Page:History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella the Catholic Vol. II.djvu/519

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SPANISH COLONIAL POLICY.
493

CHAPTER IX.

with the absolute disposal of all its dignities and chapter emoluments.[1]

It has excited the admiration of more than one historian, that Ferdinand and Isabella, with their reverence for the Catholic church, should have had the courage to assume an attitude of such entire independence of its spiritual chief.[2] But whoever has studied their reign, will regard this measure as perfectly conformable to their habitual policy, which never suffered a zeal for religion, or a blind deference to the church, to compromise in any degree the independence of the crown. It is much more astonishing, that pontiffs could be found content to divest themselves of such important prerogatives. It was deviating widely from the subtle and tenacious spirit of their predecessors; and, as the consequences came to be more fully disclosed, furnished ample subject of regret to those who succeeded them.

Spirit of the colonial legislation Such is a brief summary of the principal regulations adopted by Ferdinand and Isabella for the administration of the colonies. Many of their peculiarities, including most of their defects, are to be referred to the peculiar circumstances under which the discovery of the New World was effected. Unlike the settlements on the comparatively sterile shores of North America, which were permitted to devise laws accommodated to their

  1. Solorzano, Politica Indiana, tom. ii. lib. 4, cap. 2, sec. 9.—Riol, Informe, apud Seinanario Erudito, torn. iii. pp. 160, 161.
  2. Among others see Raynal,History of the East and West Indies, translated by Justamond, (London, 1788,) vol. iv. p. 277.—Robertson, History of America, (London, 1796,) vol. iii. p. 283.