In the beginning, missionaries handed out such gifts, as they attempted to win over the Native people. But by the 1700s, that duty had been delegated to soldiers and governors. The reason was that the distribution of gifts to nomadic tribes had become a key feature in making peace and preserving it. That so, the finest gifts, usually presented to Indian leaders, had the effect not only of honoring them, but also of confirming their high status and nourishing a new loyalty to the Spanish government. In early 1786, for instance, New Mexico Gov. Juan Bautista de Anza met a delegation of Comanches at Pecos Pueblo. In a ceremony establishing permanent peace, Anza bestowed upon the tribe’s high chief, the title “General of the Comanche Nation.” Then he presented him with a cane, or staff of office, a sword, banner, medal, a head dress of scarlet cloth and a horse. Earlier, England and France had started the custom of presenting official peace medals, usually of silver, to loyal Indian chiefs. Belatedly, Spain was forced to follow suit. After it acquired French Louisiana in 1763, the Indian chiefs there refused to accept Spanish allegiance until they received new medals, and of equal weight in silver to the old ones from France.Get the Story:
Marc Simmons: Trail Dust: Spaniards and Indians exercised primitive diplomacy (The Santa Fe New Mexican 1/25)
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