| Introduction |
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1 | (7) |
| Chapter 1. Conquistadors and Romans |
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8 | (35) |
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"The Most Famous Romans Never Performed Deeds Equal to Ours": Conquistadors and Their Publicists Challenge the Prestige of the Romans |
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9 | (10) |
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Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo: Outdistancing the Ancients |
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19 | (12) |
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The Romans at the Fall of Tenochtitlan: Models from the Jugurthine War and the Jewish Revolt on the Last Day of the Aztec Empire |
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31 | (12) |
| Chapter 2. The Model of Roman Imperialism in the Controversy of the Indies, First Phase: Vitoria and His Disciples |
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43 | (60) |
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The Roman Imperial Glory of Charles V, "Rey de Romanos y Emperador del Mundo" |
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43 | (13) |
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The Beginning of the Controversy of the Indies |
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56 | (5) |
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Roman Empire and Spanish Dominion in the Indies in Domingo de Soto's Relectio de dominio |
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61 | (7) |
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The Roman Empire in Francisco de Vitona's Indian Relections of 1539 |
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68 | (14) |
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The Valladolid Lectures of Bartolomé de Carranza (1540) |
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82 | (3) |
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Melchor Cano's Relectio de dominio Tndorum |
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85 | (8) |
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Domingo de Soto Rereads Augustine on the Roman Empire: De Iustitia et Iure (1553) |
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93 | (5) |
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The Ambivalence of Juan de la Peña (1559-60) |
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98 | (5) |
| Chapter 3. The Model of Roman Imperialism in the Controversy of the Indies, Second Phase: Las Casas versus Sepúlveda |
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103 | (47) |
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Sepúlveda and the Romans before the Valladolid Debate |
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104 | (8) |
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The Romans in Sepúlveda's Democrates secundus |
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112 | (10) |
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Las Casas and the Romans before the Valladolid Debate |
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122 | (4) |
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Las Casas versus Sepúlveda and the Romans: Opening Rounds (1547-51) |
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126 | (7) |
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Las Casas versus Sepúlveda and the Romans: Valladolid (1550-51) |
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133 | (17) |
| Chapter 4. After Valladolid: The Fate of the Roman Model in the |
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Continuing Debate over the Justice of the Conquest |
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150 | (1) |
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Miguel de Arcos versus a Bishop of New Spain on Caesar, Titus, and Roman Imperialism |
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150 | (5) |
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The Model of Roman Imperialism in a Fragmentary Treatise Attributed to Vasco de Quiroga |
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155 | (3) |
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Alonso de la Vera Cruz versus the Roman Empire: University of Mexico, 1554 |
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158 | (9) |
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Did the Romans Have Dominion over the New World? Vinko Paletin of Korcula (Vicente Palatino de Curzola), circa 1557-59 |
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167 | (19) |
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Juan de Solórzano Pereira: From Roman Tyranny to Legitimate Dominion |
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186 | (3) |
| Chapter 5. Romans and Iberians / Spaniards and Indians |
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189 | (46) |
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Cano and Las Casas on the Roman Conquest of Spain as a Precedent for the Spanish Conquest of the New World |
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190 | (5) |
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Las Casas and the Perennial Question ofHispanidad |
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195 | (8) |
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Early Iberians as "Spaniards": The Career of a Topos from Alfonso X to Charles V |
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203 | (6) |
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The "Iberian Patriotism" and "Anti-Romanism" of Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo |
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209 | (11) |
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Cano, Las Casas, and Ambrosio de Morales |
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220 | (6) |
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"In Discovering America Europe Had Discovered Itself' |
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226 | (3) |
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Aztec Latinists Encounter Spanish Pagan Victims of Roman Imperialism |
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229 | (6) |
| Chapter 6. Romans and Indians |
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235 | (92) |
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Oviedo 's Romans and Indians |
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237 | (18) |
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The Superiority of the Indians to the Romans in the Apologética historia Bartolomé de las Casas |
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255 | (15) |
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Las Casas the Antiquarian and "Pagan Survivals" in the Old World and the Nor |
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270 | (18) |
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Indians versus R0117allS' as Empire Builders and Warriors: Las Casas, the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, Alonso de Ercilla, and Gerónimo de Vivar |
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288 | (30) |
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318 | (9) |
| Notes |
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327 | (74) |
| Bibliography |
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401 | (24) |
| Index |
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425 | (12) |
| Index of Modern Scholars |
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437 | |