In June 1622, the silver mining metropolis of Potosí, Bolivia, erupted in gangland violence, only halted three years later. Basque immigrants were at the center of the controversy, squaring off against nearly a dozen other nations known collectively as Vicuñas. This rich collection of original sources allows readers to play historian.
In June 1622, the silver mining metropolis of Potosí, Bolivia, erupted in gangland violence, only halted three years later. Basque immigrants were at the center of the controversy, squaring off against nearly a dozen other nations known collectively as Vicuñas. This rich collection of original sources allows readers to play historian.
Kris Lane holds the France V. Scholes Chair in Colonial Latin American History at Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana. He is the author of Pandemic in PotosÍ: Fear, Loathing, and Public Piety in a Colonial Mining Metropolis; PotosÍ: The Silver City that Changed the World, Pillaging the Empire: Piracy in the Americas, 1500-1750; Colour of Paradise: Columbian Emerald in the Age of Gunpowder Empires; and Quito 1599: City and Colony in Transition. Lane is currently writing a history of the great PotosÍ mint fraud of the 1640s. Timothy F. Johnson is Associate Professor of Spanish at Central College. His research centers on the early modern connections between literature and warfare, and he has translated several colonial texts in collaboration with Kris Lane, including The Indian Militia and Description of the Indies and Defending the Conquest: Bernardo de Vargas Machuca's Defense and Discourse of the Western Conquests.
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