SAEGER - Another View of the Mission as a Frontier - Santa Fe

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Another View of the Mission as a Frontier Institution: The Guaycuruan Reductions of Santa Fe, 1743-1810 Author(s): James Schofield Saeger Source: The Hispanic American Historical Review, Vol. 65, No. 3 (Aug., 1985), pp. 493-517 Published by: Duke University Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2514833 . Accessed: 18/08/2011 17:01 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Duke University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Hispanic American Historical Review. http://www.jstor.org

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Transcript of SAEGER - Another View of the Mission as a Frontier - Santa Fe

Page 1: SAEGER - Another View of the Mission as a Frontier - Santa Fe

Another View of the Mission as a Frontier Institution: The Guaycuruan Reductions of SantaFe, 1743-1810Author(s): James Schofield SaegerSource: The Hispanic American Historical Review, Vol. 65, No. 3 (Aug., 1985), pp. 493-517Published by: Duke University PressStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2514833 .Accessed: 18/08/2011 17:01

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

Duke University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The HispanicAmerican Historical Review.

http://www.jstor.org

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Hispanic Antericais Historical Reviev 65 (3), 1985, 493-517 Copyright (C 1985 by Duke University Pr-ess

Another View of the Mission as a Frontier Institution: The Guaycuruan Reductions of Santa Fe, 1743- i8io

JAMES SCHOFIELD SAEGER*

H TOSTILITIES between Guaycuruans of the Gran Chaco and Spaniards complicated life in the Upper Plata re- gion for three centuries. The relationship between

the two cultures, never static, was radically altered in the eighteenth cen- tury, as missions were founded. This article will analyze the mission on the Chaco frontier to discover what role it played in the larger history of Spanish-Guaycuruan relations. The focus will be on relations between two Guaycuruan groups who requested missions, Abipones and Mocobies, and the city of Santa Fe. In the mid-eighteenth century, Abipones num- bered 5,ooo and Mocobies possibly 15- i8,ooo.' The city of Santa Fe had 1,076 residents in 1662, about 1,500 in 1698, and between 4,ooo and 5,000 in 1793.2

Since Charles III's expulsion of the Jesuits, observers have debated the reasons for the ensuing "failure" of their Chaco reductions. These missions, settled from 1743 to 1765, were established to convert "non- sedentary"3 Guaycuruan peoples of the eastern Chaco to Christianity and to persuade them to lead sedentary lives subordinate to Spanish control. Two explanations have emerged.

*The author wishes to thank Mark Burkholder, Murdo MacLeod, Kristine Jones, James Lewis, and Suzanni-e Browne for their criticisms of earlier drafts of this article and the Fulbright Commission and the Gipson Institute for Eighteenth Cenltury Studies for finlan- cial support.

i. Alfred M6traux, "Ethnography of the Chaco," Handbook of South American In- dians, 7 vols., ed. by Julian H. Steward (Washin-gton, D.C., 1946-59), I, 211-223; Julianl H. Steward, "The Native Population of South America," Handbook, V, 662; anid n. 7. below.

2. Leon-cio Gianello, Historia de Santa Fe (Buenos Aires, 1978), p. 141; Felix de Azara, Descripci6n e historia del Paragzuay y del Rio de la Plata, 2 vols. (Madrid, 1847), I, 344.

3. Nonseden-tary is used instead of "nomadic" to designate people who move seasonlally, hunting and gathering within well-defined areas; James Lockhart and Stuart B. Schwartz, Early Latin America: A History of Colonial Spanish America and Brazil (New York, 1983), pp. 34-36.

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One advanced by Jesuits and others who accept Jesuit accounts main- tains that the ultimate failure of these missions can be traced directly to the Jesuits' expulsion. This argument holds that between the 1740S and 1767, the priests created thriving Christian enterprises. Absent the So- ciety's warriors for Christ, the less able clerics and laymen who succeeded them were unequal to the challenge; the mission endeavor succumbed; and the Indians returned to "barbarism."4 Since most Jesuit works on the reductions end on a pessimistic note in 1767, they leave the erroneous impression that the missions then disappeared.

The other principal contention attributes the supposed failure of the Chaco enterprises mainly to the magnitude of the challenge: the Guaycuruans' culture. This caused the Guaycuruans to resist leading lives of peasant horticulturalists and herdsmen, preferring their traditional nonsedentary, predatory ways. Proponents of this argument say the re- sults of the missions were ephemeral. Guaycuruans settled in missions only for immediate material gain, with little enthusiasm for Christianity. Just as missionaries succeeded among the semisedentary Guarani be- cause they were culturally prepared to accept Hispanic society, so did they fail among Guaycuruans because these latter were so resistant.

Yet from the crown's vantage point, the outlook was different; and Spanish inhabitants of the region agreed that the missions were not fail- ures. Although they never assumed the character that early imperial ideology deemed desirable, the missions were successes, though limited successes. The test of success or failure here will be simply whether mis- sions provided for the essential security and social and economic needs of both cultures.

The eastern Gran Chaco, where Guaycuruans lived, is a low-lying re- gion of forest, scrub forest, and marshes, interspersed with plains and nu- merous small, mostly non-navigable rivers. It is bounded on the east by the Parana' and Paraguay rivers and runs from the Salado River in the south past the Bermejo, over the Pilcomayo, north to an area some 50 miles be- yond the present Paraguayan-Bolivian border. This region was home to the Guaycuruans, warlike nonsedentary peoples with a nearly homo- geneous culture and similar languages. They included the Abipones,

4. Jos6 Cardiel, S. J., Declaraci6n de la verdad (Buenos Aires, 1900), p. 449; Guillermo Furlong [Cardiff], S. J., Entre los nsocobies de Santa Fe, segun las noticias de los misioneros jesuitas . . . (Buenos Aires, 1938), pp. 199-205, 209; Phillip Caraman, The Lost Paradise; TheJesuit Republic in South America (New York, 1976), pp. 189-211, 280; Ludwig Kersten, Las tribus indigenas del Gran Chaco hasta fines del siglo xviii (Resisteincia, Arg., 1968), p. 52.

5. Branislava Susnik, El indio colonial del Paraguay: El chaqueiio, I11-i, (Asunci6n, 1971), pp. 167-172; Salvador Canals Frau, Las poblaciones indigenas de la Argentina: Su origen-su pasado-su presente (Buenos Aires, 1953), p. 316.

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Mocobies, Tobas, Pilaga's and Mbaya's. These people were known collec- tively as "Guaycurut," a Guarani word that Spaniards adopted.6 Population figures for Guaycuruans are available only after the middle of the eigh- teenth century; then they numbered between 35,ooo and 45,000, out of an eastern Chaco aboriginal population of possibly 8o,ooo.7

About a half century after Spanish settlement of the region in the 1540S, Guaycuruans acquired horses strayed from Spanish herds. The horse complemented the Guaycuruans' warrior ethos, and Mocobies, Abipones, and others developed a "horse culture" similar to that of the Plains Indians of North America. Among the many influences of Hispanic derivation altering Guaycuruan life-styles, the horse was the most impor- tant. It caused revolutionary changes. It let them imagine military equal- ity with Spaniards and tribal superiority in the Chaco. It allowed them vastly greater mobility, increased their range of economic alternatives, and favored their bellicosity. The horse heightened the level of conflict among Indian groups and between Guaycuruan and white society. Their new military potential enabled them to raid and pillage on a scale suffi- cient to dominate other Indian peoples and attack Spanish estancias and cities. The horse also allowed Guaycuruans to exploit the rapidly growing cattle herds adjacent to the Chaco.8

Before contact with whites, Guaycuruans lived by hunting wild game, fishing, and gathering fruits and vegetables; most continued these pur- suits during the colonial period. The hunt was a collective endeavor

6. Names of Chaco tribes are legion. Each had a name for itself and others, and Span- iards also awarded various names.

7. Metraux, "Ethnography of the Chaco," pp. 217-223; Steward, "The Native Popula- tioin of South America," p. 662. M6traux's figures are: Mbaya, 7-8,ooo; Abip6n, 5,000; Mocobi, 2-3,000; Toba, 20-30,000; Pilaga, 200-2,000 (?). While the sum of the Mocobi plus Toba populations is reliable, the 20-30,000 figure for the Toba is too large and the 3,000 for the Mocobi too small. The tribes were more nearly equal in size, but conltemporary Spaniards said that the Mocobies were more numerous.

8. Branislava Susnik, "Dimensiones migratorias y pautas culturales de los pueblos del Gran Chaco (enfoque etnol6gico)," Suplemnento antropol6gico; Universidad Cat6lica (Asun- ci6n, Paraguay), 7: 1-2, (1972), 85-ioi, 89; Susnik, El indio colonial, 111-1, pp. 27, 41; Alvin M. Josephy, Jr., The Indian Heritage of America (New York, 1968), pp. 273-274; Canals Frau, Las poblaciones indigenas, pp. 299, 315; Enrique Palavecinlo, "Las culturas aborigenes del Chaco," Historia de la naci6n argentina (Desde los origenes hasta la or- ganizaci6n definitiva en 1862), 10 vols., ed. by Ricardo Levene (Buenos Aires, 1936-50), I, 429-472.

The best way to understand Guaycuruan culture in the middle of the eighteenth cen- tury is through three Jesuit chronicles: Martin Dobrizhoffer, An Accouint of the Abipones; An Equestrian People of Paraguay, 3 vols. (London, 1822; repr. New York, 1970); Florian Paucke, Hacia alld y para acd (una estada entre los indios Mocobies, 1749- i767), 4 vols. (Tucuman-Buenos Aires, 1942-44), and Jose Sanchez Labrador, El Paraguay catolico, 3 vols. (Buenos Aires, 1910-17). For the period before the 1740s, Pedro Lozan-o, S. J., Descripci6n corografica del Gran Chaco Gualamba (Tucuman, 1941), is in-dispensable.

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undertaken exclusively by men; its significance was economic and ritual. The few Guaycuruan industries spinning, weaving, and preparing wild honey and carob beans for fermentation into intoxicants-were the prov- ince of Guaycuruan women and captives of both sexes. Guaycuruans lived in reed and grass huts, which could be quickly set up and disassembled. Their form of government was a hereditary chieftainship. Chiefs, how- ever, had little real authority and were often abandoned by followers who chose another leader. Men whose prestige came from past tests of valor and ability led war parties and hunting expeditions but had no authority to command others. Thus expeditions for plunder and war were highly democratic or disorganized affairs. In religion, Guaycuruans recog- nized a superior being but rendered no cult to him. They said that sick- ness and death were spiritual in origin, usually the result of a malevolent sorcerer. Personalization of misfortune contributed to intertribal and intra- tribal hostilities, and to a continuous cycle of reprisals. Guaycuruans lived in small bands; the economic potential of the Chaco was insufficient to allow large groups of people to congregate very long. Guaycuruan bands periodically gathered to trade, to exchange ideas, and, for men, to enjoy occasions of ritual drunkenness or for plunder and war. Then they dis- persed again into small groups.9

The growth of Spanish society, centered on Asuncion, Corrientes, and Santa Fe in the east and the cities of Tucumain in the west, caused impor- tant changes in the Guaycuruan economy and society by the seventeenth century. Trade with Spaniards became intensive'0 and changed the Guay- curuan economy from a subsistence- to a barter-based one. Horsemeat and beef began to supplement game, fish, and wild plants in the Indians' diet. Animals of Spanish origin became staples, as Guaycuruans de- pended on quadrupeds for food and for commerce with Spaniards. Other trade goods included Spanish and Indian captives, horses, honey, wax, and skins. These were bartered for Guaycuruans taken by Spaniards, knives, fishhooks, iron for projectile points, beads, hatchets, and clothing.

Economic changes produced a new scale of values and important so- cial alterations. Owing to the increased value of skins and hides, the status of the hunter-warrior in Guaycuruan society rose. Competition for scarce Chaco resources intensified the warrior ethos, and warlike expansionism and conflict over tribal areas grew. Caciques took on a more important role in Guaycuruan society, and factionalism among caciques increased. Caciques, selectively interpreting new cultural models, patterned their

9. This accounted for the failure of most Spanish expeditions sent to punish Indian raid- ers. Spaniards sent armies after large Guaycuruan forces, forces that ceased to exist imme- diately after a raid. Susnik, "Dimensiones migratorias," pp. 85-88.

lo. Susnik, El indio colonial III-1, p. 23.

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behavior on Spanish capitanes." Because the Chaco was overpopulated, considering the environment, warlike expansionism was a consequence of violent migratory pressures, to which Spanish encirclement of the Chaco contributed heavily. Guaycuruans' limitation of family size by infanticide, abortion, and easy divorce was an integral part of their social organization.

After i6oo, Guaycuruans increasingly raided Spanish settlements. Usually profits from a raid in one jurisdiction, for example, C6rdoba or Asunci6n, were bartered in another, Santa Fe or Corrientes. Everywhere periods of hostility alternated with periods of relatively peaceful coexis- tence between Guaycuruans and Spaniards. Although trade between Guaycuruans and Spaniards was often officially prohibited, relations be- tween individual settlers and the Chaco peoples were often close.'2

Beginning around i66o, Guaycuruans increasingly pressed against Santa Fe and other settlements. The end of the Calchaqui wars at this time allowed Spaniards moving east from La Rioja, Salta, and Jujuy to en- croach on Indian lands, and the displaced Indians pushed against the hunting areas of the eastern Chaco.'3

As Abipones and Mocobies intensified their attacks, Spanish efforts to eliminate or reduce the Guaycuruan threat were unavailing. Spanish arms seldom achieved more than limited, temporary success. Missionary efforts to preach Guaycuruans into Spanish society failed. Treaties, too, were of a transitory nature. Even while the pacts were in force, Guaycu- ruans perceived them only in local terms, and Spaniards (in practice) ac- cepted this view. Agreements with Santa Fe seldom prevented Abipones or Mocobies from raiding around Asunci6n. Treaties never caused Span- iards anywhere to refrain from purchasing stolen livestock. The period of greatest Guaycuruan danger to Santa Fe was from about 1675 to 1732,

increasing especially after 1710-11, when Governor Esteban Urizar y Arespacochaga led a large punitive expedition from Tucuman, pushing that frontier farther into the Chaco. This caused increased intertribal war- fare in the eastern Chaco and greater pressure from Chaquefios against Santa Fe. 14

ii. Ibid., pp. 25, 56-69. 12. Antonio Serrano, Los pueblos y culturas indigenas del litoral (Santa Fe, Arg., 1955),

passim, and idem, Los primitivos habitantes del territorio argentino (Buenos Aires, 1930), pp. lo8-115; Canals Frau, Las poblaciones indigenas, pp. 298-316; Alberto Rex Gonzalez and Jos6 A. Perez, Argentina indigena; Visperas de la conquista (Buenos Aires, 1972),

pp. 120-127; Susnik, El indio colonial, 111-1, passim. 13. Armando R. Bazan, Historia de La Rioja (Buenos Aires, 1979), pp. 102-140,

142-143; Susnik, "Dimensiones migratorias," pp. 85-92.

14. Furlong, Entre los Mocobies, p. 11; Lozano, Gran Chaco Gualamba, passim; Manuel Lizondo Borda, "El Tucuiman de los siglos xvii y xviii," Historia de la naci6n argen- tina, III, 406-407; (Argentine Republic) Comando General del Ej6rcito, Direcci6n de Es- tudios Hist6ricos, Politica seguida con el aborigen: Vol. 1, (1750-1819); Vol. 2, in 2 vols.,

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Typical Guaycuruan hostilities with Santa Fe included two kinds of en- counters. In one, the Indians' primary objective was profit, not warfare, and they approached Santa Fe to acquire livestock, trade goods from cart trains, and women and children as captives.'5 The city's slow-moving forces would pursue until their mobile adversaries lost themselves in the vast expanses of the Chaco. Usually on these raids Guaycuruans fought only when cornered, and casualties on both sides were few. The second type of clash was for military and symbolic purposes. The Indians might, as they did in March 1732, attack and kill isolated male civilians in the countryside. They taunted the residents of Santa Fe by showing them- selves and then ambushed the militia as it moved out.'6 Large Guaycu- ruan groups sometimes attacked Spanish patrols.'7 These occasional com- bats with the Spanish military were of secondary, but not negligible, importance. They enabled Guaycuruan men to boast of their valor and thus to enhance their prestige. As the most famous Jesuit chronicler of Guaycuruan life said, "Military fame is the principal object of the ambi- tion of the Abipones."'8 Seldom, however, did they initiate fights with nu- merically equal Spanish forces. Guaycuruan lack of command authority, discipline, and combat organization meant that they could not win such encounters unless their numbers were truly overwhelming.

Nevertheless, Guaycuruan forays had a depressing effect on Santa Fe as hostilities climaxed in 1732. Whether raids were for profit or warfare was an unimportant distinction for Spaniards, who feared for their lives. Pilfering from estancias was continual. Livestock had to be enclosed and lacked access to adequate pasture. Merchants, on whose cart trains Santa Fe's economy depended, could neither feed their livestock nor travel in safety. Normal economic activity was close to paralysis. 9

Leaders of Santa Fe proposed numerous military remedies. They built new forts and relocated exisiting ones to deter raids. They asked for more troops and better mounts for the cavalry. They hoped to send an army to the Chaco on a general entrada, a major campaign.20 These measures were of little consequence.

By 1732, vecinos of Santa Fe feared that they would be overwhelmed.

(1820-.1852); ed. by Fued G. Nellar (Buenos Aires, 1972-75), I, 51; Susnik, El indio colo- nial, 111-i, i65.

15. Examples of hostilities during these years are found in documents in the Archivo General de la Naci6n, Buenos Aires, Argentina (hereinafter AGN), IX, 4- 1- 1 and 3-10-7.

16. Alonso de la Vega al gobernador, Santa Fe, Mar. 20, 1732; AGN, IX, 4- 1- 1. 17. Petici6n del procurador general al cabildo, Santa Fe, Apr. 26, 1732; Acuerdo del

cabildo, both in ibid. i8. Dobrizhoffer, Abipones, III, 347. 19. Cabildo de Santa Fe al gobernador, Santa Fe, July 20, 1730; AGN, IX, 4- 1-1.

20. Frutos de Palafox al gobernador, Sainta Fe, June i8, 1730; Francisco de Ziburu al gobernador, Santa Fe, Mar. 28, 1731; all in ibid.

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In March and April, Abipones killed four Spaniards and four Indian ser- vants of the Dominican convent. They despoiled houses of God, sacred relics, and images of saints. They endangered priests the most. A measles epidemic was afflicting residents; clerics had to go about comforting the sick and administering last rites.2'

The Indian danger to Santa Fe, however, reached its apogee in 1732.

Such measles epidemics as the 1732 disaster always spread from the settlers to the remotest corners of the Chaco. Epidemic disease, variously reported as measles and smallpox, spread throughout the upper Plata re- gion from 1732 to 1734. In the Guarani missions alone 30,000 people died. Epidemics continued to ravage the region until the early 1740s,

and food shortages followed.22 These events caused great dislocations in Guaycuruan society,23 and help explain why Abipones and Mocobies con- curred in a peace treaty with Santa Fe in 173424 and why they observed it. Another explanation was that Guaycuruan society was beginning to unravel.

By the 1730s, the Abipones' and Mocobies' aboriginal ways were radi- cally altered by Spanish influences, and their cultural patterns distorted by dependence on Spanish society. Their society was losing cohesion. The booty-based economy had created rising Guaycuruan ambitions, which caused more peaceful contacts, as caciques visited Santa Fe.25 Status dis- tinctions among men were now important. Spanish artifacts were now economic necessities, and Spanish staffs, clothing, and jewelry to display rank, social necessities. The increased bartering of horses to Spaniards to acquire these goods, however, caused a decline in Guaycuruan wealth and a diminished military capability. Chaquefio dependence on Spanish so- ciety had been an antagonistic one, but it was dependence nevertheless. Cattle, now Guaycuruans' most important source of food and a major trade item, were increasingly domesticated. Moreover, intertribal strife had reached intolerable levels. Guaycuruan tribes were achieving maxi- mum territorial limits; the formerly loosely defined hunting areas in the Chaco became limited by true frontiers.26

Uniform hostility to Spanish society was finished. Guaycuruan tribes were dividing politically. Peace parties in each tribe now sought amicable

21. Petici6n del procurador general al cabildo, Apr. 26, 1732; Acuerdo del cabildo; P. Ignacio Perez, S. J., al cabildo, all in ibid.

22. Informe del obispo de Buenos Aires al rey, Buenos Aires, Jan. 8, 1743; Vol. 79, pp. 183- 192; Pastells Collection, Knights of Columbus Vatican Film Library. St. Louis Uni- versity, St. Louis, Missouri.

23. Dobrizhoffer, Abipones, II, 240-246. 24. Nellar, ed., Polftica seguida con el aborigen, I, 123.

25. Paucke, Hacia all, II, 5-6. 26. Susnik, El indio colonial, III- I, 52-67.

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relations with chosen Spanish localities, like Santa Fe, while reserving the right-which Santafecinos tacitly recognized to raid elsewhere. War party advocates protested that such a relationship would rob them of opportunities to demonstrate their valor and would steal their manhood.27

Many Abipones and Mocobies began requesting missions, where they settled and renounced attacks on Santa Fe. They now reserved their ag- gression for other Spanish provinces and for intertribal and intratribal warfare.28 The first rupture occurred in 1741-43, when a group of Mocobies, represented by their cacique, Ariacaiquin, agreed to live in peace with Santa Fe and to stay in the reduction of San Javier, ultimately located about 40 leagues north of Santa Fe. Five years later, led by Ychamenraikin, the plains-dwelling Riikahes, one of three Abipon sub- tribes, did the same, settling at the mission of San Jeronimo del Rey,29 38 leagues north of the Mocobi mission. Jesuits were chosen to head the missions because of their influence in local politics. In Santa Fe, they were favored by the cabildo.30

Why did the Guaycuruans begin their fifty-year quest for missions? They principally wanted a more secure existence, and a mission ensured subsistence. Social and economic changes meant that their military capac- ity was diminished; they wanted peace. A mission symbolized the ratifica- tion of peace with Spaniards. Moreover, because Guaycuruan and Span- ish societies feared one another, they each lacked an understanding of the other culture. Guaycuruans sought missionary priests to act as intermedi- aries with the Spanish world.3'

The Indians' most immediate short-term goal was access to cattle. For decades before the 1740s, their increasing dependence on cattle produced gradual changes in their way of life. As late as 1700, the plains of the north-

27. Ibid., pp. 66-69. Some historians cite other reasons why GCuaycuruians chose mis- sionls. These factors include anti-chaqueflo military efforts from Tucumdrn, Mocobi and Abip6n failure to destroy Santa Fe, and of course the preaching of the Jesuits; Manluel M. Cervera, Historia de la ciudad y provinicia de Santa Fe, 1573- 1853, 2 vols. (Santa Fe, 1907), I, 505; Caraman, Lost Paradise, p. 195.

28. Dobrizhoffer, Abipones, II, 96. 29. Paucke, Hacia alla, II, 3-12; Furlong, Entre los inocobies, p. 17; Dobrizhoffer,

Abipones, II, 95-96. Elsewhere on the Chaco periphery the process was the same. In 1748-49, the Nakaiketergeh6s Abipones agreed to the Concepci6n mission of Sanltiago del Estero. Inl 1750, the Yaaucaniga Abipones agreed to a mission at San Fernlando near Cor- rientes. More Jesuit-Guaycuruan missions followed. In 1756 the Toba missionl of San Ignlacio de Ledesma in Tucuiann was founded, followed in 1763 by the Abip6n mission of Rosario del Timb6 in Paraguay, and in 1765 by the Mocobf reduction of the San Pedro de Espfn (Santa Fe); Dobrizhoffer, Abipones, II, 95-96; Nellar, ed., Politica seguida con el aborigen, II, 303, Canals Frau, Las poblaciones indigenas, p. 316.

30. Guillermo Furlong, S. J., Entre los Abipones del Chaco . . . (Buleos Aires, 1938), p. 98.

31. Susn-ik, El indio colonial, III-i, 68-69, 78, go.

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ern Plata region were covered with wild animals, and Guaycuruans easily acquired them for food and hides, which they bartered to whites. Uncon- trolled exploitation, however, "being continued for a whole century, ex- hausted almost all the plains of wild cattle."32 Most animals were now protected by Spanish hands, and their acquisition by Guaycuruans was increasingly difficult. Mission life promised the Indians easier access to cattle.

Guaycuruan requests for missions were also part of a larger phenome- non, the gradual crumbling of the barriers between the two cultures. By the 1730s, Guaycuruan bands included renegade whites, "espaiioles de mal vivir."33 In the 1740s, Mocobies were doing wage work for Span- iards.34 When a group of Abipones in the 1740S asked Santiago del Estero officials for a mission, one adviser was Cristobal Almaraz, a Spaniard cap- tured as a boy who had become a leader in Abipon society. Almaraz later returned to the Spanish world and practiced folk medicine among "the lower order of Spaniards."35 In the missions, Abipon women returned from captivity among Spaniards caused great trouble for Jesuits by warn- ing against baptism and for abandonment of the mission experiment.36 Around 1780, Jose Ramon Quiroga, a Santafecino of good family, left his wife to live with an Abipon woman at San Jeronimo; there he was an ad- viser to Cacique Miguel Benavides.37

From establishment to exile, results of the Jesuits' efforts in the Guaycuruan missions were mixed. Bolton's classic article38 delineates mis- sionary aims, and Evelyn Hu-DeHart's recent book39 on the Jesuits' Yaqui missions in northwestern Mexico identifies a number of the Society's ob- jectives, identical to those in the Chaco. The initial goal was to provide sufficient food to make life in missions more attractive to Indians than ab- original ways; thereafter economic security through self-sufficiency of the mission was sought. Jesuits proposed to abolish what they identified as heathen customs and to introduce Catholic ideas and practices through education. Paternalistically seeking to be "cultural brokers" between white and Indian worlds, they hoped to restrict Indians' contact with Spaniards. They never aimed at Indian assimilation into Hispanic society

32. Dobrizhoffer, Abipones, I, 218-222; Paucke Hacia all, II, 7. 33. Cervera, Santa Fe, I, 481. 34. Paucke, Hacia alld, II, 22.

35. Dobrizhoffer, Abipones, III, 213-215.

36. Ibid., pp. 217-218.

37. Dofla Maria Tomnasa de Umeres al virrey, Santa Fe, Aug. 22, 1781, AGN, IX, 4-1-6; Melchor de Echagiie al virrey, ibid.

38. Herbert E. Bolton, "The Missioni as a Fron-tier Institution in the Spanish American Colonies," American Historical Review, 23: 1 (1917), 42-61.

39. Evelyn Hu-DeHart, Missionaries, Miners, anid Indians; Spanish Contact with the Yaquti Nation of Northwestern New Spain, 1533-1820 (Tucson, 1981).

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and failed to place widespread instruction in the Spanish language on their agenda.40

Although the Platine Jesuits' long-range objective was to make Guaycu- ruans model Christians, the fathers initially concentrated on economic and social matters. Their first task was to see that Guaycuruans traded their vagabond ways for fixed residences in villages.4' Next they tried to convince Guaycuruans to renounce military exploits against Christians and Guaycuruans alike.42 Indians were supposed to adopt Hispanic dress to symbolize their acceptance of new customs. They were lectured about the evils of rustling cattle.43 A further Jesuit aim was to abolish shamanism, symbolized by ceremonies the Jesuits thought "ridiculous," including singing and dancing at funerals and the ritual curing of the sick.44 Jesuits especially hoped to eliminate the drunken festivals at which Guaycuruan men celebrated important events. Efforts were made to convince Guay- curuans to accept the communal economic and social practices that Jesuits had instituted elsewhere. The priests tried to prevent contact between Guaycuruans and all Spaniards except those approved by the mission- aries.43 Instruction in the faith was a long-term chore, and the sacraments were introduced gradually.

Some clerical efforts were more successful than others, and those that succeeded did so usually because Indians welcomed them. Priestly at- tempts to abolish shamanism were so successful that Mocobi hechiceros tried to cast a death spell on Father Paucke.46 The reduced status of shamans, however, was probably more a result of the efforts of caciques, who were also competing for influence. Mission Indians readily accepted Spanish modes of dress and the small houses built for them. Mocobies seem to have accepted communal practices more readily than Abipones; but even the former grumbled when the priest of San Javier ordered that every six families must eat only one cow a week and bring the hide to him, and at least six private Indian estancias supplemented the village's com- munal herd.47

Abipones were truly interested in private economic initiatives. Abipon leader Ychoalay sought personal profit; "he shunned no labour conducive to his own advantage," and became a prudent estanciero.48 Other Abipones

40. Ibid., pp. 3-4, 25-39.

41. Paucke, Hacia alld, II, 23. Jos6 Cardiel, "Carta y relaci6n de las misiones de la provincia del Paraguay (1747)," pp. 115-213, of Guillermo Furlong [Cardiff], S. J., Jose Cardiel, S. J. y su Carta-Relaci6n (1747) (Buenos Aires, 1953), p. 194.

42. Ibid., pp. 192, 194.

43. Dobrizhoffer, Abipones, III, 397. 44. Cardiel "Carta y relaci6n" p. 193. 45. Paucke, Hacia alld, II, 69, 87-88. 46. Ibid., pp. 250-251.

47. Ibid., p. 33, and passim. 48. Dobrizhoffer, Abipones, III, 151, i6o.

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THE GUAYCURUAN REDUCTION, 1743-1810 503

demanded that missionaries pay them wages.49 In 1759, Abipon Cacique Laberequin's personal estancia contained io,ooo head of cattle.30

New arrivals from the Chaco reinforced old habits;5' and Indian drinking rituals survived. Preventing frequent and unsettling Spanish- Guaycuruan contacts was difficult. Spaniards told Mocobies that if they caused no trouble, they could live however they pleased, and the mission- aries would still feed them.52 The attempt at cultural separation was im- possible. Mocobies brought Spanish captives fluent in both langauges to San Javier, and they contributed influences of which Jesuits disapproved. One Argentine anthropologist says that most Guaycuruans resisted assimi- lation into the creole population and remained outside missions.3 This needs revision. The fact is that the priests' goal was to prevent con- tact with Spaniards, especially the "lower orders," who corrupted the

54 Indians. Despite these efforts, however, communication between Spanish and

Guaycuruan communities was frequent even while the Jesuits were in charge. The first Mocobies to request missions worked for Spaniards as agriculturalists, shepherds, and hunters of wild horses. Additionally, a goodly number of Mocobies and Abipones came to live in missions at one time or another.:6

Initially, the Jesuits devoted their major efforts to assuring the mis- sions a stable economic base. They maintained great cattle herds. Con- vincing Abipones and Mocobies to work their fields communally was diffi- cult; many preferred working for Spaniards for wages. Others had for centuries scorned "corn eaters," thinking their old life superior. Jesuits thus brought Guaranis to serve as an example and hired Spanish foremen to supervise livestock on the missions' estancias. Influential Guaycuruans were initially reluctant to give up other traditional practices. Infanticide was a major challenge. Polygamy, permitted mostly for chiefs, and easy divorce were other problems. Young women often welcomed the Jesuit effort to promote a cultural revolution from above for the added security

49. Ibid., p. 157. 50. Alcalde ordinario Gabriel de Lazaga, Informe de las reducciones del tiempo de la

expulsi6n de los ex-Jesuitas, Santa Fe, Oct. 6, 1785; AGN, IX, 4-1-6. 51. Paucke, Hacia alli, II, 69. 52. Ibid., p. 86. 53. Canals Frau, Las poblaciones indigenas, p. 316. 54. Paucke, Hacia all, II, 21, 39. Quarantine of the Chaco reductions was impossible.

Too many people, Guaycuruans and Spanish and Portuguese traders, sought the mutually beneficial exchange of cattle hides and horses on the hoof for Spanish artifacts. Moreover, a number of Spaniards, including captives, foremen, and others, lived in the missions.

55. Paucke, Hacia alla, II, 22.

56. Greater numbers of Tobas and Mocobies resisted settling in missions. In 1763-65 all Abipones were in one or another of the four reductions; Dobrizhoffer, Abipones, III, 194-201.

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504 HAHR I AUGUST I JAMES SCHOFIELD SAEGER

it gave them, but most young men and those older women and men who acted as shamans resisted strongly. It reduced the comforts of the one group and the wealth and influence of the other.57 Men had trouble ad- justing to the grueling hours of the agriculturalist. For centuries their ac- tivities were limited to hunting, fishing, warfare, and, lately, raiding for cattle and horses. Women and captives performed domestic and industrial activities.58 Men, therefore, had much time to devote to seeking pleasure and for hunting and combat. In time, however, Mocobi men became adept at making bricks and candles and learned to be good carpenters and smiths, while women made textiles to sell to Spaniards.59

That the missions never achieved economic self-sufficiency, however, also resulted from the Guaycuruans' continuing combat60 and their al- legedly indiscriminate consumption of cattle.61 Guaycuruan groups within and outside of mission society allied for raids on livestock or for warfare. These alliances were brief and seldom prevented former friends from becoming future enemies. Abipones from San Jeronimo continued to fight other Abipones for reasons ethnic, familial, and personal, as they had for years. At the same time, they fought Mocobies and Spaniards in areas other than Santa Fe.62 Internecine disputes also characterized Mocobi life.63

Jesuits were not alone in wishing the success of the new reductions. Royal officials and settlers in Santa Fe and Corrientes contributed to the foundation of the Guaycuruan missions. They donated tools and labor for the construction of chapels and dwellings for the priests. In a five-year period in the 1740s, Santafecinos later recalled, they spent 28,ooo pesos to purchase cattle for the new settlements. Often they helped militarily, trying to protect Guaycuruans in missions from raids of others in the Chaco and also from rivals in other missions.64

After a time, aid from civil society dwindled. Subventions for the

57. Paucke, Hacia all, II, 20; Dobrizhoffer, Abipones, II, 64-67, 76-80. 58. Serr-ano, Los primnitivos habitantes, pp. 111- 112.

59. Paucke, Hacia all, II, 51-54, 269-274.

6o. The Abipones, Dobrizhoffer observed, "though bound by ties of consanguinity an-d friendship, impatient of the smallest in-jury . . . eagerly seize any occasion- of war, an-d fre- quently weaken- each other with mutual slaughter." Abipones, II, 96.

6i. Mission-aries said Indians' herds dwinidled because they preferred eating tenlder cows meat to that of steers and bulls. A more likely explanation, however, is that they tried to satisfy the demands of the hides market.

62. The viceroy of Peru was told that Jesuit Abipones were still causing trouble by at- tacking cart trains between San-ta Fe and Santiago del Estero. Iniforme de donl Manuel de Castro al virrey sobre . . . los Indios del Chaco, Lima, Oct. 25, 1766; Man-uel Gondra Col- lection (hereinafter CMG), University of Texas, Cal. 1255.

63. Paucke, Hacia alli, II, 35-37. 64. Gabriel de Lazaga al superindente general, Santa Fe, Oct. 6, 1785, AGN, IX,

4-1-6.

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THE GUAYCURUAN REDUCTION, 1743-1810 505

Chaco missions came increasingly from the profits of the Jesuits' flourish- ing Guarani enterprises. Santafecinos delivered only a fraction of the cattle pledged to the San Javier mission. Thereafter, Jesuit subsidies ranged from 500 to 3,000 pesos annually. 65 Jesuits criticized Spaniards for their lack of charity, but Santafecinos knew that the Guarani missions were profitable ventures, superior in organization and management to those of most vecinos north of Buenos Aires.66 Surplus from the Guarani missions contributed to the Jesuits' putatively greater success with the Guaycuruan missions than that of the lay administrators and Franciscans and Mercedarians after 1767.

Some Jesuit and Guaycuruan perceptions of Spanish attitudes toward the Chaco missions were accurate. Not only did Santafecinos fail to endow the San Javier mission generously, Mocobies and missionaries complained, but they also harbored murderous intentions. Spaniards, Paucke said, were unconcerned with the saving of Guaycuruan souls. Mostly they wished to see them kill each other.67 The criticism is overstated, but not totally inaccurate.

Spaniards in Santa Fe knew their chief benefit from the Chaco missions was increased security. When Guaycuruans raided other Guaycuruans for livestock and captives, they often spared Spanish possessions. It was natu- ral for Abipones, Mocobies, and Tobas to attack each other. Their inter- tribal, intratribal, and personal animosities retained their cultural signifi- cance, as did their warrior ethos. Guaycuruans got the benefits of profits and prestige from raiding other Guaycuruans and few of the disadvan- tages that followed an attack on Spanish properties. Guaycuruans, more- over, understood each other; they knew how the game of war was played. Combat usually brought death, no matter who fought whom; but when they fought each other, bloodshed was limited. After a few deaths, the fighting was broken off. Sometimes combat was even unnecessary; a show of bravado sufficed. Fighting Europeans, who played by different rules, was another matter. Although the eighteenth century was a century of "limited war," this was seldom true in America and never true when Eu- ropeans fought Indians.68 As best they could, Spaniards conducted wars of annihilation.

The primary military contribution of the Chaco missions to Spanish society was passive. They deflected other marauding Guaycuruans from

65. Paucke, Hacia alla, II, 32-81; Cardiel, "Carta y Relaci6n," p. 198. 66. Alistair Hennessy, The Frontier in Latin Amnerican History (Albuquerquie, 1978),

P. 57. 67. Paucke, Hacia alld, II, 37, 22.

68. T. Harry Williai-ms, A History of American Wars from 1745 to 1918 (New York, 1981), pp. 10- 12; Walter Millis, Arms anid Men: A Sttudy in American Military History (New Brunswick, N.J., 1981), pp. 13-22.

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506 HAHR I AUGUST I JAMES SCHOFIELD SAEGER

attacks on Spanish persons and property. Additionally, however, warriors from San Javier and San Jeronimo rendered active service. Since Mocobi strength at times rose above 500 men at arms, this was a major addition to the region's military. In Paucke's eighteen years at San Javier, men from the mission went on expeditions alone and with Spaniards thirty-five times and made significant contributions, especially as scouts.69

Mission Mocobies still welcomed combat. Spaniards marveled at the quickness with which they could kill and decapitate an enemy. After one Abipon rustling expedition, thirty San Javier Mocobies a month were then posted to reinforce the Spanish picket. On another occasion, during a period of confederation of "savage" Mocobies with Tobas, Paucke de- tailed twenty men from San Javier to escort a cart train, and the mission Mocobies drove off a group of raiders, killing and beheading two.70 The appreciative merchant paid them seven pesos apiece for their services.7'

Increased security to Santa Fe resulting from the Guaycuruan mis- sions was evident in other ways. Estancieros hired Abipon "Cacique" Ychoalay (later known as Jose Benavides) to recover horses stolen by Con- cepcion Abipones, who were mostly rival Nakaiketergehes. The theft of cattle and horses declined, and the frontier was safer, both during the pe- riod of Jesuit tutelage and afterwards.72

When the Jesuits were expelled, mission life changed but not as dras- tically as many readers of Jesuit accounts have assumed. Many historians have concluded from Jesuit assertions that Guaycuruans returned to "sav- agery" that this represented a real departure. In fact, as careful readers can see from Dobrizhoffer's and Paucke's chronicles, Guaycuruan habits changed only a little under Jesuit tutelage. Changes in Guaycuruan cul- ture resulting from Spanish influences preceded Jesuit missions by two centuries and would continue to the present. The Jesuit mission experi- ment was but one stage in the process.

Into the 176os, Abipones of San Jeronimo and Mocobies of San Javier and of the new mission of San Pedro (founded 1765) still came and went mostly as they pleased. They used reductions as headquarters but fought with each other and raided into Paraguay and Santiago del Estero, gener- ally restraining themselves from raiding Santa Fe directly.

The expulsion shocked the departing missionaries, but after minor disturbances, the three towns remained in place to the end of the colonial

69. Paucke, Hacia alla, II, 297-302. Informe del cabildo al virrey, Santa Fe, Mar. 25, 1778; AGN, IX, 31-3-5.

70. Paucke, Hacia alla, pp. 297-302. Nicolas Patr6n al gobernador, Corrientes, Feb. 8, 1758; AGN, IX, 3-3-6; Jos6 de Acosta al gobernador, Corrientes, Jan. 8, 1759, ibid.

71. Ibid. 72. Dobrizhoffer, Abipones, III, 256-257, 403-410; Iniforme del cabildo al virrey,

Santa Fe, Mar. 25, 1778; AGN, IX, 31-3-5.

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THE GUAYCURUAN REDUCTION, 1743-1810 507

period. The chief result of the expulsion was that the Jesuit subsidies to the Guaycuruan pueblos stopped. Franciscans and Mercedarians now headed the missions. Since most Spaniards were less willing to under- write them than the Jesuits had been, Mocobi and Abipon residents in- tensified their quarrels with each other in times of need. Nevertheless, the Guaycuruan towns were so beneficial that these disputes troubled Santafecinos deeply. The frontier was now safer than before, and no one wished a return of hostilities.

The most serious problem was Abipon-Mocobi enmity. Many Santa- fecinos believed that the residents of San Jeronimo were the aggressors. Most were still, at best, lukewarm Christians, "enjoying the libertinism of their heathen customs."73 This was unsettling, especially in view of the continuing Abipon military potential, 500 warriors. They were insubordi- nate to their new clerical counselors in matters of religion and to their lay administrators in mundane affairs. They traveled to Santa Fe as they wished for pleasure and profit. And they hated the Mocobies of San Javier and San Pedro.74

Two events of 1775-76 sparked a new Abipon-Mocobi war, which lasted from 1777 to 1782. The first was the killing of Mocobi chief Paiquin by Abipones.75 The second was the pro-Mocobi policy of Santa Fe's new teniente, Melchor de Echagiie y Andia (served 1776-92). Hostilities between Abipon and Mocobi pueblos were exacerbated by "infidel" Mocobies from the Bermejo, who often visited San Javier and San Pedro. The year 1778 began with a Mocobi raid on San Jeronimo for livestock and revenge. Soon hostilities expanded, and a Chaco confederation of Mocobies, Tobas, and Lenguas laid siege to San Jeronimo. This brought troops from Santa Fe to the rescue, and they drove off the besiegers.76

The problems were, of course, the long-standing Abipon-Mocobi enmity and values arising from the Chaquefio cultural complex. Each raid gave its victims an excuse for reprisal. The designations "Infidel" and "Christian" were meaningless. The Abipones of San Jeronimo knew the Chaco Mocobies were in regular contact with their relatives in the two rival pueblos.77

Santa Fe officials could propose only a military, not a cultural, solu- tion. The viceroy must build another fort, near San Jeronimo, and pay for soldiers to man it. Abipones could then serve as scouts. Should the

73. Informe del cabildo al virrey, Santa Fe, Mar. 25, 1778; AGN, IX, 31-3-5. 74. Ibid. 75. Juan Francisco de la Riva Herrera a Juan Jose de Wrtiz, Santa Fe, Apr. 3, 1775;

AGN, IX, 4-1-5. 76. Informe del cabildo al virrey, Santa Fe, Mar. 25, 1778; AGN, IX, 31-3-5. 77. Ibid.

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508 HAHR I AUGUST I JAMES SCHOFIELD SAEGER

Abipones prove troublesome, their rivals, the mission Mocobies, were on hand to right the balance. The major problem was finance. If the viceroy could find the necessary funds, the missions would become "opulent and peaceful."78

By the spring of 1779, Teniente Echagiie faced another problem. Abipones had left San Jeronimo and attacked people from San Pedro. Mocobies spread a rumor that Abipones carried off seventy. Three days later worse news came from the frontier. Father Julian de Obelar reported a massacre. Obelar wished to retrieve the bodies for a Christian burial, but Mocobies dissuaded him. They warned that the Abipones were likely to strike again.80

Echagiie reasoned that he would have to make a major effort. Surely, he thought, the Abipones were culpable and must be punished. Their 400 warriors had firearms and could put the Spanish force at risk. No one, Echagiie observed, wanted to see a return of the Indian menace."8 Echagiie identified the real issue as Spaniards saw it: the potential danger to His- panic society posed by the Guaycuruans' fighting each other. Indians fighting Indians was tolerable, if kept within bounds; the problem was to keep it restricted to Indian society.

In Buenos Aires, Viceroy Juan Jose de Vertiz was aware of the prob- lem. He knew that if the three Guaycuruan pueblos disappeared, Santa Fe would again be endangered. The villages currently safeguarded Santa Fe from Guaycuruans still in the Chaco. Officials in Buenos Aires never- theless advised prudence. Were the "natives" prepared to resist Spanish authority? If not, chastisement might be counterproductive. Peaceful efforts should come first. But the instigators of the bloody business with the Mocobies should go to Buenos Aires. The rest should get off with a warning. If Abipones threatened Spaniards, the teniente could treat them as "apostates and rebels" and subdue them by force. These gestures, Ver- tiz hoped, would keep the Indians in their village.82

When Echagiie's force of 430 reached San Jeronimo, they found 300 Abipones arrayed for battle. They did not want to fight Spaniards, they said; their fear was that Echagiie's force included Mocobies, "from whom they expected no quarter." Assuring them that they had nothing to fear, Echague demanded that they return to their homes. Even less willing

78. Ibid. 79. Melchor de Echagiue y Andia al virrey, Santa Fe, Oct. 9, 1779; AGN, IX, 31-3-5. 8o. Echaguie al virrey, Santa Fe, Oct. 12, 1779, ibid. 8i. Ibid. 82. Dictamen fiscal, Buenos Aires, May 5, 1778; Fiscal Pacheco al virrey, October 19,

1779; Providencia del virrey, October 20, 1779, all in ibid.

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THE GUAYCURUAN REDUCTION, 1743-1810 509

now after thirty years of mission life to fight a Spanish army than in the old days, they complied.83

Echagiie then investigated the recent Abipon-Mocobi dispute and learned that early reports were exaggerated. The clash with the San Pedro Mocobies was only a reprisal for an earlier Mocobi attack. The culprits were Christians from San Pedro.84

The San Jeronimo Abipones' condition was pitiful. They were afraid to leave the village individually. Their livestock was dispersed in the countryside. Fear of Mocobies prevented them from tilling their fields. Thus they survived on the fruits of war. They stole livestock and sent horses and hides to Corrientes and Santiago del Estero. Echagiie found proof. He had just apprehended Luis Pavon, a Portuguese merchant, and his hide-laden raft. Even as Echaguie was talking to the Abipones, five traders from Santiago del Estero arrived with ponchos to trade for stolen horses and mules.85

Besides problems with mission Guaycuruans, Echagiue faced the problem of war-party Chaqueflos, especially Tobas and some Mocobies. Their detestation of Spaniards had caused them to refuse missions.86 Nevertheless, they benefited from the Guaycuruan settlements without living in them. They traded and stayed with some village Indians and peri- odically raided others. Around 1780, many even of those Guaycuruans heretofore reluctant to show submission to Spanish authority were re- questing reductions.87

Meanwhile Echagiie posted soldiers at San Pedro to deter Indians from killing other Indians and to obstruct the activities of traders like Pavon. The illegal economic network among Chaquefios, mission In- dians, Platine merchants, and eventually buyers in Europe was especially troubling to Spanish authorites,88 at least to those who failed to profit.

83. Junta de guerra, Paraje del Arroyo Rab6n, Nov. 24, 1779; Echaguie al virrey, Santa Fe, Dec. 6, 1779, both in ibid.

84. Ibid. 85. Ibid. 86. As late as 1912, Tobas in Argentina and Bolivia had "an implacable hatred against the

whites. ... Rafael Karsten, The Toba Indians of the Bolivian Gran Chaco (Oosterhout, N.B., The Netherlands, 1967), p. 12.

87. See "Diarios" of Juan Adrian Fernandez Cornejo, Francisco Gavino Arias, and Ger6nimo Matorras in Pedro de Angelis, ed., Colecci6n de obras y documentos relativos a la historia antigua y moderna de las provincias del Rio de la Plata, 6 vols. (Buenos Aires, 1836-37), VI, passim; and Diarios ejecutados a los paises del Gran Chaco en . . . 1776- 1781 por el Reverendo Padre Prior del Orden Serafico Fr. Antonio Lapa, Reducci6n de Macapillo, Nov. 23, 1776, and May 30, 1781, CMG; Cal. 1676.

88. Echagfie al virrey, Santa Fe, Dec. 6, 1779, AGN, 31-3-5; Respuesta del abogado fiscal Dr. Pacheco al virrey, Buenos Aires, June 20, 1780; Otro del fiscal, Buenos Aires (n.d.), both in ibid.

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510 HAHR I AUGUST I JAMES SCHOFIELD SAEGER

Hostilities among Guaycuruans continued into the next year, and Echagiue still worried. Until now, the Mocobies had obeyed his orders. (Since they attacked the Abipones so often, one wonders what these or- ders were.) Now their mood was rebellious, and the teniente feared a re- turn to the period when the city of Santa Fe was exposed.89

In May 1780, as the situation deteriorated, the anti-Abipon admin- istrator of Santa Fe's Guaycuruan pueblos, Jose Tarragona, added his voice to the protest. A Mocobi partisan, Tarragona warned that San Pedro could disappear if the "civil war" between Abipones and Mocobies continued. Only i6o head of cattle and no horses remained there, and these animals were too unruly to handle, which was why the Abipones had left them. Without horses, he warned, Mocobies could not get to the feral cattle even for food, although the exploitation of hides was probably Tarragona's real concern. A hundred people had already left San Pedro, and this, Tarragona cautioned, was an invitation to renewed Abipon attacks on Spaniards. San Javier was seemingly better off, still possessing cattle, but their presence was deceptive. The Indians had no horses with which to exploit the bovine potential. Tarragona's anti-Abipon bias was not so great as to cause him to fail to point out that the Mocobies still had 2,000 mares. He maliciously reported that the destitution of the Mocobies was a result of their friendship with Spaniards. For thirty-six years they had killed no one, robbed no estancias. This stood in dramatic contrast to the behavior of the Abipones, who had raided a cart train, harried woodcutters, and robbed estancias. But Tarragona failed to reveal that these attacks oc- curred in 1758-62, and had no connection with San Jeronimo Riikahes Abipones. They were conducted by the Yaaukaniga Abipones of Co- rrientes's San Fernando reduction.90

Tarragona had a financial stake in the dispute, and his twisted tale laid the blame on the Abipones, whom he called "shameless and bold." Most had reaped the benefits of mission life for years and were still "infidels." Even the young, raised on the milk of Christianity, refused to respect their priest. (Since their priest spoke no Abipon, their behavior is some- what easier to understand.) Tarragona recommended that the Abipones be punished. 9'

Tarragona's partisanship for the Mocobies came from his involvement in the Indian trade and connections of ritual kinship; and Abipones dis- liked him. With a Mocobi godson, he profitted from his Mocobi connec-

89. Alonso de la Pefia al general Antonio Figuera; Rio del Valle, Jan. 19, 1780; Echagiie al virrey, Santa Fe, February 22, 1780, both in ibid.

go. Jose Tarragona al teniente Echagiue, Santa Fe, June 4, 1780; Diputados de Santa Fe al virrey, Buenos Aires, Oct. 2, 1780, both in ibid.

91. Tarragona a Echagiie, Santa Fe, June 4, 1780, ibid.

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THE GUAYCURUAN REDUCTION, 1743-1810 511

tions and thus had problems with Abipones. Cacique Miguel Jeronimo Benavides, son of Ychoalay and now corregidor of San Jeronimo, soon traveled downriver to complain to the viceroy about Tarragona specifically and Spanish paternalism generally. Don Miguel Jeronimo pointed out that Tarragona was in partnership in the exploitation of hides with the people of San Javier and San Pedro, and the Abipon spokesman wanted the connec- tion broken. In addition, the Abipones wanted to conduct their business affairs without the intervention of bureaucrats. Benavides said:

we feel ourselves capable of trading and trafficking by ourselves; and our goods are acquired by our own industry and continual labor and not by the aid and counsel of the Administrator and Protector; and our goods and persons being free, it is also cer- tain that we in our liberty are not in an inferior condition to the Spaniards. 92

Benavides said that Spanish merchants who chose to trade with Abi- pones should be allowed to enter his village without restriction. Competi- tion among many merchants would benefit Abipones, who were capable of distinguishing honest merchants from crooks. The worst crook of all was Tarragona, who had taken 30,ooo head of Abipon cattle in exchange for putrid yerba, a few dozen buttons, and some defective knives.93

Nevertheless, Echagiie, whose family was also tied by ritual kinship to the Mocobies, seconded Tarragona's doleful and misleading report. For fif- teen years San Pedro had helped guard Santa Fe from Indian attacks. The pueblo's extinction would invite Abipones to rob and kill Spaniards. Should the Abipones and Mocobies decide to rebel, they could raise a force larger than Santa Fe's. Till now, Mocobies had helped contain Abipones, but this defense might be passing away.94

The loyalty of well-placed Santafecinos was for the moment clear. The Mocobies were "faithful." Abipones were the "enemy," "people of heathen customs and depraved inclinations." The Mocobi settlement had forced Abipones to stop raiding Santa Fe, giving citizens a rest and allowing them to push the frontier farther north and west. The current Abipon-Mocobi war was about to revive old problems. Santa Fe's spokesman warned that as the Mocobi pueblos protected Santa Fe from Chaco hostiles, so did Santa Fe perform this same function for Buenos Aires.95

The Abipon champion was Mercedarian friar Father Blas Brite, who reported that the situation in San Jeronimo was as dismal as in the Mocobi

92. Relaci6n de don Miguel Ger6nimo Venavides al virrey, Montevideo, n.d. (1781); AGN, IX, 4-1-1.

93. Ibid. 94. Echague al virrey, Santa Fe, June 6, 1778; AGN, IX, 31-3-5. 95. Diputados de Santa Fe al virrey, Buenos Aires, Oct. 2, 1780, ibid.

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512 HAHR I AUGUST I JAMES SCHOFIELD SAEGER

villages. During the past ten years, Abipones had fought Mocobies, both "Christians" in the villages and Chaco infidels with whom they were al- lied. Loss of cattle and horses meant Abipones hungered. To eat they had to hunt, and they had no mounts. Brite himself was suffering; he had not received his annual stipend in three years and had to beg for a horse to ride to Santa Fe. Like the Mocobies, San Jeronimo Abipones threatened to return to the Chaco. People in San Jeronimo were "crazy with hun- ger."96 Much of this alleged suffering was real. Some claims, however, were probably exaggerated, resulting from Guaycuruans' ability to exploit Spanish fear of them.97 The Indians survived as best they could. In April 1782, about sixty Guaycuruans98 encountered a Dominican traveling to Santa Fe from Cordoba. They intended to kill him but changed their minds when they discovered his calling. Still they relieved him of three silver pesos, his poncho, yerba, and tobacco and sent him on his way.99

In 1782-83, colonial officials worked out a temporary expedient for the Indian problem on the frontier. Teniente Echaguie again went to San Jeronimo with priests, corregidores and principal caciques of Mocobi towns, and a few "infidel" Mocobi caciques. He delivered cattle to the Indians. All parties then agreed to keep the peace. Apparently they were exhausted from the hostilities of the last few years. Echaguie saw that intransigent Chaco Mocobies would be a continuing problem; but the agreement lowered hostilities among the three Guaycuruan pueblos to tolerable levels,'00 or levels at any rate tolerable to Spanish society.

Any peace, however temporary, was helpful, because the last forty years of the colonial period saw the continuing hispanization of the people in the three villages. Evidence of this process is fragmentary but con- vincing. The career of Ychoalay (Jose Benavides) is instructive. Though not a cacique, "he was born of a most honourable family amongst the Riikahes...." After an early treaty between Santa Fe and his people, Ychoalay moved to Santa Fe. There he worked breaking horses and took "the name of his master Benavides."''l Rejecting Catholicism, Ychoalay nevertheless took what he wanted from Spanish culture. He learned Spanish, became a drover, and worked in Chile and Mendoza. Later he returned to Santa Fe. After a quarrel with his employer over wages, he rejoined his people as a war leader. He was instrumental in the founding

96. P. Fr. Blas Brite al teniente de Santa Fe, Santa Fe, n.d. [1781]; Brite a Echagiie; San Jer6nimo, Sept. 1782, both in ibid.

97. Susnik, El indio colonial, III- 1, 89. 98. Their tribal designation is uinclear. 99. Echagiie al virrey, Santa Fe, Apr. 29, 1782; AGN, IX, 4-1-6. 100. Echagiie al virrey, Sainta Fe, Mar. 6, 1783; Echagiie al vir-rey, Santa Fe, Apr. 14,

1783; Echagiue al virrey, Santa Fe, June 6, 1783, all in ibid. 101. Dobrizhoffer, Abipones, III, 143.

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of San Jeronimo. Afterwards he respected Spanish people and property around Santa Fe, though not elsewhere. In the 176os, he plundered the new Abipon reduction of Rosario near Asuncion and ranches in eastern Paraguay. Living much of the year in San Jeronimo, he worked his own estancia. '02

Other Abipones, too, were integrating into Spanish society. In 1768-69 the Yaaukaniga Abipones of the San Fernando mission escorted cattle drives from Corrientes to Asuncion.'03 In 1778 the Riikahes Abi- pones were in Corrientes to sell livestock, stolen from Mocobies. 114 In the 1790S San Fernando Abipones were even tilling the soil with acceptable results and building their dwellings after the Spanish fashion.'05 By 1803

Abipones of San Jeronimo kept leaving their pueblo, not to return to the Chaco, but to work on Spanish estancias.'06 In the same year Abipones formed a company of the Corrientes militia. Eighty were infantrymen armed with muskets, though 150 more were serving more traditionally, as mounted lancers.'07 The most important way Guaycuruans were becom- ing a part of Platine society, however, was through miscegenation, as women especially went to the presidios in the Chaco and estancias and urban residences across the river as servant-concubines and bore their masters' children.

Abipon culture was stripped away gradually from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries. It was replaced selectively by those aspects of European culture the Abipones found beneficial. As Abipones, the In- dians never accepted the totality of Spanish society.'"8 Only when they physically moved into the Hispanic world to become members of the dark-skinned proletariat of the Upper Plata region did they become full participants, subordinate and servile. In Paraguay, Guaycuruans often

102. Ibid., pp. 143-147, 323-325. 103. Sebastian Casaju6s regidor de la ciudad de Corrientes al gober-nador, Buenos Aires,

Feb. 23, 1769; AGN, IX, 3-3-7. 104. The viceroy ordered this illegal activity stopped. Correntinos pretended it did nlot

exist. El virrey al teniente de Corrientes, Buenos Air-es, Oct. 13, 1778; Jos6 Poncianlo Rol6n al virrey, Corrientes, Oct. 27, 1778, both in ibid.

105. Poder sostituido en don Santiago Gutierrez para los siniodos de Fray Francisco Rodriguez, cura doctrinero de San Fernan-do de Abipones (1779); AGN, IX, 31-7-1.

1o6. Fr. Ram6n Redrado al virrey, Colegio de San Carlos, Auig. 11, 1803; AGN, IX, 31-3-6.

107. Thirty-two of these men, led by Captain- doll Juan Benavides, a descendan-t of Ychoalay, were from San Jer6ninio; Prudencio Maria de GastLfiaduv al virrey, Fr-ontei-a de Santa Fe, Mar. 11, 1803; AGN, IX, 4-2-4.

io8. In the early i86os the San Jer6niimo Abipones were still magnificenlt horsemen who wielded bolas and lances with great dexterity. They preferred to hunt and disdained agricultural labor. They felt little hostility to Argentine society and lived in a village with a brick church and school. Some dwellings were constructed like those of the rural lower- class of Santa Fe, others in an older-but not aboriginal-fashion. Paolo Mantegazza, Viages por el Rio de la Plata (Buenos Aires, 1916), pp. 263-267.

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514 HAHR I AUGUST I JAMES SCHOFIELD SAEGER

served Asuncefios as originarios, people formally in encomiendas but permanently attached to their masters.'09

For reasons only marginally connected with saving souls for Christ, the Spanish government at local levels supported the Guaycuruans' vil- lages enough to keep the residents remaining in them. Mostly they sup- plied cattle, horses, and clothing.0lo

At the end of the colonial period, Santa Fe was delivering a monthly ration of cattle to San Jeronimo. Clerics and laymen alike agreed the pueblo's security function was significant; it was a safeguard (antemuro) protecting Santa Fe and Corrientes from errant Chaquenos."' Support from local government never satisfied the Guaycuruans; but the pittance ensured the continued existence of their pueblos, which in turn protected Santa Fe.

Intertribal warfare continued to trouble Santa Fe. In early 1786, San Jeronimo Abipones again asked for help against Chaco Tobas and Moco- bies. When Echaguie contemplated sending a large punitive expedition against the offenders, the viceroy told him merely to promise an expedi- tion at a more convenient time."2 He did, however, approve a more lim- ited response, telling Echaguie to station twenty soldiers at the village. The viceroy's major concern was to keep the Abipones pacified by showing them that Spaniards had not abandoned them. The Spanish contingent that went to the missions in August of that year found nothing unusual. A couple of dozen San Pedro Mocobies had raided the Abipon estancia, but an Abipon force had retrieved the stolen livestock. 113

Two years later, the Abipones threatened a major step. Miguel Bena- vides wanted to move his village across the river where it could be more easily defended. His people were in want. An important hunt was ap- proaching, and they were again afoot because Chaco and mission Indians had just taken Abipon horses. Echagiie thought that San Jeronimo should remain at its present location. It was strategically important. A terse vice-

109. Dobrizhoffer, Abipones, II, 152; James Schofield Saeger, "Survival and Abolition; The Eighteenth Century Paraguayan Encomienda," The Americas, 38 (1981), 59-85.

110. Antonio Barrenechea al superintendente general Francisco Paula de Sanz, Santa Fe, Jan. 6, 1786; AGN, IX, 33-1-2; Gabriel de Lazaga al superintendente general, Santa Fe, Oct. 6, 1785; AGN, IX, 4-1-6.

.11. Fray Juan Ignacio Ayzpuru al teniente, San Jer6nimo, July 12, 1807; AGN, IX,

4-2-6; Gastainaduy al virrey, Santa Fe, Oct. 8, i8o8, ibid. 112. Echagiue al virrey, Santa Fe, Jan. 8, 1786; AGN, IX, 4-1-7; Echagiie al virrey,

Santa Fe, Mar. 25, 1786, ibid.; Respuesta del virrey al teniente de Santa Fe, Buenos Aires, Apr. 5, 1786; ibid; El virrey al teniente de Santa Fe, Buenos Aires, May 8, 1786; ibid.; Echa- guie al virrey, Santa Fe, Sept. 6, 1786, ibid.

113. Ibid.

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THE GUAYCURUAN REDUCTION, 1743-1810 515

regal order merely told Echaguie to give the Abipones enough material aid to keep San Jeronimo in place. 114

The pueblo's location was not negotiable. It was too important to the viceroyalty's northern defense to allow Abipones to live where they wished. The northern cordon of presidios and Indian villages never pro- vided a perfect defense, but the Guaycuruan villages served as magnets for Indian marauders from the Chaco. When the process of intertribal warfare was added to the changes in Guaycuruan culture and gradual in- corporation within Spanish society, the defenses were sufficient to allow an advance of Spanish settlement on the northern frontier. Were San Jeronimo to relocate or disappear, an avenue for Guaycuruan raids on Santa Fe would be reopened.115 This was probably an overestimation of current Guaycuruan military potential, but as late as 1821, Chaco Guaycuruans attacked Santa Fe and Santiago del Estero. 116

By the 1790s, Spaniards saw Abipones as a positive force. The sub- delegado of Santa Fe called the Abipon nation "the most faithful of all," a "noble and valiant people." Abipon incorporation into and contributions to Spanish society were not primarily results of guidance by their spiritual mentors; they sometimes had none. In 1795 Subdelegate Prudencio Maria de Gastafiaduy reported that San Jeronimo had been without a priest for eight years; he was taking his own chaplain there to baptize the young and administer last rites to the dying. 117

The Guaycuruan establishments were of significant benefit to His- panic society. They served as nuclei of northern expansion and as links in the chain of Spanish forts. Their main value lay not in their active military contribution, although the Guaycuruans periodically rendered such aid. Their value was as a military buffer between nonsedentary peoples still in the Chaco and the Spanish world.

To understand more clearly the Platine processes, we can contrast the Jesuits' Chaco reductions and their Yaqui missions. The differences are striking. The major difference was that in seventeenth-century Mexico, "Jesuits successfully established the Yaqui mission . . . ," and "the Yaqui people acquiesced in this directed cultural change . .118 In the Chaco, the Indians were the initiators of the missions. Around 1760 Mbaya's

114. Miguel Benavides a Echagiie, San Jer6nimo, Jan. 26, 1786; Manuel Garcia a Echagiue, San Jer6nimo, Jan. 26, 1786; Echaguie al virrey, Santa Fe, Feb. 6, 1788; El virrey al teniente de Santa Fe, Buenos Aires, Feb. 13, 1787, all in ibid.

115. Echagiie al virrey, Santa Fe, Feb. 6, 1788, ibid. ii6. Cervera, Santa Fe, II, 578-579. 117. Gastnfiaduy al virrey, Los Manantiales, June 5, 1793, AGN, IX, 30-5-2, exp. 11;

Gastnfiaduy al virrey, Santa Fe, July io, 1795; ibid. 118. Hu-DeHart, Missionaries, Miners, and Indians, pp. 39, 23.

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516 HAHR I AUGUST I JAMES SCHOFIELD SAEGER

asked Paraguayan governors for missions,"9 and in the 1770s, Tobas and Mocobies requested missions in Tucuman.'20 A determining influence was Guaycuruan culture. Many traditional customs survived. Guaycuruans re- tained martial attitudes, a military potential, and, thus, greater autonomy.

Another factor was the difference between the Spanish secular soci- eties of seventeenth-century northwestern New Spain and the eighteenth- century Plata region. Yaqui missions originated in "the absence of a com- petitive secular society...." Most Spanish institutions were "uncertain and ephemeral."121 The competing Spanish secular society that confronted the new Chaco establishments had been developing for two centuries.

If the Guaycuruan missions failed to achieve many religious goals of their Jesuit founders, they were not failures. As buffer zones, they served the development of Santa Fe. Many Guaycuruans and their descendants became hispanized through contact with missionaries and foremen, mer- chants and soldiers. When Guaycuruan hostilities reappeared in the nine- teenth century, they resulted from the destruction of controls evolved in the last seventy years of the colonial period.'22 Guaycuruan missions served the same pioneering functions on the Chaco frontier as in Bolton's Borderlands, and their residents participated in the same kinds of cultural exchanges as James Lockhart and Stuart B. Schwartz have described. 123

Conclusions about the ways members of previously mobile Chaco so- cieties saw the reductions are also evident. They were founded because Indians requested them. Initially Guaycuruans desired economic security and peace, and missions provided both. The Jesuits left in 1767, but the mission towns endured until after the colonial period. The reasons for their survival are found in the changing conditions of Guaycuruan society. In reductions Indians received the subventions that they found increas- ingly necessary. They were still free to continue old pursuits. They were

119. Gobernador Jos6 Martinez Fontes al R. P. Nicolas Contucci, C. J., Asunci6n, Jan. 22, 1762; Archivo Nacional de Asunci6n, Asunci6n, Paraguay, S. H., Vol. 133, no. 4.

120. Diario de Lapa, entries for Sept. 3 and Nov. 21, 1776. 121. Hu-DeHart, Missionaries, Miners, and Indians, p. 39. 122. After independence Guaycuruans again became a hostile threat. Strife character-

ized the Argentine provinces from i8io to 1850, and this caused new white-Indian hos- tilities. Only after the end of the Paraguayan War was the Chaco Indian threat overcome. This was never as great in the nineteenth century as in 1675-1732, but Argentines were unwilling to tolerate it. Political stability, improved communications, and renewed frontier colonization coincided with the northern military campaigns of 1870-84 to bring to a close the Indian wars in the north. Luis Jorge Fontana, El Gran Chaco; Estudio preliminar de ErenstoJ. A. Maeder (Buenos Aires, 1977), pp. 7-22; Roberto H. Marfany, "La guerra con los indios n6madas," Historia de la naci6n argentina, 6: 1 (1944), 1077.

123. James Lockhart, "The Social History of Colonial Spanish America: Evolution and Potential," Latin American Research Review, 7 (Spring 1972), p. 10; Lockhart and Schwartz, Early Latin America, pp. 256-267, 293-298, passim.

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THE GUAYCURUAN REDUCTION, 1743-1810 517

less free than before; but many continued to hunt, fish, and raid against Spaniards and Indians in localities other than Santa Fe. Moreover, they could fit themselves effectively into the Platine network of commerce in livestock. Using missions as halfway houses, they became increasingly hispanized.

Appendix Population, Guaycuruan Pueblos of Santa Fe a

San Jeronimo San Javier San Pedro

1743 (250) -

1748 300 1753 (760)b (1065)b 1759 800 1760 579 1766 800 1000 1767 150 1776 400 (900)' 1777 1254 1785 598 (602) d 1028 (1049)d 580 (638)' 1789 1185 -

1793 482 1308 643

aSources: Dobrizhoffer, Abipones; Paucke, Hacia alla; and Azara, Descripci6n e historia del Paraguay y del Rio de la Plata . . . documents, AGN, Sala IX; and Furlong, Entre los Mocobies.

"'( ) indicate estimates based on number of families x5, the Jesuit rule of thumb for estimating population.

ePlus 500 Chaco Mocobies temporarily residing at pueblo. dCervera, Santa Fe, I.