The Mexican 'swords' are reasonably effective but they also have a
major psychological affect on both the Incas and the Chimu when elite
Chimu warriors start using them. The Chimu win some battles that they
lost in our time-line, routing the Incas when the war comes. The Incas
retire to their mountains to lick their wounds and reconstitute their
empire, which is wracked by revolts following their defeat by the Chimu.
The Chimu continue to trade with western Mexico for the next century and
a half. They establish permanent trading posts at several points on the
Pacific coast. Access to those posts becomes the object of a great deal
of competition between the small western Mexican states, and later
between the growing Tarascan and Aztec states. Towns grow up around those posts, with a mixed population of Chimu and
Mexican Indians. Some of those towns become heavily involved in seagoing
trade further up the Pacific coast of Mexico, bringing a mix of Chimu
and coastal Mexican culture to the tribes of northern Mexico.
The trade enriches Indian cultures of both Mexico and Peru. Peruvian
metal-working techniques are considerably more advanced than Mexican
ones, though some of them had already diffused to western Mexico by this
time. Peruvian guinea pigs make a handy addition to the protein-poor
diets of the Mexican Indians. Llamas come into use to some extent in
western Mexico before the Spanish arrive. Llamas are primarily highland
animals and big enough that transporting them is not easy, but they are
useful enough that they make their appearance. They are still scarce in
the Aztec areas of central Mexico when the Spanish arrive, but they are
avidly sought after.
The highlands of Peru give the highlands of western Mexico a huge
array of new crops like potatoes that allow farming to become more
productive and to spread to areas where it was previously not feasible.
Use of quipus becomes common in areas where writing has not spread yet.
Peruvian culture is enriched too. The Chimu become great bowmen,
inspired by the Indians of western Mexico. The Chimu had been aware of
bows and arrows before, but the bows of Mexico are far more effective
than the ones they had known before. There was a definite north/south
gradient in the effectiveness and technology of bows in Pre-Columbian
times, and the Chimu make good use the advantage they derive from
contact with the excellent bowmen of western Mexico.
The 'swords' that started all of this become more effective in Chimu
hands, with the extremely sharp obsidian mated to the bronze of Peru to
make a very deadly weapon, with obsidian cutting edges and bronze
'sword-breaking' surfaces.
Domestic turkeys and new breeds of corn spread to Peru from Mexico
too, as does the concept of writing and some mathematical concepts.
|
Why Not Have the Inca & Aztec
Empires Meet?
Mainly
because they were both comparatively recent phenomenon.
As I mentioned in the Chimu box, the Incas didn’t
conquer the bulk of the coast until 1470. The whole Inca empire was a relatively recent phenomenon when
the Spanish arrived in Peru in the 1530’s.
They started out as one of many competing minor states in
highland Peru. Under
a series of very competent leaders, they took over the
highlands, then captured the lowlands by defeating the Chimu.
The
Aztecs were also a recent phenomenon as a major force.
They started out as barbarian mercenaries, but managed to
establish a far-flung empire in the last couple of hundred years
before contact. They
did have a presence on the west coast of Mexico before Spanish
contact, but they controlled only a relatively small part of
that coast, and they hadn’t been there for long.
The
short time that the two empires had controlled areas of the
Pacific coast makes contact unlikely, especially since both were
mainly highland people.
|
The trade from Chimu up the Pacific coast doesn't just affect western
Mexico, though the impact is felt there more than anywhere else. The
Chimu create a chain of trading and supply posts along the west coast of
Central America, and elements of Chimu culture radiate outward from
those posts. About ten years before Columbus's first voyage, the Chimu
found a trading post on the Atlantic coast of Panama, and Chimu trading
voyages begin probing up the Gulf Coast of Mexico. Local coastal traders
establish indirect links between the Chimu and the Atlantic coast of
Mexico, though the Chimu themselves have not yet reached Mexico on the
Atlantic side.
And then the Spanish arrive? The point of divergence is over a
hundred years before the Spanish arrived in our time-line, but the
hemispheres were reasonably isolated for most of that time. I
suppose there might be long-range butterfly-wing effects. Overall
though, I see no obviously reason that this time-line's Columbus
couldn't land in a subtly but definitely different New World in 1492.
Then what?
The Spanish under Rodrigo de Bastidas meet the Chimu in Panama in
1501, on a voyage that also occurred in our time-line. Things start
diverging for the Spanish at this point. They spend a lucrative month
trading, with the Chimu, then start to sail home. That month makes the
difference between a safe voyage home and a storm that leaves the
expedition stranded among their hosts. A number of Spaniards die in the
storm, and survivors become guests/prisoners of the Chimu. They include
Balboa, the man who in our time-line discovered the Pacific Ocean.
The destruction of the Bastidas expedition leaves the honor of the
first reported encounter with the Chimu to Christopher Columbus. In our
time-line, in his fourth and last voyage in late summer 1502, Columbus
explored the coast of Central America from Honduras to Panama with an
expedition of four old leaky boats and 140 men. In our time-line he
found a few Indians willing to trade him gold. In this time-line he
encounters the Chimu.
A little bit of background is in order here. After his discoveries in
1492, Columbus was for a time governor of the Spanish colony on the
island of Hispaniola. He proved to be a rather poor administrator, and
faced a revolt by the colonists a few years later. He eventually
suppressed the revolt, but was replaced as governor and sent back to
Spain. In 1502, a royal governor who had nothing but contempt for
Columbus ruled Hispaniola, and the Spanish crown was in court whittling
down the rights that they had granted Columbus before his first voyage.
The fourth voyage was a final attempt by Columbus to prove to an
increasingly skeptical Spain that he had found a route to the East
Indies, and an attempt to regain his standing and rights in the areas he
had discovered. In our time-line, the voyage was heroic, but ultimately
a failure. In this time-line, something more consequential happens, as
we will see.
Columbus trades with the Chimu for a time, and sets up a small post
headed by his bother to continue that trade. He then sails for home. The
trip home parallels that of our time-line. His ships are no longer
really seaworthy by this time, and he ends up stranded in Jamaica, which
has not yet been settled by the Spanish. After a long series of
adventures including a mutiny that he barely puts down, Columbus and a
remnant of his crew make it back home in 1504. Almost all of the gold
has been lost, and Spanish officialdom in Hispaniola and Spain no longer
take Columbus seriously. He does manage to scrape together funds from
private backers on the basis of the remaining gold, and sails for Panama
directly from Spain in 1506 with one small ship. In Panama, he collects
as much gold and silver as his ship can hold, and sails back to Europe,
where by a series of misadventures the ship and its cargo ends up in
Portuguese hands.
The Portuguese now have a dilemma. They are aware of a rich new
source of gold that the Spanish crown is not aware of. On the other
hand, they have a stake in avoiding competition with Spain, and
Columbus's new discovery definitely falls within the area allocated to
Spain. The Portuguese finesse the issue by making Columbus governor of
his new discovery under Portuguese rule. That gives Portugal rights in
the area by right of discovery, and Portugal moves quickly to make its
settlement in Panama a fait accompli. Spanish in the existing small
colony mutiny when the Portuguese take over, and some of them survive by
fleeing among the Indians.
As news of the riches of Panama leak out, the Spanish and Portuguese
crowns compete for the rich trade of the mainland Americas, with rival
explorers competing to discover the sources of the gold and silver being
traded at Panama. The European discovery of the Aztecs and other Indians
of Mexico comes over a decade before it did in our time-line-in 1507. It
also comes in the context of cut-throat competition between Portugal and
Spain. The French join that competition a couple of years later. The
English don't officially, but individual captains do trade along the
Mexican Atlantic coast from time-to-time. Possession of Panama gives the
Portuguese a major advantage in that it is relatively easy for them to
build bases on both oceans and follow the Chimu routes up and down the
Pacific coast. That has the disadvantage of putting them in competition
with the Chimu. The Chimu respond by taking in Spanish refugees from the
original Spanish trading post and trying to use their knowledge to
compete more effectively with the Portuguese.
Assuming that the Aztecs or somebody like them created an empire in
central Mexico in this time-line, which seems reasonable, things in
Mexico still start diverging almost immediately from the pattern of our
time-line, as do events in Peru.
The Aztecs and other Indians of Mexico are considerably more
formidable militarily and politically than they were in our time-line.
Only a small part of that is material. In this time-line, Aztec 'swords'
have bronze strips on their sides that are designed to shatter the
obsidian edges of opposition 'swords'. By contrast, in our time-line the
Aztecs did not yet have bronze, though they did have copper, and they
had not started using metal for tools and weapons.
In our time-line's western Mexico the Tarascans did have bronze, but
even they had not yet started to use it very much in tools or weapons.
In this time-line, the Tarascans have become innovators in bronze work,
with many tools, bronze daggers, and even some use of bronze in armor
(primarily helmets and small sections of links sewn into cotton armor
for added protection of vulnerable areas).
A more important reason why the Aztecs and others-especially the
Indians of Western Mexico-- are more formidable is that they've
exchanged subsets of their military and political play-books with the
Chimu. While the Chimu have been primarily traders, they have at times
become involved in the political/military rivalries of western Mexico,
and some aspects of their tactics and strategies have been observed and
copied by the locals.
Because of contact with the Chimu, the Aztecs and others have a more
sophisticated political response to the Spanish and Portuguese. They
already have a precedent for having powerful strangers appear from the
sea with strange new technologies. Granted, the Europeans are much
stranger and more powerful than the Chimu, but most of the same
principles used in coping with the Chimu appear to be applicable to the
Spanish or Portuguese. The Aztecs and their rivals in Western Mexico use
the techniques that have worked with the Chimu:
- Encourage the newcomers to settle, but only in very strongly held
areas and in such a way that contact with the newcomers can be strictly
controlled.
- Be very wary of the newcomers. They are tricky and don't play by
the same set of rules the locals do.
- Look for military and political ideas that can be copied and used
against rivals.
- Look for factions among the newcomers and exploit any divisions to
get better trade terms.
- Quickly learn as much as possible about the newcomers. That guards
against surprises and lets you get the best possible value in trading.
- Keep the newcomers away from rivals or potentially untrustworthy
subjects.
- Learn the language of the newcomers as quickly as possible, but
don't always let them know how well you speak it.
The Spanish are considerably weaker in this time-line than they were
when they discovered Mexico in our time-line. In our time-line the
Spanish had been in the New World for over twenty-five years before they
discovered Mexico. Spanish expeditions had established solid settlements
with thousands of Spaniards on most of the West Indies islands before
the discovery and conquest of the Aztecs. The conquest was actually
launched from Cuba, which in our time-line was conquered starting in
1511. In our time-line there were also Spanish colonies in Jamaica
(founded in 1509), Puerto Rico (founded in 1508), and Panama (founded in
1510). The Spanish also have to be careful not to leave their
settlements too lightly guarded because rival Europeans would be happy
to take advantage of such lapses.
The Aztecs have another edge in this time-line: By the time large
Spanish expeditions land in 1509, they already know a considerable
amount about the Spanish and other Europeans. They know what motivates
Europeans and something of how they fight. They even have a few old
swords and broken firearms obtained in trade.
When the first major Spanish expedition arrives in Aztec-controlled
territory, they immediately encounter Spanish-speaking Aztec
interpreters, which the Aztecs try to attach to the expedition. More
intimidating, the Aztecs present the Spanish with two native-made
attempts at replicating Spanish swords. One is in gold, the other in
bronze. Neither is that good, but they do serve notice to the Spaniards
that the Aztecs are not like the stone-age Indians of the West Indies.
The Spanish are handicapped in this time-line by lack of independent
interpreters, at least for the first few months of the encounter. The
Aztecs are very happy to trade on their own terms, which involve keeping
the Spanish away from any potentially disloyal subject tribes and
bargaining hard, trying to sell the Spanish golden trinkets in exchange
for things of value to the Aztecs, especially tools and weapons. They
also quietly try to trade privately with individual Spaniards-a practice
that they have found leads to lower prices in trade with the Chimu.
Prices are already falling by 1509, as European goods become more common
and the Indians become more sophisticated at dealing with the Europeans.
The Spanish don't know quite how to deal with the Aztecs. In
Hispaniola they easily conquered the natives and put them to work. On
the other hand, the Aztecs seem formidable, and they are quite willing
to trade-a very profitable trade with gold flowing in quite satisfactory
amounts to the Spaniards.
Cortes, the conqueror of the Aztecs in our time-line, arrives in this
time-line's Mexico in 1510, and makes a name for himself as a wild but
ambitious and capable young man. He becomes wealthy in the gold trade
along the coast, as do many other young men, but then becomes bored and
seeks excitement as a mercenary fighting for the Chimu against the
Portuguese.
The Mexican coast and the rest of the Central American coast are wild
territory-places where daring young men can make their fortunes or die
in shipwrecks or Indian attacks. It is a place to make your fortune and
then go home from, not a place to settle or raise a family, though
thousands of mixed blood children begin to appear around trading posts
and other areas where Europeans have access to Indian women.
Conquest of the area is not considered an option, at least not yet.
Europeans and Indians have clashed militarily from time-to-time, and the
Europeans definitely have an edge on a man-for-man basis. That advantage
is nowhere near enough to overcome the Indian advantage in numbers,
especially when competition between the Europeans means that the Indians
usually have European help or at least advice.
The Aztecs and other Indian powers, as well as the Chimu hire
European mercenaries to fight for them and to train warriors in European
techniques. A European sword or firearm is worth far more than its
weight in gold to the Aztecs and other Indians of Mexico, and once they
figure out what a horse can do, a horse is almost priceless. Where there
is that much demand, there are almost always people willing to supply
it. European swords become a status symbol among the Aztec and other
Mexican Indian nobility, though the Indians are by no means as good at
using them as the Spanish are. Firearms remain scarce, and horses even
scarcer, but most of the major Indian powers have a few of each by 1519,
along with a small groups of renegades willing to help them use their
new weapons. For the time being, they use them mainly against rival
Indian groups.
The lure of gold along the Mexican coast partially depopulates
Hispaniola, as Spaniards find making their fortunes easier along the
coast. It also diverts new settlements away from the West Indies for a
while. The islands are nowhere near as lucrative as the mainland gold
trade.
The Mexican and Peruvian Indian worlds are shattered in 1522, when
smallpox strikes the West Indies, then spreads throughout the area from
north of the current US border all the way through Peru to what in our
time-line became Chile. The epidemic destroys about the same percentage
of the Mexican population that it did in our time-line-somewhere between
30 and 50 percent. It also creates chaos throughout Mexico, as leaders
die and balances of power are upset. The epidemic spreads further and
faster than it apparently did in our time-line-up the west coast of
Mexico and to the Pueblo areas of the US southwest, and the feuding
states of Peru. The reigning Inca dies in the epidemic as does the Aztec
head of state.
In the chaos following the smallpox, the Aztec Empire suffers from
widespread revolts. That's traditional after the death of a ruler. In
our time-line, almost every new Aztec ruler had to defeat at least a few
revolts in order to re-establish the fear by which the Aztecs ruled. The
rival European factions take advantage of the chaos, and promote it. The
result is a long, complex series of wars, with rival groups of Indians
and Europeans trying to carve out empires, acting as mercenaries for one
faction or another, or simply looting. The Europeans still aren't strong
enough to simply walk in and take over the place like they did in our
time-line, for both political and military reasons. At the same time,
ambitious Europeans can become enormously rich and powerful-or
dead--along the chaotic coasts of Mexico or Peru.
And that seems like a good place to put a story but I really wouldn't
want to live there. What do you think? We have the best of the two major
Indian centers of civilization combined, with each building on the
strengths that they have acquired from the other. We have Indians that
are much more sophisticated in their political and military responses to
Europeans. We have the potential for Mexican Indian civilization to
spread north into previously less civilized areas as llamas and new
crops spread north. Llamas in Mexico make it easier for Mexican Indians
to adopt horses when they become available, because the Indians already
know how to take care of a large, powerful animal. That in turn makes
any European conquest much more difficult. If a conquest doesn't happen
quickly it may not happen until rapid-fire rifles are invented, assuming
that happens.
In both Mexico and Peru, there is no one center of power for
Europeans to seize, which makes any attempt at conquest more difficult.
Both civilizations start out their contact with Europeans in the bronze
age, and with some degree of metal tool use.
Where do things go from here? How does the rest of history play out?
What sort of story should I put in this setting if any? What about the
adventures of Cortes? He could start out as a mercenary in the Chimu/Portuguese
wars, have a lot of adventures in battlefields and probably bedrooms
unless his personality changed a lot, and maybe even take a stab at
grabbing the Aztec throne in the chaotic aftermath of the smallpox
epidemic. He could meet Balboa, and/or Columbus (who would be in his
early 60's by that time). We're talking convoluted intrigue between the
Indian and European powers, with Columbus and his relatives trying to
assert his powers semi-independently of the Portuguese, and with any
little band of Europeans having a chance to upset balances of power and
seize enough loot to make themselves very rich.
What do you think?
But what about?
As usual, I went back and reread this scenario with a critical eye. I
see a couple of potential problems:
1) Would the Chimu have the ability and a good enough reason to get
to western Mexico? To be honest, I don't know. Getting there shouldn't
have been impossible-just follow the coast north if nothing else. Would
the rafts be seaworthy for that long of a time? I don't know. Having a
good enough reason to go there and return again and again? That's hard
to know. Long range trade would have to involve luxury goods, at least
partly. I suspect that once the contact was made people would find
something valuable enough to continue it, but I can't prove that.
2) Would smallpox be that late? That's impossible to predict. It
could have come at any time after the divergence started affecting
Europeans-any time after 1501. There was going to be a smallpox epidemic
sometime in the first 50 or 60 years of contact, but when? Smallpox hit
in 1508 in our time-line, but apparently didn't spread beyond Hispaniola.
It hit again in our time-line in 1518, and spread to Mexico, and from
Panama down to Peru. I chose 1522 as the date of the first epidemic
because it gives the Indian powers 15 or so years to adapt to Europeans.
It also makes for maximum chaos at a time where Cortes is young enough
to take advantage of it. I think 1522 is justifiable because while there
would probably be more Europeans in the area than in our time-line there
would be far fewer European children and few if any African slaves.
Children and slaves were the most likely sources of smallpox because a
large enough percentage of European adults were already immune that it
was hard to sustain a chain of infection through an Atlantic crossing.
3) Would the Portuguese go for a Panama colony? Again, that's hard to
say. There were a lot of reasons not to, but enough gold laying around
loose would make going for it very tempting.
4) Isn't the 'Portugal in Panama' bit really a second and more
important divergence? I thought long and hard before I went that
direction, and I'm still not sure I went the right way. Cortes and
company coming ashore in this time-line's Mexico actually has more
potential drama in some ways, and is something more people could
identify with. I actually wrote several pages of this scenario that
described that meeting, but then went back and chose this line because I
thought it was the more likely one. Spanish explorers were prowling all
through the area around the Gulf of Mexico. Until 1517 they somehow in
our time-line kept missing the area the Aztecs and Maya dominated, but
they did go through areas that would have been affected in a major way
by the Chimu. If the Spanish found the huge amounts of gold and silver
in Mexico before they were solidly entrenched in the West Indies,
someone would have almost certainly challenged them for control of the
area-probably multiple countries. I suspect that until the discovery of
Mexico, Europe thought of the Americas as sort of like the Canary
Islands-a nice little bit of real estate, but not worth getting in a war
over. By the time the Spanish discovered Mexico they had colonies all
over the Caribbean, and it would have taken a major effort to dislodge
them. For other Europeans, competing in Mexico while Spanish bases in
the West Indies were intact would have been very difficult, though not
completely impossible.
If you enjoyed this scenario, or if you are disappointed with it, please let me know. I always read and enjoy any feedback I can get.
Note: I'm still planning to start an 'e-mail to
the editor' section soon if I get enough responses. Please feel free to e-mail me.
I'll only use your comments in the 'e-mail' section if you specify that it is
okay to do so.