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Europeans Were Less Interested By The New

?Europeans Were Less Interested By The New World Than Their Classical Heritage? Essay, Research Paper


The discovery of the Americas in


1492 was a massive challenge to the accepted notions of the world; a world


which was still viewed by many in Ptolemaic terms, and laid claims against the


accepted wisdom concerning geography, theology, history and the very nature of


man. However, despite the momentous


implications of a new land and, more importantly, its heathen peoples, there


was an apparent slowness to take any real notice of the New World from within


the Old World. This lag


cannot be explained either by slow dissemination of the news, nor by a lack of


understanding of the importance of the discovery. Peter Martyr wrote to the Count of Tendilla and the Archbishop of


Grenada in September 1493 to spread the news, opening with the words ?Raise


your spirits? Hear about the new discovery!?


He talked of the gold Columbus found as well as the important news of


the men they found, who were naked yet fought with bows and staves; men who had


kings competing for power and yet worshipped celestial bodies. The excitement of the initial news was


tremendous, and this was reflected in the demand for literature concerning the


new discovery. Columbus?s first letter


concerning his discovery was reprinted 9 times by the end of 1493 and at least


20 times by 1500. Montalboddo?s voyages


went into print 15 times by 1507 and even in the mid sixteenth century,


Ramusi?s voyages were being republished.


Yet the excitement of discovery was not the only reason for the


excitement. The scale of the discovery


was well-recognised. Guicciardini


praises the Spanish and Portuguese for the ?great and unexpected? discovery. Juan Luis Vires wrote that ?the globe has


been opened up to the human race? and in 1539 the Paduan philosopher Buonamico


claimed that the Americas and the printing press were the two great historical


events that ?could be compared not only to antiquity, but to immortality.? With the obvious exceptions of the


Incarnation, the Crucifixion and the Resurrection, Gomara viewed the event as


the greatest ?since the creation of the world.? Although Gomara was writing a half-century after the discovery,


and apparently with great enthusiasm, the fad for Americana soon passed. Although


Guicciardini praised the Spanish and Portuguese for their discovery, he did not


seem aware of Columbus? Italian nationality. When the world?s most famous


sailor died in Vallidolid, the local chronicle did not even mention the


event. Whilst Ramusio and Oviedo


reckoned that his discovery?s conversionary potential would give him almost


saintly status, it was some time before Columbus could even have been sure that


his Christian name would be recorded correctly by writers. Benzoni noted that their classical forebears


would have erected a statue in his honour suggesting a lack of appropriate


monuments to his memory (although Francis Bacon kept a statue of him) and


giving us a hint at a preoccupation with comparing contemporary society to the


classical civilisations. The situation


became so bad that in 1571 his son Hernando was forced to publish a biography


simply in order to keep his name alive for another generation. There was certainly many difficulties for


Europeans wanting to learn about America; difficulties which seem to have


fostered apathy. Difficulties


existed because of the sheer distance between the Americas and Europe and the


time it took to cross the Atlantic, the problems of preconceptions and the


difficulties of language and environment.


These made any information at all difficult to obtain but these were all


overcome simply by exposure to America and by using large fleets to maintain an


American presence, which would explain initial apathy about America. The news of discovery apart, people would


not have been interested by reports with no further developments. Hernando Columbus was fighting a truly


difficult battle, as ?the European reading public displayed no overwhelming


interest in the newly-discovered world of America.[1]?


and it would take generations to overcome such barriers as the problems of


observation, description, dissemination and comprehension. As Humboldt said, ?to see is not to observe;


that is to compare and clarify.?


Unfortunately, the difficulty of comparing and clarifying a land totally


separate in form, ecology, culture and humanity from one?s own in words is


incalculable. The problems of


disseminating new ideas and images until they became the stock-and-trade


furnishings of the mental images of the peoples of Europe concerning the Americas


were enormous. Yet more difficult was


the problem of shifting the mental barriers of both the author, who needed to


try and work to portray a world entirely different from his own, and the


reader, who needed to change their perceptions without seeing the landscapes of


which the author had the benefit when writing. So


great was the problem that most authors chose to wrote of ?experiences? as


opposed to scenery. De Guzman


specifically said in his prologue that he would not try to relate the sights


that he had seen. Some people found themselves able to describe individual


aspects of the American landscape; Verrazeno described the forests of North


America, de Lery described the flora and fauna that he saw whilst Barlowe


described the trees of North America is some detail. However, the greatest problem lay in


describing the peoples of North America. The problem of the weightiness of the


classical ideals often meant that the realities of the New World were hidden,


minimised and concealed by bad comparisons that, instead of relating the


differences and similarities between the Americas and Europe, simply served to


trivialise the fundamental differences between the two zones. For example,


Perez de Oliva?s ?History of the Discovery of the Indies? contains a speech by


an Aztec chieftain with Livian rhetoric in it.


Alonso de Zuazo looked at the Mexicans he met as chivalric barbarians,


whilst Verrazano saw the Indians of Rhode Island as dark-haired, bronzed and


black-eyed, but described their bodies in terms best suited to describing


classical sculptures. The problem was


to be tackled by the employment of painters, but European painters were not


really used to making portraits of people outside of the classical mould. In any case, even when painters gave their


etchers material to use, the poor etching technology often made any


characteristics indistinguishable, and etchers often chose to turn their


subjects into Greek and Roman ideals.


Worse still, some publishers simply used images of Turks that they


happened to have in stock at the time instead of commissioning new


etchings. The


lack of interest in the Americas is thus partly the result of a continuing


determination, right up to the last two or three decades of the sixteenth


century, to describe the world as if it were still the world as known to


Strabo, Ptolemy and Pomponius Mela[2];


a tendency which made America sound like a simple extension of the European


mainland and thus diminished its novelty and interest value. This obsessive


clinging onto the mighty past was driven forward by the printing press, which


had turned to publishing classics almost immediately that it needed secular


matter. The philosophy of Humanism, which predominated above all in Florence


from the time of Petrarch until around 1475, had been originally dedicated


above all else to the promulgation of classical languages and literature, which


they thought to be more rational.


Burckhardt noted that the Florentines made ?antiquarian interests one of


the chief objectives of their lives.?


What they referred to as studia humanitas was strongly centred on


philology and it was this study that first discovered a definitive and


impassable distance between past and present, whereas before, there had been no


awareness of a break. This new awareness


gave rise to a need to define oneself in relation to the past, to build anew on


the past, but differently from the past.


The Romans, it was argued, had built their Republic on foundations of


virtue, whilst their empire was on foundations of tyranny. The philosophy, a


result of Florence?s republican fervour, could have developed in no other


environment, and the defeat of the Visconti tyranny in Milan, was an exhibition


from the most Republican of cities (the city had been founded by Sulla), and of


its self-conscious study of the Roman republican world. Humanism


was the frame into which the news of the discovery was placed; a frame of


devotion to Aristotle, Plato, Cicero, Xenophon and the newly discovered


Tacitus. Bruni?s second dialogue saw


the classical past as something with which the newly disassociated present can


compete and outdo, as opposed an irreplaceably lost golden age. In 1435, the exiled Roman Curia, which


included Bruni, held a debate about whether the vernacular languages of Europe


could ever attain the perfection of Latin or Greek, and concluded that one must


be willing to employ the ancient model as a guide in building a new literature


in a new nation, but that one must do it in a new language. This is indicative of the

obsessive


comparisons between the Early-Modern and Classical eras, that the Roman Curia


should compare their languages; this is more bizarre still when one is dealing


in the era after Dante, one of Bruni?s ?Three Crowns of Florence? and a


vernacular poet. Dante was a recognised


talent and he was defended to the hilt by Florentine Humanists even when his


placement of Caesar in purgatory and his assassins in a lower circle of hell


suggested sympathy with tyranny. That


one should consider faulting Dante for his use of Italian and not High Latin


suggests compulsiveness as regards the Classics. With European


arrogance about what defined society (Europe), Bodin declined to use the


information that he had available about the New World in his writings whilst


cosmographers and social philosophers, with so much to take in, just decided to


circumvent the problems caused by America by ignoring the continent. This is perhaps unsurprising given the


responses of Medieval Christendom to Islam, where once again prejudice,


puzzlement and indifference reigned.


The reorganisation of ideas to incorporate the New World meant the


abandonment of many of their inherited founding principles and preconceptions,


so many chose to avoid making the ?agonising? decision[3]


to take on board the new lessons of the New World, especially when arguments


concerning the Old World were so prevalent and complex. New


World culture was never close to being assimilated, and no Eueopean would ever


have considered any assimiliation of anything non-European. In 1528 Hernan Perez de Oiva wrote of giving


?those strange lands the form of our own.?


The Aztec Empire was seen as the background to conversion, as the Roman


Empire had been the background to European conversion. Las Casas? ?Apologetica Historia? assessed Aztecs, Incas, Greeks,


Romans, Gauls, Egyptians and Britons as examples of pre-Christian societies


(and came up very much in favour of the potential of the South Americans) thus


bringing the Indians into sociological parity with the Europeans, and Cicero?s


claim that men are defined by their rationality led many to see the Indians as


equal; a decision made finally with a papal bull authenticating their humanity.


Whilst


theologians and philosophers were debating what makes men into men, Philip III


of Spain used ?Politics? by Aristotle to justify the slave status of the


Americans, whilst even Cortes called them ?Barbarians? in spite of the


condemnation in Corinthians I of the term ?Barbarians?. Cicero?s claim that men are rational also


meant that the Europeans had no qualms about imposing a ?rational? government


onto the Americans, replacing their ?irrational? lifestyles, again despite


Corinthians I. This placement of


Aristotle on a par with St. Paul is perhaps incredible from the grandson of


Charles V, but indicative of the sway held by the classics outside of the


republican sphere. In the decades after the fall of


Constantinople and the establishment of fortress Europe, when the system of Tuerkeglocken


warning bells ran from Vienna to Gibraltar to call the Christians to defend


the east against Turkish intruders, the unbreakable Christian continent, under


the Habsburg marshalship, was coming to be viewed as not just the cradle of


civilisation, but also the divinely appointed centre of humanity. The idea of accepting ideas from the New


World where the inhabitants had not yet even acquired shame about their


nakedness was preposterous to Europeans who knew themselves to be right in


every way. This


idea of divine guidance for the Godly continent was supported by the growth of


the influence of the ?classic? texts.


The growth of printing lent greater authority to the classic texts and


led to a more slavish interpretation of the classics. Authority staked fresh claims against experience as the lessons


of the New World came to be seen as being incredible or at best,


irrelevant. In an era when great,


spiritual, intellectual and political problems[4]


were rending the continent apart, the New World was not perceived as a land of


hope, but as a potential cause of new problems, which may explain the


dedication of those who chose to ignore it.


In the seventh century, as J.H. Elliott notes, the Chinese T?ang


dynasty?s discovery of Nam-Viet had a similar influence, as the mainland


Chinese came to impose their will on the indigenous population, and decided not


to take in the lessons that could be learnt there. The influence of


the classical past is clear in the approach taken to the histories made of the


Americas. Using Pliny?s ?Natural


History? as a guide, Monardes? ?Medicinal Plants of America? and de Acosta?s


?Natural & Moral History of the Indies? were the first books to catalogue


and classify any aspects of the American world. The history was based on recordings of the oral traditions ? a


source that was only credited with anything more than the most dubious of


provenances once Herodotus? usage of the oral tradition was cited as a


precedent.The issue of whether Europeans


were more interested by their heritage or by their own generations? discovery


is easier to answer by geographical region.


Atkinson?s survey of geographical literature shows four times as many


books published in France concerning Africa and Asia as the Americas, although


this may be symptomatic of the exploration of the Africas and Asia by the


Portuguese; a factor that led to geographical information being available for


these regions which was unavailable for the Americas. However, this explanation does not explain an apparent waning in


the rate of publication of books about the Americas throughout the period, before


it finally plummeted in the last decades of the sixteenth century. This would suggest a New World apathy in


France; a country whose role in the discovery and exploration of the continent


was minimal. Meanwhile, in


Poland, 39 16th and 17th centuries volumes contain a


total of 60 American references, all of which imply either the exotic, or the


church triumphant; none implying anything more or anything more important to


Europeans themselves, nor showing a knowledge of the Americas beyond the


Americas as converted area and as a faraway source of gold. Comparative


interest in the New World seems to vary with national involvement with the


discovery and exploration. In Italy,


interest was intense until the 1520s when Italian involvement ended and Italian


sources ceased to be produced. The


number of translations of foreign works did seem to make up this shortfall from


the 1550s and is indicative of a prolonged interest from the Italians. The Italian epic poems of the 1580s and


1590s about the discovery and the 1614 Spanish drama, ?El Nuevo Mundo


descubierto par Cristobal Colon? by de Vega were the exceptions in so far as


that they were focussed works concerning the New World, although it should be


remembered that in these works, the Indians speak in tones more suited to a


debate in a Roman forum than a South American rainforest. Spain?s public


showed little interest in the New World, and Ercilla?s ?Aruacana? was the first


epic about the Indies. This may be


because the conquistadors were not ?epic hero? material, although a large


corpus of professional materials, for use by doctors, philosophers, sailors and


theologians was produced. This may have


depreciated public appreciation for the New World, but the extent of Spanish


interest in Portugal?s great discovery becomes clear when looking at


England. In England, the discovery was


hailed with apathy before the Spanish connection of the 1550s stimulated a


limited degree of interest. Although it is


tempting to see the Atlantic as the binding factor governing interest, the


examples of England, France and Italy, where interest runs counter to this


trend would suggest that the Atlantic?s presence was simply the stimulus to


explore that led to involvement in the New World in the first place. On the issue of the role of the classical


world?s hold on Europe, the rise of Humanism, Platonism and Neoplatonism, meant


that the Old World had just risen to its climax of relevance as the New World


was discovered and was on the wane. The


increase in translations in Italy throughout the 1550s coincides with the end


of the Neoplatonic era, which would suggest a shift in focus at around this


time. The coincidence of the Spanish


connection in the 1550s and the end of Neoplatonism would explain the interest


in England for the New World from this time. The increase in importance of the


New World at the Spanish court grew massively at this time. The Spanish took


just 300 toneladas of silver in 1504, 10,000 toneladas by 1520, 20,000


toneladas by 1545 and 32,355 toneladas by 1554. The coincidence with the death


of Neoplatonism would foster a look westward by the Spanish at this time. This is easiest to spot in the appearance of


poetry, plays and so on, but also in the use of questionnaires in Castile; a


technique honed in the New World. Thus,


greater interest in the New World was reliant on disentrenchment of the


classical ideals that had been made fashionable by the successes in Italy of


humanist Florence. [1] p. 12 JHE [2] p. 14 [3] p. 15 [4] p. 16

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