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A Brief Account of the Destruction of the Indies

By: Bartolome de las Casas
Narrated by: Jason McCoy
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Publisher's summary

A Brief Account of the Destruction of the Indies is the story of the Spanish Dominican priest Bartolome de las Casas, who came to the Americas in the 16th century. Immediately he was struck by the inhumane ways in which the native peoples were treated by the European explorers and conquerors, Las Casas went on to be a leading opponent of slavery, torture, and genocide of the Native Americans by the Spanish colonists. A Brief Account of the Destruction of the Indies is his personal account, with chapters covering Cuba, Nicaragua, Hispaniola, Guatemala, Venezuela, Florida, and many other areas conquered by the Spaniards.

Public Domain (P)2019 BN Publishing
  • Unabridged Audiobook
  • Categories: History
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What listeners say about A Brief Account of the Destruction of the Indies

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Important Work--Needs Better Narration/Annotation

Las Casas' book, though the language/translation could be a little more accessible, did much to both document and improve the treatment of the tribal peoples conquered by the Spanish. It would be worthwhile having a little more context for the general reader, however. Las Casas' goal was to win souls for the Church, and alongside his genuine humanitarian disgust for what he saw and heard about the Indians' treatment, he seems at least as appalled by the failure to convert the Indians to Christianity. This, of course, reflects his genuine belief that the Catholic faith presented the only opportunity for them to enter heaven. Las Casas also fails to directly name many of the leaders he criticizes. While he provides dates and locations that would have easily allowed his contemporaries to know who he was talking about, this is harder for the modern reader/listener, since some place names (especially) have changed over the centuries. A little editing/annotation, providing explorers', officials', and locations' current names in parenthesis after they are mentioned, maybe an aside or footnote or two where needed, would go a long way toward making this work more accessible. While the narrator does the best job he can, there are many Spanish location names and even a few words of this English translation he still clearly had trouble with. Even so, this is very valuable to have in audio format.

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The destruction of a people

Perfect illustration of true history as it written on a fist account
Basis, just wow

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A horrifying but Necessary Listen

why do we still celebrate Columbus' birthday? this book proves him to be a deplorable criminal

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The events in the book

Overall great. Narrator is good. Just mispronounced words and stumbles sometimes. But overall he did a good job. The book is excellent

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History written from who witnessed

The horror the horror the horror.
Before Congo and before captain Kurtz there was this

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Brutal Account

I knew of this person and things he said. But never read this or any of his writings. What happened is not only horrible but more shocking than I was prepared to learn about. It covered more examples and details than I remembered learning about. I knew of the slaughter and abuse, but to read example and example of it. Getting worse and worse. Worth learning about for sure.

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Reminds one how much blood is drop for Christ....

Christianity has too much blood and tyranny on it's hands for me to get down with it.... I'd rather worship Satan at this point....

Satan is an Egyptian God. Respected just as much as the others. You need to embrace the Darkside. Don't be fooled by these European concepts of so called spirituality through the religions they have fostered.... Many of which they learned via the Kemetans/AfriKans/Egyptians.....

SET. Source of the name Satan. The Kamite God SET was the God of Drought, Darkness, Negativity. "SET gives name to Satan as 'Set-an': 'SET'.... is the destructive power and 'an' in the Egyptian language is a mark of emphasis." Heru(Horus) bound SET in chains.

Knowledge is power. The bible is a joke on the subconscious if you don't pick up it's metaphysical aspects that they have purposely put forth, so out of touch with the real ancient 'Mysteries'.

You have the right to remain deceived..... It's your life...

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Raw descriptive truth .

This book speaks the truth of who the Spaniards were , and the wickedness of Spain , may the lost tribes rise again .

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Indescribable violence, described

Historical accounts of an eyewitness of the destruction of native people by Spaniards, stomach-turning violence described, of tyrants who took pride if they level of deprivation and inhumanity all with the aim to get rich with gold and minerals

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