This Isle of Hispaniola was
made up of Six of their greatest Kingdoms, and as
many most Puissant Kings, to whose Empire almost all
the other Lords, whose Number was infinite, did pay
their Allegiance. One of these Kingdoms was called
Magua, signifying a Campaign or open Country;
which is very observable, if any place in the Universe
deserves taking notice of, and memorable for the pleasantness
of its Situation; for it is extended from South to
North Eighty Miles, in breadth Five, Eight, and in
some parts Ten Miles in length; and is on all sides
inclosed with the highest Mountains; above Thirty Thousand
Rivers, and Rivulets water her Coasts, Twelve of which
prodigious Number do not yield in all in magnitude
to those famous Rivers, the Eber, Duer, and
Guadalquivir; and all those Rivers which have
their Source or Spring from the Mountains lying Westerly,
the number whereof is Twenty Thousand) are very rich
in Mines of Gold; on which Mountain lies the Province
of rich Mines, whence the exquisite Gold of Twenty
Four Caracts weight, takes denomination. The
King and Lord of this Kingdom was named Guarionex,
who governed within the Compass of his Dominions so
many Vassals and Potent Lords, that every one of them
was able to bring into the Field Sixteen Thousand
Soldiers for the service of Guarionex their
Supream Lord and Soverain, when summoned thereunto.
Some of which I was acquainted with. This was
a most Obedient Prince, endued with great Courage
and Morality, naturally of a Pacifick Temper, and
most devoted to the service of the Castilian
Kings. This King commanded and ordered his Subjects,
that every one of those Lords under his Jurisdiction,
should present him with a Bell full of Gold; but in
succeeding times, being unable to perform it, they
were commanded to cut it in two, and fill one part
therewith, for the Inhabitants of this Isle were altogether
inexperienced, and unskilful in Mine-works, and the
digging Gold out of them. This Caiu proferred
his Service to the King of Castile, on this
Condition, that he would take care, that those Lands
should be cultivated and manur’d, wherein, during
the reign of Isabella, Queen of Castile,
the Spaniards first set footing and fixed their
Residence, extending in length even to Santo Domingo,
the space of Fifty Miles. For he declar’d
(nor was it a Fallacie, but an absolute Truth,) that
his Subjects understood not the practical use of digging
in Golden Mines. To which promises he had readily
and voluntarily condescended, to my own certain knowledge,
and so by this means, the King would have received
the Annual Revenue of Three Millions of Spanish
Crowns, and upward, there being at that very time
in that Island Fifty Cities more ample and spacious
than Sevil it self in Spain.
But what returns by way of Remuneration
and Reward did they make this so Clement and Benign
Monarch, can you imagine, no other but this?
They put the greatest Indignity upon him imaginable
in the person of his Consort who was violated by a
Spanish Captain altogether unworthy of the
Name of Christian. He might indeed probably expect
to meet with a convenient time and opportunity of
revenging this Ingominy so unjuriously thrown upon
him by preparing Military Forces to attaque him,
but he rather chose to abscond in the Province De
los Ciquayos (wherein a Puissant Vassal and subject
of his Ruled) devested of his Estate and Kingdom,
and there live and dye an exile. But the Spaniards
receiving certain information, that he had absented
himself, connived no longer at his Concealment but
raised War against him, who had received them with
so great humanity and kindness, and having first laid
waste and desolate the whole Region, at last found,
and took him Prisoner, who being bound in Fetters was
convey’d on board of a ship in order to his
transfretation to Castile, as a Captive:
but the Vessel perished in the Voyage, wherewith many
Spaniards were also lost, as well as a great
weight of Gold, among which there was a prodigious
Ingot of Gold, resembling a large Loaf of Bread, weighing
3600 Crowns; Thus it pleased God to revenge their enormous
impieties.
A Second Kingdom was named Marien,
where there is to this day a Haven, upon the utmost
Borders of the Plain or open Countrey toward the North,
more fertil and large than the kingdom of Portugal;
and really deserving constant and frequent Inahbitants:
For it abounds with Mountains, and is rich in Mines
of Gold and Orichalcum, a kind of Copper Mettal
mixt with Gold; The Kings name of this place was Guacanagari,
who had many powerful Lords (some whereof were not
unknown to me) under his subjection. The first
that landed in this Kingdom when he discovered America
was an Admiral well stricken in years, who had so
hospitable and kind a reception from the aforesaid
Gracanagari, as well as all those Spaniards
that accompanied him in that Voyage, giving them all
imaginable help and assisstance (for the admiral’s
vessel was sunk on their Coasts) that I heard it from
his own mouth, he could not possibly have been entertained
with greater Caresses and Civilities from his own
parents in his own Native Country. But this King
being forced to fly to avoid the Spanish slaughter
and Cruelty, deprived of all he was Master of, died
in the Mountains; and all the rest of the Potentates
and Nobles, his subjects, perished in that servitude
and Vassalage; as you shall find in this following
Treatise.
The Third Kingdom was distinguished
by the Appellation of Maquana, another admirable,
healthful and fruitful Region, where at present the
most refined sugar of the Island is made. Caonabo
then reigned there, who surmounted all the rest in
Power, State, and the splendid Ceremonies of His Government.
This King beyond all expectation was surpriz’d
in his own Palace, by the great subtilty and industry
of the Spaniards, and after carried on board
in order to his transportation to Castile,
but there being at that time six Ships Riding in the
Haven, and ready to set Sail such an impetuous storm
suddenly arose, that they as well as the Passengers
and Ships Crew were all lost, together with King Canabao
loaded with Irons; by which judgement the Almighty
declared that this was as unjust and impious an Act
as any of the former. This Kind had three or
four Brothers then Living, Men of strength and Valour,
who being highly incensed at the Captivity of their
King and Brother, to which he was injuriously reduc’d,
having also intelligence of the Devastations and Butcheries
committed by the Spaniards in other Regions,
and not long after hearing of their Brothers death,
took up Arms to revenge themselves of the Enemy, whom
the Spaniards met with, and certain party of
Horse (which proved very offensive to the Indians)
made such havoc and slaughter among them, that the
half of this Kingdom was laid waste and depopulated.
Xaraqua is the Fourth Kingdom,
and as it were the Centre and Middle of the whole
Island, and is not to be equalled for fluency of Speech
and politeness of Idiom or Dialect by any Inhabitants
of the other Kingdoms, and in Policy and Morality
transcends them all. Herein the Lords and Peers
abounded, and the very Populace excelled in in stature
and habit of Body: Their King was Behechio
by name and who had a Sister called Anacaona,
and both the Brother as well as Sister had loaded
the Spaniards with Benefits and singular acts
of Civility, and by delivering them from the evident
and apparent danger of Death, did signal services
to the Castilian Kings. Behechio dying
the supreme power of the Kingdom fell to Anacaona:
But it hapned one day, that the Governour of an Island,
attended by 60 Horse, and 30 Foot (now the Cavalry
was sufficiently able to unpeople not only the Isle,
but also the whole Continent) he summoned about 300
Dynasta’s, or Noblemen to appear before him,
and commanded the most powerful of them, being first
crouded into a Thatcht Barn or Hovel, to be exposed
to the fury of the merciless Fire, and the rest to
be pierced with Lances, and run through with the point
of the Sword, by a multitude of Men: And Anacaona
her self who (as we said before,) sway’d the
Imperial Scepter, to her greater honor was hanged
on a Gibbet. And if it fell out that any person
instigated by Compassion or Covetousness, did entertain
any Indian Boys and mount them on Horses, to
prevent their Murder, another was appointed to follow
them, who ran them through the back or in the hinder
parts, and if they chanced to escape Death, and fall
to the ground, they immediately cut off his Legs;
and when any of those Indians, that survived
these Barbarous Massacres, betook themselves to an
Isle eight miles distant, to escape their Butcheries,
they were then committed to servitude during Life.
The Fifth Kingdom was Hiquey,
over whom Queen Hiquanama, a superannuated
Princess, whome the Spaniards Crucified, did
preside and Govern. The number of those I saw
here burnt, and dismembered, and rackt with various
Torments, as well as others, the poor Remnants of
such matchless Villanies, who surviving were enslaved,
is infinite. But because so much might be said
concerning the Assassinations and Depopulating of
these people, as cannot without great difficulty be
published in Writing (nor do I conceive that one fragile
part of 1000 that is here contained can be fully displayed)
I will only add one remark more of the prementioned
Wars, in lieu of a Corollary or Conclusion, and aver
upon my Conscience, that notwithstanding all the above-named
Injustice, profligate Enormities and other Crimes which
I omit, (tho sufficiently known to me) the Indians
did not, nor was it in their power to give any greater
occasion for the Commission of them, than Pious Religioso’s
Living in a well regulated Monastic Life did afford
for any Sacrilegeous Villains to deprive them of their
Goods and Life at the same time, or why they who by
flight avoided death should be detain’d in perpetual,
not to be ransom’d Captivity and Slavery.
I adde farther, that I really believe, and am satisfied
by certain undeniable conjectures, that at the very
juncture of time, when all these outrages were commited
in this Isle, the Indians were not so much
guilty of one single mortal sin of Commission against
the Spaniards, that might deserve from any
Man revenge or require satisfaction. And as
for those sins, the punishment whereof God hath reserved
to himself, as the immoderate desire of Revenge, Hatred,
Envy or inward rancor of Spirit, to which they might
be transported against such Capital Enemies as the
Spaniards were, I judge that very few of them
can justly be accused of them; for their impetuosity
and vigor I speak experimentally, was inferior to
that of Children of ten or twelve years of age:
and this I can assure you, that the Indians
had ever a just cause of raising War against the Spaniards,
and the Spaniards on the contrary never raised
a just was against them, but what was more injurious
and groundless then any undertaken by the worst of
Tyrants. All which I affirm of all their other
Transactions and passages in America.
The Warlike Engagements being over,
and the Inhabitants all swept away, they divided among
themselves the Young Men, Women, and Children reserved
promiscuously for that purpose, one obtained thirty,
another forty, to this Man one hundred were disposed,
to the other two hundred, and the more one was in
favor with the domineering Tyrant (which they styled
Governor) the more he became Master of, upon this pretence,
and with this Proviso, that he should see them instructed
in the Catholick Religion, when as they themselves
to whom they were committed to be taught, and the
care of their Souls instructed them were, for the major
part Idiots, Cruel, Avaritious, infected and stained
with all sorts of Vices. And this was the great
care they had of them, they sent the Males to the
Mines to dig and bring away the Gold, which is an
intollerable labor; but the Women they made use of
to Manure and Till the ground, which is a toil most
irksome even to Men of the strongest and most robust
constitutions, allowing them no other food but Herbage,
and such kind of unsubstantial nutriment, so that the
Nursing Womens Milk was exsiccated and so dryed up,
that the young Infants lately brought forth, all perished,
and females being separated from and debarred cohabitation
with Men, there was no Prolification or raising up
issue among them. The Men died in Mines, hunger
starved and oppressed with labor, and the Women perished
in the Fields, harrassed and broken with the like
Evils and Calamities: Thus an infinite number
of Inhabitants that formerly peopled this Island were
exterminated and dwindled away to nothing by such
Consumptions. They were compelled to carry burthens
of eighty or one hundred pound weight, and that an
hundred or two hundred miles compleat: and the
Spaniards were born by them on the Shoulders
in a pensil Vehicle or Carriage, or kind of Beds made
of Net-work by the Indians; for in Truth they
made use of them as Beasts to carry the burthens and
cumbersom baggage of their journeys, insomuch that
it frequently happened, that the Shoulders and Backs
of the Indians were deeply marked with their
scourges and stripes, just as they used to serve a
tired Jade, accustomed to burthens. And as to
those slashes with whips, blows with staves, cuffs
and boxes, maledictions and curses, with
a Thousand of such kind of Torments they suffered
during the fatigue of their laborious journeys it
would require a long tract of time, and many Reams
of Paper to describe them, and when all were done
would only create Horror and Consternation in the
Reader.
But here is is observable, that the
desolation of these Isles and Provinces took beginning
since the decease of the most Serene Queen Isabella,
about the year 1504, for before that time very few
of the Provinces situated in that Island were oppressed
or spoiled with unjust Wars, or violated with general
devastation as after they were, and most if not all
these things were concealed and masked from the Queens
knowledge (whom I hope God hath crowned with Eternal
Glory) for she was transported with fervent and wonderful
zeal, nay, almost Divine desires for the Salvation
and preservation of these people, which things so
exemplary as these we having seen with our eyes, and
felt with our hands, cannot easily be forgotten.
Take this also for a general Rule,
that the Spaniards upon what American
Coasts soever they arrived, exercised the same Cruelties,
Slaughters, Tyrannies and detestable Oppressions
on the most innocent Indian Nation, and diverting
themselves with delights in new sorts of Torment,
did in time improve in Barbarism and Cruelty; wherewith
the Omnipotent being incensed suffered them to fail
by a more desperate and dangerous lapse into a reprobate
state.