
A remarkable window into the early Spanish encounter with the Americas, this volume blends natural observation with moral reflection. Written by a Jesuit who spent several years in Peru before returning to Europe, it records what he saw of the heavens, the minerals, plants and animals of the New World. At the same time it sketches the rites, laws, governance and wars of the indigenous peoples, offering a holistic picture of a continent just beginning to be understood by Europeans.
The work earned praise from later scholars such as Humboldt, who saw in it an early foundation for physical geography before modern mathematics entered the field. Acosta relied on his own journeys and on trustworthy reports from fellow travelers, avoiding the habit of merely copying earlier authors. As a result, the book stands as a singular, first‑hand chronicle that helped expand European ideas about the world beyond the Atlantic.
Language
es
Duration
~9 hours (568K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
Spain: Ramón Anglés Impresor, 1894.
Credits
Andrés V. Galia, Adrian Mastronardi, Thiers and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2023-03-06
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1540–1600
A Jesuit scholar and traveler of the Spanish Empire, he wrote some of the earliest major European accounts of the Americas and tried to make sense of its peoples, landscapes, and religions. His work helped shape how early modern readers understood the New World.
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