The Columbus fleet colonists plundered the Indians for food, **, and beauties.
Since the Age of Discovery, the "pursuit" of Indian women by European colonists has attracted widespread attention. This phenomenon seems to have begun when Columbus "discovered" the New World, and Spanish explorers were especially known for their "quest" for Indian women.
Similarly, the "pursuit" of the Spanish for Indian women provoked Indian resistance. This has been the case since Columbus first "discovered" the Indians.
When Christopher Columbus completed his first expedition to the west and was about to return to Spain, an expedition ship was shipwrecked on the island of Hispaniola, and he had to choose a place on the island to establish friendly relations with the local Indians.
In order to establish a colony in the Americas, the Spaniards sent dozens of explorers to garrison and take care of the guards. Columbus placed special emphasis on building friendly relations with local Indians and growing crops to achieve self-sufficiency.
In addition, he also left some small European goods in exchange for **, food, and other items.
When Columbus returned to the colony, he found that it had been burned to the ground, and all the Spanish explorers stationed there had disappeared without a trace.
Columbus and others searched the area carefully and found only a few highly decomposed white corpses, and it was clear that something had happened to them. Later, after asking the local Indian allies, Columbus and others learned that all this was caused by the Spanish explorers themselves.
After Columbus left, the Spanish explorers, who had become colonizers, completely let themselves go and began to quarrel and compete with each other, although they were divided into several factions, they had no interest in colonizing the area.
As for planting land and growing crops, they can run as far as they can, without thinking at all about growing food crops for self-sufficiency. These Spanish colonists only knew how to do small business with the Indians, exchanging some knick-knacks that were worthless in Europe (such as red hats, glass beads, copper bells, knives and fish hooks) for ** ornaments and food, which made them a lot of money.
But as time went on, the gadgets in the hands of the Spaniards gradually decreased, and in order to get more ** and food, they directly robbed and turned into vicious robbers.
Tip sharing: In the future"Discover"Before the Americas, Columbus's expedition fleet had prepared knick-knacks such as red hats, glass beads, brass bells, knives, and fish hooks, a lesson learned from the Portuguese.
They discovered that the blacks of Africa had an unrivalled love for these small European commodities. Columbus therefore ** Chinese, Japanese or Indians will also like these items, so they specially prepared a lot.
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The local Indians had never seen the power of steel and the sound of firearms, so the Spaniards attacked them again and again, and each robbery was full of loads.
As looting became more frequent, the Spanish colonists were no longer content with looting** and food, and they began to take an interest in Native American women. Without Columbus's supervision, in order to satisfy their desires, they directly began to kidnap Indian women.
In the eyes of the Spanish colonizers, Indian women were merely their playthings and slaves. Regardless of their status and marital status, as long as they are beautiful, the Spaniards will not hesitate to snatch them away and satisfy their desires.
Eventually, each Spanish colonist had three or four Indian beauties as slaves and lived "happy" lives that could not have been imagined in Europe. This kind of behavior is not only extremely disrespectful and exploitative to Indian women, but also a serious violation of humanity and morality.
A group of Native Americans, led by a valiant chieftain of Caribbean ancestry, armed and armed to take advantage of the Spaniards' pleasure with Indian women, launched a night raid and successfully eliminated several Spaniards in the colonial fort.
Under the chieftain's leadership, the other Indian chieftains on Hispaniola began to fight back against the Spanish oppression, successfully eliminating all the Spanish colonists on the island.
Conclusion: We must admit that in the course of human history, there has always been an eternal truth, that is, "the weak will be bullied by the strong". Like the Indians I mentioned earlier, they were eventually controlled by the wolf-like European colonizers due to their lack of advanced technology and strong **.
Although they had relied on outnumbered and sudden attacks to achieve a brief victory, when Columbus returned to Hispanio, he easily wiped out the rebellious Indian tribes and sold them into slavery with only a small group of Spanish explorers armed with advanced ** and heavy armor.
This is the stark contrast between the advanced and the backward. Since then, other European explorers have followed Columbus's lead and continued to oppress the Indians.
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