: Frederick J. Reiter
: They Built Utopia (The Jesuit Missions in Paraguay): 1610-1768
: Digitalia
: 9781882528110
: 1
: CHF 67.80
:
: Neuzeit bis 1918
: English
: 429
: DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

The present study, brilliantly written and scrupulously documented, examines the spiritual conquest of the southern American continent, as well as the political, historical, and social ramificacions of such a conquest. An indispensable research tool of interest to the specialist and the general reader alike.

INTRODUCTION (p. i)

Mankind`s efforts to create the `Ideal State` always held a special fascination for me. Utopia, by definition, is a visionary`s dream unsuited for reality. Yet when, many years ago, in Rome an old Italian book about the Jesuit Missions in Paraguay fell into my hands I was almost ready to believe that there had been, between 1610 and 1767, a true Utopia in the tropical wilderness of Paraguay.

A cursory check revealed that the book was not fiction but history: a group of Jesuit missions had, through circumstances as unique as extraordinary, grown into an entity, a state within the state, where more than a hundred thousand Guaraní Indians, guided by a handful of the Fathers, led productive lives as free men, deeply religious Christians and proud subjects of the King of Spain.

Since then I have been dedicated to that story and the many years of research have been richly rewarding. Much to my surprise I found that no American historian had been attracted to the subject and even the many thousands of pages written about it by Latin American, Spanish, and other European historians do not tell the whole of the story, either because they are dealing with a limited aspect or period or, in the case of the Jesuit writers, because the Expulsion Decree of 1767 enforced their silence.

So it seems appropriate to give a brief description of the geographical and political circumstances prevailing at the origin of the missions. Paraguay, at the end of the 16th century, was a vast province comprising the southern half of the continent from the border of Peru to the tip of Patagonia.

Up north, Mexico and Peru were rich and productive vice-royalties, but Paraguay was an empty wilderness, the few settlements little more than primitively fortified villages isolated from one another by huge distances. Buenos Aires, settled briefly in 1535, had to be abandoned as indefensible and, settled again in 1580, had no port and just a few hundred souls between Spaniards and mestizos.

The conquistadors who had to abandon it in 1535 sailed up the Paraná and Paraguay rivers and founded Asuncion at a protective bend of the river, it became the capital of the province and boasted about 200 colonists.

The country belonged to the Indians, mostly Guaraníes, split into countless tribes, each headed by its cacique. They were savage nomads, fiercely hostile against the intruders. Those closest to the settlements were subdued, the men serving as the labor force and the women producing the first generation of the rapidly multiplying mestizo population.

Armed conquest of the interior was obviously beyond the colonists` strength. It was the heroic effort of a handful of Jesuit missionaries from Peru and Brazil who began, alone and unaided, the `conquista espiritual`, the spiritual conquest of the Guaraníes which opened the path into the interior.

They went from tribe to tribe, living with the Indians and learning their language, suffering hunger and sickness with them, --he first white men who came unarmed and in peace without demanding anything. The Guaraní.es began to trust them and listened when they spoke about Jesus Christ and the Faith.
Table of contents6
Introduction8
Part I: The Investigation18
Chapter 1: The State Within the State20
Chapter 2: The View from Madrid28
Chapter 3: Beginnings36
Chapter 4: The Enemies58
Chapter 5: Ecclesiastic and Fiscal Problems72
Chapter 6: The Communal System81
Chapter 7: The Daily Life91
Chapter 8: 'A Garden of Christianity'101
Chapter 9: Language--Militia--Jesuit Hierarchy112
Chapter 10: The Royal Approval118
Notes to Part I127
Part II: The Border Treaty Between Spain and Portugal134
Chapter 1: The Portuguese Connection136
Chapter 2: Seven of the Missions--Sold Out144
Chapter 3: Don José de Carvajal, the Minister150
Chapter 4: The King's Commissar157
Chapter 5: The Padre Comisario General167
Chapter 6: The Indians Resist177
Chapter 7: The Guaraní War, First Campaign187
Chapter 8: Madrid Accuses the Jesuits199
Chapter 9: Don Ricardo Wall, the New Minister207
Chapter 10: The Guaraní War, Second Campaign215
Chapter 11: Don Pedro de Ceballos, the New Governor of Buenos Aires225
Chapter 12: The Portuguese Double Cross235
Chapter 13: Ceballos and the Jesuits249
Chapter 14: The Padres' Loyalty Affirmed263
Chapter 15: Carvalho's Final Attack275
Chapter 16: The Expulsion from Portugal281
Notes to Part II286
Part III: The Expulsion from Spain293
Chapter 1: The New King, Carlos III295
Chapter 2: Turnabout in Paraguay305
Chapter 3: The Expulsion from France309
Chapter 4: Rebuilding the Missions315
Chapter 5: Conspiracy at the Court in Madrid321
Chapter 6: Riots in Madrid--321
Chapter 6: Riots in Madrid--321
331321
Chapter 7: Count Aranda Takes Charge337
Chapter 8: Secret Investigation and Expulsion Decree344
Chapter 9: Aranda's Private Problem354
Chapter 10: Expulsion from Spain358
Chapter 11: Expulsion from Paraguay364
Epilogue376
Notes to Part III384
Bibliography389
Appendices411
Index419
A419
B419
C420
D422
E422
F422
G423
H423
I423
J424
K424
L424
M424
N425
O425
P425
Q426
R426
S427
T428
U428
V428
W429
Y429