The Americas in the Spanish World Order
The Justification for Conquest in the Seventeenth Century
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Pennsylvania Press
Published:29th May '94
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This insightful book explores the Spanish justification for colonial actions in the Americas, focusing on Juan de Solorzano Pereira's influential work.
In The Americas in the Spanish World Order, the author delves into the complex interplay between Spanish colonial ambitions and the intellectual frameworks that justified them. The book highlights the persistent Spanish concern regarding the legitimacy of their conquests and colonization efforts in the Americas. This exploration is not merely a historical recounting but also an examination of how medieval thought, particularly from the thirteenth century, continued to influence Spanish legal and ethical perspectives during the colonial period.
At the heart of this narrative is Juan de Solorzano Pereira, a prominent lawyer and judge who dedicated much of his career to understanding and justifying Spanish rule in the New World. His seminal work, De Indiarum Jure, stands out as a critical defense of Spanish actions in the Americas. The book illustrates how Solorzano's arguments were rooted in medieval Catholic theories of international order, offering an alternative perspective to the emerging ideas of modern international law, as epitomized by figures like Hugo Grotius.
By examining Solorzano's contributions and the broader context of Spanish colonialism, The Americas in the Spanish World Order provides valuable insights into the legal and moral justifications that shaped the Spanish Empire's expansion. This book is essential for understanding the enduring legacy of medieval thought in shaping modern legal frameworks and the historical narrative surrounding the conquest of the Americas.
"It is Solorzano's indestructible competence, his exactness and certainty in applying the categories of Aristotelian analysis, that makes reading about him a valuable experience. . . . Muldoon has done admirable work in restoring Solorzano to life, and it is clear from his conclusion that his commitment as a historian is to the recovery of the scholastic intellect no less than to the narrative of the Spanish encounter with the New World. It is this duality of interest which gives his book its very considerable value." * J. G. A. Pocock *
"Muldoon is an able analyst, particularly apt at discerning nuance. Like a latter-day scholastic political theorist of the seventeenth century, he immerses himself and his reader in prevailing views on justification of colonial enterprise deeply rooted in medieval history and medieval concepts and notions about the nature of the world. Muldoon seems to admire Solorzano, to get inside him, in a way that Solorzano's views become Muldoon's, a virtue of this book, which can be read profitably today by those vexed by the need to justify intervention in the affairs of other nations or societies where tyranny, monumental injustice, exploitation, and inhumanity prevail." * American Historical Review *
"Muldoon does an excellent job of Placing Solorzano's ideas into the context of medieval and early modern political theory and philosophy. He makes careful speculations about the intellectual process behind the composition of the De Indiarum Jure and therefore reconstructs an intellectual debate that will be useful for many scholars." * Renaissance Quarterly *
"An important book that clarifies both the continued Spanish preoccupation with the legitimacy of conquest and colonization of the Americas and the persistent strength of medieval intellectual thought dating back, in large part, to the thirteenth century." * Sixteenth-Century Journal *
ISBN: 9780812232455
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
256 pages