The relative autonomy of this coastal region …

Years: 1540 - 1683

The relative autonomy of this coastal region nearest to Quito enhances the effect of the Andes in isolating the Ecuadorian Sierra from the rest of the world during most of the nearly three centuries of colonial rule.

Behind these barriers, a social system is established that is essentially a replica of the Spanish feudal system at the time of the conquest, with the peninsulares (Spanish-born persons residing in the New World) being the ruling, landed elite and the natives being the subject people who work the land.

Although a few towns, particularly Quito, Riobamba, and Cuenca, grow along with the administrative and Roman Catholic bureaucracies and the local textile industries, colonial Ecuador is essentially a rural society.

The most common form in which the Spanish occupy the land is the encomienda.

Settlers are granted land, along with its inhabitants and resources, in return for taking charge of defending the territory, spiritually indoctrinating the native population, and extracting the crown's annual tribute (payable half in gold, half in local products) from the encomienda's native population.

There are some five hundred encomiendas in Ecuador by the early seventeenth century.

Although many consist of quite sizable haciendas, they are generally much smaller than the estates commonly found elsewhere in South America.

A multitude of reforms and regulations does not prevent the encomienda from becoming a system of virtual slavery of the natives, estimated at about one-half the total Ecuadorian population, who live on them.

In 1589 the president of the audiencia recognizes that many Spaniards are accepting grants only to sell them and undertake urban occupations, and he stops distributing new lands to Spaniards; however, the institution of the encomienda will persist until nearly the end of the colonial period.

Land that is less desirable is never distributed, but rather is left to traditional native communities or simply remains open public land.

In the late sixteenth century, the estimated one-quarter of the total native population on such public lands is resettled into native towns called reducciones in order to facilitate the collection of the natives' tribute, their conversion to Christianity, and the exploitation, of their labor. 

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