Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 December 2015
After expelling their European rivals from the Amazon in the early–seventeenth century, the Portuguese set about exploiting the principal assets of the vast basin—the indigenous inhabitants. As allies, converts, and slaves the native population provided the labor and much of the social fabric of the developing colony. While a variety of canoe-borne expeditions ventured ever farther up the main river and its tributaries seeking elusive gold, harvesting forest products, and expanding the crown's domain, prosperity and power for the leaders and sponsors of those forays derived mainly from the human cargo brought downstream to missions, forts, and other settlements. As a result, crown and colonial authorities attempted to regulate and control the expeditions, and fierce competition developed among institutions and individuals involved in the process. Documents in Portuguese and Brazilian archives reveal the key role played by the Indians themselves in collaboration with the little-studied cross-cultural intermediaries, known as cunhamenas.
The author gratefully acknowledges research support from Gettysburg College and the Biblioteca Nacional—Fundação Luso-Americana in Lisbon, Portugal.
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101 5 Oct. 1744, “The ‘Junta de Missões,’” p. 135.
102 Requerim^o do R^mo P^e Prov^al do Carmo, 18 Aug. 1745, “The ‘Junta de Missões,’” p. 142.
103 15 Mar. 1745, “The ‘Junta de Missões,’” pp. 139–40.
104 Investigation by the Inquisition Commissioners, Braga, IL, Processo 5169, ANTT, fl. 27.
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115 Governor Fran.co X.er de M.ca Furtado to Diogo de M.ca Corte Real, Pará, 1 Feb. 1754, AHU_ACL_CU_013, Cx. 36, D. 3323.
116 [Francisco Xavier de Mendonça Furtado to Pombal], Pará, 25 Feb. 1754, AEP, vol. 2, p. 515.
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