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‘Por que no sabemos firmar’: Black Slaves in Early Guatemala*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 December 2015
Extract
Juan, a literate black slave born and raised in the Spanish town of Cáceres, labored for at least five years during the 1560s in the Honduran gold mines of Guayape. Finally, growing tired of the arduous work of placer mining and taking advantage of his isolation, he made a bid for freedom. Upon hearing of Juan's flight, his owner, a wealthy Santiago-based merchant named Santos de Figueroa, immediately began the process of securing Juan's recovery. Eventually Juan made his way to Santo Domingo where unfortunately he was captured and Figueroa notified of his whereabouts. It remains unknown if Juan was actually returned to Santiago or if Figueroa instead preferred to sell him, a rather common occurrence in cases of runaway slaves.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- The Americas , Volume 57 , Issue 2: The African Experience in Early Spanish America , October 2000 , pp. 247 - 267
- Copyright
- Copyright © Academy of American Franciscan History 2000
Footnotes
Research for this article was made possible by a fellowship from the Del Amo Foundation. Writing was made possible in part by a First Year Assistant Professor Summer Research Grant from the Florida State University (FSU). Completion was permitted by a sabbatical from the Department of History at FSU. I am grateful to Jane Landers, Matthew Restall, Lisa Sousa and the anonymous reviewers for their comments on earlier drafts. “Por que no sabemos firmar” (because we are unable to sign) appears often in notarial documents involving illiterate peoples. Literacy during the period, a topic as of yet not deeply studied, proved somewhat rare. While few people could completely read and write, more could sign their names and many more could at least manage a rough rubric. Those that could not write at all usually asked the notary or a witness to sign for them. The use of this phrase, thus, seems apropos given that literacy was extremely rare among Black slaves. Additionally in every single document consulted involving the need for Black slaves to sign, someone else inevitably did so in their place. Consequently the historical voice of Black slaves living in sixteenth-century Spanish Central America rarely appears directly, to date no diaries or other such documents have come to light and only a smattering of wills have been discovered, but rather indirectly.
References
1 Archivo General de Centro América (from here on abbreviated as AGCA). A1.20.437.8840.f.12236 (1-18-68).
2 One document states in Comayagua alone (a place of relatively large silver mining activity) 400 Blacks labored. See Alvarez-Lobos Violator, Carlos Alfonso and Palm, Ricardo Toledo, editors. Libro de los Pareceres de la Real Audiencia de Guatemala, 1571–1655 (Guatemala: Academia de Geografía e Historia de Guatemala, Biblioteca Goathemala, 5. 32, 1996), p. 23.Google Scholar For a general discussion of silver production in the area see Newson, Linda A., “Silver Mining in Colonial Honduras,” Revista de Historia de América 97 (1984), pp. 46–75.Google Scholar
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19 Licencia de esclavos a Eugenio Moscoso AGI: Sig.: Guatemala, 393, 1. 1, f. 49v-50 (fechas extremas 8-5-32) and Licencia de esclavos a Gabriel de Hurueña AGI: Sig.: Guatemala, 393,1.1, f.73v-74 (fechas extremas 11-27-32). Licencia para pasar esclavos a Gonzalo de Ronquillo, AGI: Sig.: Guatemala, 393,1. 1, f. 113-113v (fechas extremas 2-6-35).
20 For a brief analysis of the Black slave trade in sixteenth-century Guatemala see my “The African Slave Trade in Early Santiago,” Urban History Workshop Review 4 (Fall, 1998), pp. 6–12.
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24 Work with local seventeenth-century documents might well answer this important question.
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28 Credit, although relatively little studied for the sixteenth century, served as the basis for the local economy. The near complete lack of liquid capital mandated the existence of a complex credit structure in early Guatemala. For excellent discussions of credit in the later colonial period see Quiroz, Alfonso W., Deudas olividadas: Instrumentos de crédito en la economía colonial Peruana 1750–1820 (Lima: Fondo Editorial de la Pontifica Universidad Católica del Peru, 1993);Google Scholar “Reassessing the Role of Credit in Late Colonial Peru: Censos, Escrituras and Imposiciones,” Hispanic American Historical Review 4 (1994), 193–230; Greenow, Linda, Credit and Socioeconomic Change in Colonial Mexico: Loans and Mortgages in Guadalajara, 1720–1820 (Boulder: Westview Press, 1983).Google Scholar
29 See A1.20. 732. 9225. f. 52(5-9-44), f. 88 (2-21-44), AGCA. A1.20. 733. 9226. f. 43 (4-6-66), f. 176 (9-9-44), f. 178 (1-31-49), 231 (10-17-52), f. 300 (5-12-62), AGCA. A1.20. 734. 9227. f. 130 (12-f29-67); AGCA. A1.20. 807. 9301. f. 125 (7-18-75), AGCA. A 1.20. 1362. 9853. f. 168 (6-23-44); AGCA. A 1.20. 1489. 9969. f. 11 (12-30-54), and AGCA. Al.15. 4079. 32373. (4-3-83).
30 See note 26.
31 See AGCA. A1.20. 732. 9225. f. 110(3-3-44).
32 See AGCA. A1.20. 423. 8826. f. 100 (8-11-84). Guevara Sanginés mentions merchants acquiring black slaves as payment for debts in early Guanajuato. See Sanginés, María Guevara, “Particpación de Los africanos en el desarollo del Guanajuato colonial,” in Martínez Montiel, Luz María, editor, Presencia africana en México (México: Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y la Artes, 1997, first printed in 1995), pp. 133–198, 148.Google Scholar
33 See AGCA. A1.20. 734. 9227. f. 395 (12-9-68), “Last Will and Testament of Pedro Alemán,” AGCA. A1.20. 734. 9227. f. 395 (12-9-68) and AGCA. A1.20. 422. 8825. f. 3 (2-23-83).
34 See AGCA. A1.20. 1489. 9969. f. 41 (1-3-55) and AGCA. A1.20 424 8827 f. 140 (10-21-86).
35 I reserve a full discussion of resistance for a manuscript currently in progress.
36 Martínez Peláez mentions a black slave revolt that took place in Honduras in 1548. He does not elaborate, however, if the revolt resulted from the activity of cimmarones or whether it occurred sponta neously. See Peláez, Severo Martínez, La patria del criollo: Ensayo de interpretación de la realidad colonial guatemalteca (Guatemala: Talleres de Ediciones en Marcha, 1973), p. 278.Google Scholar
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41 See Bowser, Frederick P., The African Slave in Colonial Peru, 1524–1650 (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1974), pp. 83–84.Google Scholar
42 See AGCA. A1.20. 2023. 14005 f. 7 (1-4-84). At this time the term bianco, when used in conjunction with esclavo (slave), usually meant moor.
43 The original reads “en el brazo yzquierdo una señal a manera de quemadura y tiene losnerbios delbrazo un poco encoxidos” see AGCA. A1.20. 424 8827. f. 136 (10-16-86).
44 See AGCA. A1.20 437 8840 f. 12042 (1-8-68).
45 See Lockhart, James, Spanish Peru, 1532–1560, A Social History (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1994, first edition 1968), pp. 204–05.Google Scholar
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47 See AGCA. A1.20. 441. 8844. f. 12789 (9-22-70).
48 The original reads “algunos dellos tien negros y negras que les sirven.” Although the passage does not specifically identify the Blacks in question as slaves the context leaves little doubt. See Pineda, Juan de, “Descripción de la Provincia de Guatemala, Año 1594” in Serrano y Sanz, Manuel, editor, Relaciones históricas y geográficas de América Central (Madrid: Librería General del Victoriano Suárez, 1908), p.442.Google Scholar Also quoted in McBryde, Felix Webster, Cultural and Historical Geography of Southwest Guatemala (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1971, first edition 1947), pp. 13–14.Google Scholar
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51 See AGCA. Al.20. 441. 8844. f. 12840(8-1570).
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54 See Pike, Ruth, “Sevillian Society in the Sixteenth Century: Slaves and Freedmen,” Hispanic American Historical Review 47 (1967), pp. 344–359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar For slaves in provincial settings see Sanz, Vicente Graullera, La esclavitud en Valencia en Los siglos XVI y XVII (Valencia, 1978);Google Scholar and Silva, Alfonso Franco, Esclavitud en Andalucía, 1450–1550 (Spain: Universidad de Granada, 1992).Google Scholar
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56 Not once during the testimony of natives and Spaniards alike does Domingo receive the label of esclavo. Therefore it seems highly probable that he formed part of Santiago’s free Black population. AGCA. Al.15. 4076. 32349. (3-23-71).
57 Uncovering elements of Black culture for the period under study proves extremely elusive. In some cases, such as that of the marimba (xylophone), at least some scholars argue for African roots. See Fernández, Fernando Ortiz, “La afroamericana ‘marimba’,” Guatemala Indígena 6:4 (December 1971), pp. 9–43.Google Scholar
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59 See AGCA. A1.20. 423. 8826. f. 39 (6-28-84).
60 In contemporary Guatemala there exists little difference between commercial enterprises and the home, people operate bakeries, all manners of stores, and even medical clinics from the same building wherein they make their homes. Author’s Field Notes, Guatemala, 1990–1997.
61 See AGCA. A1.20. 423. 8826. f. 28 (6-15-84).
62 The word tiánguiz (from Nahuatl tianquiztla) was commonly used among the population of New Spain and subsequently Guatemala. For its use in New Spain see Lockhart, James, The Nahuas After the Conquest (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1992), p. 191.Google Scholar
63 See AGCA. Al.15. 4075. 32343. (12-6-77).
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65 See Autos Bienes de Difuntos: AGI: Sig.: Contratación 472, n. 4, r.9 (fechas extremas 8-5-67) and Autos de Bienes de Difuntos: Relaciones de Caudales de Bienes de Difuntos: Sig.: Contratación, 473, n. 1, r. 3 (fechas extremas 1568).
66 See Peláez, Severo Martínez, La patria del criollo: Ensayo de interpretación de la realidad colonial guatemalteca (Guatemala: Talleres de Ediciones en Marcha, 1973), p. 276.Google Scholar For black slaves on large agricultural estates see Brockington, Lolita Gutiérrez, The Leverage of Labor: Managing the Cortés Haciendas in Tehuantepec, 1588–1688 (Durham: Duke University Press, 1989), pp. 126–142.Google Scholar
67 See AGCA. A1.20. 443. 8846. f. 13551 (1579).
68 See AGCA. A1.20. 444. 8847. f. 13730 (9-27-81).
69 See Lane, Kris, “Captivity and Redemption: Aspects of Slave Life in Early Colonial Quito and Popayán,” The Americas, this issue.Google Scholar
70 See AGCA. A1.20. 732. 9225. f. 16 (10-19-44).
71 See AGCA. A1.20. 442. 8845. f. 13084 (12-1-76).
72 See AGCA. A1.20. 438. 8841. f. 12397 (2-8-69).
73 Compare to Bowser, Frederick P., The African Slave in Colonial Peru, 1524–1650 (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1974), p. 13.Google Scholar
74 See AGCA. A1.20. 1362. 9853 f. 130(5-19-44) and AGCA. A1.20. 444. 8847 f. 13644(5-23-81)
75 For a fuller discussion of silver mining in a Central American area see Newson, Linda A., “Silver Mining in Colonial Honduras,” Revista de Historia de América 97 (1984), pp. 46–75.Google Scholar
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77 Interestingly Bartolomé had runaway four months before the transaction took place. See AGCA. A1.20. 424. 8827. f. 217 (12-31-86).
78 See AGCA. A1.20. 446. 8849. f. 14428 (6-21-84) and AGCA. A 1.15. 4074. 32340. (5-8-76).
79 See Kicza, John E., Colonial Entrepreneurs: Families and Business in Bourbon Mexico City (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1983), p. 207.Google Scholar
80 See AGCA. A1.20. 733. 9226. f. 74 (5-29-66).
81 The documents identify each as having the surname de Dueñas and not as a couple followed by de Dueñas. The former implies some sort of relation while the latter leaves little doubt that they would have been the chattel of Dueñas. See AGCA. A1.20. 807. 9301. f. 87 (3-26-75) and f. 125 (7-18-75).
82 Since the free woman undertook the transaction her husband’s owner did not require notification. See AGCA. A1.20. 422. 8825. f. 319 (4-16-83).
83 See my “The People of Santiago: Early Colonial Guatemala, 1538–1587,” Ph.D. dissertation, Uni versity of California, Los Angeles, 1997, pp. 254–318. The slave family has received greater attention in other parts of Latin America. See Chandler, David Lee, “Family Bonds and the Bondman: The Slave Family in Colonial Colombia,” Latin American Research Review 16:2 (1981), pp. 107–131;Google Scholar Hünefeldt, Christine, Paying the Price of Freedom, Family and Labor Among Lima’s Slaves (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994), pp. 9–36;Google Scholar and Mattoso, Kátia de Queirós, “Slave, Free, and Freed Family Structures in Nineteenth-Century Salvador, Bahia,” Luso-Brazilian Review 25: 1 (Summer, 1988), pp. 69–84.Google Scholar
84 See Higman, B.W., “Methodological Problems in the Study of the Slave Family,” in Rubin, Vera and Tuden, Arthur, editors, Comparative Perspectives on Slavery in New World Plantation Societies (New York: New York Academy of Sciences, 1977), pp. 591–596;Google Scholar Schwartz, Stuart B., Slaves, Peasants, and Rebels: Reconsidering Brazilian Slavery (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1992), p. 10;Google Scholar Bush, Barbara, Slave Women in Caribbean Society, 1650–1838 (Bloomington: University of Indiana Press, 1990), pp. 85–86.Google Scholar
85 See for example Lavrin, Asunción, “Sexuality in Colonial Mexico: A Church Dilemma.” in Lavrin, Asunción, editor, Sexuality and Marriage in Colonial Latin America (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1989), pp. 47–95.Google Scholar
86 See AGCA. A1.20. 734. 9227. f. 367 (10-29-68).
87 See AGCA. A1.20. 807. 9301. f. 85 (3-20-75). The wording “su muger” is ambiguous. It could either mean wedded spouse or concubine. Nevertheless it does imply much more than a fleeting relationship between Anton and Ysabel.
88 The original reads “negro esclavo Anton…casado con una yndia que se llama Margarita,” AGCA. A1.20 441. 8844. f. 12953 (3-14-73). See also AGCA. A1.20 441. 8844. f. 12954 (3-14-73).
89 See AGCA. Al.20. 733. 9226 f. 148 (8-25-44).
90 See AGCA. A1.20. 733. 9226 f. 74 (5-29-66).
91 Last Will and Testament of Juan de Léon de la Rua AGCA. A1.20. 440. 8843. f. 11902 (10-72).
92 The 1950s saw the beginning of the systematic study of Blacks in Guatemala’s colonial society. See Correa, Gustavo, El espíritu del mal en Guatemala (New Orleans, 1955).Google Scholar Later Lutz ably took up the challenge in his landmark study. See Lutz, Christopher H., “Santiago de Guatemala, 1541–1773: The Socio-Demographic History of a Spanish American Colonial City,” Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1976. See also note 5.Google Scholar
93 Compare to Bowser, , African Slave, p. 273.Google Scholar
94 See Kamen, , “El negro en hispanoamérica,” pp. 121–137, 136;Google Scholar and Restall, , “Black Conquistadors,” The Americas, this issue.Google Scholar
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96 See Díaz Soler, Luis M., Historia de la esclavitud negra en Puerto Rico (Rio Piedras: Editorial Universitaria, Universidad de Puerto Rico, 1965), p. 251 also cited ibid: p. 136.Google Scholar
97 See Hanger, Kimberly S., Bounded Lives, Bounded Places, Free Black Society in Colonial New Orleans 1769–1803 (Durham: Duke University press, 1997), p. 55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
98 See AGCA. A1.20 424. 8827. f. 40 (6-6-86).
99 Komisaruk’s work promises to shed much needed light on Black and mixed-Black women in the late colonial period. See for example Komisaruk, Catherine, “‘The Work it Cost Me:’ The Struggles of Slaves and Free Africans in Guatemala, 1770–1825,” paper presented at The International Conference of the American Society for Ethnohistory, Mexico City, 1997.Google Scholar As well Paul Lokken’s (Department of History, University of Florida) and Leonardo Hernández’s (Department of History, Brown University) forthcoming dissertations will help towards the understanding of Blacks in Santiago’s militias and interethnic interaction, respectively.
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