El Salvador SPANISH CONQUEST AND COLONIZATION
Ruins at Tazumal
When the Spanish first ventured into Central America from the
colony of New Spain (Mexico) in the early sixteenth century, the
area that would become El Salvador was populated primarily by
Indians of the Pipil tribe. The Pipil were a subgroup of a
nomadic people known as the Nahua, who had migrated into Central
America about 3000 B.C. The Nahua eventually fell under the sway
of the Maya Empire, which dominated the Mesoamerican region until
its decline in the ninth century A.D. Pipil culture did not reach
the advanced level achieved by the Maya; it has been compared,
albeit on a smaller scale, to that of the Aztecs in Mexico. The
Pipil nation, believed to have been founded in the eleventh
century, was organized into two major federated states subdivided
into smaller principalities. Although primarily an agricultural
people, the Pipil built a number of large urban centers, some of
which developed into present-day cities, such as Sonsonate and
Ahuachapan
(see
fig. 1).
The Pipil were a determined people who stoutly resisted
Spanish efforts to extend their dominion southward. The first
such effort by Spanish forces was led by Pedro de Alvarado, a
lieutenant of Hernan Cortes in the conquest of Mexico. It met
with stiff resistance from the indigenous population. Alvarado's
expeditionary force entered El Salvador--or Cuscatlan, as it was
known by the Pipil--in June 1524. The Spaniards were defeated in
a major engagement shortly thereafter and were forced to withdraw
to Guatemala. Two subsequent expeditions were required--in 1525
and 1528--to bring the Pipil under Spanish control. It is
noteworthy that the name of the supposed leader of the Indian
resistance, Atlacatl, has been perpetuated and honored among the
Salvadorans to the relative exclusion of that of Alvarado. In
this sense, the Salvadoran ambivalence toward the conquest bears
a resemblance to the prevailing opinion in Mexico, where Cortes
is more reviled than celebrated.
The Spanish had come to Central America seeking, at least in
part, to add to the store of precious metals that constituted the
most immediate spoils of the Mexican conquest. In the small
colony that they dubbed El Salvador ("the savior"), they were
severely disappointed in this regard. What little gold was
available was accessible only through the laborious and timeconsuming method of panning, a process that consumed the effort
of numerous impressed Indian laborers for a number of years.
Denied the opportunity for quick riches, the conquistadors and
later the Spanish settlers eventually came to realize that the
sole exploitable resource of El Salvador was the land.
El Salvador thus was relegated to the status of a backwater
of the Spanish Empire. In this state of neglect and isolation,
the seeds of the country's politico-economic structure were
planted. Large tracts of land were granted by the crown,
initially under the terms of the
encomienda (see Glossary)
system, whereby the grantee was invested with the right to
collect tribute from the native inhabitants of a designated area.
The manifest abuse of the Indian population that resulted from
the encomienda system contributed to its replacement in
the mid-sixteenth century by the
repartimiento (see Glossary)
system. Under repartimiento, representatives of
the crown were empowered to regulate the work allotment and
treatment of Indian laborers. Although more humane in theory, it
was a system that was extremely vulnerable to abuse. The colony's
distance from the mother country, the ease with which royal
officials could be corrupted, and the prevailing disregard among
the elite--made up of peninsulares, born in Spain, and
criollos born in the New World of Spanish parentage--for
the plight of the Indians militated against any substantive
improvement in living conditions for the indigenous population.
Although landholders in El Salvador exercised nearly absolute
power within their fiefdoms, they did not begin to realize the
full economic potential of their holdings until they instituted
the system of widespread cultivation of a single lucrative export
commodity. The first of these commodities was cacao, which
flourished during the latter half of the sixteenth century.
Cultivation of indigo followed and produced tremendous profits
during the eighteenth century. Largely as a result of the
importance of the indigo trade, the colonial capital of San
Salvador eventually came to be considered the second city of the
Captaincy General of Guatemala, the Spanish administrative unit
that encompassed most of Central America during the colonial
period. The indigo boom effectively played itself out by the midnineteenth century, however, after the discovery in Germany of a
synthetic dye that could be produced much more economically.
The fortunes of the Spanish Empire waned throughout the
eighteenth century and were dashed completely by the Napoleonic
conquest of the Iberian Peninsula in 1808. As the Salvadorans
moved toward independence, the legacies of their progenitors,
both Indian and Spanish, were firmly fixed. The predominance of
agriculture was a fact of life well before the Conquest; the
Spanish contributed to this basic system by emphasizing
production for export versus cultivation for subsistence.
Individual loyalties under the pre-Conquest civilization were
given primarily to one's family and to one's village; Spanish
rule did little or nothing to change this attitude or to build
any substantial sense of national identity among the common
people. Religious influence on daily life was strong in both preConquest and colonial societies. The simple animistic nature of
the Indians' beliefs allowed for the ready assimilation of Roman
Catholic dogma. As elsewhere in Latin America, the hierarchical
structure of the church complemented the rigid stratification of
colonial society. In many ways, independence would serve only to
exacerbate the inequities inherent in that society.
Data as of November 1988
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