Inter caetera
("Among other [works]") was a papal bull
issued by Pope Alexander VI on 4
May 1493, which granted to Spain
(the Crowns
of Castile and Aragon) all lands to the "west and south" of
a pole-to-pole line 100 league west
and south of any of the islands of the Azores
or the Cape Verde
Islands
.
It remains unclear to the present whether the pope was issuing a
"donation" of
sovereignty or a
feudal infeodation or
investiture. Differing interpretations have been
argued since the bull was issued, with some arguing that it was
only meant to transform the possession and occupation of land into
lawful sovereignty. Others, including the Spanish crown and the
conquistadores, interpreted it in the widest possible sense,
deducing that it gave Spain full political sovereignty.
The
Inter caetera bull and other similar to it made up the
Bulls of Donation.
Background
Columbus' arrival to supposedly
Asiatic lands in the western seas in 1492
threatened the unstable relations between Portugal and Spain, which
had been jockeying for position and possession of colonial
territories along the
African coast for many
years. The
King of
Portugal asserted that the discovery was within the bounds set
forth in the papal bulls of 1452 (
Dum diversas), 1455
(
Romanus Pontifex), 1456 (
Inter Caetera, not to
be confused with the 1493 bull of the same name), 1481 (
Aeterni
Regis), and 1484. The
King
and Queen of Spain recognized the authority of these papal
bulls and initiated diplomatic discussions over the rights to
possess and govern the newly found lands. Spanish and Portuguese
delegates met and debated from April to November 1493, without
reaching an agreement.
At the same time Spain urged Pope Alexander VI, a Spaniard native of
Valencia
and a friend
of the Spanish King, to issue a new bull favorable to Spain.
The Pope did so, issuing four edicts dated 3 May and 4 May 1493.
The third superseded the first two, and the fourth, titled
Inter caetera, superseded the third. A fifth edict,
Dudum siquidem of 26 September 1493, supplemented the
Inter caetera.
The
Inter caetera and the following Treaty of Tordesillas
defined and delineated a zone of Spanish rights exclusive of
Portugal. In relation to other states the agreement was legally
ineffective (
res inter alios
acta). Spain's attempts to persuade other European powers
on the legal validity of the
Inter caetera were never
successful.
Provisions
This bull
was silent regarding whether lands to the east of the line would
belong to Portugal, which had only recently reached the southern
tip of Africa (1488) and had not yet reached India
(1498). These lands were "to be discovered" beyond
those along the west coast of Africa as far as Guinea
that were
given to Portugal via the 1481 bull Aeterni regis, which had ratified the
Treaty of
Alcáçovas. Moreover, in the bull
Dudum siquidem
dated 25 September 1493 and entitled
Extension of the Apostolic
Grant and Donation of the Indies, the Pope granted to Spain
even those lands in eastern waters that "at one time or even yet
belonged to India".
This nullification of Portugal's aspirations led to the 1494
Treaty of Tordesillas between
Spain and Portugal, which moved the line further west to a meridian
370 leagues west of the Portuguese Cape Verde Islands, now
explicitly giving Portugal all newly discovered lands east of the
line. Initially, the Tordesillas line did not encircle the globe.
Spain and Portugal could pass each other toward the west or east,
respectively, on the other side of the globe and still possess
whatever lands they were first to discover.
In response to
Portugal's discovery of the Spice Islands
in 1512, the Spanish put forward the idea, in 1518,
that Pope Alexander had divided the world into two halves.
By this time, however, other European powers had overwhelmingly
rejected the notion that the Pope had the right to convey
sovereignty of regions as vast as the New World. Even within Spain
influential voices, such as
Francisco de Vitoria, had denounced the
validity of the
Inter caetera. While Spain never gave up
its claims based on papal bulls, neither did the Spanish crown seek
papal sanctions over the Pacific Ocean line of demarcation. Rather,
Spain negotiated directly with Portugal.
The Treaty of Saragossa (1529) settled the
dispute by placing the antipodal line 17°
east of the Moluccas
.
Inter caetera states: "Among other works well pleasing to
the Divine Majesty and cherished of our heart, this assuredly ranks
highest, that in our times especially the Catholic faith and the
Christian religion be exalted and be everywhere increased and
spread, that the health of souls be cared for and that barbarous
nations be overthrown and brought to the faith itself. ...we (the
Papacy) command you (Spain) ... to instruct the aforesaid
inhabitants and residents and dwellers therein in the Catholic
faith, and train them in good morals." This
papal command marked the beginning of
colonization and Catholic
Missions in the New World.
An important if initially unintended effect
of the combination of this papal bull and the Treaty of Tordesillas
was that nearly all the Pacific Ocean
and the west coast of North
America were given to Spain. Consistent with these
ancient claims, Spain
made claims
to
British Columbia and
Alaska as late as 1819 because
they bordered the Pacific Ocean.
The Adams-Onís Treaty resolved this by
settling the border between Spain and the United States, limiting
Spain's northward expansion to the 42nd parallel, south of Oregon
.

A map of the Spanish (red) and
Portuguese Empires (blue) in the period of their personal union
(1581–1640).
Areas explored & claimed by the Spanish, but unsettled,
(i.e.
Amazon basin) are not shown.
Modern protests by indigenous peoples
Various groups representing indigenous peoples of the Americas have
organised protests and raised petitions seeking the repeal of the
papal bull
Inter caetera which they believe led to the
subjugation of their peoples, and to remind Catholic leaders of
what they perceive to be the record of conquest, disease and
slavery in the Americas, sometimes justified in the name of
Christianity, which they say have had a devastating effect on their
cultures.
See also
References
- A single meridian is excluded because no lands can be
south of it. Two partial meridians are possible, one
extending north from a point west of the Azores and another
extending south from a point south of the Cape Verde Islands, the
two being connected by a north-northwest south-southeast line
segment. Another possibility is a rhumb line west and south of the islands
extending north-northwest and south-southeast. All rhumb lines
reach both poles by spiraling into them.
- . Online, Google Books entry
- Emma
Helen Blair, James Alexander Robertson, "Preface to Volume I",
The Philippine Islands 1493-1803.
- The Treaty of Tordesillas did not specify any longitude, thus
writers have proposed several, beginning with Jaime Ferrer's 1495
opinion provided at the request of and to the Spanish king and
queen.
- Edward Gaylord Bourne, "Historical Introduction", in
The Philippine Islands 1493-1803 by Emma
Helen Blair.
- "Indigenous demand revocation of 1493 papal bull", National
Catholic Reporter, Oct 27, 2000, John L. Jr. Allen
- "Restore World Peace"[1]
External links