To strengthen his own power and gain …

Years: 1396 - 1539
To strengthen his own power and gain supporters both in Cuba and in Spain, Velazquez begins to grant encomiendas, or contracts, whereby large landowners (encomederos), who are favored conquistadors, supposedly agree to provide protection and religious instruction to natives in return for their labor.

The crown uses the encomienda concept as a political instrument to consolidate its control over the indigenous population.

Many encomenderos, however, interested only in exploiting the resources of the island, disregard their moral, religious, and legal obligations to the natives.

A conflict soon develops between the crown and the Spanish settlers over the control and utilization of the labor by the exploitative encomenderos, and also over the crown's stated objective to Christianize the natives and the crown's own economic motivations.

In the reality of the New World, the sixteenth-century Christian ideal of converting souls is many times sacrificed for a profit.

Christianization is reduced to mass baptism; and despite the crown's insistence that natives are not slaves, many are bought and sold as chattels.

As soon as the conquest is completed and the natives subjugated, the crown begins introducing to the island the institutional apparatus necessary to govern the colony.

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