Rivers of Gold: The Rise of the Spanish Empire, from Columbus to Magellan

الغلاف الأمامي
Random House, 2003 - 696 من الصفحات
From one of the greatest historians of the Spanish world, here is a fresh and fascinating account of Spain’s early conquests in the Americas. Hugh Thomas’s magisterial narrative of Spain in the New World has all the characteristics of great historical literature: amazing discoveries, ambition, greed, religious fanaticism, court intrigue, and a battle for the soul of humankind.

Hugh Thomas shows Spain at the dawn of the sixteenth century as a world power on the brink of greatness. Her monarchs, Fernando and Isabel, had retaken Granada from Islam, thereby completing restoration of the entire Iberian peninsula to Catholic rule. Flush with success, they agreed to sponsor an obscure Genoese sailor’s plan to sail west to the Indies, where, legend purported, gold and spices flowed as if they were rivers. For Spain and for the world, this decision to send Christopher Columbus west was epochal—the dividing line between the medieval and the modern.

Spain’s colonial adventures began inauspiciously: Columbus’s meagerly funded expedition cost less than a Spanish princess’s recent wedding. In spite of its small scale, it was a mission of astounding scope: to claim for Spain all the wealth of the Indies. The gold alone, thought Columbus, would fund a grand Crusade to reunite Christendom with its holy city, Jerusalem.

The lofty aspirations of the first explorers died hard, as the pursuit of wealth and glory competed with the pursuit of pious impulses. The adventurers from Spain were also, of course, curious about geographical mysteries, and they had a remarkable loyalty to their country. But rather than bridging earth and heaven, Spain’s many conquests bore a bitter fruit. In their search for gold, Spaniards enslaved “Indians” from the Bahamas and the South American mainland. The eloquent protests of Bartolomé de las Casas, here much discussed, began almost immediately. Columbus and other Spanish explorers—Cortés, Ponce de León, and Magellan among them—created an empire for Spain of unsurpassed size and scope. But the door was soon open for other powers, enemies of Spain, to stake their claims.
Great men and women dominate these pages: cardinals and bishops, priors and sailors, landowners and warriors, princes and priests, noblemen and their determined wives.

Rivers of Gold is a great story brilliantly told. More significant, it is an engrossing history with many profound—often disturbing—echoes in the present.
 

المحتوى

This city is a wife whose husband is the hill
3
The only happy country
11
Great tranquility and order
27
Book
45
For Gods sake tell me what song you are singing
70
A white stretch of land
85
Tears in the royal eyes
99
They love their neighbors as themselves
108
Book Five BALBOA AND PEDRARIAS
325
They took possession of all that sea
327
A man very advanced in excess
341
Book Six CISNEROS
355
King Fernando He is dead
357
Go back and see what is happening
375
Book Seven CHARLES KING AND EMPEROR
395
The best place in the world for blacks
397

We concede the islands and lands discovered by you
116
As if in their own country
126
Mainland no island
139
Whether we can sell those slaves or not
153
Malevolent jokes of the goddess Fortune
163
Book Three
181
The greatest good that we can wish for
201
Teach them and indoctrinate them with good customs
218
Children must constantly obey their parents
239
You ought to send one hundred black slaves
251
And they leapt onto the land
260
Call this other place Amerige
269
Book Four
285
A voice crying in the wilderness
287
Infidels may justly defend themselves
296
Without partiality love or hatred
311
It is clear as day
414
I was moved to act by a natural compassion
424
For empire comes from God alone
435
The new golden land
444
Book Eight NEW SPAIN
459
I am to pass away like a faded flower
461
This land is the richest in the world
474
O our lord thou has suffered
479
Go with good fortune
495
The new emperor
513
From the poplars I come mama
519
FAMILY TREES
539
THE COSTS OF BECOMING EMPEROR 1519
545
543
650
545
691
حقوق النشر

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نبذة عن المؤلف (2003)

HUGH THOMAS is the author of numerous histories, including The Spanish Civil War, for which he won the Somerset Maugham Award, Conquest, and The Slave Trade. His A History of the World won him the Arts Council Prize for History. Made a Lord in 1981, Lord Thomas was educated at Queens’ College, Cambridge, and the Sorbonne.

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