"On the twentieth, eve of the day of the blessed Apostle and Evangelist St. Matthew, having prayed to Our Lord and His Blessed Mother, supplicating them to give us victory against those Lutherans, because we had already agreed to take the twenty ladders we had brought along, to attack them by scaling the walls in their sight. And His Divine Majesty did us such mercy and guided it in such a way that, without the death of a single man, and with only one man knocked on the head [who is already well], we won the fort and everything within it. One hundred thirty-two men had their throats cut and, the next day, ten more who were taken prisoner in the woods. Among them were many gentlemen."
Pedro Menéndez de Avilés, Letter to King Philip II, October 15, 1565
Pedro Menéndez de Avilés’s justification for attacking the French fort in Florida is most closely associated with which of the following Spanish colonial policies?
The encomienda system, which granted land and labor to Spanish settlers
The Laws of the Indies, which regulated Spanish settlements and colonial governance
The Spanish Crown’s commitment to Catholic missionary efforts and religious warfare
The Requirement (Requerimiento), which justified the forced conversion of Indigenous peoples and non-Catholics
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