You’re missing the other European territories Spain had in the Spanish Empire like parts of Italy, Netherlands, France & so on. Also larger portions of North & South America
Exactly what I said. Anglos always do this for the Spanish empire but they include all of India even though the British never controlled all of India. They include the modern borders of African countries even though the British only controlled coastal towns. Pure hypocrisy.
@@xhorxheetxeberria-td1hu The Anglo-sphere of influence is immense, I live in the United States & the education is a joke not to mention Spain & the language Spanish are a nonstarter in anything significant in history here. Most Americans don’t even know Spain helped the most in the American Revolution against Great Britain, most money, weapons, soldiers, more than France. Spanish is looked upon as a Non-white language from Mexico or “South America”. The United States also started to use the word “Hispanic” to identify anyone from part of the former Spanish Empire, “Latin” America even if they don’t descend from the Spanish or Portuguese. The Black Legend was meticulously done, still to this day.
@@xhorxheetxeberria-td1hu The Anglo-sphere of influence is immense, I live in the United States & the education is a joke not to mention Spain & the language Spanish are a nonstarter in anything significant in history here. Most Americans don’t even know Spain helped the most in the American Revolution against Great Britain, most money, weapons, soldiers, more than France. Spanish is looked upon as a Non-white language from Mexico or “South America”. The United States also started to use the word “Hispanic” in the 1970’s census to identify anyone from part of the former Spanish Empire, “Latin” America even if they don’t descend from the Spanish or Portuguese. The Black Legend was meticulously done, still to this day.
@@IblewuponyourfaceIIIIndeed, although Hispanic is in fact the correct term, latin American or 'latinos' it's a wrong term the french popularized to keep away the Spanish influence on America. The first thing that triggered me on this video was the map of the 'highest Spanish extend' which is 100% incorrect, people tend to forget the extend of the empire under Felipe II, which was massive. The second trigger in this video and when I stopped watching, was the massive inaccuracy of how Hernán Cortéz conquered the Aztecs, he didn't sail there out of his own will or by looking for new land, he went there because the crown sent another Caudillo to Havana because he was corrupt and bad, he then proceeded to try to get something for the crown to not be ripped off his titles, but yeah, Spanish history is massively overlooked and minimized.
@@shocku5250 I agree with both of you, I'm also Hispanic, born and raised in Nicaragua, currently live in the 🇺🇸, I sometimes have to explain to my son lots of inaccuracy in History taught in schools today .
From Netherlands to Napoli From Alaska to Argentina From Morocco to Ecuatorial guinea From Philippines to Papua nueva guinea ....The sun never sets in the spanish empire.
actually at first they couldn't conquer the southern part of what today is argentina until later because of the mapuches and the name of that most southern argentina part is "Tierra Del Fuego" or "Land Of Fire" in english, very much of a badass name if you ask me at least in english.
@@SenyorV8479 Habrán llegado pero no conquistado hombre Papúa Nueva Guinea y en cuanto a Alaska nunca llegaron los españoles en los mapas más antiguos sale que solo llegaron hasta Seattle o más o menos esos estados al norte de USA
@@edenanshar9225jealous about what? 😂 The Spanish lost every single war against the British/ Americans. You do realize that while Spanish has more native speakers, english has the most speakers in total? Like it's not even close
I think that the negative aspects of Spanish colonization are well known, but I want to highlight some lesser-known elements that deserve recognition: The documentary oversimplifies history and overlooks that these territories were not colonies in the same sense as 19th-century imperialist ventures. There also were viceroyalities in europe (sicily, naples, cerdeña and a few others). Shortly after Spanish arrival, universities, hospitals, cities, and roads were established-a model similar to the Romans as a builder/integrative empire. Indigenous people were recognized as citizens of the Spanish Crown, protected by progressive laws such as the "Leyes de Indias" and "Leyes de Burgos" from Queen Isabel onward. While abuses did occur, they were not unique to the Americas; similar exploitation and harsh conditions were also prevalent in Spain and Europe, particularly in mining and agriculture. New Spain soon became wealthier than Spain itself, acting as a global trade hub, with only one-fifth of its gold and silver sent to Spain, mostly to fund wars aimed at preserving Christian unity in Europe. The remaining wealth largely stayed in the Americas, helping to establish what would become the foundations of Western civilization there. However, the benefits of this wealth were not evenly felt in Spain; most of it funded military campaigns or repaid debts rather than improving life for the average person. Inflation from the influx of American silver even worsened economic conditions for many Spaniards, while certain cities in the Americas, like Mexico City and Lima, thrived, becoming more prosperous than some regions in Spain itself. The encomienda system, often criticized, had its roots in the Reconquista, where land control followed similar structures within Spain. Furthermore, the conquest of the Aztec Empire depended heavily on alliances with indigenous groups like the Tlaxcaltecas and Coconas, who were longstanding enemies of the Mexica (Aztecs). After the conquest, many members of these groups became aristocrats, landowners, and city rulers in New Spain, and today their descendants form part of the largely mestizo society across Spanish America. Religious conversion was also more complex than implied. Native gods were sometimes viewed as more severe than the Christian God, while saints were perceived as stronger deities, leading to relatively smooth conversions. In many cases, indigenous deities were integrated with Christian beliefs. Missionaries often played a positive role in this transition, treating native communities with respect, providing education, and even studying indigenous languages like Nahuatl, one of the first to be formally documented. In my view, Spain’s approach to the Americas in the 15th and 16th centuries was, in many ways, progressive and distinct from later colonial ideologies. Rather than purely subjugating one world to another, Spain aimed to integrate the two, creating a unique historical process that fostered cultural exchange and lasting integration (Perhaps not by the standards of a 21st-century mindset, but certainly progressive when viewed through the lens of the 15th to 20th centuries' perspectives.)
What most people don't know is that Spain does not have colonies. All the territories they conquered are Viceroyalties and are considered Kingdoms within the Empire. All the people of the Empire are subjects to the Spanish monarchs just like the Spaniards in the mainland.
No, that is not a fact. 80 % of the wealth produced remained in the overseas regions ( viceroyalties). Only a 20 % of the whole production of any resourses was exported to mainlad ( Iberian peninsula). Thats why jn America most of todays hispanic heritage countries have the first universities and oldest of the continent, hospitals, schools, cathedrals, plazas and many other buildings such as forts, light houses, etc... Very different in comparison to England, and Portugal. @eashanahluwalia9599
Jerónimo de Ayanz y Beaumont (1553 - 23 March 1613 AD) was a Spanish soldier, painter, astronomer, musician and inventor. He pioneered the use and design of the steam engine, as well as mining ventilation systems, improved scientific instrumentation, developed windmills and new types of furnaces for metallurgical, industrial, military, and even domestic operations. He invented a diving bell, patented an immersion suit tested before the court of Felipe III in Pisuerga, on August 2, 1602, and designed a submarine.[1]
@@PatadeCabra369Hombre como que era navarro y por tanto cabezón. Si se le metía en la cabeza que había que inventar el submarino, inventaba el submarino por cojones...
The Spaniards did not conquer America on their own, they were thanks to the natives, there is a popular belief that the natives were and fought against a common enemy, the truth is that the Aztecs had many enemies just like the Incas, the pre-Columbian legacy did not disappear was mixed, Spain named a single continent called America and this is how the rest of Europe and the world knew it.
You got it right but by completely wrong reasons. The Aztecs and the Incas didn't know each other. The thing is that the Aztecs were actually exclusively the inhabitants of the city of Mexico and the rest was a maremágnum of different cultures and languages and city states with no polítical unity that were involved in genocidal struggles against each other.
When I say that the Aztecs had many enemies like the Incas, I mean that both equally had different enemies, not that the Incas were enemies of the Aztecs.
@@davidalves7949 España no tenía colonias al estilo de otros imperios comerciales. Todo el territorio era España. Sólo podían comerciar, en teoría con nosotros, porque nosotros reinvertimos allí el 70% de la riqueza, en los siglos XVI-XVII. 80% en el siglo XVIII, levantando 2000 ciudades de piedra, 28 universidades, 400 catedrales, 300 fortalezas, miles de escuelas infantiles, 850 hospitales... Sólo faltaba que los británicos y holandeses, que tenían sus propios imperios comerciales en la India, África e Indonesia, en 1948, tan pobres como los encontraron 300 años antes, sin invertir nada y llevándose todo a Londres y Amsterdam, encima ganaran dinero con el imperio español y nuestros esfuerzos por desarrollarlo. De hecho, cuando los británicos pusieron sus manos políticamente, en América Latina (Hispano América y Brasil), después de las guerras napoleónicas que destruyeron Europa continental, pero no las islas de Gran Bretaña o Chipre, no mejoraron en nada la vida de la gente de América Latina, sólo se dedicaron a buscar concesiones, provocando guerras entre países hermanos, golpes de estado e inestabilidad, como USA y la Unión Soviética en el siglo XX.
@@Gloriaimperial1 No sé de dónde sacan ustedes los españoles esas "historias" tan distorsionadas. La América española no podía negociar con otros países, única y exclusivamente con España. Los ciudadanos de estas regiones eran considerados de segunda clase y sólo los españoles peninsulares podían asumir roles de liderazgo. Los recursos naturales y la riqueza del continente fueron explotados y expropiados por la corrupta corona española. La gente de estas regiones fue sometida y masacrada, lo que usted llama una "leyenda negra", pero en realidad sucedió realmente. Ustedes, los españoles, se creen benévolos por las obras de infraestructura y las universidades, y esto fue sólo por interés propio, ya que necesitaban enseñar a leer y escribir a la elite española nacida en América. Pero ustedes no se diferencian en nada de los británicos, holandeses, franceses y belgas. ¡Los europeos son todos iguales!
You miss one of the most important economic effects of the Spanish empire, the intercontinental commerce created between Mexico, China and Spain. All financed with the Spanish Real de a Ocho, the first intercontinental currency that was in use for almost 3 centuries. The economic effects of bringing silver into China were enormous. Other aspects, like the direct intervention of the English in the independence process of South America to open their markets to English products are also crucial because they opened the way for the expansion and dominance of the British empire after they lost North America. On the social and economic side, is relevant to mention that life in these colonies during the Spanish period was far better than in Europe. There were no wars, public health systems, and more land and opportunities, the problem was the scarcity of population. The large population explosion in 19 century Europe is what triggered the enormous expansion of the USA at the expense of the thinly populated post independence Mexico.
@@xhorxheetxeberria-td1hu you are right, but in general most videos in RUclips are very light and quite biased. After the defeat of Napoleon the Brits took over the world and wrote a new vision of world history in which they are the good guys and Spain is the bad guy. The fact is that all the British empire is a commercial network built on top of the world that spain and Portugal discovered, mapped and brought together.
@@julio5pradola verdadera leyenda negra española creada por los de la isla M@ldita del mar del norte 😅, los imbañables de los come baguette, podemos agregar a un par más a esta lista, los obsesionados con las flores hindues y los zapatos de madera y los de la bota peninsular que creen haber inventado los fideos, ellos en realidad se dicen fueron los que empezaron la leyenda negra por celos. ESPAÑA fue una versión (su propio versión) del antiguo imperio romano, saludos a toda la Hispanada, ah! Se me olvidaba, te das cuenta que es pura propaganda Anglo, por qué ni se da cuenta que Guinea Ecuatorial en Medio de África fue también parte del Virreynato de la Plata. Saludos de un Nicaragüense 🇳🇮 👋🫡
And that’s where the $ simbol and the word peso came from, which is ironic because Spain doesn’t use it anymore but the US and Mexico still use it for their modern currencies
@@justinherrera3722 the real and the peso were mostly generated and used from New Spain (Mexico) and Peru that were the richest and most commercially developed areas of the empire. After independence Spain was too poor as it was till ruined by the napoleonic wars and it moved to other monetary solutions. The paradox here is that the official narrative today is that the Americans were poor and oppressed by Spain when it was not at all like this. They were far richer societies and when the local elites saw the weakness in Spain they left. But they didn’t leave to create a big and powerful nation, no, the local elites left to create small areas of power for themselves and thus ruined their future.
You forgot the European territories of the Spanish Empire: southern Italy, Sicily, Sardinia, the marquisate of Finale in northwestern Italy, Milan, the State of the Presidi in Tuscany, Belgium, Luxembourg, Netherlands, the French regions of Artois and Franch-Comte. And African territories like Oran in Algeria. Or the Marianas and Caroline Islands in Oceania
@@danteledesma42 Belgium and Luxembourg were under Spanish rule from 1556 to 1714, the State of the Presidi from 1557 to 1707, Naples and Sicily from 1504 to 1713, Finale from 1602 to 1713, Oran from 1509 to 1708 and 1732 to 1792, the Marianas from 1668 to 1898, Milan 1556-1707. That means those territories were under Spanish rule for over 100 years, some over 150 and 200 years. So, can you tell me which one were ruled for ten or less years, according to you?
British naval units tried to conquer Cartegena de Indias, Colombia in the present day, where the spanierds had an important trading harbor. Blas de Lezo, commander in chief of the spanish troops, offered the full spanish citizenship to those men who help to defend the city. Many thousands joined the spanish army, including many britishmen. But this part of the story they won't tell you. 😊
Gracias, hermano, nosotros siempre los sentimos así, y yo personalmente tengo antepasados y familia actual de México, Chile y Puerto Rico, y aquí tenemos una gran comunidad latina. Un abrazo ❤Viva el mundo latino!
@@miguelnavarrete7475 Los nuevos españoles acaban de lanzar un cohete espacial al espacio, viven en el décimo país en investigaciones científicas del mundo, un país con muy alto desarrollo humano, con más esperanza de vida de Europa, con un gran sistema público de salud, muy competitivo en cultura, deportes y mil cosas. Los romanos pusieron la primera piedra y nos civilizaron. Lo hemos pasado mal muchas veces, pero ahora progresamos. Y estamos deseando que América Latina sea una de las próximas potencias mundiales, gracias a nuestro legado y a sus propio esfuerzo, e influya a todo el planeta. No veo a los españoles que conozco sintiéndose superiores a nadie, el desarrollo que todos los países del mundo depende de mil circunstancias. En la misma América Latina hay países atrasados, normalmente los que tienen regímenes socialistas (Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua...) y países que ya están entre los 69 con muy alto desarrollo humano: Chile, Uruguay, Panamá, Costa Rica, Argentina. Tienen todavía problemas, pero están tan o más desarrollados que países de Europa Oriental, que sufrieron el comunismo.
@@miguelnavarrete7475Calma tú inquietud hermano tranquilo... Si nos culpan de robar oro y me insultan algunos por ser español... Me tengo que sentir culpable por algo donde yo no estaba??? Y no puedo sentir orgulloso por las cosas buenas que hizo mi pueblo??? Lo bueno de los españoles lo hicieron otros españoles... Pero en lo malo si!!!! En lo malo si estamos todos en el mismo saco 😂😂😂😂😂 de verdad 😂😂😂😂😂 como somos los seres humanos de envidiosos,sesgados y poco objetivos... Lo malo es de todo los españoles y lo bueno es de unos pocos españoles de antaño 😂😂😂😂 es normal en el ser humano da igual el país (lo bueno no es tuyo no te lo creas, que mi envidia no lo acepta) pero lo malo si... Es normal que los españoles nos sintamos orgullosos de nuestro legado en el mundo, pues eran españoles no eran colombianos ni venezolanos... Ni italianos... Igual que los italianos sienten orgullo de la antigua Roma.. o los griegos de Grecia... Y no olvides que a diferencia de Roma que como estado desapareció y es una ciudad hoy día... El pueblo español o castellano no despareció... Cayó el imperio pero no el pueblo español...
Spain"the empire on which the sun never sets" the dollar, the yuan and many other currencies are the heirs of the real of ocho, the first global currency an empire that lasted four centuries
Great summary of the Spanish Empire, I really enjoyed watching it. Three comments: 1) The map of the Aragon Empire missed the area in south Italy. 2) The map of Mexico in 1823 is wrong, the borders back then were very different than today. 3) Spanish Louisiana territory would be worth being mentioned.
Much respect to the Spanish empire, they lead the way for the rise of the western civilization.. they highly skilled in craftsmanship.. they make good clothing, sword, armory & ships
The Spanish destroyed civillisations they came into contact with in pursuit of conquest & plunder. Are you seriously proud of that?? The British Empire for all it's faults as viewed by modern standards was at least an empire based upon trade rather than mere plunder. The British never wanted to destroy the indiigenous people of India or any other territory they invaded.
@@fedevida1951 Never said the British Empire was faultless. However it was an awful lot better than the Spanish.This is all relatively speaking of course.
@@reddwarfer999I doubt very much that the British empire was better than the Spanish one; knowing that great britain became great by always messing with spain and envying her in almost everything.
*FUN FACT:* Spain had 3 small colonies in Canada: Terra Nova ( New Foundland ) St. Pedro (St. Pierre Island) and Fuerte de San Miguel (Fort San Miguel) on Vancouver Island. the name for Canada comes from the Spanish word *"Cañada"* which means "pathway"
that is the "typical" Anglo make-believe bologna that the Portuguese also use on youtube and "some" history books. the actual name for Canada comes from the Spanish word "Cañada" which means "pathway". And the Spanish were in Canada long before the English or the French. The last two wiped out *all* Spanish history in Canada and supplanted it with their own as they saw fit! @@angelcamachodelsolar
@@TrentBrent Jacques Cartier, seeking the Northwest Passage to France, came into contact with the Iroquois in 1534, on his first voyage, and on his second voyage he navigated the St. Lawrence River and founded Quebec (1535), having contact with the Iroquois throughout that time travel, and names those lands as "Canada." They are the first documents in which the word appears, and the most accepted theory is that of the Iroquois word "kanata."
True! the country of Canada is the Spanish word for Cañada which means a pathway. Spanish explorers were the first to reach and settle Canada (wayyyyyyyy before the 🇬🇧 or 🇫🇷) so you can make up your Anglo-lies based history, an English tradition of course, but it's *nothing factual* 👍
@@cekan14 the Treaty of Tordesillas only happened becuase the Spanish monarchy was complaining to the Spanish pope that it wasn't fair how the Portuguese laid claim to most of the unexplored world. feeling that " it wasn't fair" is how Spain got most of the western hemisphere. LOL
@@bconni2 When a treaty is being made, negotiations are made. The United States and little Albania can seek arbitration to negotiate a treaty. I remember that at that time, 1494, Spain had half of Italy, bases in North Africa, and the first cities in America. Portugal was only exploring the West coast of Africa.
@@bconni2 In fact, it was an update of the Treaty of Alcáçovas of 1479, in which the zones of influence in the Atlantic were already divided, and when it was signed it was both to avoid Spanish interference in the Portuguese route around Africa and to do the same in the new one route to the Indian (later it turned out that they were not the Indian but America) that Columbus had discovered for the Catholic Monarchs.
@@bconni2 Francis I of France insisted that the Pope see Adam's will in the face of successive papal bulls that recognized Spanish preeminence in the conquest of America. «The sun shines for me as for others. I would like to see the clause in Adam's will that excludes me from the division of the world and leaves everything to the Castilians and Portuguese. Not even the Spanish and Portuguese agreed with the distribution made by the Pope, which is why they ended up signing their own Treaty of Tordesillas in 1494.
Some minor quibbles but important to mention. Spain actually explored as far north as Alaska and established outposts there (there's still Spanish named geographic features there to this day). California was not the northernmost area of New Spain, however it was when Mexico became independent. Also other areas as far north as modern day Montana were also claimed historically by Spain. Secondly, also a quibble. The viceroyalty of Peru produced most of the silver for the Spanish Empire throughout the 1500s. However by the mid 1600s, the viceroyalty of New Spain (Mexico) was the largest producer of silver for the Spanish Empire eclipsing Bolivian/Peru production for nearly the last 200 years of colonization. In fact it was during the Mexican period of silver production that the Spanish currency the piece of eight became the first truly global reserve currency used in trade in Europe, east Asia, Africa, the British colonies, etc.
*FUN FACT:* Spain had 3 small colonies in Canada: Terra Nova ( New Foundland ) St. Pedro (St. Pierre Island) and Fuerte de San Miguel (Fort San Miguel) on Vancouver Island. the name for Canada comes from the Spanish word *"Cañada"* which means "pathway"
Spain had more islands in Canada, Vancouver. I know because of my ancestry from Spain, also had Maine, now being affected by a hurricane. Spanish ships sunk off of the coast of Maine, provoked The Spanish American War with The United States fighting for The British. That's why The American Revolution? Who really won, because Spain helped the colonies fight against The British, along with The French.
Spain did help (Admiral Galvez) the American Colonies become Independent from Britain. U.S. ship called the Maine was blown up by the Americanos as a False Flag Operation in Spanish Havana so the U.S. could steal Spanish Guam, Puerto Rico and Cuba.... *IF* the traitorous U.S. treats it's allies like this (Spain) *HOW* do they treat their enemies? Oh wait, they drop 2 nuclear bombs on Japan during WWII...🇺🇸 *=* 💩 *ALWAYS!!* @@anaibarangan4908
If we think about it, Spain was actually just the new Romans that time. They have basically make the Roman catholic as the mostly practice religion in the world.
@hiooxkrmagkis9323 You're wrong. Christianity is based on the life and teachings of Jesus Christ and is approximately 2,000 years old. Its largest groups are the Roman Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox churches, and the Protestant churches, and its sacred text is the Bible. Over the centuries, Christianity grew in numbers as it spread around the world, often through missionaries and colonizers making it the most widely practiced religion/belief on the planet.
Indeed, even their method of colonization was similar to the Romans. They introduced their faith and culture and began the process of assimilation. They even integrated Moctezuma's lineage within Spanish nobility and it still exists til this day.
Como mexicano me siento orgulloso de mi sangre y herencia española , uds los americanos deben sentirse orgullosos de ser la actual superpotencia y no dejar que los chinos les tiren la corona
The Americans are the least responsible super power of all times. I wish there was a ruler like Carlos I de España y V del Sacro Imperio Romano Germánico
One not very well known fact is that Spanish América, specially New Spain paid for most of the military campaigns against Napoleon in Europe. Since the Peninsula was taken by the french as most of Europe at that time. The "Juntas" took political control and financially helped Europe get rid of Napoleon. That is why in the Proclanation medals of the Juntas in New Spain read "Restaurador de la Europa" translates to "Restorer of Europe".
The Spanish financed the Brits and Portuguese? I'm pressing F to doubt. Unless you're saying it wasn't Wellington and the Portuguese that liberated Spain from the mess they got themselves into when they invited their ally, Napoleon, to mediate the crowning of their new King, only for him to swipe the crown and give it to his brother Joseph? Are you? Not only does Spain accept the Napoleonic embargoes that would dictate France's trade hegemony on land, they thought they would just let their armies march towards Portugal too and invade, and that nothing would happen to them. Served them right. Spain was allied with France and so weak their King just handed away the Kingdom without a fight. Were the juntas having any meaningful military successes against the French before the Luso-English Army liberated Spain? Only the Spanish population is worth praising for their efforts and sacrifice, not the military juntas that did nothing until the Portuguese and English came to the rescue, and certainly never ever Spanish military leaders. *"Restorer of Europe arch"* *Pick the winning side *Winning side eats you up *You cause your civilians to suffer *Your military is used to invade neighbors *Winning side starts losing *Switch sides! *Call yourselves winners *Now you won the war by yourself *Congrats, no one likes stolen valor
@@justinherrera3722 Spain gave to Europe a new continent that was the critical competitive advantage for European civilization to grow faster than the other world civilizations, develop its institutions, its philosophy, its art, its freedom and its progress. The West has a huge debt with the Spanish world (Spain and Spanish Americas) that is forgotten today but is real.
@@justinherrera3722 the French when? After the Portuguese and British liberated Spain who had a deal with France and was conquered because they wanted to allow the French army to just march through Spain towards Portugal? You were allied with France you cowardly turncoats, you always side with whoever is winning or seems the strongest. But history does not lie. You get no credit, because you deserve no credit you grifters.
The First Empire the Spanish Empire that can rightfully declare the sun never sets in our Empire! The first world superpower in the 15th century Queen Isabela of Castille married the King of Aragon k!
@@widodoakrom3938 oh, against the Spanish? Oh no, sorry, I thought you were answering to my comment about Portugal. I never knew that the Spaniards fought the otomans. I always thought the Spaniards only had courage to fight against foes that didn't have firearms. The Portuguese on the other hand won a number of battles against the ottomans (battle of Diu 1509, siege of diu 1538, battle of Cochim 1504, the Ethiopian Campaign 1541-1543, and of course the first Portuguese-ottoman conflict of 1538-1557, where the Portuguese won in the indian ocean and the Ottomans in the red sea; the second Portuguese-Ottoman conflicts 1558-1566, which was a Portuguese victory; and then the third Portuguese-ottoman conflict, from 1580 to 1589 which was again a Portuguese victory.
The $panish dollar, which gives the simbol $ dollar today, financed the independence of the 13 Colonies until 1857 .... When also the Louisiana was part of the Spanish Empire all along 40 years. Did you forget also?
@@hubertusvenator5838 FALSO, España dio la independencia a las 13 Colonias, atrapando los 50 barcos ingleses que llevaban tropas, armas, dinero para la defensa. España ademas pagó los sueldos a los soldados de la flota francesa y llevó armas, municiones, etc y dinero a los rebeldes por el Mississippi. España ademas derrotó a los ingleses en Nueva Orleans, Baton Rouge, Movila y Galveston al sur y en San Louis al norte, en Illinois con lo que los rebeldes tenian cubiertas laa espaldas y suministros asegurados.
@@Eljefe5948Las capitales de los virreinatos eran muy ricos y se asemejaban a otras ciudades de europa como la misma Madrid. Tuvieron mala suerte con su independencia, todos los que se independizaron a hispanoamerica eran criollos blancos. El unico indigena que lidero una independencia contra España fue en Filipinas, el mismo afirmo su arrepentimiento.
Spain held many more territores than portrayed at the video. Guam, marianas islands and many more pacific islands were spanish. Even taiwan wich was called Formosa (beautiful). At europe, spain also controlled 2/3 of italy. And the lowlands inherited by the habsburgs. They explored and constructed forts all the way up to Alaska. About the polemic initial conquest, it wasnt so brutal like its commonly portrayed, they did it roman style, conquest through diplo first, war second. They introduced the western tech and integrate the huge diversity of native populations into the realm as equal citizens, same as european peasants, educated them into catholicisim and modern science and culture. Many natives became popular writers and doctors.
Seguro eres español para decir que los españoles trataban como iguales a los Incas o nativos americanos, eran despreciados, hasta los mestizos lo eran sólo los nacidos en España eran privilegiados, los españoles esclavisaron a los nativos en vez de matarlos pero aún así casi extinguen a los Incas, se dice q cuando España comenzó la colonización había 20 millones de Incas q fueron reducidos a 3 millones a causa de la esclavitud y las enfermedades. Y además se llevaron todo el oro que encontraron en América, lo bueno de los españoles eran los religiosos como los jesuitas q hicieron buen trabajo, pero fueron un imperio esclavisador de nativos americanos, la única diferencia con los ingleses es q no los mataron.
Very true talk, my father traded with the Spanish in those old days in the present day country of Equatorial Guinea. And I have also the chance to connect miraculousy and embrace a similar trading connection in Spain. Spanish people truly are very very civilized with good understanding of what life is all about. I enjoy very well every moment with them during our business relationship. They are very loving and kind people, very well civilized.Long life the nation and people of Spain.
If anything we should be absolutely ashamed of the actions of these bumbling money-grubbing world powers. What about the millions of people who had their entire civilizations erased, completely unprovoked. No society should ever have the right to impose themselves upon another.
As a Colonbian i´m really proud to speak spanish and being Catholic Christian ✝ thanks to spain this lands could hear the message of our lord Jesuschrist , even today the bible has been translated to almost every single existing indegenous tongue ❤ and all our biggest cities has Spanish arquitecture in it
The Portuguese established the first global maritime and commercial empire under the leadership of Henry the Navigator in the 15th century. In the 1440s, Henry sent out key expeditions to Africa and Asia, and in the 16th and 17th centuries, Portugal went on to establish colonies in Brazil, Africa, East Timor, India and Macau. The Spanish quickly followed suit by conquering Mexico in 1519 and, shortly thereafter, Peru, the Philippines and most of Central and South America (except Brazil).
the Portuguese innovated almost every major technological advancement in maritime exploration and naval warfare almost 100 years before Columbus set sail. the astrolabe, cartography. the ship design of the Carracks and Caravels.? cracking the codes of the Atlantic winds ? the Portuguese did most of the hard work long before Spain got in the game.
@@bconni2columbus was portuguese. The first land he saw in america call it Cuba.... in Spain what is Cuba??? In portugal is a town with centuries, where columbus was born. He named that land in honour of the place he born
No mencionas los territorios europeos de España? Países Bajos, Bélgica, Luxemburgo, Nápoles (sur de Italia) Sicilia, Cerdeña y ducados de Milán y Borgoña en Francia. Además el Virreinato de Nueva España era considerablemente más grande, ya sin contar la luisiana francesa y el territorio de Nootka que llegaba a Canadá y por supuesto las islas Filipinas junto con las islas marianas y las carolinas. La mitad de Taiwán fue parte de España también (estoy seguro de que ni un solo británico sabía eso) . Son bastantes territorios conquistados y muy importantes en la historia de España y de Europa en general (la revolución neerlandesa). España no fue la primera potencia mundial solo por sus territorios en América, hasta 1714 era la primera potencia solo con sus territorios en Europa. Pero bueno tampoco pido nada, es un video hecho por un inglés. El español sigue siendo el idioma europeo con más hablantes nativos mientras que el inglés es el idioma europeo más hablado como lengua secundaria (fue Estados Unidos el país que popularizó en inglés! no Inglaterra). Lo único que hace falta es que paises con un enorme potencial y de los cuales estoy seguro que se van a convertir en potencias como México, Argentina o Venezuela si matan de una vez al tonto que tienen de gobernante. También sería interesante una unión centroamericana. Sé que los que son de allí me dirán que no puedo opinar ya que no soy de centroamérica pero vamos a ser realistas, los paises de centroamérica son 99.9% iguales en cultura y tradiciones. Que sean paises separados porque a una élite que gobierna le interesa me suda los cojones, lo mejor es unirse. El mundo hispano va a crecer en influencia económica y cuando eso pase quiero que nadie tenga que hablar inglés.
Imperio Español. No sé por qué los Habsburgos y Borbones nunca se declararon Emperadores de América. Me da a mí que tenían a sus territorios americanos descuidados.
The British empire was the biggest, most spoken about and English is the most spoken language, the Spanish empire was good but doesn’t come close to the British
Landa census of 1565 registered 200 Taino indigenous people, confirming their extermination in the Caribbean, the most atrocious extermination in all of human history. that is part of the spanish history too.
Spain were the 1st. Global Superpower where the Sun Never Set; just an awesome country and an awesome people! VIVA SPAIN and it's wonderful and friendly people; i am going there on a tapas tour to Madrid and cannot wait🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸
Very well-done and informative. This video forgot to include any mention of Spanish Sahara, Ifni, and Spanish Guinea. The histories of these last remaining colonies were significant in the 20th century.
despite tapping into the Atlantic slave trade, Spain's influence in Africa is not that significant. i'd make the argument that Spain's experience with African culture is more paramount in the New World.
The reason he most likely didn’t mention them was because it’s a lie. There were some hints to them killing prisoners of war as a war tradition and the conquistadors ramped it up 100 times to make their bloody conquest seem morally right infront of the Spanish crown because they had no legal right to wage wars of Conquest. Overall the subject of the Conquest of New Spain by Hernan Cortez is full of half truths and the modern narrative is not even 10% true, but it’s quick to explain that the Aztecs most certainly weren’t as cruel as the Conquistadors painted them to be
@@MargaretJ-i3m the Aztecs and the entire area for that matter didn’t have the same kind of warfare we Europeans were used to. Their tradition of war was predominantly waged by the warrior cast and they usually excluded civilians, the fact that most cities weren’t heavily fortified because they didn’t need to be is proof. Furthermore, there was no „conquest“, the system revolved around the most dominant City being able to beat the other ones in battles, the Aztec „empire“ was a system of tributaries which payed taxes to Tenochtitlan and otherwise were left mostly alone to do their thing. We Europeans introduced the way of total war and destruction, hence why our wars usually need a good explanation because it is to destructive. You don’t need to lie about waging war when it’s a couple of rich guys beating each other up over who pays tribute to who, hence why the Aztecs and their neighbours constantly fought each other. What you’re likely referring to is the fact that Hernan Cortez says he had thousands of native allies, and he likely did. But it wasn’t because the Aztecs were so terrible and the Spanish were saints, they thought Hernan Cortez was a new local power and wanted to be on their good side, no one expected this to be a threat not to Aztec dominance, but to their entire way of life.
*I am Portuguese and i recognize the enormous value of Spain in history since it was the First Global Empire!!* *Great navigators ; great empire and language talk for 600 million of inhabitants. Us Portuguese "always" looking back and eating Spain's FIRSTS in Discoveries but that's life!!!* *VIVA 🇪🇸 with ❤ from Portugal!*
Portugal and Spain discovered the world. It would be unfair to relegate one or the other. Simply put, the two countries had different areas of exploration or dominion. Spain in Europe, North Africa, America, the Pacific and extreme Asia. Portugal on both African coasts, the entire Asian coast up to Japan, the Indian Ocean and Brazil. This is demonstrated by the paradox that Spain arrived first in Brazil, and Portugal arrived first in Argentina. ❤Portugal-España
@@bigxchubstv6056 Imagine a basketball fan playing on a court, all by himself. I appear, living somewhere else, I watch him play, and I discover that he is a great basketball player. If I spread the word about the existence of this prodigious basketball player, I am his discoverer. He does not lose his human condition because of that. I have communicated to the world (to Africa, Asia, Europe and Oceania) that a basketball player exists. And he has discovered (because he is very introverted) that Africa, Asia, Europe and Oceania exist. The most appropriate thing would be to say that it is a mutual discovery, and that Christopher Columbus is the discoverer or intermediary. Without Christopher Columbus, there is no America. Maybe someone else could discover it later, but it was Christopher Columbus. I discovered Michael Jordan, who was playing alone on the court on his street. Nobody knew about Michael's abilities before 1492
These English/ Americans always trying to make the Spanish empire smaller...they dont even color Florida, Louisiana etc....but hey when they talk about the British empire they won't forget to color the north of Canada and the Australian desert 😅
One thing you got wrong is that Spain did not exploit the Americas resources. During the first decades of the empire, 80% of the gold and silver that was mined, was reinvested in the Americas. That's how Spain was able to build all the cathedrals, schools, churches, roads, aqueducts, hospitals and universities. Then, because the development was still too slow in the Americas, it was decided that 90% of the resources should be reinvested there. That's the reason that Spain had to declare bankruptcy, even though there was so much gold in the Americas. Also, slavery was made illegal in the empire, which didn't prevent some people doing it nonetheless. You should have also mentioned that during the conquest around 80% of the soldiers that helped Spain conquer all these lands were indigenous people and that during the independence, Spanish and indigenous people fought on both sides, which is why the wars of independence were much more of a big civil war, where the Criollos just wanted more money and power and after the independence "sold" the Americas to the British.
The definition of exploit definitely fits what he was describing. The definition of Exploit in this context means to: make full use of and derive benefit from (a resource), use (a situation or person) in an unfair or selfish way, and benefit unfairly from the work of (someone), typically by overworking or underpaying them. Those definitions are all accurate to how Spain acted with it's conquered territories in the Americas. Spain got their resources from the Americas, benefitted from the labor of the Indigenous peoples, and enslaved the Indigenous people and overworked them until their numbers fell even more to which they needed to import new slave labor from West Africa. What you described is akin to someone saying the British didn't exploit Africa, and India because the British built railroads, schools and hospitals.
@@youngarchivest9092 Spain made a Romanization in America, reinvesting 70% of the wealth there (16th-17th centuries. 80% in the 18th century). We made 40 universities in the world (28 in America, 9 in Italy, 3 in the Philippines and 1 in France). In addition to 2,300 stone cities, 900 large hospitals, 400 cathedrals, 300 fortresses, thousands of children's schools, a mixture of races, a religion of peace, bringing the Renaissance, the baroque, the illustration, the opera, the literature of the century of gold, to the jungle. That is why Hispanic America has 90% of Spanish native speakers. 99% speak perfect Spanish. 85% Catholic. Even the Philippines: 85% Catholic. 2-3 million Spanish and Creole Spanish speakers. I remember that the British had a monopoly on slavery in Africa until 1800, and a trading company in India until 1857, the year of the first non-white university. Almost all the wealth went to London until XX century. That's why 90% of the Commonwealth is the poorest place on earth: India, Pakistan, Botswana, Zimbabwe... The Commonwealth has less than 10% native English speakers. Less than 10% Christians. There are more native Spanish speakers than all native English speakers in the Commonwealth, plus all native English speakers in the USA (60% of native English speakers). 800 million Catholics thanks to Spain (200 million in Europe, 500 million in America, 100 million in Asia and Oceania, 3 million in Africa) thanks to our investments in people of other races. Anglicans: 120 million. The British in India removed food crops from some regions of India, causing 20-30 million starvation deaths in the 18th-19th centuries. Black slavery for 250 years. English industrial revolution, with children aged 5-12 working in coal mines, endless days, sometimes for a plate of food. Children and women in the Spanish Empire could not work in the mines or in hard labor since the 16th century. 48% of Hispanic America has a mixture of Spanish and American blood, because Queen Isabel I of Castile said in 1500: "I want the Spanish, men and women, to marry and form families with the inhabitants of the new lands (America) ". The British had social Darwinism in the 19th century: "The darker races are inferior, as shown by their being poor." Racial segregation in Alabama until 1960, apartheid in South Africa until 1990, now Brexit... We all have good and bad things, but some are more selfish than others.
@@Gloriaimperial1hola amigo estás en lo correcto dices la verdad . yo como argentino te doy la razón . yo no reniego mis raíces hispanas el idioma castellano es un orgullo sino fuera por España mí país argentina 🇦🇷💪 jamás hubiese existido saludos desde argentina 🇦🇷🙋🇪🇦
@@Gloriaimperial1 What a load of bullshit lmao. First off you got a source on the supposed 70% of wealth "reinvested"? You mention all these universities, cities, hospitals, cathedrals, fortresses and schools but don't cite a single source. How telling... All those things listed were not to the benefit of the common person living there but to the Spanish elite who ruled over the land and cared nothing for the Indigenous except to exploit the people and the land. Don't know why you added the "mix of races" as if that was a good thing to the non-Europeans. The Spanish raped, murdered, spread disease, and enslaved the Native populations across the continent so much so that 90% of the population was wiped out! Then once due to the brutality and utter lack of humanity on the Spaniards part, they then brought over tens of millions of enslaved Africans to work on plantations. The so called mixing of races was largely due to rape, not something to brag about and even then racism and colorism exists in the Americas because of the Spanish. Racism and colorism still exists in the Americas and in Spain itself, foh. You mention religion of peace, but that could not be further from the truth! Christianity, more specifically Catholics did not bring peace, but war and chaos. These so called practicers of "religion of peace" brought war, disease and slavery to the Americas and across the world! Hell, these Chirsitians even tried to argue that the Indigenous did not have souls in an attempt to justify the slavery the Spaniards practiced! Religion of peace my ass! The Catholic Church became a massive land-owning class interfering with the politics of the future successor nations, and supported right wing death squads in a attempt to hold onto their power. The Catholic Church served no other purpose than to destroy the identities of the Indigenous populations and control the people through the forcefully imposed fairy tale. You act like people still don't work in mines after the 16th century and they still do to this very day! Fuck out of here with that bullshit. Hmm well it seems like the Spanish did not give a damn about what Queen Isabella had said becaue they did pretty much the opposite of what she had said. The Indigenous were treated as equal vassals but as slaves and then later second-class citizens. The authority of Spain held little weight in many of the laws the monarchs put out. Murder, Rape and slavery pretty much went unpunished. And finally you are talking about Britain a century after the Spanish Empire had collapsed, so what is the comparison? Spain had no control in the Americas since the 1820s yet you are bringing up stuff the British, South Africans and the US were doing?! What a bullshit argument that doesn't even make any sense! Lay off the propaganda and realize what Spain and all the former colonial empires for what they really are, that being largely dogshit.
@Gloriaimperial1 if this was the case, then why was Latin America so much less developed? Obviously some were better than others, but the way you put it, they should have been smooth sailing when they became independent. Why was there so much gold and other treasures on all those ships heading back to Spain? Anyone can play the race card. What happened to the Jews and Muslims in Spain again? It's easy to do that with any people.
@@professorwoland3181They made the land something to live about, bring faith and unity to an entire continent, and made an union through family and blood ties. A shame brits couldn't say the same, because the ones being mixed with hindi were totally despised, for example.
A lot of you have commented saying that Portugal was the worlds first superpower, rather than Spain, so I've created a video on how Portugal forged the first truly global empire: ruclips.net/video/9P7szJRlbxk/видео.html&ab_channel=ThisIsHistory
@@NoWoke-JustWake... 'llorando'? Em 1492 Colon (Colombo não era o seu verdadeiro nome) efectuou uma viagem de pura aventura para ocidente, crente de que seria o caminho mais perto para alcançar o 'Oriente'. Em 1488, o português Bartolomeu Dias descobriu o 'fim de África', deitando por terra a tese de 'Colon', que não terá tomado conhecimento da descoberta de Bartolomeu Dias. A posterior presença de Espanha no Oriente não se deveu a Colon, deveu-se, pois, a Bartolomeu Dias. Recomendo a busca de informação sobre Afonso de Albuquerque e sobre a Batalha de Diu em 1509. Sou português e não estou 'llorando' (ou chorando, em português), o que, aliás, não seria de admirar já que Portugal é 'mui choquitito' comparando com Espanha, em população e em território, algo como cinco vezes mais pequeno.
I find it logical that you make videos for the Portuguese, and I respect your opinion. But that Portugal is the first global empire is quite doubtful. Spain arrives first in Europe: -Conquest of Sicily (1282), conquest of Athens (1311) Spain arrives first in Africa: -Djerba, Tunisia (1380), the Spanish of the Aragon empire. Castile arrives in the Canary Islands (1404, although we had settlers there in 1341. Portugal arrives in Ceuta in 1415. There is no global empire in the 15th century. The exploration of the west African coast is not a global empire Spain arrived first in America (1492). It is the first time in history that there is a base out of the area of known lands, Eurasia-North Africa. Spain is on 3 continents. Portugal is in Portugal and in Africa. But has Spain made the first global empire with 3 continents? Portugal reaches India, Asia (1498) and Brazil (1500). Portugal is on 4 continents, creating many bases in Africa and Asia. While Spain begins to dominate Europe and spreads throughout America. Spain reaches the fourth and fifth continents: deep Pacific Ocean (1520), which is the GLOBAL half of the earth, and the Philippines, Asia (1520). Spain 5 continents. Portugal 4 continents. But really, the first global empire would be the union of the two empires, Spanish and Portuguese in 1580, under the crown of Philip II of Spain. Spain was not in the Indian Ocean or on the coast of Africa (only the northern coast). And Portugal was not in the Pacific Ocean nor in Europe nor in the Mediterranean. Felipe II is the first king to be on all 5 continents, occupying all current time zones. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_Empire#/media/File:Philip_II's_realms_in_1598.png
Veo que estan muy informados de la historia de mi país España ,y me llena de orgullo. Las historias ,las matemáticas,y la política son signaturas muy importante para que no te manipulen , y tengas suficiente criterio si los que te gobiernan lo hacen bien,y nos engañen con sus mantras ideológicos. Gracias .
El Imperio Español duró 350 años y luchando con todos los países más importantes de su época. La era de los E-E-U-U solo lleva 80 años un y no es comparable. El real de a ocho español fue la moneda más fuerte durante 300 años, reconocida en China, Japon, la ruta de la seda, Filipinas, por supuesto toda Hispanoamérica mientras que el dólar americano está empezando a decaer su influencia.
si los 8 millones de seres humanos que murieron miserablemente en las minas de potosi, se sentia orgullos de morir sin poder ver la luz del sol sabiendo que su cuerpo quedaria en las extrañas de la tierra pero serviria para hacer modenas, stupio hispanofacista.
Adding to this great video, I would also like to mention the Spanish Netherlands and the Spanish territories in the Italian Peninsula, such as Lombardy, Sicily, Sardinia, and the Kingdom of Naples. In fact, to the surprise and disappointment of many Brits, the phrase "The empire on which the sun never sets", was first used to describe the empires of Charles V (Charles I of Spain), and his son, Phillip II. Years later, John Smith and Francis Bacon would use it to refer to the British Empire.
@@D32musicIn fact, Spain and the Netherlands shared a king, Charles I of Spain, half Spanish and half Flemish, was born in Ghent and educated in Mechelen. And the 80 years' war (1568-1648), or the independence of the Netherlands, was won by the Netherlands.
Less known or recognized, Spain also had the Netherlands, Belgium, the Franche county, Savoy, Milan and Naples when they where still under Hapsburg rule, i think you could of have mentioned the Succession crisis and war. Also they had lesser important colonies in Guinea and Morocco they had in the Scramble of Africa, prior their loss in the war against the US.
Fair video. Important to know that Spaniards did not conquer America on their own. The majority of the conquerors where native indians, allies of the Spaniards. The history told about this is a black legend. Spain created other Spains in America, where life was far better in many cases than in the Iberian Peninsula. That has nothing to do with a colony.
Bro and you forgot the spanish territories in Europe: most of Italy, netherlands and parts of France and belgium (even Athens for a small time) The spanish empire domitated the world for two centuries
Very nice video!!!! Just a quick observation: Santo Domingo was not the first city founded by the Spaniards, it was actually La Isabela on 1493, on the Northern Coast of Dominican Republic. After that, they founded Concepción de La Vega in 1494, Santiago De los Caballeros in 1495 and finally Santo Domingo 1496, that is how they managed to take control of the Caribbean and start the colonization of Central America and Mexico. Also, at the end of the video you showed Cuba, Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico still under colonial rule, but Dominican Republic declared its independence from Spain in 1821, then from Haiti in 1844 and then Spain again on 1865, which was 30 years before the Cuban Independence movement and longer than the Spanish-American War. Looking forward to see more content from you!!
Increadible as it might seem, Spanish students are not taught even a slice of this pride national history. We once were the biggest, more important and first global Empire, however foreign powers which control our politicals affairs prevent us from learning our history. We study the Industrial Revolution, the World Wars and many other foreign things, but we do not study how we had an Empire in which Iberoamérica were brothers with us and we with them as in the same nation.
And don't forget that the iberians Spain 🇪🇸 and Portugal 🇵🇹 had the tratado de tordesillas the only people that conquered the whole world. History has the paper work to prove it.
As if the actions of these bumbling empires should be something to celebrate. Did you actually watch the video? If anything, we should be greatly ashamed of this chapter in human history.
That map is incorrect. Anglos always take away lands in Spanish empire maps. But for the British empire they draw all of India and borders of modern African countries. So hypocritical.
Sicily, Naples, the duchy of Milan, Netherlands, Belgium and luxembourg, the Franc county, northern Morocco, Tunisia, Oran, Bujia, Algiers, the duchy of Athens and Neopatria, island of Guaham, the marquesas, carolinas, palaos and marianas, the Canary islands, Ecuatorial Guinee, western sahara, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Texas, etc However in the maps of the British Empire they paint in red most of the world when the Brits rarely steped inside the big landmasses of canada, australia, India, etc but established coastal factories and ports to extract raw materials and sale their merchandise. They claimed whole continents without having any presence in them. Spaniards, on the contrary, traveled inwards founding new cities, building infraestructure, etc
@@jonayz8655 this, your damn right, a great example is various citys in alaska founded by the spanish, yet the anglos never saw part of alaska as spanish when showing the maxim expansion of the empire wich was in 1790.
Letter from a Mexican resident of Barcelona “Thank you, Spain, for making Mexico”: “Thank you, Spain, for our faith, for our little God, our Virgin of Guadalupe, our processions, our brotherhoods, all with Spanish names. Thank you, Spain, for our missionaries, our friars and Jesuits who came from Spain to educate our bodies and our souls; for the first mass in Cozumel, for the 12 Franciscans Friars Martín de Valencia, Motolinía, Andrés de Olmos, Bernardino de Sahagún, Gerónimo de Mendieta, Antonio de Roa, Juan de Zumárraga; for the blessed martyrs of Tlaxcala, Christian Indians murdered in 1527 for confessing Christ; by blessed Sebastián de Aparicio, he of the carts; and for San Felipe de Jesús, Mexican martyr in Japan at the age of 24 in 1597; for San Pedro de San José, for the Jesuit martyrs expanders of Mexico; and by Brother Antonio Margil the one with the winged feet; and to San Junípero Serra, the missionary from the north. Thank you, Spain, for being above your time and England or Holland, and subordinating the mercantilist objectives of the Conquest to “the preaching of the Gospel” and the rise of civilization, as Philip II established in his Ordinances of 1573. Thank you, Spain, for our kings, who gave us the Laws of the Indies to order viceroys, presidents, audiences, governors and royal justices, archbishops and ecclesiastical prelates “not to receive any wrong in our persons and property, and to be fairly treated.” while in the 13 English colonies the Indians were massacred. Thank you, Spain, for the exaggerated Bartolomé de Las Casas and the just Francisco de Vitoria. Thank you, Spain, for our race, for mixing your blood with ours, from Martín Cortés, son of Conquistador and Doña Marina, who received the habit of Santiago from the king to the viceroy José Sarmiento, count of Moctezuma; for rejecting the extermination and xenophobia practiced by the Anglo-Saxons in the north. Thank you, Spain, for freeing us from the tyrant Moctezuma who enslaved 371 Mexican towns and subjected them to the anthropophagous idol Huitzilopochtli / Huichilobos, to which he sacrificed 20,000 human hearts every year. Thank you, Spain, for giving us our heroic founder, Hernán Cortés, who conquered Tenochtitlán with barely 900 men against 150,000, and who considered himself worthless because “such a great work was finished by the weakest and most useless means that could be found.” , because it was an attribute only to God.” Thank you, Spain, for our Royal University of Mexico of 1551 that you copied from Salamanca, and that of Mérida, and that of Guadalajara, and the colleges and schools where our people were formed. Thank you, Spain, for bringing us the first printing press in America, a branch of the Sevillian printing press of Cromberger, and the first American book, 'The Spiritual Scale' by San Juan Clímaco. Thank you, Spain, for our authors of the Golden Age, for our historian Fernando de Alva Ixtlilxochitl -son of the kings of Acolhuacán and Tenochtitlán-, who collected the history of our indigenous peoples by order of the viceroy; for our Ruiz de Alarcón born in Taxco, comparable in so many things to Lope de Vega and Tirso de Molina; and by Bernardino de Sahagún, who compiled our ethnography in Nahuatl in the 16th century itself. Thank you, Spain, for our Sessé and Mociño, who cataloged more than 1,000 plant species for us. Thank you, Spain, for the School of Mining, the Astronomical Observatory, the Museum of Natural History and others, which made Alexander von Humboldt say that “no city on this continent, without exception of those in the United States, has such large scientific establishments.” and solid like those of the capital of Mexico.” Thank you, Spain, for our convents and bell towers, for the rectangular cities, with their main square, for Chihuahua, Guanajuato, Mexico, Veracruz, Mérida or Acapulco, for the magnificent Casa de Cortés in Cuernavaca, inspired by the Piedras Albas palace in Trujillo, or the beautiful Andalusian-style town hall of Tlaxcala, for the neighborhoods, for the shield temples, for the convents of Acolman, Ixmiquilpan, Actopan, Zacualpan, Atlizco or Huejotzingo; for the cathedral of Puebla, which is like that of Valladolid, or the Herrerian cathedral of Mexico, and that of Guadalajara, Oaxaca and Mérida, so similar to that of Jaén. Thank you, Spain, for having saved us from the scourge of smallpox with the Royal Philanthropic Expedition of the Vaccine sponsored in 1804 by our beloved King Charles IV. Thank you, Spain, for your hospital towns like those built by Vasco de Quiroga in Michoacán, where we learned faith and trades. Thank you, Spain, for the baroque jewels of the Tabernacle of the cathedral of Mexico, the convent of Tepozotlan, Santa Prisca of Taxco, Santa Rosa of Querétaro, the altarpiece of Ocotlán or Santa María de Tonantzintla in Puebla. Thank you, Spain, for our festivals, our carnivals, holy weeks, pilgrimages, sanisidros, pilgrimages, corpuschristis, santiagos, diademuertos, patron saints and Christmas. Thank you, Spain, for the bulls we have run since Cortés arrived from Honduras; by Gaona, Arruza, Martinez, Leal and the Master of Saltillo. Thank you, Spain, for our corrido and mariachi, born from the sober octosyllabic Spanish romance; for our son, our syrup, our Guadalajara and all our zapateada music, derived from Spanish folklore; for the sacramental autos and Christmas carols, for the masses with Aztec songs and dances of Friar Pedro de Gante. Thank you, Spain, for accepting our tomatoes, corn, vanilla, cacao, sweet potatos and pumpkins, , and for bringing us our wheat for tortillas, barley, rye, oats and millet, grapevines and olives, lentils, broad beans, peas and chickpeas, lettuce, endives, thistles, chard, collards, cauliflowers. sugar cane, bananas, onions, leeks, asparagus, artichokes, spinach, eggplants, turnips and carrots, coffee, parsley, bay leaf, cumin, ginger, cucumbers, lemons, watermelons, oranges, melons, limes, apples, pears, peaches, cherries, pomegranates , figs, strawberries, almond trees, hazelnuts, pine nuts. Thank you, Spain, for forcing us to stop eating each other, and for bringing us livestock, horses, cows, chickens, pigs, beasts of burden and milk, mules, donkeys and donkeys, and the nomadic Mesta, and the hacienda and the ranch, and even the silkworm. Thank you, Spain, for our mestizo gastronomy, which combines indigenous cuisine with Spanish-style stews, roasts, pork and dried meat. Thank you, Spain, for our clothes, because we gathered the wool and cotton from the maguey fiber on the Spanish spinning wheels, and we put on hats, and we carried striped blankets on our shoulders like Spanish saddlebags, and we used your leather in shoes and atlases. Thank you, Spain, for giving us the pottery from Puebla and the glaze that you brought from Talavera de la Reina. Thank you, Spain, for bringing us fairs and markets like Veracruz or Jalapa, and the Camino Real of Querétaro, Guanajuato, Zacatecas and Chihuahua, for the peddlers, gangsters and varilleros. Thank you, Spain, for our Spanish language of more than 600 million speakers, for having given us grammars that dignified and preserved our indigenous speech, for the 109 works written between 1524-1572 in Nahuatl, Tarasco, Totonaco, Otomí and Matlazinga. Thank you, Spain, for our chivalry of gifts and ladies. Thank you, Spain, for bequeathing us the art of the roseo and the charreria Thank you, Spain, for the games of canes, of rings, for the races, the cards and the hunting. Thank you, Spain, for the mysterious Llorona, who came to us from the Serrana de la Vera in the Sierra de Gredos. Thank you, Spain, for the extended family, with grandparents, uncles and cousins, for the compadrazgo, for the gatherings at the door of the house, for our Spanish surnames, for defending us from the amassed Creole minority that wanted to enlightenedly despotize us. Thank you, Spain, for leaving us a much larger territory than we knew how to maintain after independence. Thank you, Spain, for making Mexico. And thank you, Spain, for bringing us the grandfather of the populist Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who made a living here without thinking that one day his grandson would miserably accuse his grandparents, uncles and cousins of murderers and plunderers."
Muchas gracias por tu carta y tu reconocimiento a la labor de España en América! Un trabajo muy preciso y detallado. Sólo puedo añadir que lo hicimos juntos, por medio del mestizaje, sin unos y otros sería imposible. México/América Latina ❤🙂👍España
@gnocchinocho En efecto, América Hispana o Hispano América es lo más acertado. Incluso Iberoamérica, si incluimos Brasil. De todas maneras, cuando comparamos el legado español en América con el francés allí, está claro que los españoles latinizamos y evangelizamos América con mucha más intensidad, como trescientas veces más que la influencia de Francia, en número de hablantes y cristianizados. Supongo que ellos llaman a la región, Latinoamérica, porque no quieren incluir Guyana o Haiti en un mundo hispánico o ibérico. Ahora están los hispanos de América manejando el acrónimo Latam (Latinoamérica), y son conocidos en muchos sitios como latinos, entonces esto se hace más problemático para que acepten Hispano América de forma definitiva o popular. Lula y otros dirigentes quieren promover una unión, tipo Unión Europea, en la región, entonces es probable que se imponga Latinoamérica, porque Hispano América o Iberoamérica les recuerde más su pasado dentro de nuestros imperios, y en el futuro puede interesarles incluir en esa unión a países como Trinidad y Tobago, Guyanas y otros. En cualquier caso siempre prefiero Hispano América o América Hispana, si el traductor google no me lo cambia.
Excellent video but you are missing the fact that Spain was even more powerful territorialy than you explain in your channel. Nevertheless, Spain was a juggernaut country thanks to their brave sailors and explorers that Opened up the Age of Discovery and mapped out the entire planet before anybody else!! Long Live Spain: *ARRIBA España* 🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸
El 48% de la población de Hispano América es mezcla de español y originario de América. Más de 200 millones de personas. Es el único lugar del mundo donde se hizo este mestizaje, con un sincretismo religioso, es decir, adoptando partes del culto de los pueblos de América para incorporarlo al catolicismo. Los tlaxtecas de México y otros pueblos fueron la mayoría de los marineros, soldados y misioneros que viajaron desde México para la conquista de Filipinas, luchando contra los piratas japoneses y chinos y mezclando su sangre con los filipinos. Luego Nueva España, con capital en México era más rica que España, con más de 8 millones de km2. Espero América Latina se una como la Unión Europea y se convierte ese siglo en una potencia mundial, con más territorio que USA y China juntos, y el doble de población que USA. Un saludo, hermano mexicano! 😊❤
That whole statement of ''the sun does not set on the British Empire'' was something that the King of Spain said first. Charles I of Spain, who was also known as Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, once said that ''the sun does not set on my dominion.''
This video has certain errors, such as not correctly showing the entire Spanish territory since this was larger, they also omit the 50 years that Portugal was Spain as well, I also want to mention that the Spanish territories were not colonies since they were viceroyalties and that it was England taking advantage of the invasion of France in the peninsula who financed the separatist groups,
'... set the groundwork and pace for global interconnection and commerce'. Did Spain do that really? I suggest some reading about 'Battle of Diu (India) in 1509.
Most pro-spanish factions during the wars if independence were Natives and Penninsulares, as the Natives prefered a far off government that those of the Criollos and Mestizos which were closer to them.
This is a polemic topic, mainly because there were city dwelling cultures in América before they were asimilated into the spanish empire. What I believe is true beyond a shadow of a doubt is that it integrated the american peoples into western civilization. The hispanic american independence declaracions happened in step with european enlightenment ideals. The US independence happened too around that time, but natives were never a part of the equation.
@@alvarorodriguez1592Criollo’s declared independence in Spanish speaking America not natives. They were basically indentured servants. Spain did not integrate the American people into western civilization. Many ideals that would come to be associated with the enlightenment already existed in the American continent, some even influenced people like Rousseau, they were also largely a product of the Islamic golden age that Europeans and especially Spaniards tried to eliminate.
The Spanish Empire was the first global empire in history, as it encompassed the first territories in Europe, Africa, Asia, Oceania. You need to mention the other territories of the Spanish Empire in Europe (Italy, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg) in Oceania (the Caroline Islands, the Mariana Islands, Guam, Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia). In Asia, the northern portion of Taiwan. In Africa (Western Sahara, Morocco, Equatorial Guinea). And American continent where I include Alaska, (Valdes hence the name in Spanish) to British Columbia.
Good video, also the Spanish empire was the first superpower not only for it’s territories in America and the Philippines also for it’s influence in Europe, the Spanish empire took the Portuguese empire between 1580-1640 and the Netherlands, Belgium, parts of France and Italy specifically the south, and the wars between the ottoman empire in the XVI century, and the wars with the French and English empires in the XV, XVI and XVII centuries, let the Spanish the advantage of commercial routes and influence in the globe 🌎
Wrong!! Everything West of the Mississippi River was owned by Spain. So this map discounts massive lands. That’s more than half of today’s USA. In 1802 they ceded it to France, and a year later the French sold it to US government in what’s called “Louisiana Purchase”.
No lo menciona para no incomodar a Estados Unidos de América, que hurtó esos territorios a México durante el siglo XIX, y no le gusta que se lo recuerden... Pero la toponimia no engaña. 😊
Probably because Mexico loss the territories in a spam of 15 years after it got it's independence from Spain which is pretty pathetic i guess the U.S took advantage of a vulnerable nation
@@santiagoblasgilabert2877 Esos territorios por lo que se sabe eran Realistas no Independentistas y por lo mismo cuando dijeron que ahora el Virreinato de Nueva España era república hubo conflictos y muchos querian separarse de lo nueva República llamado E. U. Mexicanos, para formar un territorio Realista y volver a ser parte de España, porque crees que cuando perdio Mexico esos territorios no ubo riñas de los Criollos, Mestizos, Mulatos Novohispanos que quedaron en dicho lugar. Solo piensalo.
No diría que en los virreinatos españoles había 3 clases de individuos, como dice el vídeo: peninsulares, criollos y mestizos. Una más acertada descripción sería que había tres estratos sociales entre los españoles de América: 1.- Los peninsulares, que principalmente ejercían las funciones de administración, por tener la confianza de la corona 2.- La burguesía, principalmente compuesta por los criollos 3.- El resto, fueran mestizos, criollos o nativos no mezclados. Los procesos de independencia en América del Sur fueron promovidos por la burguesía criolla, para no tener que pagar impuestos y tener libertad de acción y explotación frente a las garantistas leyes que venían de la península. Estos criollos obtuvieron la financiación principalmente de Inglaterra y Holanda, que siempre buscaron, sin conseguirlo por las continuas agresiones militares, acceder a los territorios españoles de América y al comercio de sus productos. En la Nueva España (virreinato del norte y centroamérica), sin embargo, el primer levantamiento obedeció a su rechazo a someterse a un rey francés impuesto por Napoleón. De hecho, promovían la fidelidad a la monarquía española. Poco después, sí fueron las élites de la burguesía criolla las que lideraron las batallas por la independencia, por lo mismo motivos en en la España del sur de América: no pagar impuestos a la corona y tener mayor libertad para obrar a su manera. En general, la independencia tuvo como consecuencia en toda América un pérdida de derechos para las clases más modestas, pérdida de tierras por parte de estos y bastantes matanzas contra nativos para poder explotar los recursos naturales de la tierras en que se aquellas tribus se asentaban. Por supuesto, además, la deuda contraída con ingleses, holandeses y franceses por los préstamos de guerra empobrecieron a los nuevos países, y la fragmentación de los territorios, antes unidos, les relegó a una condición de irrelevancia y debilidad en influencia internacional. Una vez divididos, además, se dispararon los conflictos territoriales entre los nuevos países y se multiplicaron los conflictos internos en constantes luchas por el poder.
I can't believe the comments spouting the same old stereotype about Spanish backwardnes. The Napoleonic war was fought on Spanish soil, with France and England destroying the manufacturing base on Spain. If this war had occurred on England itself, the industrial revolution wouldn't have taken off.
Good video. Between 1580 and 1640 was the Iberian Union and Portugal empire was added to Spanish Empire. I Nord América all lands of western of Mississippi River was controlled by Spain, French Louisiana become to Spanish Louisiana cause the 7 years wars even New Orleans, Bernardo De Gálvez was governor of Spanish province of Louisiana and he was very important in the USA independence war and Bernardo recovered Florida to Spanish. In Alaska there was little Spanish cities named Cordova and Valdes in the maximum expansion of empire. On the Pacific ocean Spain owned a lot of island, like the Nord of Taiwan (Formosa), Solomon Islands, Marianas Island, Nord of Australia (explored) and discovered Hawai Island even Antartican continent where the Spanish tripulation died by cold and hungry.
That's wrong my good friend. First of all, to be very accurate, the "spanish" empire only existed from 1707 onward, as "Spain" as a unified state only came into being de jure after the Nueva Planta decrees of 1707. If you see the Mayan word for "Spaniard" is "Kastláan", why? because they presented themselfs as "Castellians" not Spaniards. What existed was a Hapsburg House, which had domains all over Europe, including Castile & Leon and Aragon. So what actually existed prior to 1707 was a "Castillian & Aragonese" Empire... not a Spanish one. Now, unlike Spain, which wasn't (and still isn't) a nation state, Portugal was never defined by the ruler, but by its people, since 1143. You can clearly see that on the "Cortes of Tomar" agreement, which states that the Kingdom of Portugal, and its Empire, would remain independent, with a several guarantees, although the new king would be King Filipe I, which was also Felipe II of Spain - (or to be precise, of Castile and Leon, Aragorn, Navarre, so on so on). The empires were never mixed, the lands of the Portuguese Empire remained of the Portuguese Empire. De iuri, Portugal's sovereignty was never questioned until Filipe III of Portugal (which was the same person as Felipe IV of Spain) tried to demote Portugal's status as an independent kingdom under Spain, and was deposed because of it. So as you see, Portugal was never added to the Spanish Empire. That is why, historically, everyone (maybe except for Spaniards) calls that period "Iberion Union", and not "Spain", and even in maps the two empires are usually depicted with different colors. Like today's Canada and UK, they have the same king, yet are two separate kingdoms.
@@Tusiriakest That is not true. The French of the 16th century said: "Spain is a very ambitious empire, which invades all lands and all seas." Luther said in the 16th century: "Spain is our enemy. They have divided the German nation into two religions." The Italian humanists of the XV-XVII centuries said: "Spain is the invading power of our Italy". The English used to say "Spanish Armada", and they wrote works of the Elizabethan theater, such as "Spanish Tragedy". The Dutch never said: "We are invaded by the Castilians." They said: "We are invaded by Spain." The viceroyalty of New Spain was created in 1535. It is not new Castile, it is New Spain. The first kings of Spain, who call themselves kings of Spain, are the Visigoths of the 6th century. El Cid speaks of Spain, in the 10th century. The Marca España, said by the French, is the border between Iberian Islam and the empire of Charlemagne. Cervantes and the entire Spanish Golden Age are aware of the existence of Spain. Another thing is that Felipe II, and other Spanish kings, were aware of the regional autonomy, with parliaments, of some kingdoms. A bit like today's Spain, or like today's federal Germany. Germany was officially born in 1870, but the Holy German Empire dates from the 9th-19th century. Renaissance Italians were very conscious of living in Italy, even though it was provisionally divided into separate kingdoms. Spain had only one king since 1478. For example, Isabel de Castilla says in 1500: "I want the Spanish, men and women, to marry men and women from the new lands" (America). Sometimes Castile is used, as the English still say England, but the British concept is 2000 years old. The Habsburg surname comes from Felipe I the "beautiful" a Flemish fond of women, and a fool. The Spanish kings were much more important than the Habsburgs. The capital of the empire was always in Madrid, when the Habsburg surname enters here. For example, André Agassi (tennis player) has 8 grand slams. His wife, Steffi Graft (tennis player) has 22 grand slams. What are the children of that marriage called? Agassi. The machismo of the time gave priority to the male surname. That's all. Even Portugal, although an independent state, was long before of Hispania. The Portuguese are ancestrally Hispanic-Spain. Not Spain as a country. But yes in the Iberian-Hispanic Roman, Hispanic Visigoth and Hispanic Arab cultural sphere. Portugal was as independent between 1580-1640 as Italy, Belgium, Luxembourg, and parts of France and Germany, which also had their local mayors. The King of Spain (Felipe II, Felipe III and Felipe IV) said: "Yes, the Tomar agreement, but it is forbidden to have independent politics and diplomacy. It is forbidden to have another religion that is not Catholic. It is forbidden to have alliances with France, England or Turkey. I choose the viceroy of Portugal or Italy in Madrid. And if you rebel (something that the Portuguese could only do in 1640, when Spain had a very hard war against France, England, Protestant Germany, the Netherlands and the Turkish Empire) I will put 50,000 soldiers in you and I cut the throats of all the Portuguese, Italian or French rebel leaders. And I also love plays written in Spanish by Portuguese and Italian poets and playwrights." The Portuguese were good stewards of their empire, and the Italian mayors were good Italian mayors, but there was only one king. Portugal preferred to sell cinnamon. Spain had great power priorities, building in Italy 9 universities, 50 fortresses, palaces. And sending troops to central and northern Europe in a 200-year war. If Spain had fallen at that time, the Protestants would have descended on Madrid, Lisbon and Rome, they would have destroyed Catholicism and now we would all be Protestants. Surely Brazil would be half English Anglican and half French Huguenot. But the Spanish empire invaded Rome, Lisbon, Paris, Cologne, Milan, Genoa, Florence, Strasbourg, Aachen, Manheim, Amsterdam, Brussels... That is why the Catholic religion and the heritage of Spain and Portugal exist in the world. Then Spain became a threat to Portugal, and the British and French said: "Do I eat Portugal? I want to eat Portugal and all of her empire. But I better let it live, to prevent Spain from eating Portugal." ". He thinks that the British destroyed the Dutch and French empire without any compassion, and that in 1890 they created the Mozambique and Angola crises, to annex the intermediate territory, which perhaps belonged to Portugal, without any generosity with the former ally.
In the some time missing Netherlands ; Belgium ; Luxembourg 16-17 century; kingdom of Naples with Sardinia and Sicily 16-18 century ; Duchy of Milan 16-18 century ; in one word missing European territories ; Spain rule in European territories the 16 to 18 century; it happens many times for reasons unknown ; perhaps due to ignorance? to me when it is absolutly historical correct at the same time
There is no error. The author shows the empire as its maximum territorial extension in a given year. When those European territories were part of the empire, the American territories were much smaller, thus the total surface of the empire was smaller.
@@alvaromartinez8209 They woukd be noticed if it put them be sure and if not that i do it in a way that is noticeable i have seen many maps than even more clearky did not put European territories it is not the first one; it is not dificult to put them ; greetings.
@@Lacteagalaxia again, the European territories did not belong to Spain when the empire was as its largest extension in the early 1800s. That is what the map of the video showed and it is factually correct.
Now on another note, the Spanish also vassalized Florence, made the Medici family their stooge, and made an alliance with the Austrian Habsburg family.
I only can imagine such empire in modern times, having Panama's canal, Venezuela's oil reserves and Colombia's cocaine... bruh (I'm colombian by the way so I can make such jokes...)
Brasil didn't end up broken like the spanish colonies because of the Independence from Portugal. Which is kind of funny because they had a King and the Son Declared Independence and became the Emperor.. Soo did it really change that much? 🤣
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You’re missing the other European territories Spain had in the Spanish Empire like parts of Italy, Netherlands, France & so on. Also larger portions of North & South America
Exactly what I said. Anglos always do this for the Spanish empire but they include all of India even though the British never controlled all of India. They include the modern borders of African countries even though the British only controlled coastal towns. Pure hypocrisy.
@@xhorxheetxeberria-td1hu The Anglo-sphere of influence is immense, I live in the United States & the education is a joke not to mention Spain & the language Spanish are a nonstarter in anything significant in history here. Most Americans don’t even know Spain helped the most in the American Revolution against Great Britain, most money, weapons, soldiers, more than France. Spanish is looked upon as a Non-white language from Mexico or “South America”. The United States also started to use the word “Hispanic” to identify anyone from part of the former Spanish Empire, “Latin” America even if they don’t descend from the Spanish or Portuguese. The Black Legend was meticulously done, still to this day.
@@xhorxheetxeberria-td1hu The Anglo-sphere of influence is immense, I live in the United States & the education is a joke not to mention Spain & the language Spanish are a nonstarter in anything significant in history here. Most Americans don’t even know Spain helped the most in the American Revolution against Great Britain, most money, weapons, soldiers, more than France. Spanish is looked upon as a Non-white language from Mexico or “South America”. The United States also started to use the word “Hispanic” in the 1970’s census to identify anyone from part of the former Spanish Empire, “Latin” America even if they don’t descend from the Spanish or Portuguese. The Black Legend was meticulously done, still to this day.
@@IblewuponyourfaceIIIIndeed, although Hispanic is in fact the correct term, latin American or 'latinos' it's a wrong term the french popularized to keep away the Spanish influence on America. The first thing that triggered me on this video was the map of the 'highest Spanish extend' which is 100% incorrect, people tend to forget the extend of the empire under Felipe II, which was massive. The second trigger in this video and when I stopped watching, was the massive inaccuracy of how Hernán Cortéz conquered the Aztecs, he didn't sail there out of his own will or by looking for new land, he went there because the crown sent another Caudillo to Havana because he was corrupt and bad, he then proceeded to try to get something for the crown to not be ripped off his titles, but yeah, Spanish history is massively overlooked and minimized.
@@shocku5250 I agree with both of you, I'm also Hispanic, born and raised in Nicaragua, currently live in the 🇺🇸, I sometimes have to explain to my son lots of inaccuracy in History taught in schools today .
From Netherlands to Napoli
From Alaska to Argentina
From Morocco to Ecuatorial guinea
From Philippines to Papua nueva guinea
....The sun never sets in the spanish empire.
El Imperio Español nunca llegó a Alaska o Papua Nueva Guinea estás desinformado
actually at first they couldn't conquer the southern part of what today is argentina until later because of the mapuches and the name of that most southern argentina part is "Tierra Del Fuego" or "Land Of Fire" in english, very much of a badass name if you ask me at least in english.
Now time change wake up 😂
@@Elmenor_15974si que llegamos, busca un mapa del imperio bien hecho y verás. El problema es que es difícil encontrar uno, aunque por suerte los hay
@@SenyorV8479 Habrán llegado pero no conquistado hombre Papúa Nueva Guinea y en cuanto a Alaska nunca llegaron los españoles en los mapas más antiguos sale que solo llegaron hasta Seattle o más o menos esos estados al norte de USA
Currently the european language with the most native speakers is Spanish, that says a lot about how big the empire was.
Not the British. That why the were jealous about Spain
The most spoken language in the whole world is English though? Stupid comment!
That says a lot about how many people they slaughtered
@@edenanshar9225jealous about what? 😂
The Spanish lost every single war against the British/ Americans. You do realize that while Spanish has more native speakers, english has the most speakers in total? Like it's not even close
NO, that says a lot about the brutality the invaders used in their genocide in “The Americas”
I think that the negative aspects of Spanish colonization are well known, but I want to highlight some lesser-known elements that deserve recognition:
The documentary oversimplifies history and overlooks that these territories were not colonies in the same sense as 19th-century imperialist ventures. There also were viceroyalities in europe (sicily, naples, cerdeña and a few others). Shortly after Spanish arrival, universities, hospitals, cities, and roads were established-a model similar to the Romans as a builder/integrative empire. Indigenous people were recognized as citizens of the Spanish Crown, protected by progressive laws such as the "Leyes de Indias" and "Leyes de Burgos" from Queen Isabel onward. While abuses did occur, they were not unique to the Americas; similar exploitation and harsh conditions were also prevalent in Spain and Europe, particularly in mining and agriculture.
New Spain soon became wealthier than Spain itself, acting as a global trade hub, with only one-fifth of its gold and silver sent to Spain, mostly to fund wars aimed at preserving Christian unity in Europe. The remaining wealth largely stayed in the Americas, helping to establish what would become the foundations of Western civilization there. However, the benefits of this wealth were not evenly felt in Spain; most of it funded military campaigns or repaid debts rather than improving life for the average person. Inflation from the influx of American silver even worsened economic conditions for many Spaniards, while certain cities in the Americas, like Mexico City and Lima, thrived, becoming more prosperous than some regions in Spain itself.
The encomienda system, often criticized, had its roots in the Reconquista, where land control followed similar structures within Spain. Furthermore, the conquest of the Aztec Empire depended heavily on alliances with indigenous groups like the Tlaxcaltecas and Coconas, who were longstanding enemies of the Mexica (Aztecs). After the conquest, many members of these groups became aristocrats, landowners, and city rulers in New Spain, and today their descendants form part of the largely mestizo society across Spanish America.
Religious conversion was also more complex than implied. Native gods were sometimes viewed as more severe than the Christian God, while saints were perceived as stronger deities, leading to relatively smooth conversions. In many cases, indigenous deities were integrated with Christian beliefs. Missionaries often played a positive role in this transition, treating native communities with respect, providing education, and even studying indigenous languages like Nahuatl, one of the first to be formally documented.
In my view, Spain’s approach to the Americas in the 15th and 16th centuries was, in many ways, progressive and distinct from later colonial ideologies. Rather than purely subjugating one world to another, Spain aimed to integrate the two, creating a unique historical process that fostered cultural exchange and lasting integration (Perhaps not by the standards of a 21st-century mindset, but certainly progressive when viewed through the lens of the 15th to 20th centuries' perspectives.)
What most people don't know is that Spain does not have colonies. All the territories they conquered are Viceroyalties and are considered Kingdoms within the Empire. All the people of the Empire are subjects to the Spanish monarchs just like the Spaniards in the mainland.
Basically colonies all the resources gets sent to Spain
No, that is not a fact. 80 % of the wealth produced remained in the overseas regions ( viceroyalties). Only a 20 % of the whole production of any resourses was exported to mainlad ( Iberian peninsula). Thats why jn America most of todays hispanic heritage countries have the first universities and oldest of the continent, hospitals, schools, cathedrals, plazas and many other buildings such as forts, light houses, etc...
Very different in comparison to England, and Portugal. @eashanahluwalia9599
Too bad it was only extended to Europeans their… natives were treated horrible
Same for France. All French territories are just all France.
@@CousinJimbobA miner in Bolivia earned more than your typical factory worker during the industrial revolution in the UK.
Jerónimo de Ayanz y Beaumont (1553 - 23 March 1613 AD) was a Spanish soldier, painter, astronomer, musician and inventor. He pioneered the use and design of the steam engine, as well as mining ventilation systems, improved scientific instrumentation, developed windmills and new types of furnaces for metallurgical, industrial, military, and even domestic operations. He invented a diving bell, patented an immersion suit tested before the court of Felipe III in Pisuerga, on August 2, 1602, and designed a submarine.[1]
No sólo fue pionero en el desarrollo de la máquina de vapor sino que su modelo era más eficiente que el diseñado 1 sigo después por 1 inglés.
@@PatadeCabra369Hombre como que era navarro y por tanto cabezón. Si se le metía en la cabeza que había que inventar el submarino, inventaba el submarino por cojones...
@@Cmi-atl23no sabía que Navarra pertenece a Murcia !!!
The Spaniards did not conquer America on their own, they were thanks to the natives, there is a popular belief that the natives were and fought against a common enemy, the truth is that the Aztecs had many enemies just like the Incas, the pre-Columbian legacy did not disappear was mixed, Spain named a single continent called America and this is how the rest of Europe and the world knew it.
Finally an educated comment! Thank you
You got it right but by completely wrong reasons. The Aztecs and the Incas didn't know each other. The thing is that the Aztecs were actually exclusively the inhabitants of the city of Mexico and the rest was a maremágnum of different cultures and languages and city states with no polítical unity that were involved in genocidal struggles against each other.
"Aztecs had many enemies like the Incas" .... 🤣🤣🤣 Maybe others, but not the Incas...
When I say that the Aztecs had many enemies like the Incas, I mean that both equally had different enemies, not that the Incas were enemies of the Aztecs.
They had never experienced smallpox, measles or flu before, and the viruses tore through the continent, killing an estimated 90% of Native Americans.
Fun fact: only 20% of the gold and silver that Spain extracted was carried to the peninsula. The remaining 80% remianed of development
Mentira! Existia uma coisa chamado pacto colonial, isto é, as colônias Espanhólas só poderiam comprar e comercializar somente com Espanhá.
@@davidalves7949 España no tenía colonias al estilo de otros imperios comerciales. Todo el territorio era España. Sólo podían comerciar, en teoría con nosotros, porque nosotros reinvertimos allí el 70% de la riqueza, en los siglos XVI-XVII. 80% en el siglo XVIII, levantando 2000 ciudades de piedra, 28 universidades, 400 catedrales, 300 fortalezas, miles de escuelas infantiles, 850 hospitales... Sólo faltaba que los británicos y holandeses, que tenían sus propios imperios comerciales en la India, África e Indonesia, en 1948, tan pobres como los encontraron 300 años antes, sin invertir nada y llevándose todo a Londres y Amsterdam, encima ganaran dinero con el imperio español y nuestros esfuerzos por desarrollarlo. De hecho, cuando los británicos pusieron sus manos políticamente, en América Latina (Hispano América y Brasil), después de las guerras napoleónicas que destruyeron Europa continental, pero no las islas de Gran Bretaña o Chipre, no mejoraron en nada la vida de la gente de América Latina, sólo se dedicaron a buscar concesiones, provocando guerras entre países hermanos, golpes de estado e inestabilidad, como USA y la Unión Soviética en el siglo XX.
@@Gloriaimperial1 No sé de dónde sacan ustedes los españoles esas "historias" tan distorsionadas. La América española no podía negociar con otros países, única y exclusivamente con España. Los ciudadanos de estas regiones eran considerados de segunda clase y sólo los españoles peninsulares podían asumir roles de liderazgo. Los recursos naturales y la riqueza del continente fueron explotados y expropiados por la corrupta corona española. La gente de estas regiones fue sometida y masacrada, lo que usted llama una "leyenda negra", pero en realidad sucedió realmente. Ustedes, los españoles, se creen benévolos por las obras de infraestructura y las universidades, y esto fue sólo por interés propio, ya que necesitaban enseñar a leer y escribir a la elite española nacida en América. Pero ustedes no se diferencian en nada de los británicos, holandeses, franceses y belgas. ¡Los europeos son todos iguales!
You miss one of the most important economic effects of the Spanish empire, the intercontinental commerce created between Mexico, China and Spain. All financed with the Spanish Real de a Ocho, the first intercontinental currency that was in use for almost 3 centuries. The economic effects of bringing silver into China were enormous. Other aspects, like the direct intervention of the English in the independence process of South America to open their markets to English products are also crucial because they opened the way for the expansion and dominance of the British empire after they lost North America.
On the social and economic side, is relevant to mention that life in these colonies during the Spanish period was far better than in Europe. There were no wars, public health systems, and more land and opportunities, the problem was the scarcity of population. The large population explosion in 19 century Europe is what triggered the enormous expansion of the USA at the expense of the thinly populated post independence Mexico.
It's an Anglo documentary. What did you expect? Not REAL history free of propaganda.
@@xhorxheetxeberria-td1hu you are right, but in general most videos in RUclips are very light and quite biased. After the defeat of Napoleon the Brits took over the world and wrote a new vision of world history in which they are the good guys and Spain is the bad guy. The fact is that all the British empire is a commercial network built on top of the world that spain and Portugal discovered, mapped and brought together.
@@julio5pradola verdadera leyenda negra española creada por los de la isla M@ldita del mar del norte 😅, los imbañables de los come baguette, podemos agregar a un par más a esta lista, los obsesionados con las flores hindues y los zapatos de madera y los de la bota peninsular que creen haber inventado los fideos, ellos en realidad se dicen fueron los que empezaron la leyenda negra por celos. ESPAÑA fue una versión (su propio versión) del antiguo imperio romano, saludos a toda la Hispanada, ah! Se me olvidaba, te das cuenta que es pura propaganda Anglo, por qué ni se da cuenta que Guinea Ecuatorial en Medio de África fue también parte del Virreynato de la Plata. Saludos de un Nicaragüense 🇳🇮 👋🫡
And that’s where the $ simbol and the word peso came from, which is ironic because Spain doesn’t use it anymore but the US and Mexico still use it for
their modern currencies
@@justinherrera3722 the real and the peso were mostly generated and used from New Spain (Mexico) and Peru that were the richest and most commercially developed areas of the empire. After independence Spain was too poor as it was till ruined by the napoleonic wars and it moved to other monetary solutions. The paradox here is that the official narrative today is that the Americans were poor and oppressed by Spain when it was not at all like this. They were far richer societies and when the local elites saw the weakness in Spain they left. But they didn’t leave to create a big and powerful nation, no, the local elites left to create small areas of power for themselves and thus ruined their future.
You forgot the European territories of the Spanish Empire: southern Italy, Sicily, Sardinia, the marquisate of Finale in northwestern Italy, Milan, the State of the Presidi in Tuscany, Belgium, Luxembourg, Netherlands, the French regions of Artois and Franch-Comte. And African territories like Oran in Algeria. Or the Marianas and Caroline Islands in Oceania
They had it for a while until losing it again only about 10 years or less
@@danteledesma42 Belgium and Luxembourg were under Spanish rule from 1556 to 1714, the State of the Presidi from 1557 to 1707, Naples and Sicily from 1504 to 1713, Finale from 1602 to 1713, Oran from 1509 to 1708 and 1732 to 1792, the Marianas from 1668 to 1898, Milan 1556-1707. That means those territories were under Spanish rule for over 100 years, some over 150 and 200 years. So, can you tell me which one were ruled for ten or less years, according to you?
Also Western Sahara and Equatorial Guinea.
@@danteledesma42 la ignorancia es maravillosa, las posesiones españolas en europa fueron españolas por casi 200 años 😂😂😂
@@danteledesma42 omg you are so stupid... spain got italy for 2oo years and Beligum and Netherlands for 150 years. Mother fuker
British naval units tried to conquer Cartegena de Indias, Colombia in the present day, where the spanierds had an important trading harbor. Blas de Lezo, commander in chief of the spanish troops, offered the full spanish citizenship to those men who help to defend the city.
Many thousands joined the spanish army, including many britishmen. But this part of the story they won't tell you. 😊
Como mestizo estoy orgulloso de la gran herencia que nos dejaron. ¡Viva España!
🇪🇸 ❤🇪🇨
Ante todo somos hispanos y hermanos
Gracias, hermano, nosotros siempre los sentimos así, y yo personalmente tengo antepasados y familia actual de México, Chile y Puerto Rico, y aquí tenemos una gran comunidad latina. Un abrazo ❤Viva el mundo latino!
Pero di por los españoles en el pasado porque los nuevos españoles van apensar que fueron ellos y ya se sienten superiores por lo que estas diciendo
@@miguelnavarrete7475 Los nuevos españoles acaban de lanzar un cohete espacial al espacio, viven en el décimo país en investigaciones científicas del mundo, un país con muy alto desarrollo humano, con más esperanza de vida de Europa, con un gran sistema público de salud, muy competitivo en cultura, deportes y mil cosas. Los romanos pusieron la primera piedra y nos civilizaron. Lo hemos pasado mal muchas veces, pero ahora progresamos. Y estamos deseando que América Latina sea una de las próximas potencias mundiales, gracias a nuestro legado y a sus propio esfuerzo, e influya a todo el planeta. No veo a los españoles que conozco sintiéndose superiores a nadie, el desarrollo que todos los países del mundo depende de mil circunstancias. En la misma América Latina hay países atrasados, normalmente los que tienen regímenes socialistas (Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua...) y países que ya están entre los 69 con muy alto desarrollo humano: Chile, Uruguay, Panamá, Costa Rica, Argentina. Tienen todavía problemas, pero están tan o más desarrollados que países de Europa Oriental, que sufrieron el comunismo.
Qué poco conoces a los españoles actuales.... @@miguelnavarrete7475
@@miguelnavarrete7475Calma tú inquietud hermano tranquilo... Si nos culpan de robar oro y me insultan algunos por ser español... Me tengo que sentir culpable por algo donde yo no estaba??? Y no puedo sentir orgulloso por las cosas buenas que hizo mi pueblo??? Lo bueno de los españoles lo hicieron otros españoles... Pero en lo malo si!!!! En lo malo si estamos todos en el mismo saco 😂😂😂😂😂 de verdad 😂😂😂😂😂 como somos los seres humanos de envidiosos,sesgados y poco objetivos... Lo malo es de todo los españoles y lo bueno es de unos pocos españoles de antaño 😂😂😂😂 es normal en el ser humano da igual el país (lo bueno no es tuyo no te lo creas, que mi envidia no lo acepta) pero lo malo si... Es normal que los españoles nos sintamos orgullosos de nuestro legado en el mundo, pues eran españoles no eran colombianos ni venezolanos... Ni italianos... Igual que los italianos sienten orgullo de la antigua Roma.. o los griegos de Grecia... Y no olvides que a diferencia de Roma que como estado desapareció y es una ciudad hoy día... El pueblo español o castellano no despareció... Cayó el imperio pero no el pueblo español...
Spain"the empire on which the sun never sets"
the dollar, the yuan and many other currencies are the heirs of the real of ocho, the first global currency
an empire that lasted four centuries
Dolar was a Spanish currency and its two lines of represents the Totres of Hercules of our shield.
HAY QUE POBLAR LA PATAGONIA
BIENVENIDOS
Great summary of the Spanish Empire, I really enjoyed watching it. Three comments: 1) The map of the Aragon Empire missed the area in south Italy. 2) The map of Mexico in 1823 is wrong, the borders back then were very different than today. 3) Spanish Louisiana territory would be worth being mentioned.
🇪🇦
Lies again? UFC SILAT UEFA SW
@@NazriB 🇹🇳
Yes I don't hear much about the Spanish creoles of Louisiana.
@@louisinese
Then look at the treaty of Paris of 1763 in which France ceded Louisiana to Spain and you will understand.
Much respect to the Spanish empire, they lead the way for the rise of the western civilization.. they highly skilled in craftsmanship.. they make good clothing, sword, armory & ships
The Spanish destroyed civillisations they came into contact with in pursuit of conquest & plunder. Are you seriously proud of that??
The British Empire for all it's faults as viewed by modern standards was at least an empire based upon trade rather than mere plunder. The British never wanted to destroy the indiigenous people of India or any other territory they invaded.
@@fedevida1951 Never said the British Empire was faultless. However it was an awful lot better than the Spanish.This is all relatively speaking of course.
@@reddwarfer999 Beter exterminating natives i see.
@@reddwarfer999I doubt very much that the British empire was better than the Spanish one; knowing that great britain became great by always messing with spain and envying her in almost everything.
Thats because of all the knowledge they found all over Spain that the Muslim left behind
*FUN FACT:* Spain had 3 small colonies in Canada: Terra Nova ( New Foundland ) St. Pedro (St. Pierre Island) and Fuerte de San Miguel (Fort San Miguel) on Vancouver Island.
the name for Canada comes from the Spanish word *"Cañada"* which means "pathway"
Actually the most accepted theory is that it comes from the Iroquois word "kanata" which means town, village.
that is the "typical" Anglo make-believe bologna that the Portuguese also use on youtube and "some" history books.
the actual name for Canada comes from the Spanish word "Cañada" which means "pathway". And the Spanish were in Canada long before the English or the French. The last two wiped out *all* Spanish history in Canada and supplanted it with their own as they saw fit!
@@angelcamachodelsolar
@@TrentBrent Jacques Cartier, seeking the Northwest Passage to France, came into contact with the Iroquois in 1534, on his first voyage, and on his second voyage he navigated the St. Lawrence River and founded Quebec (1535), having contact with the Iroquois throughout that time travel, and names those lands as "Canada." They are the first documents in which the word appears, and the most accepted theory is that of the Iroquois word "kanata."
True! the country of Canada is the Spanish word for Cañada which means a pathway. Spanish explorers were the first to reach and settle Canada (wayyyyyyyy before the 🇬🇧 or 🇫🇷) so you can make up your Anglo-lies based history, an English tradition of course, but it's *nothing factual* 👍
@@casadeespanaenmanitoba3191 Portugal is not Spain. The first global empire was Portuguese, not spanish.
The Spanish Empire owned all the west coast and some parts of Alaska, as well as some parts of the Guinean gulf.
In fact, using the Treaty of Tordesillas, Charles III of Spain got into diplomatic conflict with Russia precisely for Alaska
@@cekan14 the Treaty of Tordesillas only happened becuase the Spanish monarchy was complaining to the Spanish pope that it wasn't fair how the Portuguese laid claim to most of the unexplored world. feeling that " it wasn't fair" is how Spain got most of the western hemisphere. LOL
@@bconni2 When a treaty is being made, negotiations are made. The United States and little Albania can seek arbitration to negotiate a treaty. I remember that at that time, 1494, Spain had half of Italy, bases in North Africa, and the first cities in America. Portugal was only exploring the West coast of Africa.
@@bconni2 In fact, it was an update of the Treaty of Alcáçovas of 1479, in which the zones of influence in the Atlantic were already divided, and when it was signed it was both to avoid Spanish interference in the Portuguese route around Africa and to do the same in the new one route to the Indian (later it turned out that they were not the Indian but America) that Columbus had discovered for the Catholic Monarchs.
@@bconni2 Francis I of France insisted that the Pope see Adam's will in the face of successive papal bulls that recognized Spanish preeminence in the conquest of America. «The sun shines for me as for others. I would like to see the clause in Adam's will that excludes me from the division of the world and leaves everything to the Castilians and Portuguese.
Not even the Spanish and Portuguese agreed with the distribution made by the Pope, which is why they ended up signing their own Treaty of Tordesillas in 1494.
I have Spanish blood and I am so proud. That my ancestors came a America, and founded the New Spain, what is México today. 🇲🇽❤️🇪🇦
you cant found something that was already there. It is like saying the Moors founded Spain.
@@ob1smashwould you prefer to live under Aztecs instead 😅?
Now they don’t like that they have an immigration problem. European countries should be the *LAST* to complain about immigration.
@@alexlastra9931yes.
@ good luck with that. Prefieres ser cabeza de raton, cuando erais cabeza de leon.
Criminally underrated European empire. Viva España!
1) Roman Empire
2) British Empire
3) Spanish Empire
Surely top 3 in Europe
@@robzsarmy5471
3)russian empire
4)frensh empire
5)German empire
6)ottoman empire
7)spanish empire
Ok
@@zakariabozo1027 I did not put Ottoman since Turkey is not European
no reason to celebrate the death of millions -everytime white people concor an era , its always ends in genocide
@@zakariabozo1027 sorry but wikipedia said 1.British empire 2. Mongol Empire and 3. Spanish empire
Some minor quibbles but important to mention. Spain actually explored as far north as Alaska and established outposts there (there's still Spanish named geographic features there to this day). California was not the northernmost area of New Spain, however it was when Mexico became independent. Also other areas as far north as modern day Montana were also claimed historically by Spain.
Secondly, also a quibble. The viceroyalty of Peru produced most of the silver for the Spanish Empire throughout the 1500s. However by the mid 1600s, the viceroyalty of New Spain (Mexico) was the largest producer of silver for the Spanish Empire eclipsing Bolivian/Peru production for nearly the last 200 years of colonization.
In fact it was during the Mexican period of silver production that the Spanish currency the piece of eight became the first truly global reserve currency used in trade in Europe, east Asia, Africa, the British colonies, etc.
*FUN FACT:* Spain had 3 small colonies in Canada: Terra Nova ( New Foundland ) St. Pedro (St. Pierre Island) and Fuerte de San Miguel (Fort San Miguel) on Vancouver Island.
the name for Canada comes from the Spanish word *"Cañada"* which means "pathway"
Spain had more islands in Canada, Vancouver. I know because of my ancestry from Spain, also had Maine, now being affected by a hurricane. Spanish ships sunk off of the coast of Maine, provoked The Spanish American War with The United States fighting for The British. That's why The American Revolution? Who really won, because Spain helped the colonies fight against The British, along with The French.
Spain did help (Admiral Galvez) the American Colonies become Independent from Britain. U.S. ship called the Maine was blown up by the Americanos as a False Flag Operation in Spanish Havana so the U.S. could steal Spanish Guam, Puerto Rico and Cuba.... *IF* the traitorous U.S. treats it's allies like this (Spain) *HOW* do they treat their enemies? Oh wait, they drop 2 nuclear bombs on Japan during WWII...🇺🇸 *=* 💩 *ALWAYS!!* @@anaibarangan4908
@@TrentBrent “To be an enemy of America can be dangerous, but to be a friend is fatal.”- Henry Kissinger
If we think about it, Spain was actually just the new Romans that time. They have basically make the Roman catholic as the mostly practice religion in the world.
That is exactly what James Michener said
Michener was a historical writer who wrote many volumes of books.
You made a good observation
@@henryperez606 And the greatest builders
@hiooxkrmagkis9323 You're wrong. Christianity is based on the life and teachings of Jesus Christ and is approximately 2,000 years old. Its largest groups are the Roman Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox churches, and the Protestant churches, and its sacred text is the Bible. Over the centuries, Christianity grew in numbers as it spread around the world, often through missionaries and colonizers making it the most widely practiced religion/belief on the planet.
Indeed, even their method of colonization was similar to the Romans. They introduced their faith and culture and began the process of assimilation. They even integrated Moctezuma's lineage within Spanish nobility and it still exists til this day.
Given the fact that their king was the Holy Roman Emperor when they conquered the New World, this makes sense.
Como mexicano me siento orgulloso de mi sangre y herencia española , uds los americanos deben sentirse orgullosos de ser la actual superpotencia y no dejar que los chinos les tiren la corona
The Americans are the least responsible super power of all times. I wish there was a ruler like Carlos I de España y V del Sacro Imperio Romano Germánico
Nosotros siempre hemos sido aliados de china y adversarios del anglosajon. Nuestro deber es oponernos al protestante
@@hugolxxx nuestro deber no es enemistarnos con nadie, sino crear amistades y alianzas entre nosotros
@@JP-en7cc mientras USA sea la superpotencia hegemónica jamás podremos unitnos
españa hoy es lo mas atrasado de europa.
One not very well known fact is that Spanish América, specially New Spain paid for most of the military campaigns against Napoleon in Europe. Since the Peninsula was taken by the french as most of Europe at that time. The "Juntas" took political control and financially helped Europe get rid of Napoleon. That is why in the Proclanation medals of the Juntas in New Spain read "Restaurador de la Europa" translates to "Restorer of Europe".
The Spanish financed the Brits and Portuguese? I'm pressing F to doubt.
Unless you're saying it wasn't Wellington and the Portuguese that liberated Spain from the mess they got themselves into when they invited their ally, Napoleon, to mediate the crowning of their new King, only for him to swipe the crown and give it to his brother Joseph? Are you?
Not only does Spain accept the Napoleonic embargoes that would dictate France's trade hegemony on land, they thought they would just let their armies march towards Portugal too and invade, and that nothing would happen to them. Served them right.
Spain was allied with France and so weak their King just handed away the Kingdom without a fight.
Were the juntas having any meaningful military successes against the French before the Luso-English Army liberated Spain?
Only the Spanish population is worth praising for their efforts and sacrifice, not the military juntas that did nothing until the Portuguese and English came to the rescue, and certainly never ever Spanish military leaders.
*"Restorer of Europe arch"*
*Pick the winning side
*Winning side eats you up
*You cause your civilians to suffer
*Your military is used to invade neighbors
*Winning side starts losing
*Switch sides!
*Call yourselves winners
*Now you won the war by yourself
*Congrats, no one likes stolen valor
Very interesting!
Yes, Spain literally saved Europe twice, first from the Muslims and then the French but they seem to get no credit for it
@@justinherrera3722 Spain gave to Europe a new continent that was the critical competitive advantage for European civilization to grow faster than the other world civilizations, develop its institutions, its philosophy, its art, its freedom and its progress. The West has a huge debt with the Spanish world (Spain and Spanish Americas) that is forgotten today but is real.
@@justinherrera3722 the French when? After the Portuguese and British liberated Spain who had a deal with France and was conquered because they wanted to allow the French army to just march through Spain towards Portugal?
You were allied with France you cowardly turncoats, you always side with whoever is winning or seems the strongest.
But history does not lie. You get no credit, because you deserve no credit you grifters.
Viva España 🇪🇸 💪 Orgulloso de tener como Lengua Materna el idioma mas hermoso del mundo el Español. Saludos a los Españoles desde Chile 🇨🇱
🇪🇦♥️🇨🇱
Pero ustedes no hablan español.
Mentiras. Solo una broma
si no eres mapuche no eres chilena, eres gringa.
@@lordcommandernox9197🤡
@@lordcommandernox9197 los mapuche también sacaron a otros. Ese debate estúpido lleva a una regresión infinita
The First Empire the Spanish Empire that can rightfully declare the sun never sets in our Empire! The first world superpower in the 15th century Queen Isabela of Castille married the King of Aragon k!
Nop, Portugal was the first global empire
Lol multiple times lost against the ottoman
@@widodoakrom3938 multiple times kicked ottoman ass. Portugal won more battles against the ottomans than it lost=|
@@Tusiriakest lol named some battle that ottoman lost the ottoman arguably more powerful than the Spanish at 16-17 century
@@widodoakrom3938 oh, against the Spanish? Oh no, sorry, I thought you were answering to my comment about Portugal. I never knew that the Spaniards fought the otomans. I always thought the Spaniards only had courage to fight against foes that didn't have firearms.
The Portuguese on the other hand won a number of battles against the ottomans (battle of Diu 1509, siege of diu 1538, battle of Cochim 1504, the Ethiopian Campaign 1541-1543, and of course the first Portuguese-ottoman conflict of 1538-1557, where the Portuguese won in the indian ocean and the Ottomans in the red sea; the second Portuguese-Ottoman conflicts 1558-1566, which was a Portuguese victory; and then the third Portuguese-ottoman conflict, from 1580 to 1589 which was again a Portuguese victory.
The $panish dollar, which gives the simbol $ dollar today, financed the independence of the 13 Colonies until 1857 .... When also the Louisiana was part of the Spanish Empire all along 40 years. Did you forget also?
France financed the American independence. France gave America its independence with its victory at Yorktown.
@@hubertusvenator5838 xD
Exacto, con la derrota fundamental de los ingleses en Pensacola.
@@hubertusvenator5838 FALSO, España dio la independencia a las 13 Colonias, atrapando los 50 barcos ingleses que llevaban tropas, armas, dinero para la defensa. España ademas pagó los sueldos a los soldados de la flota francesa y llevó armas, municiones, etc y dinero a los rebeldes por el Mississippi. España ademas derrotó a los ingleses en Nueva Orleans, Baton Rouge, Movila y Galveston al sur y en San Louis al norte, en Illinois con lo que los rebeldes tenian cubiertas laa espaldas y suministros asegurados.
@@hubertusvenator5838Spain helped the 13 colonies to get their independence, not only France.
God bless Spain
🇦🇷🤝🇪🇸
I'm from America
Viva la espana
English is better. Spain has no success world wide nor in their colonies 😂
@@Eljefe5948la corrupcion politica en hispanoamerica condeno la region, Hispanoamérica es muy rica.
@@Eljefe5948no eran colonias, eran virreinatos
@@Eljefe5948Las capitales de los virreinatos eran muy ricos y se asemejaban a otras ciudades de europa como la misma Madrid.
Tuvieron mala suerte con su independencia, todos los que se independizaron a hispanoamerica eran criollos blancos.
El unico indigena que lidero una independencia contra España fue en Filipinas, el mismo afirmo su arrepentimiento.
Spain held many more territores than portrayed at the video. Guam, marianas islands and many more pacific islands were spanish. Even taiwan wich was called Formosa (beautiful).
At europe, spain also controlled 2/3 of italy. And the lowlands inherited by the habsburgs.
They explored and constructed forts all the way up to Alaska.
About the polemic initial conquest, it wasnt so brutal like its commonly portrayed, they did it roman style, conquest through diplo first, war second. They introduced the western tech and integrate the huge diversity of native populations into the realm as equal citizens, same as european peasants, educated them into catholicisim and modern science and culture. Many natives became popular writers and doctors.
Exactly
Seguro eres español para decir que los españoles trataban como iguales a los Incas o nativos americanos, eran despreciados, hasta los mestizos lo eran sólo los nacidos en España eran privilegiados, los españoles esclavisaron a los nativos en vez de matarlos pero aún así casi extinguen a los Incas, se dice q cuando España comenzó la colonización había 20 millones de Incas q fueron reducidos a 3 millones a causa de la esclavitud y las enfermedades. Y además se llevaron todo el oro que encontraron en América, lo bueno de los españoles eran los religiosos como los jesuitas q hicieron buen trabajo, pero fueron un imperio esclavisador de nativos americanos, la única diferencia con los ingleses es q no los mataron.
100% @GXSergio 🏁👌
ruclips.net/video/zYtn1I4tRsY/видео.html&ab_channel=SCINTILLAMDEI
A Spanish Conquistador Puts Accusers of GENOCIDE In Their Place (Con subtítulos)
The Formosa island was named by Portuguese sailors! Not Spanish.
("Formosa" has the same meaning in Portuguese and Spanish)
USA focuses on its Anglo history but denies its massive Spanish/Mexican influence: Florida, California, Los Ángeles, Las Vegas, Texas, San Diego, etc
Sorry, not where I studied.
I live in New Mexico and can tell you your wrong!
@kevinweinz2790 Same, FL is an ancient state, it's so cool!
No influence there.
@@alice_agogo "No influence there", "there" being places with Spanish names.
Very true talk, my father traded with the Spanish in those old days in the present day country of Equatorial Guinea. And I have also the chance to connect miraculousy and embrace a similar trading connection in Spain. Spanish people truly are very very civilized with good understanding of what life is all about. I enjoy very well every moment with them during our business relationship. They are very loving and kind people, very well civilized.Long life the nation and people of Spain.
If anything we should be absolutely ashamed of the actions of these bumbling money-grubbing world powers. What about the millions of people who had their entire civilizations erased, completely unprovoked. No society should ever have the right to impose themselves upon another.
Gracias hermano! Conozco a gente de guinea Ecuatorial aqui en España y es la gente Africana que más se entiende con los españoles, se nota la cultura
Guinea Ecuatirial people are true Spanish brothers
As a Colonbian i´m really proud to speak spanish and being Catholic Christian ✝ thanks to spain this lands could hear the message of our lord Jesuschrist , even today the bible has been translated to almost every single existing indegenous tongue ❤ and all our biggest cities has Spanish arquitecture in it
dilo en español si estás tan orgulloso
The Portuguese established the first global maritime and commercial empire under the leadership of Henry the Navigator in the 15th century. In the 1440s, Henry sent out key expeditions to Africa and Asia, and in the 16th and 17th centuries, Portugal went on to establish colonies in Brazil, Africa, East Timor, India and Macau. The Spanish quickly followed suit by conquering Mexico in 1519 and, shortly thereafter, Peru, the Philippines and most of Central and South America (except Brazil).
the Portuguese innovated almost every major technological advancement in maritime exploration and naval warfare almost 100 years before Columbus set sail. the astrolabe, cartography. the ship design of the Carracks and Caravels.? cracking the codes of the Atlantic winds ? the Portuguese did most of the hard work long before Spain got in the game.
@@bconni2look at us now 🤣
You do not conquer a global empire by just marching with your army inside of the capital.
@@bconni2columbus was portuguese. The first land he saw in america call it Cuba.... in Spain what is Cuba???
In portugal is a town with centuries, where columbus was born. He named that land in honour of the place he born
@@alvargonz07every historian??? Every? No... just the spanish ones and that is called propaganda
No mencionas los territorios europeos de España? Países Bajos, Bélgica, Luxemburgo, Nápoles (sur de Italia) Sicilia, Cerdeña y ducados de Milán y Borgoña en Francia. Además el Virreinato de Nueva España era considerablemente más grande, ya sin contar la luisiana francesa y el territorio de Nootka que llegaba a Canadá y por supuesto las islas Filipinas junto con las islas marianas y las carolinas. La mitad de Taiwán fue parte de España también (estoy seguro de que ni un solo británico sabía eso) . Son bastantes territorios conquistados y muy importantes en la historia de España y de Europa en general (la revolución neerlandesa). España no fue la primera potencia mundial solo por sus territorios en América, hasta 1714 era la primera potencia solo con sus territorios en Europa. Pero bueno tampoco pido nada, es un video hecho por un inglés. El español sigue siendo el idioma europeo con más hablantes nativos mientras que el inglés es el idioma europeo más hablado como lengua secundaria (fue Estados Unidos el país que popularizó en inglés! no Inglaterra). Lo único que hace falta es que paises con un enorme potencial y de los cuales estoy seguro que se van a convertir en potencias como México, Argentina o Venezuela si matan de una vez al tonto que tienen de gobernante. También sería interesante una unión centroamericana. Sé que los que son de allí me dirán que no puedo opinar ya que no soy de centroamérica pero vamos a ser realistas, los paises de centroamérica son 99.9% iguales en cultura y tradiciones. Que sean paises separados porque a una élite que gobierna le interesa me suda los cojones, lo mejor es unirse. El mundo hispano va a crecer en influencia económica y cuando eso pase quiero que nadie tenga que hablar inglés.
Imperio Español.
No sé por qué los Habsburgos y Borbones nunca se declararon Emperadores de América.
Me da a mí que tenían a sus territorios americanos descuidados.
@@Δ-Δ-Δ-Δ la triste realidad es que para cuando terminó el imperio todavía no se habían dado cuenta del tamaño real de América.
@@jmmh1313 Nos veían como como colonias y ya.
Nunca nos supieron apreciar.
@@Δ-Δ-Δ-Δ las leyes no dicen eso.
@@jmmh1313 ¿Qué leyes?
You know the Spanish Empire is better than the british one when the Black Legend by the british still hits nowadays.
PLVS VLTRA
Well said
My Hero Academia makes the Spanish proud. Which is actually quite ironic as anime is popular in Latin America.
The British empire was the biggest, most spoken about and English is the most spoken language, the Spanish empire was good but doesn’t come close to the British
@@pauliewalnuts5803 Britain only rose to the highest when Spain fell, and Spain only fell because Napoleon invaded them.
@@HolyknightVader999 okay but that doesn’t change my point
Im not Spanish and yet still feels a little bad sad that the Hispanic story is long overlooked
De quien crees que es la culpa?
This is intentional
Landa census of 1565 registered 200 Taino indigenous people, confirming their extermination in the Caribbean, the most atrocious extermination in all of human history. that is part of the spanish history too.
We all know that was the intention, there is a book created named the black book.
Spain were the 1st. Global Superpower where the Sun Never Set; just an awesome country and an awesome people!
VIVA SPAIN and it's wonderful and friendly people; i am going there on a tapas tour to Madrid and cannot wait🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸
It's insane how they lost all importance. Now an irrelevant nation globally
@@chrisj-zk1tgla union europea destruyo a España, ahora si somos relevantes es por el legado del idioma
@@chrisj-zk1tglike britain
ahora dilo en español
Portugal was the first global empire not Spain btw :)
Spain is beautiful never understood why grandpa wanted us to travel to France, Spain, Germany 🤝👋👏
Very well-done and informative. This video forgot to include any mention of Spanish Sahara, Ifni, and Spanish Guinea. The histories of these last remaining colonies were significant in the 20th century.
And Paraguay is not
I guess that they weren't included because they became Spanish territories much later, when the Empire was crumbling.
despite tapping into the Atlantic slave trade, Spain's influence in Africa is not that significant. i'd make the argument that Spain's experience with African culture is more paramount in the New World.
hey, we 🇵🇹 committed genocides in Africa and more! 😀@@bconni2
@@bconni2 Only countries I can think of are Western Sahara and Equatorial Guinea.
You missed important facts about the terrible human sacrifices that the Aztecs had in their culture.
The reason he most likely didn’t mention them was because it’s a lie. There were some hints to them killing prisoners of war as a war tradition and the conquistadors ramped it up 100 times to make their bloody conquest seem morally right infront of the Spanish crown because they had no legal right to wage wars of Conquest.
Overall the subject of the Conquest of New Spain by Hernan Cortez is full of half truths and the modern narrative is not even 10% true, but it’s quick to explain that the Aztecs most certainly weren’t as cruel as the Conquistadors painted them to be
E a inquisição católica?
@brn_4456 The Aztecs were brutally conquering the neighboring tribes. It is a fact.
@@MargaretJ-i3m This is a lie invented by the Spanish to justify their crimes against the native populations.
@@MargaretJ-i3m the Aztecs and the entire area for that matter didn’t have the same kind of warfare we Europeans were used to. Their tradition of war was predominantly waged by the warrior cast and they usually excluded civilians, the fact that most cities weren’t heavily fortified because they didn’t need to be is proof. Furthermore, there was no „conquest“, the system revolved around the most dominant City being able to beat the other ones in battles, the Aztec „empire“ was a system of tributaries which payed taxes to Tenochtitlan and otherwise were left mostly alone to do their thing. We Europeans introduced the way of total war and destruction, hence why our wars usually need a good explanation because it is to destructive. You don’t need to lie about waging war when it’s a couple of rich guys beating each other up over who pays tribute to who, hence why the Aztecs and their neighbours constantly fought each other.
What you’re likely referring to is the fact that Hernan Cortez says he had thousands of native allies, and he likely did. But it wasn’t because the Aztecs were so terrible and the Spanish were saints, they thought Hernan Cortez was a new local power and wanted to be on their good side, no one expected this to be a threat not to Aztec dominance, but to their entire way of life.
Muy buen reportaje sobre el Imperio Español. Sin cosas maliciosas y falsas. Gracias. 😊 🇪🇸
*I am Portuguese and i recognize the enormous value of Spain in history since it was the First Global Empire!!*
*Great navigators ; great empire and language talk for 600 million of inhabitants. Us Portuguese "always" looking back and eating Spain's FIRSTS in Discoveries but that's life!!!*
*VIVA 🇪🇸 with ❤ from Portugal!*
Portugal and Spain discovered the world. It would be unfair to relegate one or the other. Simply put, the two countries had different areas of exploration or
dominion. Spain in Europe, North Africa, America, the Pacific and extreme Asia. Portugal on both African coasts, the entire Asian coast up to Japan, the Indian Ocean and Brazil. This is demonstrated by the paradox that Spain arrived first in Brazil, and Portugal arrived first in Argentina. ❤Portugal-España
@@Gloriaimperial1how can you discover a world when people are living where u “discover” do u think people outside of Europe aren’t human beings?
@@bigxchubstv6056 Imagine a basketball fan playing on a court, all by himself. I appear, living somewhere else, I watch him play, and I discover that he is a great basketball player. If I spread the word about the existence of this prodigious basketball player, I am his discoverer. He does not lose his human condition because of that. I have communicated to the world (to Africa, Asia, Europe and Oceania) that a basketball player exists. And he has discovered (because he is very introverted) that Africa, Asia, Europe and Oceania exist. The most appropriate thing would be to say that it is a mutual discovery, and that Christopher Columbus is the discoverer or intermediary. Without Christopher Columbus, there is no America. Maybe someone else could discover it later, but it was Christopher Columbus. I discovered Michael Jordan, who was playing alone on the court on his street. Nobody knew about Michael's abilities before 1492
@@bigxchubstv6056 just like that xD
@@bigxchubstv6056 well man, u didnt know us, we didn't know you, and then we discovered you!
These English/ Americans always trying to make the Spanish empire smaller...they dont even color Florida, Louisiana etc....but hey when they talk about the British empire they won't forget to color the north of Canada and the Australian desert 😅
One thing you got wrong is that Spain did not exploit the Americas resources. During the first decades of the empire, 80% of the gold and silver that was mined, was reinvested in the Americas. That's how Spain was able to build all the cathedrals, schools, churches, roads, aqueducts, hospitals and universities. Then, because the development was still too slow in the Americas, it was decided that 90% of the resources should be reinvested there. That's the reason that Spain had to declare bankruptcy, even though there was so much gold in the Americas. Also, slavery was made illegal in the empire, which didn't prevent some people doing it nonetheless. You should have also mentioned that during the conquest around 80% of the soldiers that helped Spain conquer all these lands were indigenous people and that during the independence, Spanish and indigenous people fought on both sides, which is why the wars of independence were much more of a big civil war, where the Criollos just wanted more money and power and after the independence "sold" the Americas to the British.
The definition of exploit definitely fits what he was describing. The definition of Exploit in this context means to: make full use of and derive benefit from (a resource), use (a situation or person) in an unfair or selfish way, and benefit unfairly from the work of (someone), typically by overworking or underpaying them. Those definitions are all accurate to how Spain acted with it's conquered territories in the Americas. Spain got their resources from the Americas, benefitted from the labor of the Indigenous peoples, and enslaved the Indigenous people and overworked them until their numbers fell even more to which they needed to import new slave labor from West Africa. What you described is akin to someone saying the British didn't exploit Africa, and India because the British built railroads, schools and hospitals.
@@youngarchivest9092 Spain made a Romanization in America, reinvesting 70% of the wealth there (16th-17th centuries. 80% in the 18th century). We made 40 universities in the world (28 in America, 9 in Italy, 3 in the Philippines and 1 in France). In addition to 2,300 stone cities, 900 large hospitals, 400 cathedrals, 300 fortresses, thousands of children's schools, a mixture of races, a religion of peace, bringing the Renaissance, the baroque, the illustration, the opera, the literature of the century of gold, to the jungle. That is why Hispanic America has 90% of Spanish native speakers. 99% speak perfect Spanish. 85% Catholic. Even the Philippines: 85% Catholic. 2-3 million Spanish and Creole Spanish speakers.
I remember that the British had a monopoly on slavery in Africa until 1800, and a trading company in India until 1857, the year of the first non-white university. Almost all the wealth went to London until XX century. That's why 90% of the Commonwealth is the poorest place on earth: India, Pakistan, Botswana, Zimbabwe... The Commonwealth has less than 10% native English speakers. Less than 10% Christians. There are more native Spanish speakers than all native English speakers in the Commonwealth, plus all native English speakers in the USA (60% of native English speakers). 800 million Catholics thanks to Spain (200 million in Europe, 500 million in America, 100 million in Asia and Oceania, 3 million in Africa) thanks to our investments in people of other races. Anglicans: 120 million. The British in India removed food crops from some regions of India, causing 20-30 million starvation deaths in the 18th-19th centuries. Black slavery for 250 years. English industrial revolution, with children aged 5-12 working in coal mines, endless days, sometimes for a plate of food. Children and women in the Spanish Empire could not work in the mines or in hard labor since the 16th century. 48% of Hispanic America has a mixture of Spanish and American blood, because Queen Isabel I of Castile said in 1500: "I want the Spanish, men and women, to marry and form families with the inhabitants of the new lands (America) ". The British had social Darwinism in the 19th century: "The darker races are inferior, as shown by their being poor." Racial segregation in Alabama until 1960, apartheid in South Africa until 1990, now Brexit... We all have good and bad things, but some are more selfish than others.
@@Gloriaimperial1hola amigo estás en lo correcto dices la verdad . yo como argentino te doy la razón . yo no reniego mis raíces hispanas el idioma castellano es un orgullo sino fuera por España mí país argentina 🇦🇷💪 jamás hubiese existido saludos desde argentina 🇦🇷🙋🇪🇦
@@Gloriaimperial1 What a load of bullshit lmao. First off you got a source on the supposed 70% of wealth "reinvested"? You mention all these universities, cities, hospitals, cathedrals, fortresses and schools but don't cite a single source. How telling... All those things listed were not to the benefit of the common person living there but to the Spanish elite who ruled over the land and cared nothing for the Indigenous except to exploit the people and the land. Don't know why you added the "mix of races" as if that was a good thing to the non-Europeans. The Spanish raped, murdered, spread disease, and enslaved the Native populations across the continent so much so that 90% of the population was wiped out! Then once due to the brutality and utter lack of humanity on the Spaniards part, they then brought over tens of millions of enslaved Africans to work on plantations. The so called mixing of races was largely due to rape, not something to brag about and even then racism and colorism exists in the Americas because of the Spanish. Racism and colorism still exists in the Americas and in Spain itself, foh. You mention religion of peace, but that could not be further from the truth! Christianity, more specifically Catholics did not bring peace, but war and chaos. These so called practicers of "religion of peace" brought war, disease and slavery to the Americas and across the world! Hell, these Chirsitians even tried to argue that the Indigenous did not have souls in an attempt to justify the slavery the Spaniards practiced! Religion of peace my ass! The Catholic Church became a massive land-owning class interfering with the politics of the future successor nations, and supported right wing death squads in a attempt to hold onto their power. The Catholic Church served no other purpose than to destroy the identities of the Indigenous populations and control the people through the forcefully imposed fairy tale. You act like people still don't work in mines after the 16th century and they still do to this very day! Fuck out of here with that bullshit. Hmm well it seems like the Spanish did not give a damn about what Queen Isabella had said becaue they did pretty much the opposite of what she had said. The Indigenous were treated as equal vassals but as slaves and then later second-class citizens. The authority of Spain held little weight in many of the laws the monarchs put out. Murder, Rape and slavery pretty much went unpunished. And finally you are talking about Britain a century after the Spanish Empire had collapsed, so what is the comparison? Spain had no control in the Americas since the 1820s yet you are bringing up stuff the British, South Africans and the US were doing?! What a bullshit argument that doesn't even make any sense! Lay off the propaganda and realize what Spain and all the former colonial empires for what they really are, that being largely dogshit.
@Gloriaimperial1 if this was the case, then why was Latin America so much less developed? Obviously some were better than others, but the way you put it, they should have been smooth sailing when they became independent. Why was there so much gold and other treasures on all those ships heading back to Spain? Anyone can play the race card. What happened to the Jews and Muslims in Spain again? It's easy to do that with any people.
The sun never sets on the Spanish empire.
We Latino Americans are proud of our Spanish roots 💪🏼🇪🇸🇲🇽we descend from the FIRST European conquerors of America. Before a “Pilgrim” existed!!
The descendants of the pilgrim aren’t allowed to be proud conquerors
@@professorwoland3181They made the land something to live about, bring faith and unity to an entire continent, and made an union through family and blood ties.
A shame brits couldn't say the same, because the ones being mixed with hindi were totally despised, for example.
some Latinos are proud of their Spanish roots. but sadly, a lot of Latinos are ashamed of their Iberian heritage
@@bconni2 And don't you tell me, you're one of them 🥱
@@Valen-o6w nope, not one of them. i'm proud of every last drop of Iberian blood in my veins
A lot of you have commented saying that Portugal was the worlds first superpower, rather than Spain, so I've created a video on how Portugal forged the first truly global empire: ruclips.net/video/9P7szJRlbxk/видео.html&ab_channel=ThisIsHistory
@josearrieta6360 mans gotta put food on the table
Make video on Mongol Empire
This video helped me with a test.
@@NoWoke-JustWake... 'llorando'? Em 1492 Colon (Colombo não era o seu verdadeiro nome) efectuou uma viagem de pura aventura para ocidente, crente de que seria o caminho mais perto para alcançar o 'Oriente'. Em 1488, o português Bartolomeu Dias descobriu o 'fim de África', deitando por terra a tese de 'Colon', que não terá tomado conhecimento da descoberta de Bartolomeu Dias. A posterior presença de Espanha no Oriente não se deveu a Colon, deveu-se, pois, a Bartolomeu Dias. Recomendo a busca de informação sobre Afonso de Albuquerque e sobre a Batalha de Diu em 1509.
Sou português e não estou 'llorando' (ou chorando, em português), o que, aliás, não seria de admirar já que Portugal é 'mui choquitito' comparando com Espanha, em população e em território, algo como cinco vezes mais pequeno.
I find it logical that you make videos for the Portuguese, and I respect your opinion. But that Portugal is the first global empire is quite doubtful.
Spain arrives first in Europe:
-Conquest of Sicily (1282), conquest of Athens (1311)
Spain arrives first in Africa:
-Djerba, Tunisia (1380), the Spanish of the Aragon empire. Castile arrives in the Canary Islands (1404, although we had settlers there in 1341. Portugal arrives in Ceuta in 1415. There is no global empire in the 15th century. The exploration of the west African coast is not a global empire
Spain arrived first in America (1492). It is the first time in history that there is a base out of the area of known lands, Eurasia-North Africa. Spain is on 3 continents. Portugal is in Portugal and in Africa. But has Spain made the first global empire with 3 continents?
Portugal reaches India, Asia (1498) and Brazil (1500). Portugal is on 4 continents, creating many bases in Africa and Asia. While Spain begins to dominate Europe and spreads throughout America.
Spain reaches the fourth and fifth continents: deep Pacific Ocean (1520), which is the GLOBAL half of the earth, and the Philippines, Asia (1520). Spain 5 continents. Portugal 4 continents.
But really, the first global empire would be the union of the two empires, Spanish and Portuguese in 1580, under the crown of Philip II of Spain. Spain was not in the Indian Ocean or on the coast of Africa (only the northern coast). And Portugal was not in the Pacific Ocean nor in Europe nor in the Mediterranean. Felipe II is the first king to be on all 5 continents, occupying all current time zones.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_Empire#/media/File:Philip_II's_realms_in_1598.png
Veo que estan muy informados de la historia de mi país España ,y me llena de orgullo. Las historias ,las matemáticas,y la política son signaturas muy importante para que no te manipulen , y tengas suficiente criterio si los que te gobiernan lo hacen bien,y nos engañen con sus mantras ideológicos. Gracias .
Spanish history is so fascinating
I feel myself forced to understand that you are proud of your civil war. (I'm Portuguese)
Most underrated european empire. Viva España 🇪🇦🇪🇦🇪🇦
Portuguese*
@@Diogo_-tx1zi Portuguese these days and Portuguese culture is known more nowadays then the Spanish sadly.
El Imperio Español duró 350 años y luchando con todos los países más importantes de su época. La era de los E-E-U-U solo lleva 80 años un y no es comparable. El real de a ocho español fue la moneda más fuerte durante 300 años, reconocida en China, Japon, la ruta de la seda, Filipinas, por supuesto toda Hispanoamérica mientras que el dólar americano está empezando a decaer su influencia.
EEUU solo fue relevante desde 1990 a 2008, antes ni de chiste era la gran "superpotencia hegemonía" .
@@jonathanglzplz894 Lo son desde la segunda guerra mundial.
si los 8 millones de seres humanos que murieron miserablemente en las minas de potosi, se sentia orgullos de morir sin poder ver la luz del sol sabiendo que su cuerpo quedaria en las extrañas de la tierra pero serviria para hacer modenas, stupio hispanofacista.
Adding to this great video, I would also like to mention the Spanish Netherlands and the Spanish territories in the Italian Peninsula, such as Lombardy, Sicily, Sardinia, and the Kingdom of Naples. In fact, to the surprise and disappointment of many Brits, the phrase "The empire on which the sun never sets", was first used to describe the empires of Charles V (Charles I of Spain), and his son, Phillip II. Years later, John Smith and Francis Bacon would use it to refer to the British Empire.
That is due to marriages...not conquering, for limited time
@@useringeneralI literally don’t see Britian having their empire anymore, Britain stole the title. Not that hard to understand
@@useringeneral LMAO
An empire is not forged by conquests alone.
@@D32musicIn fact, Spain and the Netherlands shared a king, Charles I of Spain, half Spanish and half Flemish, was born in Ghent and educated in Mechelen.
And the 80 years' war (1568-1648), or the independence of the Netherlands, was won by the Netherlands.
@@useringeneral Charles I of Spain.
Less known or recognized, Spain also had the Netherlands, Belgium, the Franche county, Savoy, Milan and Naples when they where still under Hapsburg rule, i think you could of have mentioned the Succession crisis and war. Also they had lesser important colonies in Guinea and Morocco they had in the Scramble of Africa, prior their loss in the war against the US.
I am a descendant of the spanish empire
Glad to have spaniard blood in my veins, Que viva España 🇪🇸y la hispanidad 🇲🇽🇦🇷🇨🇱🇨🇴
The most beautiful empire in the world: The Spanish Empire, a Catholic Empire. ✝️
Fair video. Important to know that Spaniards did not conquer America on their own. The majority of the conquerors where native indians, allies of the Spaniards. The history told about this is a black legend. Spain created other Spains in America, where life was far better in many cases than in the Iberian Peninsula. That has nothing to do with a colony.
Bro and you forgot the spanish territories in Europe: most of Italy, netherlands and parts of France and belgium (even Athens for a small time)
The spanish empire domitated the world for two centuries
Spain also saved Europe from Islamization
Gracias Amigo 😂
puto🤣😂😂😂@@cruzcrstar
No!!!! Spain did it!!!!@@nosferatus777
no,spain@@nosferatus777
@@nosferatus777 you keep commenting like the world depended on you explaining Spain shit nothing
Very nice video!!!! Just a quick observation: Santo Domingo was not the first city founded by the Spaniards, it was actually La Isabela on 1493, on the Northern Coast of Dominican Republic. After that, they founded Concepción de La Vega in 1494, Santiago De los Caballeros in 1495 and finally Santo Domingo 1496, that is how they managed to take control of the Caribbean and start the colonization of Central America and Mexico.
Also, at the end of the video you showed Cuba, Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico still under colonial rule, but Dominican Republic declared its independence from Spain in 1821, then from Haiti in 1844 and then Spain again on 1865, which was 30 years before the Cuban Independence movement and longer than the Spanish-American War.
Looking forward to see more content from you!!
Increadible as it might seem, Spanish students are not taught even a slice of this pride national history. We once were the biggest, more important and first global Empire, however foreign powers which control our politicals affairs prevent us from learning our history.
We study the Industrial Revolution, the World Wars and many other foreign things, but we do not study how we had an Empire in which Iberoamérica were brothers with us and we with them as in the same nation.
Spanish empire saved Christianity & brought much of the Christianity to North & South America.
And don't forget that the iberians Spain 🇪🇸 and Portugal 🇵🇹 had the tratado de tordesillas the only people that conquered the whole world. History has the paper work to prove it.
"The empire on which the sun never sets"
Thank you for making interesting history videos with animations that help show what was going on rather than a slideshow of pictures
We , native Spanish speakers , say " speak Christian ! " meaning " speak Spanish ! "
Viva España! 🇪🇦🇪🇦🇪🇦
@hiooxkrmagkis9323exactly
As if the actions of these bumbling empires should be something to celebrate. Did you actually watch the video? If anything, we should be greatly ashamed of this chapter in human history.
@@brandonsheets1883 true heartless people....the devil are humans themself
Top Tier History Content
well done
💪🏻😎.... Awesome European history
That map is incorrect. Anglos always take away lands in Spanish empire maps. But for the British empire they draw all of India and borders of modern African countries. So hypocritical.
True, luisiana, part of alaska, etc.
Sicily, Naples, the duchy of Milan, Netherlands, Belgium and luxembourg, the Franc county, northern Morocco, Tunisia, Oran, Bujia, Algiers, the duchy of Athens and Neopatria, island of Guaham, the marquesas, carolinas, palaos and marianas, the Canary islands, Ecuatorial Guinee, western sahara, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Texas, etc
However in the maps of the British Empire they paint in red most of the world when the Brits rarely steped inside the big landmasses of canada, australia, India, etc but established coastal factories and ports to extract raw materials and sale their merchandise. They claimed whole continents without having any presence in them. Spaniards, on the contrary, traveled inwards founding new cities, building infraestructure, etc
@@jonayz8655 this, your damn right, a great example is various citys in alaska founded by the spanish, yet the anglos never saw part of alaska as spanish when showing the maxim expansion of the empire wich was in 1790.
Same for chinese maps also
Letter from a Mexican resident of Barcelona “Thank you, Spain, for making Mexico”:
“Thank you, Spain, for our faith, for our little God, our Virgin of Guadalupe, our processions, our brotherhoods, all with Spanish names.
Thank you, Spain, for our missionaries, our friars and Jesuits who came from Spain to educate our bodies and our souls; for the first mass in Cozumel, for the 12 Franciscans Friars Martín de Valencia, Motolinía, Andrés de Olmos, Bernardino de Sahagún, Gerónimo de Mendieta, Antonio de Roa, Juan de Zumárraga; for the blessed martyrs of Tlaxcala, Christian Indians murdered in 1527 for confessing Christ; by blessed Sebastián de Aparicio, he of the carts; and for San Felipe de Jesús, Mexican martyr in Japan at the age of 24 in 1597; for San Pedro de San José, for the Jesuit martyrs expanders of Mexico; and by Brother Antonio Margil the one with the winged feet; and to San Junípero Serra, the missionary from the north.
Thank you, Spain, for being above your time and England or Holland, and subordinating the mercantilist objectives of the Conquest to “the preaching of the Gospel” and the rise of civilization, as Philip II established in his Ordinances of 1573.
Thank you, Spain, for our kings, who gave us the Laws of the Indies to order viceroys, presidents, audiences, governors and royal justices, archbishops and ecclesiastical prelates “not to receive any wrong in our persons and property, and to be fairly treated.” while in the 13 English colonies the Indians were massacred.
Thank you, Spain, for the exaggerated Bartolomé de Las Casas and the just Francisco de Vitoria.
Thank you, Spain, for our race, for mixing your blood with ours, from Martín Cortés, son of Conquistador and Doña Marina, who received the habit of Santiago from the king to the viceroy José Sarmiento, count of Moctezuma; for rejecting the extermination and xenophobia practiced by the Anglo-Saxons in the north.
Thank you, Spain, for freeing us from the tyrant Moctezuma who enslaved 371 Mexican towns and subjected them to the anthropophagous idol Huitzilopochtli / Huichilobos, to which he sacrificed 20,000 human hearts every year.
Thank you, Spain, for giving us our heroic founder, Hernán Cortés, who conquered Tenochtitlán with barely 900 men against 150,000, and who considered himself worthless because “such a great work was finished by the weakest and most useless means that could be found.” , because it was an attribute only to God.”
Thank you, Spain, for our Royal University of Mexico of 1551 that you copied from Salamanca, and that of Mérida, and that of Guadalajara, and the colleges and schools where our people were formed.
Thank you, Spain, for bringing us the first printing press in America, a branch of the Sevillian printing press of Cromberger, and the first American book, 'The Spiritual Scale' by San Juan Clímaco.
Thank you, Spain, for our authors of the Golden Age, for our historian Fernando de Alva Ixtlilxochitl -son of the kings of Acolhuacán and Tenochtitlán-, who collected the history of our indigenous peoples by order of the viceroy; for our Ruiz de Alarcón born in Taxco, comparable in so many things to Lope de Vega and Tirso de Molina; and by Bernardino de Sahagún, who compiled our ethnography in Nahuatl in the 16th century itself.
Thank you, Spain, for our Sessé and Mociño, who cataloged more than 1,000 plant species for us.
Thank you, Spain, for the School of Mining, the Astronomical Observatory, the Museum of Natural History and others, which made Alexander von Humboldt say that “no city on this continent, without exception of those in the United States, has such large scientific establishments.” and solid like those of the capital of Mexico.”
Thank you, Spain, for our convents and bell towers, for the rectangular cities, with their main square, for Chihuahua, Guanajuato, Mexico, Veracruz, Mérida or Acapulco, for the magnificent Casa de Cortés in Cuernavaca, inspired by the Piedras Albas palace in Trujillo, or the beautiful Andalusian-style town hall of Tlaxcala, for the neighborhoods, for the shield temples, for the convents of Acolman, Ixmiquilpan, Actopan, Zacualpan, Atlizco or Huejotzingo; for the cathedral of Puebla, which is like that of Valladolid, or the Herrerian cathedral of Mexico, and that of Guadalajara, Oaxaca and Mérida, so similar to that of Jaén.
Thank you, Spain, for having saved us from the scourge of smallpox with the Royal Philanthropic Expedition of the Vaccine sponsored in 1804 by our beloved King Charles IV.
Thank you, Spain, for your hospital towns like those built by Vasco de Quiroga in Michoacán, where we learned faith and trades.
Thank you, Spain, for the baroque jewels of the Tabernacle of the cathedral of Mexico, the convent of Tepozotlan, Santa Prisca of Taxco, Santa Rosa of Querétaro, the altarpiece of Ocotlán or Santa María de Tonantzintla in Puebla.
Thank you, Spain, for our festivals, our carnivals, holy weeks, pilgrimages, sanisidros, pilgrimages, corpuschristis, santiagos, diademuertos, patron saints and Christmas.
Thank you, Spain, for the bulls we have run since Cortés arrived from Honduras; by Gaona, Arruza, Martinez, Leal and the Master of Saltillo.
Thank you, Spain, for our corrido and mariachi, born from the sober octosyllabic Spanish romance; for our son, our syrup, our Guadalajara and all our zapateada music, derived from Spanish folklore; for the sacramental autos and Christmas carols, for the masses with Aztec songs and dances of Friar Pedro de Gante.
Thank you, Spain, for accepting our tomatoes, corn, vanilla, cacao, sweet potatos and pumpkins, , and for bringing us our wheat for tortillas, barley, rye, oats and millet, grapevines and olives, lentils, broad beans, peas and chickpeas, lettuce, endives, thistles, chard, collards, cauliflowers. sugar cane, bananas, onions, leeks, asparagus, artichokes, spinach, eggplants, turnips and carrots, coffee, parsley, bay leaf, cumin, ginger, cucumbers, lemons, watermelons, oranges, melons, limes, apples, pears, peaches, cherries, pomegranates , figs, strawberries, almond trees, hazelnuts, pine nuts.
Thank you, Spain, for forcing us to stop eating each other, and for bringing us livestock, horses, cows, chickens, pigs, beasts of burden and milk, mules, donkeys and donkeys, and the nomadic Mesta, and the hacienda and the ranch, and even the silkworm.
Thank you, Spain, for our mestizo gastronomy, which combines indigenous cuisine with Spanish-style stews, roasts, pork and dried meat.
Thank you, Spain, for our clothes, because we gathered the wool and cotton from the maguey fiber on the Spanish spinning wheels, and we put on hats, and we carried striped blankets on our shoulders like Spanish saddlebags, and we used your leather in shoes and atlases.
Thank you, Spain, for giving us the pottery from Puebla and the glaze that you brought from Talavera de la Reina.
Thank you, Spain, for bringing us fairs and markets like Veracruz or Jalapa, and the Camino Real of Querétaro, Guanajuato, Zacatecas and Chihuahua, for the peddlers, gangsters and varilleros.
Thank you, Spain, for our Spanish language of more than 600 million speakers, for having given us grammars that dignified and preserved our indigenous speech, for the 109 works written between 1524-1572 in Nahuatl, Tarasco, Totonaco, Otomí and Matlazinga.
Thank you, Spain, for our chivalry of gifts and ladies.
Thank you, Spain, for bequeathing us the art of the roseo and the charreria
Thank you, Spain, for the games of canes, of rings, for the races, the cards and the hunting.
Thank you, Spain, for the mysterious Llorona, who came to us from the Serrana de la Vera in the Sierra de Gredos.
Thank you, Spain, for the extended family, with grandparents, uncles and cousins, for the compadrazgo, for the gatherings at the door of the house, for our Spanish surnames, for defending us from the amassed Creole minority that wanted to enlightenedly despotize us.
Thank you, Spain, for leaving us a much larger territory than we knew how to maintain after independence.
Thank you, Spain, for making Mexico.
And thank you, Spain, for bringing us the grandfather of the populist Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who made a living here without thinking that one day his grandson would miserably accuse his grandparents, uncles and cousins of murderers and plunderers."
Muchas gracias por tu carta y tu reconocimiento a la labor de España en América! Un trabajo muy preciso y detallado. Sólo puedo añadir que lo hicimos juntos, por medio del mestizaje, sin unos y otros sería imposible. México/América Latina ❤🙂👍España
Aho!
@gnocchinocho En efecto, América Hispana o Hispano América es lo más acertado. Incluso Iberoamérica, si incluimos Brasil. De todas maneras, cuando comparamos el legado español en América con el francés allí, está claro que los españoles latinizamos y evangelizamos América con mucha más intensidad, como trescientas veces más que la influencia de Francia, en número de hablantes y cristianizados. Supongo que ellos llaman a la región, Latinoamérica, porque no quieren incluir Guyana o Haiti en un mundo hispánico o ibérico. Ahora están los hispanos de América manejando el acrónimo Latam (Latinoamérica), y son conocidos en muchos sitios como latinos, entonces esto se hace más problemático para que acepten Hispano América de forma definitiva o popular. Lula y otros dirigentes quieren promover una unión, tipo Unión Europea, en la región, entonces es probable que se imponga Latinoamérica, porque Hispano América o Iberoamérica les recuerde más su pasado dentro de nuestros imperios, y en el futuro puede interesarles incluir en esa unión a países como Trinidad y Tobago, Guyanas y otros.
En cualquier caso siempre prefiero Hispano América o América Hispana, si el traductor google no me lo cambia.
Holy glaze
As a filipino im proudly have españa friends and i can speak a little bit of Spanish language Viva españa🎉❤
Mabuhay Pilipinas from Spain! 🇪🇸🇵🇭
Spain history in 1500s is a legend.
Son como 4 siglos del Imperio Español.
Mi hermoso idioma Español.🙌🙌💥💥💥🤝🤝🤝🤝
Ecuatorial Guinea in Africa, was one of the last-lasting spanish colonies also
Until 1975
@@KrlKngMrtssn In fact was in 1968
@@angelcamachodelsolar right
Before Spanish, Portuguese were the first in Ecuatorial guinea...
Excellent video but you are missing the fact that Spain was even more powerful territorialy than you explain in your channel.
Nevertheless, Spain was a juggernaut country thanks to their brave sailors and explorers that Opened up the Age of Discovery and mapped out the entire planet before anybody else!! Long Live Spain: *ARRIBA España* 🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸
dilo en español ahora
I did a DNA test and it says I am half native from Mexico and half from Spain/Portugal. I am a living example of a Mestizo 😀👍🇲🇽🇪🇸
El 48% de la población de Hispano América es mezcla de español y originario de América. Más de 200 millones de personas. Es el único lugar del mundo donde se hizo este mestizaje, con un sincretismo religioso, es decir, adoptando partes del culto de los pueblos de América para incorporarlo al catolicismo. Los tlaxtecas de México y otros pueblos fueron la mayoría de los marineros, soldados y misioneros que viajaron desde México para la conquista de Filipinas, luchando contra los piratas japoneses y chinos y mezclando su sangre con los filipinos. Luego Nueva España, con capital en México era más rica que España, con más de 8 millones de km2. Espero América Latina se una como la Unión Europea y se convierte ese siglo en una potencia mundial, con más territorio que USA y China juntos, y el doble de población que USA. Un saludo, hermano mexicano! 😊❤
That whole statement of ''the sun does not set on the British Empire'' was something that the King of Spain said first. Charles I of Spain, who was also known as Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, once said that ''the sun does not set on my dominion.''
Piracy, classic.
Volveremos ser el gran imperio hispano, sin tantas vueltas.
SPAIN THE SUN NEVER SUN SET 🌝🇪🇦🇪🇦🇪🇦
This video has certain errors, such as not correctly showing the entire Spanish territory since this was larger, they also omit the 50 years that Portugal was Spain as well, I also want to mention that the Spanish territories were not colonies since they were viceroyalties and that it was England taking advantage of the invasion of France in the peninsula who financed the separatist groups,
LONG LIVE SPAIN I CAN PROUDLY SAY AS A MEXICAN BORN IN LOS ANGELES!!!!
ahoa dilo en español
Within the past thousand years. Spain set the groundwork and pace for global interconnection and commerce.
'... set the groundwork and pace for global interconnection and commerce'. Did Spain do that really? I suggest some reading about 'Battle of Diu (India) in 1509.
Most pro-spanish factions during the wars if independence were Natives and Penninsulares, as the Natives prefered a far off government that those of the Criollos and Mestizos which were closer to them.
😂😂😂 stop spreading misinformation dum dum
Natives fighting on the "pro-spanish" side were slaves that probably worked in the haciendas o mines which were owned by the Spanish
A manipulated English version of Spanish history! Ridicolous!
Despite criticism, Spain did civilized the world.
No!!
This is a polemic topic, mainly because there were city dwelling cultures in América before they were asimilated into the spanish empire. What I believe is true beyond a shadow of a doubt is that it integrated the american peoples into western civilization.
The hispanic american independence declaracions happened in step with european enlightenment ideals.
The US independence happened too around that time, but natives were never a part of the equation.
@@alvarorodriguez1592
RUSO ESPAÑOL LENGUAS POLARES USHUAIA ANTÁRTIDA ARGENTINA AURORA AUSTRAL
@@evaklum8974 Dont be so stupid..
@@alvarorodriguez1592Criollo’s declared independence in Spanish speaking America not natives. They were basically indentured servants. Spain did not integrate the American people into western civilization. Many ideals that would come to be associated with the enlightenment already existed in the American continent, some even influenced people like Rousseau, they were also largely a product of the Islamic golden age that Europeans and especially Spaniards tried to eliminate.
The Spanish Empire was the first global empire in history, as it encompassed the first territories in Europe, Africa, Asia, Oceania.
You need to mention the other territories of the Spanish Empire in Europe (Italy, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg) in Oceania (the Caroline Islands, the Mariana Islands, Guam, Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia).
In Asia, the northern portion of Taiwan.
In Africa (Western Sahara, Morocco, Equatorial Guinea).
And American continent where I include Alaska, (Valdes hence the name in Spanish) to British Columbia.
Good video, also the Spanish empire was the first superpower not only for it’s territories in America and the Philippines also for it’s influence in Europe, the Spanish empire took the Portuguese empire between 1580-1640 and the Netherlands, Belgium, parts of France and Italy specifically the south, and the wars between the ottoman empire in the XVI century, and the wars with the French and English empires in the XV, XVI and XVII centuries, let the Spanish the advantage of commercial routes and influence in the globe 🌎
Something about the Spanish culture fascinates me
Wrong!! Everything West of the Mississippi River was owned by Spain. So this map discounts massive lands. That’s more than half of today’s USA. In 1802 they ceded it to France, and a year later the French sold it to US government in what’s called “Louisiana Purchase”.
That's right.
Mexico also had what is today the US Southwest
You forget to talk about California and Texas and Colorado, Arizona, Nevada, New México...as part of México when It became independent.... Why ?
No lo menciona para no incomodar a Estados Unidos de América, que hurtó esos territorios a México durante el siglo XIX, y no le gusta que se lo recuerden... Pero la toponimia no engaña. 😊
Probably because Mexico loss the territories in a spam of 15 years after it got it's independence from Spain which is pretty pathetic i guess the U.S took advantage of a vulnerable nation
@@santiagoblasgilabert2877 Esos territorios por lo que se sabe eran Realistas no Independentistas y por lo mismo cuando dijeron que ahora el Virreinato de Nueva España era república hubo conflictos y muchos querian separarse de lo nueva República llamado E. U. Mexicanos, para formar un territorio Realista y volver a ser parte de España, porque crees que cuando perdio Mexico esos territorios no ubo riñas de los Criollos, Mestizos, Mulatos Novohispanos que quedaron en dicho lugar.
Solo piensalo.
You forgot to mention the Real de a Ocho, the first global currency in the world as it is the dollar today
No diría que en los virreinatos españoles había 3 clases de individuos, como dice el vídeo: peninsulares, criollos y mestizos. Una más acertada descripción sería que había tres estratos sociales entre los españoles de América: 1.- Los peninsulares, que principalmente ejercían las funciones de administración, por tener la confianza de la corona 2.- La burguesía, principalmente compuesta por los criollos 3.- El resto, fueran mestizos, criollos o nativos no mezclados.
Los procesos de independencia en América del Sur fueron promovidos por la burguesía criolla, para no tener que pagar impuestos y tener libertad de acción y explotación frente a las garantistas leyes que venían de la península. Estos criollos obtuvieron la financiación principalmente de Inglaterra y Holanda, que siempre buscaron, sin conseguirlo por las continuas agresiones militares, acceder a los territorios españoles de América y al comercio de sus productos.
En la Nueva España (virreinato del norte y centroamérica), sin embargo, el primer levantamiento obedeció a su rechazo a someterse a un rey francés impuesto por Napoleón. De hecho, promovían la fidelidad a la monarquía española. Poco después, sí fueron las élites de la burguesía criolla las que lideraron las batallas por la independencia, por lo mismo motivos en en la España del sur de América: no pagar impuestos a la corona y tener mayor libertad para obrar a su manera.
En general, la independencia tuvo como consecuencia en toda América un pérdida de derechos para las clases más modestas, pérdida de tierras por parte de estos y bastantes matanzas contra nativos para poder explotar los recursos naturales de la tierras en que se aquellas tribus se asentaban. Por supuesto, además, la deuda contraída con ingleses, holandeses y franceses por los préstamos de guerra empobrecieron a los nuevos países, y la fragmentación de los territorios, antes unidos, les relegó a una condición de irrelevancia y debilidad en influencia internacional.
Una vez divididos, además, se dispararon los conflictos territoriales entre los nuevos países y se multiplicaron los conflictos internos en constantes luchas por el poder.
Always "Plus ultra" 🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸
I can't believe the comments spouting the same old stereotype about Spanish backwardnes. The Napoleonic war was fought on Spanish soil, with France and England destroying the manufacturing base on Spain. If this war had occurred on England itself, the industrial revolution wouldn't have taken off.
Good video. Between 1580 and 1640 was the Iberian Union and Portugal empire was added to Spanish Empire. I Nord América all lands of western of Mississippi River was controlled by Spain, French Louisiana become to Spanish Louisiana cause the 7 years wars even New Orleans, Bernardo De Gálvez was governor of Spanish province of Louisiana and he was very important in the USA independence war and Bernardo recovered Florida to Spanish. In Alaska there was little Spanish cities named Cordova and Valdes in the maximum expansion of empire. On the Pacific ocean Spain owned a lot of island, like the Nord of Taiwan (Formosa), Solomon Islands, Marianas Island, Nord of Australia (explored) and discovered Hawai Island even Antartican continent where the Spanish tripulation died by cold and hungry.
That's wrong my good friend.
First of all, to be very accurate, the "spanish" empire only existed from 1707 onward, as "Spain" as a unified state only came into being de jure after the Nueva Planta decrees of 1707. If you see the Mayan word for "Spaniard" is "Kastláan", why? because they presented themselfs as "Castellians" not Spaniards. What existed was a Hapsburg House, which had domains all over Europe, including Castile & Leon and Aragon. So what actually existed prior to 1707 was a "Castillian & Aragonese" Empire... not a Spanish one.
Now, unlike Spain, which wasn't (and still isn't) a nation state, Portugal was never defined by the ruler, but by its people, since 1143. You can clearly see that on the "Cortes of Tomar" agreement, which states that the Kingdom of Portugal, and its Empire, would remain independent, with a several guarantees, although the new king would be King Filipe I, which was also Felipe II of Spain - (or to be precise, of Castile and Leon, Aragorn, Navarre, so on so on). The empires were never mixed, the lands of the Portuguese Empire remained of the Portuguese Empire. De iuri, Portugal's sovereignty was never questioned until Filipe III of Portugal (which was the same person as Felipe IV of Spain) tried to demote Portugal's status as an independent kingdom under Spain, and was deposed because of it.
So as you see, Portugal was never added to the Spanish Empire. That is why, historically, everyone (maybe except for Spaniards) calls that period "Iberion Union", and not "Spain", and even in maps the two empires are usually depicted with different colors. Like today's Canada and UK, they have the same king, yet are two separate kingdoms.
@@Tusiriakest Portugal a country with 90,000 square kilometers built the first global impire, with about 11 million square kilometers.
@@Tusiriakest That is not true. The French of the 16th century said: "Spain is a very ambitious empire, which invades all lands and all seas." Luther said in the 16th century: "Spain is our enemy. They have divided the German nation into two religions." The Italian humanists of the XV-XVII centuries said: "Spain is the invading power of our Italy". The English used to say "Spanish Armada", and they wrote works of the Elizabethan theater, such as "Spanish Tragedy". The Dutch never said: "We are invaded by the Castilians." They said: "We are invaded by Spain."
The viceroyalty of New Spain was created in 1535. It is not new Castile, it is New Spain. The first kings of Spain, who call themselves kings of Spain, are the Visigoths of the 6th century. El Cid speaks of Spain, in the 10th century. The Marca España, said by the French, is the border between Iberian Islam and the empire of Charlemagne. Cervantes and the entire Spanish Golden Age are aware of the existence of Spain. Another thing is that Felipe II, and other Spanish kings, were aware of the regional autonomy, with parliaments, of some kingdoms. A bit like today's Spain, or like today's federal Germany. Germany was officially born in 1870, but the Holy German Empire dates from the 9th-19th century. Renaissance Italians were very conscious of living in Italy, even though it was provisionally divided into separate kingdoms. Spain had only one king since 1478. For example, Isabel de Castilla says in 1500: "I want the Spanish, men and women, to marry men and women from the new lands" (America). Sometimes Castile is used, as the English still say England, but the British concept is 2000 years old.
The Habsburg surname comes from Felipe I the "beautiful" a Flemish fond of women, and a fool. The Spanish kings were much more important than the Habsburgs. The capital of the empire was always in Madrid, when the Habsburg surname enters here. For example, André Agassi (tennis player) has 8 grand slams. His wife, Steffi Graft (tennis player) has 22 grand slams. What are the children of that marriage called? Agassi. The machismo of the time gave priority to the male surname. That's all.
Even Portugal, although an independent state, was long before of Hispania. The Portuguese are ancestrally Hispanic-Spain. Not Spain as a country. But yes in the Iberian-Hispanic Roman, Hispanic Visigoth and Hispanic Arab cultural sphere.
Portugal was as independent between 1580-1640 as Italy, Belgium, Luxembourg, and parts of France and Germany, which also had their local mayors. The King of Spain (Felipe II, Felipe III and Felipe IV) said: "Yes, the Tomar agreement, but it is forbidden to have independent politics and diplomacy. It is forbidden to have another religion that is not Catholic. It is forbidden to have alliances with France, England or Turkey. I choose the viceroy of Portugal or Italy in Madrid. And if you rebel (something that the Portuguese could only do in 1640, when Spain had a very hard war against France, England, Protestant Germany, the Netherlands and the Turkish Empire) I will put 50,000 soldiers in you and I cut the throats of all the Portuguese, Italian or French rebel leaders. And I also love plays written in Spanish by Portuguese and Italian poets and playwrights." The Portuguese were good stewards of their empire, and the Italian mayors were good Italian mayors, but there was only one king.
Portugal preferred to sell cinnamon. Spain had great power priorities, building in Italy 9 universities, 50 fortresses, palaces. And sending troops to central and northern Europe in a 200-year war. If Spain had fallen at that time, the Protestants would have descended on Madrid, Lisbon and Rome, they would have destroyed Catholicism and now we would all be Protestants. Surely Brazil would be half English Anglican and half French Huguenot. But the Spanish empire invaded Rome, Lisbon, Paris, Cologne, Milan, Genoa, Florence, Strasbourg, Aachen, Manheim, Amsterdam, Brussels... That is why the Catholic religion and the heritage of Spain and Portugal exist in the world. Then Spain became a threat to Portugal, and the British and French said: "Do I eat Portugal? I want to eat Portugal and all of her empire. But I better let it live, to prevent Spain from eating Portugal." ". He thinks that the British destroyed the Dutch and French empire without any compassion, and that in 1890 they created the Mozambique and Angola crises, to annex the intermediate territory, which perhaps belonged to Portugal, without any generosity with the former ally.
ALL THAT ANGLOS DO IS EMBARRAS THEMSELVES WITH THEIR AIRES DE SUPERIORIDAD!! LOL!!
@@Tusiriakestyou do not even know what the word spain means do you?
This was very detailed and organised
In the some time missing Netherlands ; Belgium ; Luxembourg 16-17 century; kingdom of Naples with Sardinia and Sicily 16-18 century ; Duchy of Milan 16-18 century ; in one word missing European territories ; Spain rule in European territories the 16 to 18 century; it happens many times for reasons unknown ; perhaps due to ignorance? to me when it is absolutly historical correct at the same time
Indeed. It goes wrong with the map of Europe right away.
There is no error. The author shows the empire as its maximum territorial extension in a given year. When those European territories were part of the empire, the American territories were much smaller, thus the total surface of the empire was smaller.
@@alvaromartinez8209 They woukd be noticed if it put them be sure and if not that i do it in a way that is noticeable i have seen many maps than even more clearky did not put European territories it is not the first one; it is not dificult to put them ; greetings.
@@Lacteagalaxia again, the European territories did not belong to Spain when the empire was as its largest extension in the early 1800s. That is what the map of the video showed and it is factually correct.
@@alvaromartinez8209 Naples, Sardinia and Sicily were already part of Spain when the Iberian wedding happened yet aren't include in the map.
Now on another note, the Spanish also vassalized Florence, made the Medici family their stooge, and made an alliance with the Austrian Habsburg family.
Los Habsburgo eran Casa menor de la Casa Dinastica Trastamara.
Eran la misma casa Dinastica.
How interesting, I had never heard of "Grand Columbia." It would be a real rival of Brasil today if it was able to stay together.
I only can imagine such empire in modern times, having Panama's canal, Venezuela's oil reserves and Colombia's cocaine... bruh (I'm colombian by the way so I can make such jokes...)
They were already together when they were part of the Spanish Empire.
Brasil didn't end up broken like the spanish colonies because of the Independence from Portugal. Which is kind of funny because they had a King and the Son Declared Independence and became the Emperor.. Soo did it really change that much? 🤣
@@paulorocha8234A monarquia ainda foi melhor que a República.
@@paulorocha8234 *because of the empire, not independence