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The First Encomienda: Isabela and the Birth of Colonial Labor
Description
Columbus's first settlement on Hispaniola, La Isabela, failed—but its legacy was the encomienda system. This episode traces the origins of colonial forced labor from the 1493 settlement to the 1503 redistribution policies of Nicolás de Ovando. We explore how the Taino cacique Guacanagarix’s alliance soured into servitude, how the Requerimiento was first read in 1494, and how the Laws of Burgos (1512) tried—and failed—to regulate abuse. Specific figures include Columbus, Ovando, Fray Antonio de Montesinos (the first Spanish priest to condemn encomiendas in his 1511 sermon), and Queen Isabella’s initial protectionist stance. We examine the gold-crazed search for El Dorado that drove demand for native labor, the transition from gold to sugar, and the demographic collapse of the Taino from 300,000 to 60,000 in two decades. This is the dirty origin story of the encomienda—a system that shaped colonial Latin America for three centuries.