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04/21/2026 - 04/21/2026 | Mainz

“The Radical Spanish Empire”: Book Presentation

This talk presents The Radical Spanish Empire (Harvard UP, March 2026), by Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra and Adrian Masters.

As Spanish conquistadors and their Native allies advanced across the New World, the Spanish Crown and most of its subjects expected to erect a rigidly hierarchical aristocratic order modeled on Iberian society. Initially, this goal appeared within reach, as leading conquistadors ruled vast territories and populations as de facto noblemen. Contrary to most expectations, the Spanish Americas soon became a site of sustained and often radical challenges to this order. As conquistador authority eroded, alternative regimes emerged, including enclaves governed by powerful friars and by Indigenous lords seeking to preserve or reshape preconquest structures of rule. These arrangements, too, collapsed, frequently to the surprise of contemporaries. How did these three regimes fall? Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra and Adrian Masters center the actions of a broad range of colonial actors - non-elite Spaniards, Indigenous people, women, and the enslaved - who actively contested authority across the empire. While violence remained ubiquitous, these groups increasingly relied on paperwork—petitions, lawsuits, complaints, denunciations, and secret testimonies—to pursue their aims. Through this grassroots “lawfare,” subjects undermined the seigneurial ambitions of conquistadors, challenged theocratic claims advanced by friars, and constrained the power of Indigenous elites. These struggles had far-reaching consequences. They fueled campaigns against tyranny and enslavement, generated debates over law and governance, and produced new forms of knowledge, archives, and historical narratives that questioned truth and authority. At the same time, these radical challenges paradoxically contributed to the consolidation of a more stable colonial order by the 1570s, one headed by viceroys, bishops, and inquisitors. The Radical Spanish Empire reinterprets a pivotal historical period, demonstrating how the pervasive use of paperwork transformed political power and social order in the early modern Spanish Americas.

Digital participation is possible on BigBlueButton:
https://bbb.rlp.net/rooms/5hc-pla-giw-tma/join

The event language is English.

Information on participating / attending:
Contact person: Manfred Sing (Leibniz Institute of European History)

Date:

04/21/2026 18:00 - 04/21/2026

Event venue:

Alte Universitätsstraße 19
55116 Mainz
Rheinland-Pfalz
Germany

Target group:

all interested persons

Email address:

Relevance:

local

Subject areas:

History / archaeology, Law, Politics, Social studies

Types of events:

Presentation / colloquium / lecture

Entry:

02/20/2026

Sender/author:

Stefanie Mainz

Department:

Referat Kommunikation & Presse, Veranstaltungsmanagement

Event is free:

yes

Language of the text:

English

URL of this event: http://idw-online.de/en/event81023


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