In the 1540s, both Spanish and Portuguese colonies in the Americas were focused on exploiting indigenous populations for labor and resources. They followed a model of colonization that involved establishing plantations and extracting wealth from the land. Both empires also sought to spread Christianity and convert the local populations to Catholicism.
In the US colonies, in the early 1600s. They were originally treated more like indentured servants. If you mean the Americas as a whole, in the 1540s. Slaves worked on sugar plantations in the Caribbean once the native population began to die off due to disease.
Francisco Coronado, a Spanish explorer, led an expedition in the 1540s to the southwest region of North America, known for introducing European influence to the indigenous peoples and landscapes of the area. While he did not find the fabled Seven Cities of Gold as he hoped, his exploration led to further Spanish colonial expeditions and increased European knowledge of the Americas.
on the 1540s
about 1540s
By a flood that happened in the 1540s.
The Spanish government paid for Francisco Vázquez de Coronado's expedition in the early 1540s. He was appointed by the Spanish viceroy of New Spain to search for the fabled Seven Cities of Gold in what is now the southwestern United States.
They wove cotton that they grew. Later they wove wool after the Spanish brought sheep in the 1540s. They also traded for cloth with the French, Spanish and later Americans and with other surrounding tribes. They also used animal skins that they hunted and traded for at regular trade fairs.
Buffoon comes from the 1540s Middle French dance.
Corn, squash, beans and sunflower and cotton and tobacco. After the Spanish arrived in the 1540s peach orchards, watermelons, chilies, and onions were grown as well. Today they are still farmers. Dry land in the west and irrigated in the east.
Examine their insides.
It was called the Pale.