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A Gruesome Account from Las Casas
Excerpt taken from Bartolome de Las Casas,
The Devastation of the Indies, (reprint 1965),33-35
...And the Christians, with their horses and swords and pikes began to carry out massacres and strange cruelties against them.
They attacked the towns and spared neither the children nor the aged nor pregnant women nor women in childbed, not only stabbing them and dismembering them with but cutting them to pieces as if dealing with sheep in the slaughterhouse. They laid bets as to who, with one stroke of the sword, could split a man in two or could cut off his head or spill out his entrails with a single stroke of the pike. They took infants from their mothers' breasts, snatching them by the legs
and pitching them headfirst against the crags or snatched them by the arms and threw
them into the rivers, roaring with laughter and saying bas the babies fell into
the water, "Boil there, you offspring
of the devil!"
Other infants they put to the sword along with their mothers and anyone else who happened to be
nearby. They made some low wide gallows on which the hanged victim's feet almost touched the ground, stringing
up their victims in lots of thirteen, in memory of Our Redeemer and His twelve apostles, then set burning wood at
their feet and thus burned them alive. To others they attached straw or wrapped their whole bodies in straw and
set them afire. With still others, all those they wanted to capture alive, they cut off their hands and hung them round
the victim's neck, saying, "Go now, carry the message," meaning, Take the news to the Indians who have fled to the
mountains. They usually dealt with the chieftains and nobles in the following way: they made a grid of rods which
they placed on forked sticks, then lashed the victims to the grid and lighted a smoldering fire underneath, so that
little by little, as those captives screamed in despair and torment, their souls would leave them. I once saw this,
when there were four or five nobles lashed on grids and burning; I seem even to recall that there were two or three
pairs of grids where others were burning, and because they uttered such loud screams that they disturbed the
captain's sleep, he ordered them to be strangled. And the constable, who was worse than an executioner, did not
want to obey that order (and I know the name of that constable and know his relatives in Seville), but instead put a
stick over the victims' tongues, so they could not make a sound, and he stirred up the fire, but not too much, so that
they roasted slowly, as he liked. I saw all these things I have described, and countless others. And because all the
people who could do so fled to the mountains to escape these inhuman, ruthless, and ferocious acts, the Spanish
captains, enemies of the human race, pursued them with the fierce dogs they kept which attacked the Indians,
tearing them to pieces and devouring them. And because on few and far between occasions, the Indians justifiably
killed some Christians, the Spaniards made a rule among themselves that for every Christian slain by the Indians,
they would slay a hundred Indians.
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