Fernando Cervantes is Reader in History at the University of Bristol, and has a special interest in the intellectual and religious history of early modern Spain and Spanish America. His previous works include The Devil in the New World, Spiritual Encounters and Angels, Demons and the New World.
Lively, complex, compelling ... Cervantes is too good a historian
to try to whitewash the half-century of conquistador activities
that is his focus. Atrocities accompanied conquistadores wherever
they went, and Cervantes seldom shies away from detailing and
condemning them ... This book is a terrific read ... I could not
put it down.
*Literary Review*
The arrival of the Spanish conquistadors in the Americas is one of
the most exciting stories in history. Fernando Cervantes retells
the story with learning and gusto, and is excellent on the wider
context ... Blood flows at every turn, yet he persuasively argues
that the conquistadors have been greatly misunderstood, and invites
us to think again about one of the past's greatest turning
points.
*Sunday Times*
Enlightening ... For a vivid portrayal of a clash of very different
cultures, each equally astonishing to the other, and a group of men
who "whatever their myriad faults and crimes ... succeeded more or
less through their own agency, in fundamentally transforming
Spanish and European conceptions of the world in barely half a
century", Conquistadores makes for fascinating reading.
*Financial Times*
Superb ... Conquistadores tells the story of the discovery and
conquest of the New World, and tells it very well. His portraits of
Cortés, Pizarro, Hernando de Soto and the other conquistadors are
as vivid as one could wish.
*The Critic*
Superlative ... subtly recasts Columbus, Cortés and Pizarro as
ambiguous figures rooted in medieval ideas of holy war as much as
in greed for gold.
*Times Literary Supplement*
Cervantes places the conquest of the Americas in Spain's political
context ... a rich portrait of a period that is almost unimaginable
today ... a persuasive reassessment.
*The Spectator*
A superb new look at the conquistadors that puts them in their true
context.
*Simon Sebag Montefiore*
A veritable compendium on the Spanish conquest of the Americas ...
the book is welcome, and it most certainly meets its goal of
presenting the colonisers as real people ... Professor Cervantes is
a talented man, and his book is staggeringly thorough.
*BBC History Magazine*
Cervantes skilfully constructs a complex story, packed with
disturbing nuance, which obliterates that simplistic narrative of
brutal conquistadors subduing innocent indigenes. The depth of
research in this book is astonishing, but even more impressive is
the analytical skill Cervantes applies to his discoveries. He is
equally at home in cultural, literary, linguistic, artistic,
economic and political history. All this sophisticated scholarship
could so easily result in an unwieldy book, easy to admire, but
difficult to read. Cervantes, however, conveys complex arguments in
delightfully simple language, and most importantly knows how to
tell a good story.
*The Times*
I found it impossible to put down Conquistadores: A New History by
Fernando Cervantes. The Spanish conquerors of the Americas, usually
despised as brutal men driven only by greed for gold, are shown to
be more sophisticated, often more respectful of the dignity of the
indigenous people than their British equivalents. The friars,
Franciscan and Dominican, play a key role in these dramatic events,
with emergence of a new understanding of universal human
rights.
*The Tablet*
One of the best crossover academic books I've read for a long time.
It's approachable, but breaks new ground in its assessment of the
Spanish conquerors of Latin and Central America. Cervantes pitches
it perfectly, immersing readers in the mental world of these
historical figures, tracing the connections between their ideas and
the reality it created.
*The Tablet*
Fernando Cervantes has written a superb account of a world-changing
half-century, interweaving narrative and analysis to compelling
effect. The conquistadors were ruthless men, and did unspeakable
things, but Cervantes wants us to understand them, rather than
merely condemn. His book brilliantly illuminates a world-view which
was in some ways closer to that of the indigenous peoples the
conquistadors overpowered than it is to ours.
*Peter Marshall, author of Heretics and Believers: A History of the
English Reformation*
With reason, evidence, common sense, uncompromising candour and
disciplined imagination Fernando Cervantes makes the conquistadores
believable. He guides us expertly through the moral labyrinth of
empire, amid warts and wonders, sins and saints, crimes and
creativity.
*Felipe Fernández-Armesto, author of Out of Our Minds: What We
Think and How We Came To Think It*
A brilliant account of the men, from Columbus to Pizarro, who
conquered and settled most of Central and South America. Fernando
Cervantes tells a complex, subtle and persuasive story of their
actions. It is a story not only of simple, brutal, conquest - but
also of cooperation, of shifting alliances, of the infiltration of
Europeans into regions which had for long been zones of almost
ceaseless conflict, and of prolonged, if ultimately frustrated,
attempts to build a society which would fuse European and
indigenous legal, social and political systems. The entire history
of European imperialism and colonization is in urgent need of
complete revision. Conquistadors is an evocative, courageous, and
immensely readable beginning.
*Anthony Pagden, author of The Enlightenment: And Why It Still
Matters*
Written with narrative flair and meticulous erudition, this
splendid book strips away the stubborn fantasies and prejudices
which tend to characterise accounts of the Spanish conquest of the
Americas. Drawing on up-to-date scholarship, it describes the
late-medieval mindset of the conquistadors and analyses the
sophisticated political culture of the Spanish Monarchy to show
how, from the violent encounters of mutually alien peoples, there
emerged multi-ethnic and culturally diverse societies which proved
to be surprisingly resilient and stable over three hundred years.
This is an indispensable contribution to our understanding of the
historical roots of our globalized world.
*Edwin Williamson, author of The Penguin History of Latin America*
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