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Valdivia and the Spanish Empire
FORTS,
ARMIES AND TECHNOLOGY
Spanish Empire
In contrast with Mexico and Peru, Chile lacks
large pre-Columbian monuments. Only some ruins of a secondary character remain.
Due to this, it was not until the establishment of the Spanish empire that large constructions began to appear in these remote lands at the bottom of
the world.
These constructions, these magnificent castles
bring to mind times passed of pirates and empires, of galleons and of gold.
Violent times in which the sword and the canon defined the innumerable
skirmishes for land, treasure and the world.
Listening to the history of the Spanish empire
from the point of view of their ancient enemies, the Anglo-Saxons, gives the impression
that it had been a weak empire, or that it subjugated easily to the designs of its
enemies and in the end, that it was a total failure. Nothing is further from the
truth. After all, there are hundreds of millions of people in tens of countries
throughout the world who share these ethnic and cultural roots. The
Spanish empire was perhaps the most successful empire of all, since it brought
the Hispanic culture to many corners of the planet where it still
flourishes today.
It was not easy for the Spanish crown to maintain
its dominions overseas. It was entangled for centuries in
continuous wars with its western rivals as much in Europe as in America, from
the southern part of the United States to Cape Horn, as well as its
territories in the Philippines, North Africa and many others. These fights had their origins in economic factors as much as
religious ones. And the two were often combined - the military force behind the
weight of the Catholic church.
These continual struggles were hugely expensive and
were financed in part by the treasures of the Philippines, Mexico and
Peru and on the other hand with debts which provoked, in the end, the ruin of the Spanish
empire. Another factor to take into account was the large impact that the wars
and emigration had on the Hispanic population, which produced serious
demographic upheaval in the country.
In the end, tired of fighting, Spain lost its
colonies in America and Asia and was militarily humiliated. Yet nevertheless, for three
centuries they had managed to maintain the majority of the New World.
The precious metals of Peru and Bolivia were a
very important financial source for the Spanish empire. The gold and silver from
these regions served to buy silk in Manila, slaves in Africa and paid for
voyages from Europe which brought new products to the colonies. Under no circumstances would the empire permit the loss of
such a source of wealth.
Pirates, like Francis Drake, cruised the Magellan
strait and appeared on the south coast of Chile. They targeted the most
indefensible populations on the Pacific coast between Mexico and Chile and
sporadically attacked communities and killed civilians on their short forays
onto land. As their forces were small in number, working in this manner allowed
them to take such territories in a definitive way.
They were, we must not forget, too far from
Europe bases to begin battle in a direct form. In the Atlantic, pirates
were successful in establishing strategic points in places like Jamaica and
other places in the West Indies. From these they were successful in
inflicting damage on Spanish trade with Europe. In the Pacific,
nevertheless, the pirates lacked such enclaves from where they could launch their
attacks.
The most suitable places in the Pacific for
establishing bases were Chiloé and Valdivia on the Chilean coast. This
last was defended with painstaking care for the Spanish empire and its forts
evoke these lost times of adventurers and empires. In fact, Chile was
always a source of worry and expense for the Spanish empire, one which had to be
maintained with a permanent force of men with the purpose of protecting the
coasts from potential European enemies and to maintain a line against the
rebellions of the indomitable indigenous Mapuches.
Technology of the age:The
Military Spanish Heroes
Almost all the elements employed in the
construction were made on site. From the rock and the mortar to the
gun-carriages of the canons. All the engineering work and construction of the Hispanic
forts was managed by Hispanic military engineers in the eighteenth century and
who constituted the main body of the engineers of the king.
Spain, if a little behind in scientific
investigation, it was certainly not so with military engineering. The challenge
of American colonization and the needs of the military and civilians, as
soon as the permanent fighting against their European enemies had
driven the development of military technology aside from scientific
study.
The art of designing rock structures,
called stonecutting, was established in numerous publications of this age.
They described the precise proportions to contruct forts, to
cast canons and fire them, and many other civilian as well as military
technologies of the age. All were made with the help of highly skilled plans and artistic
skill and with the help of the maths, geometry and algebra of this time, adapted to the art of war.
In 1583 Emperor Felipe II funded the Academy of
Mathematics in Madrid under whose auspices were some of the greatest geniuses of
military theory in their time, such as: Cristóbal de Rojas (1555-1614), author
of Teoría y Práctica
de la Fortificación (Theory and Practice of Fortification), considered one
of the most celebrated military engineers of the age; Bernardino de Mendoza,
author of Teoría y Práctica de la Guerra (Theory and Practice of War) (1595)
which was translated into German, French, Italian and English; and the
mathematician Pedro Ambrosio de
Onderiz, who translated into Castellano La Perspective Speculation (The
Speculative Perspective) of Euclid and who wrote the treatise Uso de Globos.
In America, military engineers produced a lot of work, some of which was
truly spectacular. Highlighted among these were the Mexican aqueducts of Zempoala, Querétano
and Xalpa, dams, forts and much more. They also studied the development of
inter-oceanic canals in Nicaragua and Panamá, centuries before the idea was
finally realized.
Royal Factories of Valdivia
For the foundation of metallic elements,
bricks and tiles and also for the fabrication of gun-carriages, doors and other
elements in wood, it was necessary to install workshops which were called Royal Factories. The
most important was the installation on Valenzuela island which lies in front of Valdivia.
Here, all types of things were produced, and used not only locally
but taken to other places of the empire.
The forts were constructed mainly from
rock but also from bricks and lime. This last came from Calera
in the central zone which at this time was a Jesuit base.
Ballast and Canons
Many of the canons of Valdivia came directly from
Spain or better from Peru, as in the earlier periods locally-cast pieces were of lesser quality.
Over time, of course, the
skill of the artisanship improved greatly. Part of the materials were
produced locally, while the rest were brought from the capital.
One of the advancements were little ovens installed a small distance from the canons. These had the aim of
heating the balls to the point of redness, a curious technique but highly
effective against the wooden boats of this time; this is how it came to be named
the red boat. The cannonballs were heated red before firing them at the
enemy.
Valdivian Shipyards
Not all the boats of the Spanish Empire were
constructed on the Iberian peninsula, many of them were armed directly in the
colonies. This is the case with the famous galleons of Manila, which made the
route between the Philippines to Acapulco, Mexico. In South America also, they
constructed boats and in Chile the main shipyards were situated in Chiloé, with
the secondary in Valdivia.
This last region, plain of fine-wooded forests
and a considerable strategic advantage, lended itself very well to the
construction of frigates and other medium-sized boats. These were used to
complement the Pacific defenses and for commercial voyages.
It was from then therefore, that Valdivia began to contruct
boats and still today it produces small boats for fishing or tourism. It is in Talcahuano - further north -
where the drafts of large Chilean
boats are formed.
Valdivia
| Forts of
Valdivia | The
Catastrophe | Technology
of the Age
Articles: Omar Vega
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