The arrival of Europeans in the Americas brought with it a demographic
catastrophe of vast proportions for the native populations. What were
the causes?
The surviving documentation is extraordinarily rich: conquistadors,
religious figures, administrators, officials, and merchants kept
records, carried out inquiries, and issued edicts. The native world, for
its part, has also left eloquent traces of events as well as direct
testimony of its harsh subjugation at the hands of the Europeans.
Drawing on these sources, Livi-Bacci shows how not only the 'imported'
diseases but also a series of economic and social factors played a role
in the disastrous decline of the native populations. He argues that the
catastrophe was not the inevitable outcome of contact with Europeans but
was a function of both the methods of the conquest and the
characteristics of the subjugated societies.
This gripping narrative recounts one of the greatest tragedies of human
history, one whose protagonists include figures like Columbus,
Montezuma, Atahuallpa, Pizarro, Corts and Tupac Amaru.