsh punishments of a “just war.” The requerimiento was, therefore, a justification of conquest on account of being denied right of way.
Thanks. I'll go ahead and remove the template from the pages that I know of. -- [[User:Sundar|Sundar]] <sup>\[[User talk:Sundar|talk]] \[[Special:Contributions/Sundar|contribs]]</sup> 05:43, August 23, 2005 (UTC)


This exploitation of the indigenous natives and the other negative influences of the European presence of ''encomenderos'' were some of the factors that led to the breakdown of the entire ''encomienda'' system, which ceased to exercise any vital function in [[New Spain]] by the end of the sixteenth century, though the institution was not abolished. Another equally important factor was the scrupulousness of the Spanish laws governing the encomienda system, which made it difficult for mestizos or people with no clear Amerindian lineage to be liable to encomienda service. The breakdown of tribal lineages coupled with European intermarriage undermined the labor pool available by the end of the 16th century.
:I do not agree. If there is a separate template/infobox for that party, OK, but otherwise, please use this template. [[User:Wilfried Derksen|Electionworld]] 12:11, 3 September 2005 (UTC)
== Added Vice President and Dy. PM ==


The downfall of the ''encomienda'' system began in [[1544]], when [[Blasco Núñez Vela]], the first [[Viceroyalty of Peru|viceroy of Peru]], tried to enforce the [[New Laws]], which provided for the gradual abolition of the ''encomienda''. Many of the ''encomenderos'' were unwilling to comply with the New Laws and soon revolted against Núñez Vela.
Hi,


Other problems of the ''encomienda'' system in Peru resulted from the breaking up of extended families, or [[ayllu]]s, bringing an end to their economic system of vertical exchanges. Further, epidemic diseases that the Europeans brought to [[Americas|America]] - such as the [[Bubonic plague|plague]] and [[smallpox]] - killed a large percentage of the indigenous population, which had no natural defenses against them. (''See [[Population history of American indigenous peoples]]''.) According to Leslie Byrd Simpson, "the catastrophic decline of the native population during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries... doomed thew encomienda as a device for procuring cheap labor".<ref>Simpson, ''The Encomienda in New Spain: The Beginning of Spanish Mexico'' (1950:p. xi).</ref>
While [[Vice President of India]] is also a part of legislative, he is nevertheless an executive. This is not contradictory, as an MP can be a minister as well and has both legislative and executive functions. Similarly, the Vice President has a legislative or more precisely an administrative overseeing function as the Chairman of the [[Rajya Sabha]].
It must be noted, however, that the reorganizing of ayllus and geographical relocation of entire communities was a practice already put in place by the ruling [[Inca]] in order to control a vast population. The Spanish simply continued the practice. The reality of this system, arbitrary as it was, was complex and never one-sided in terms of ethnicity. Among the principal social actors interested in the continuation of the ''encomiendas'' one could usually find the pre-Incan tribal chiefs or ''curacas'' themselves, eager to be assigned ''encomiendas''.{{Fact|date=August 2008}}


The ''encomienda'' system was also introduced to the [[Philippines]] when [[Miguel López de Legazpi|Legazpi]] started to give lands to Spaniards who helped enrich Spain. ''Encomienda'' were a reward of the [[King of Spain]] to Spaniards who acted for the benefit of the name of Spain. Taxes came from Filipinos.{{Fact|date=April 2008}}
While the [[Deputy Prime Minister of India]] is not a regular position, it is, nevertheless, an implicit "second among equals" after the Prime Minister.


The ''encomienda'' system was essential to the Spanish crown's sustaining its control over [[North America|North]], [[Central America|Central]] and [[South America]] in the first decades after the conquest, because it was the first major organizational law instituted on a continent where disease, war and turmoil reigned. The ''encomienda'' system was succeeded by the crown-managed [[repartimiento]] and the privately-owned [[hacienda]] as land ownership became more profitable than acquisition of labor force<ref>''America: A Narrative History'', sixth ed. George Brown Tindall & David E. Shi.( W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.) 1984:280.</ref> The last ''encomiendas'' were abolished in 1791.
Also, the respective links to these 2 pages show them to be ceremonial or namesake positions, hence their addition to the template gives a complete picture without inflating the importance of these two positions.


The standard history in English of the encomienda system is Leslie Byrd Simpson, ''The Encomienda in New Spain: The Beginning of Spanish Mexico'' (1950), a through revision of his work of 1929, which scholarship in the past half century has modified in approach and deepened in local depth.<ref>Robert S. Chamberlain, "Simpson's the Encomienda in New Spain and Recent Encomienda Studies" ''The Hispanic American Historical Review'' '''34'''.2 (May 1954):238-250) began the process.</ref>
---[[User:Gurubrahma|Gurubrahma]] 06:13, 27 August 2005 (UTC)


== See also ==
:This template has been added to [[Vice President of India]] and [[Deputy Prime Minister of India]]. [[User:Gurubrahma|Gurubrahma]] 06:23, 27 August 2005 (UTC)
* [[Cargo system]]
* [[Repartimiento]]
* [[Hacienda]]
* [[Reductions]]
* [[Jesuit Reductions]]
* [[Jesuit Asia missions]]
* [[Spanish missions in Arizona]]
* [[Spanish missions in California]]
* [[Spanish missions in Mexico]]
* [[Spanish Missions in the Sonoran Desert]]
* [[Spanish missions in Texas]]
* [[Spanish missions in Trinidad]]


==Notes==
== Ministries and Ministers ==
{{reflist}}


==Bibliography==
Similar to having two seperate articles for the post and the person, (eg. President & Abdul Kalam, Prime Minister & Manmohan Singh), I think we should separate between the union minstries and the ministers. Today, the page [[The Union Ministries of India]] redirects to [[Indian Cabinet Ministers]], which only lists the current union ministers. Any objections...? Since I've not done changes to templates before, I just want to be sure than to 'screw-up'!! -- [[User:Natrajdr|Natrajdr]] 08:04, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
*{{cite book |last=Avellaneda |first=Jose Ignacio |title=The Conquerors of the New Kingdom of Granada |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=1995 |publisher=University of New Mexico Press |location=Albuquerque |isbn=0826316123 |pages= }}
*{{cite book |last=Himmerich y Valencia |first=Robert |title=The Encomenderos of New Spain, 1521–1555 |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=1991 |publisher=University of Texas Press |location=Austin |isbn=0292720688 |pages= }}
<ref>"encomienda." Encyclopedia Britannica Online. 26 Sept 2008. <http://search.ed.com/article.90325967></ref>
[[Category:Spanish colonization of the Americas]]
[[Category:Spanish colonial period in the Philippines]]


[[ca:Encomienda]]
== President under legislative? ==
[[de:Agrarstrukturen in Lateinamerika]]

[[es:Encomienda]]
Is there any particular reason the President is listed under the "legislative" section of this template? I'm tempted to just go ahead and move it up to the Executive section, but wanted to double-check in case there's some quirk of Indian politics I'm missing. --[[User:Jfruh|Jfruh]] ([[User talk:Jfruh|talk]]) 17:34, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
[[fr:Encomienda]]

[[it:Encomienda]]
== Change in the template ==
[[lt:Enkomjenda]]

[[nl:Encomienda]]
I see that [[User:Sumanch]] has changed the template. In the new template the names of the various leaders are missing (Pratibha Patil, Manmohan Singh etc.) Can somebody add that? --[[User:Natrajdr|Natrajdr]] ([[User talk:Natrajdr|talk]]) 15:44, 11 March 2008 (UTC)
[[ja:エンコミエンダ制]]
[[no:Encomienda]]
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[[tl:Enkomiyenda]]

Revision as of 15:57, 13 October 2008

The encomiendaCite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).</ref> system is a trusteeship labor system that was employed by the Spanish crown during the Spanish colonization of the Americas and the Philippines in order to consolidate their conquests. The status of Indians as wards of the trustees under the encomienda system served to "define the status of the Indian population"[1]. Conquistadors were granted trusteeship over the indigenous people they conquered, in an expansion of familiar medieval feudal institutions, notably the commendation ceremony, which had been established in New Castile during the Reconquista, which was a period when there was "exacting of tribute from Muslims and Jews" in Spain[2]. The encomienda system differed from the developed form of feudalism in that it did not entail any direct land tenure by the encomendero; Indian lands were to remain in their possession, a right that was formally protected by the Crown of Castile because at the beginning of the Conquest most of the rights of administration in the new lands went to the Castilian Queen.[3] These were laws that the Crown attempted to impose in all of the Spanish colonies in the Americas and in the Philippines. The maximum size of an encomienda was three hundred Indians, though it rarely reached near to that number. The encomenderos had the authorization to tax the people under their care and to summon them for labor, but they were not given juridical authority. In return, the encomenderos were expected to maintain order through an established military and to provide teachings in Catholicism. While it reserved the right of revoking an encomienda from the hands of an unjust encomendero, it rarely did.

In the papal bull Inter caetera (1493) the Borgia Pope Alexander VI had granted the western newly found lands to the Castilian Crown, on the condition that it evangelize these new lands. "...By this he allocated everything discovered by Columbus to the Crown of Castile, on the condition that the monarchs set about propagating the Christian faith there, and provided the lands concerned…"[4] Because the ultimate title of the Amerindian's land lay with the Castilian Crown[citation needed], the system in the New World differed in that it did not entail any direct land tenure by the encomendero. Amerindian lands were to remain in their possession, a right that was formally protected by the Crown of Castile's initial title.[5]. These were laws that the Crown attempted to impose in all of the Spanish colonies in the Americas and in the Philippines.

In the New World and the Philippines

The Crown established the first encomiendas in the New World on Hispaniola in 1493[citation needed]. The maximum size of an encomienda was three hundred Amerindians, although they were usually much smaller. The encomenderos were similar to feudal lords in that they were entitled to demand tribute from the people under their care in the form of specie, kind, or corvee, but great distances, and the encomenderos ruthlessly exploited the people under their ostensible care. Using their influence and power as encomenderos and land owners of the plantations that existed side-by-side with the encomiendas, they increased taxes, seized more lands from the natives, and ultimately forced many Amerindians into a quasi-slavery[citation needed]. They reasoned that riches were wasted on pagans and more properly bestowed upon Christian subjects of the Spanish king. Bernal Diaz concisely summarized his motives as "to serve God and His Majesty, to give light to those who were in darkness, and to grow rich, as all men desire to do."

By reading the Requerimiento, which ordered defiant Indians, in Spanish, to accept Spanish rule and the Christian God as greater than their own. If the Indians ignored this order, they deserved the harsh punishments of a “just war.” The requerimiento was, therefore, a justification of conquest on account of being denied right of way.

This exploitation of the indigenous natives and the other negative influences of the European presence of encomenderos were some of the factors that led to the breakdown of the entire encomienda system, which ceased to exercise any vital function in New Spain by the end of the sixteenth century, though the institution was not abolished. Another equally important factor was the scrupulousness of the Spanish laws governing the encomienda system, which made it difficult for mestizos or people with no clear Amerindian lineage to be liable to encomienda service. The breakdown of tribal lineages coupled with European intermarriage undermined the labor pool available by the end of the 16th century.

The downfall of the encomienda system began in 1544, when Blasco Núñez Vela, the first viceroy of Peru, tried to enforce the New Laws, which provided for the gradual abolition of the encomienda. Many of the encomenderos were unwilling to comply with the New Laws and soon revolted against Núñez Vela.

Other problems of the encomienda system in Peru resulted from the breaking up of extended families, or ayllus, bringing an end to their economic system of vertical exchanges. Further, epidemic diseases that the Europeans brought to America - such as the plague and smallpox - killed a large percentage of the indigenous population, which had no natural defenses against them. (See Population history of American indigenous peoples.) According to Leslie Byrd Simpson, "the catastrophic decline of the native population during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries... doomed thew encomienda as a device for procuring cheap labor".[6] It must be noted, however, that the reorganizing of ayllus and geographical relocation of entire communities was a practice already put in place by the ruling Inca in order to control a vast population. The Spanish simply continued the practice. The reality of this system, arbitrary as it was, was complex and never one-sided in terms of ethnicity. Among the principal social actors interested in the continuation of the encomiendas one could usually find the pre-Incan tribal chiefs or curacas themselves, eager to be assigned encomiendas.[citation needed]

The encomienda system was also introduced to the Philippines when Legazpi started to give lands to Spaniards who helped enrich Spain. Encomienda were a reward of the King of Spain to Spaniards who acted for the benefit of the name of Spain. Taxes came from Filipinos.[citation needed]

The encomienda system was essential to the Spanish crown's sustaining its control over North, Central and South America in the first decades after the conquest, because it was the first major organizational law instituted on a continent where disease, war and turmoil reigned. The encomienda system was succeeded by the crown-managed repartimiento and the privately-owned hacienda as land ownership became more profitable than acquisition of labor force[7] The last encomiendas were abolished in 1791.

The standard history in English of the encomienda system is Leslie Byrd Simpson, The Encomienda in New Spain: The Beginning of Spanish Mexico (1950), a through revision of his work of 1929, which scholarship in the past half century has modified in approach and deepened in local depth.[8]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "encomienda." Encyclopedia Britannica Online. 26 Sept 2008. <http://search.ed.com/article.90325967>
  2. ^ "encomienda." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 13 Oct. 2008 <http://search.eb.com/eb/article-9032596>.
  3. ^ http://muweb.millersville.edu/~columbus/papers/scott-m.html Meredith Scott, "The Encomienda system"
  4. ^ Hugh Thomas, Rivers of Gold (New York: Random House, 2004)116.
  5. ^ http://muweb.millersville.edu/~columbus/papers/scott-m.html Meredith Scott, "The Encomienda system"
  6. ^ Simpson, The Encomienda in New Spain: The Beginning of Spanish Mexico (1950:p. xi).
  7. ^ America: A Narrative History, sixth ed. George Brown Tindall & David E. Shi.( W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.) 1984:280.
  8. ^ Robert S. Chamberlain, "Simpson's the Encomienda in New Spain and Recent Encomienda Studies" The Hispanic American Historical Review 34.2 (May 1954):238-250) began the process.

Bibliography

  • Avellaneda, Jose Ignacio (1995). The Conquerors of the New Kingdom of Granada. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 0826316123. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Himmerich y Valencia, Robert (1991). The Encomenderos of New Spain, 1521–1555. Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0292720688. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)

[1]

  1. ^ "encomienda." Encyclopedia Britannica Online. 26 Sept 2008. <http://search.ed.com/article.90325967>