65 pages 2 hours read

Eduardo Galeano

Open Veins of Latin America

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 1971

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Part 1, Chapter 1Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Part 1: “Mankind’s Poverty as a Consequence of the Wealth of the Land”

Chapter 1 Summary: “Lust for Gold and Silver”

Section 1 Summary: “The Sign of the Cross on the Hilt of the Sword”

In 1492, Portuguese explorer Christopher Columbus accidentally arrived in the Americas through commission by the Spanish King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella. Columbus was seeking Asia, motivated by the writings of Marco Polo detailing the Kubla Khan’s accounts of Japan’s riches. He intended to find spices such as pepper, ginger, cloves, nutmeg, and cinnamon, all used for preserving meat. He also was looking for gold, knowing the currency and power of the precious metal. In his logbook, he notes of gold possession that “he who has it does as he wills in the world” (30).

Columbus first landed in modern-day Haiti, which he named Espanola at the time, and described the Indians he met there as peaceable as they “knew nothing of swords” (29). He and his men proceeded to kill 200 Indians and brought back 500 enslaved Indians to Spain. He also returned to Spain with gold, which King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella used to pay the sailors. This set into motion a trend of European travelers to the Americas to seek out such riches in gold and silver, forcing the natives to pay tribute, and eventually exhausting the lands of their precious metals.

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By Eduardo Galeano

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