Page:Mexico, Aztec, Spanish and Republican, Vol 1.djvu/143

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BOOK II.


CHAPTER I.

INTRODUCTORY.


COLONIAL SYSTEM EARLY GRANTS OF POWER TO RULERS IN MEXICO, BY THE EMPEROR CHARLES V — ABUSE OF IT. — COUNCIL OF THE INDIES — LAWS. — ROYAL AUDIENCES — CABILDOS — FUEROS. — RELATIVE POSITIONS OF SPANIARDS AND CREOLES. — SCHEME OF SPANISH COLONIAL TRADE. — RESTRICTIONS ON TRADE. — ALCABALA — TAXES — PAPAL BULLS. — BULLS DE CRUZADA — DE DEFUNTOS — OF COMPOSITION. — POWER OF THE CHURCH — ITS PROPERTY — INQUISITION. — THE ACTS OF THE INQUISITION. — REPARTIMIENTOS. — INDIANS — AGRICULTURISTS — MINERS — MITA. — EXCUSES FOR MALADMINISTRATION.

Before we present the reader a brief sketch of the viceroyal government of New Spain, it may, in no small degree, contribute to the elucidation of this period if we review the Spanish colonial system that prevailed from the conquest to the revolution which resulted in independence.

As soon as the Spaniards had plundered the wealth accumulated by the Incas and the Aztecs in the semi-civilized empires of Mexico and Peru, they turned their attention to the government of the colonies which they saw springing up as if by enchantment. The allurements of gold and the enticements of a prolific soil, under delicious skies, had not yet ceased to inflame the ardent national fancy of Spain, so that an eager immigration escaped by every route to America. An almost regal and absolute power was vested by special grants from the king in the persons who were despatched from his court to found the first governments in the New World. But this authority was so abused by some of the ministerial agents that Charles V. took an early occasion to curb