'Formidable contagion': epidemics, work and recruitment in Colonial Amazonia (1660-1750)

Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos. 2011 Dec;18(4):987-1004. doi: 10.1590/s0104-59702011000400002.
[Article in English, Portuguese]

Abstract

The text analyzes the extent to which smallpox and measles epidemics provoked transformations in the ways in which workforces were acquired and used in colonial Amazonia from the mid-seventeenth to mid-eighteenth century, with an increase in slave raids on the indigenous population and the attempt to organize a trade route in African slaves to the region. It also explores how indigenous mortality rates at the end of the seventeenth century led to a concern with the region's defence and prompted the recruitment of soldiers from the Madeira islands.