Colonial Mexico

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Across
  1. 5. a native leader or chief in colonial Mexico, often responsible for maintaining peace and order among indigenous communities and negotiating with Spanish colonizers.
  2. 7. emit sparks of fire or electricity.
  3. 8. a Spanish soldier or explorer who conquered and settled in the Americas, often accompanied by indigenous people or African slaves.
  4. 9. relating to or denoting a style of European architecture, music, and art of the 17th and 18th centuries.
  5. 10. a system of forced labor where indigenous people were required to work for Spanish colonizers, often in exchange for protection or goods.
  6. 12. a cultivated plant that is grown as food, especially a grain, fruit, or vegetable.
  7. 13. a town mayor or magistrate in colonial Mexico, often responsible for maintaining law and order and collecting taxes.
  8. 14. a person of mixed European and indigenous ancestry, often born in Mexico or the Americas.
  9. 15. the illegal movement of goods into or out of a country.
  10. 16. cease developing; become inactive or dull.
  11. 18. acquire (something) by paying for it; buy.
  12. 20. a traditional healer or medicine woman in colonial Mexico, often using folk remedies and spiritual practices to treat illnesses and ailments.
Down
  1. 1. de habitación a type of residential building in colonial Mexico, often used as a residence for Spanish colonizers or criollo (mixed-race) families.
  2. 2. the series of vertebrae extending from the skull to the pelvis; the spine.
  3. 3. to trade by exchanging one comodity for another
  4. 4. (of a business or activity) yielding profit or financial gain.
  5. 6. a forced labor tax imposed on indigenous people to support the construction of Spanish buildings, roads, and other infrastructure.
  6. 11. a system of granting Spanish colonizers control over a specific group of indigenous people, often in exchange for protection and spiritual guidance.
  7. 17. a large estate or plantation, typically owned by a Spanish landowner or noble, where indigenous people or African slaves worked to produce crops such as sugarcane, coffee, and cotton.
  8. 19. unpleasant, unkind, cruel, or more severe than is necessary: harsh criticism. The children had had a harsh upbringing.