The intellectual debates in sixteenth-century Spain over the treatment and status of Indigenous peoples were not merely academic exercises; they had profound legal consequences in the Americas. While figures like Bartolomé de las Casas argued for the spiritual equality and rational capacity of Native Americans, and Juan Ginés de Sepúlveda championed their subjugation based on theories of natural slavery, Native communities were not passive observers. Instead, elite Indigenous leaders quickly learned the nuances of Spanish law and theological arguments, employing Spanish courts and petitioning the crown directly to protect their communal lands, secure exemptions from the encomienda, and preserve elements of their traditional political structures.
Which of the following historical developments in the Spanish colonies during the sixteenth century best supports the author's argument in the passage?
- Indigenous communities utilizing Spanish legal tribunals to sue for protection against abusive colonial officialsAnswer
- BThe voluntary surrender of communal lands by Indigenous peoples in exchange for integration into the encomienda system
- CThe rapid formation of a pan-Indigenous political alliance that successfully united all Native societies against European influence
- DThe total rejection of European crops and livestock by Native groups to completely prevent the spread of the Columbian Exchange