Abstract
In this article I analyze the conquest and conversion of the Marianas (1676-1690) as a discursive reality that turned the islands in a violent theater wherein the chamorros were defined as ruthless warriors (warrior's ethos), and the Jesuits, on the contrary, as victims of the betrayals and retaliations of their newly converted «children» (martyr's ethos). The hagiographers elevated their Jesuit martyrs to the category of «moral heroes», turning their deeds into a strong element of cohesion and identity for the missionaries preaching in the archipelago. In addition, the superiors wrote informaciones or memorials in which they stood out the behaviour of the military «heroes» of the colonization. We refer to José de Quiroga y Losada, captain and major sergeant of the garrison, and to the «loyal Indian» don Ignacio de Hineti, Indian sergeant and a «good Christian», whose military expeditions were directed to deal with the «anomaly» of the chamorros' resistance. After the Second Great War (1683-86), the Jesuits clearly adopted the political and religious leadership in the islands, becoming the founders of a real «missionary state» wherein their martyrs acted as moral referents of the subjugated territories.
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Coello De La Rosa, A. (2010). Colonialismo Y santidad en las Islas Marianas: Los soldados de Gedeón (1676-1690). Hispania - Revista Espanola de Historia. CSIC Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas. https://doi.org/10.3989/hispania.2010.v70.i234.150
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