What a lot of Americans, particularly many African-Americans, do not know is that Spain started bringing Africans across the Atlantic to countries, now known as Mexico and all the way down to Argentina, almost 200 years before the United States. In 1442, Pope Eugene IV gave the Portuguese sailors the right to explore the African continent, and attempted to protect their findings from the Spanish, who were beginning to explore the continent as well. Spain was then occupied by a Muslim power and the Catholic Church felt threatened. Thus, in 1452, in an attempt to protect the church, Pope Nicholas V issued a Dum Diversas, giving the Spanish the right to enslave anyone not practicing Christianity. This bull, or ruling, was used by the Spanish and Portuguese Christians to enslave Africans.
Mexican of African descent working as a cobbler
In an attempt to settle disputes during the invasion of the western world, the Pope
created the Treaty of Tordesillas
and the line of demarcation, giving the Portuguese ownership of
everything to the east of the line and the Spanish ownership of
everything to the west, which is why Brazil today is a Portuguese speaking nation and other nations to the west of Brazil are Spanish speaking.. The line also gave the African continent to the
Portuguese and stopped the Spanish slave trade in Africa, forcing them
to find a new way to access slaves.
The Spanish government then created
the Asiento
system, which functioned between 1543 and 1834. By the 16th century, the
Asiento allowed other countries to sell people, mostly of African descent, to the
Spanish as slaves. Thus, black African people have an ancient presence in both Spain and Portugal.
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