Episode Details
Back to Episodes
The Requerimiento A Legal Cover for Conquest
Description
In this episode, Lucas and Luna dissect the Requerimiento, a legal document read to indigenous peoples before conquest that demanded submission to the Spanish crown and the Catholic Church. They explore its origins in the 1513 Junta de Burgos, its actual use—often read in Spanish to empty forests or before battles—and its enduring legacy in international law. The conversation covers the roles of key figures like Bartolomé de las Casas, who condemned it as unjust, and Juan Ginés de Sepúlveda, who defended conquest. They discuss the Salamanca School, the Valladolid Debate of 1550-51, and how the Requerimiento foreshadowed modern doctrines of preemptive war. The episode examines the gap between legal theory and colonial reality, including the infamous incident where conquistadors read it to an empty village before an attack. This is a deep dive into how language and law were weaponized in the service of empire, and how those debates still echo today.