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King Felipe appears to have helped thaw frosty relations with Mexico while reviving a fierce debate over events 500 years ago.
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But in doing so he has reopened a fierce debate over the colonisation of the New World.
The arrival of Spaniards in America from the late 15th Century spread Christianity and the Spanish language across the continent, while also causing the death of many thousands of indigenous people through military action and disease.
During a visit to an exhibition dedicated to indigenous women in Mexico in Madrid's National Archaeological Museum, King Felipe said there had been "a lot of abuse" during the conquest of the territory that would become Mexico.
"There are things that, when we study them, with our present-day criteria, our values, obviously cannot make us feel proud," he added on Monday.
The king made his informal observations as he commented on the exhibition in the presence of the Mexican ambassador to Spain, Quirino Ordaz.
President Claudia Sheinbaum of Mexico has welcomed the comments as a major step forward on an issue that has caused diplomatic friction between the two countries in recent years.
"One could say that it is not everything we would have wanted but it is a gesture of reconciliation by the king in terms of what we were talking about: an acknowledgement of excesses, exterminations that happened during the Spaniards' arrival," she said.
The year 2021 marked the 500th anniversary of the fall of TenochtitlΓ‘n, the site of modern-day Mexico City and the capital of the Aztec empire, at the hands of HernΓ‘n CortΓ©s and his small army.
They and other Spanish conquistadors went on to slaughter many thousands more indigenous people across the continent.
In 2019, the then-president of Mexico, AndrΓ©s Manuel LΓ³pez Obrador, demanded an apology from Spain for human rights violations during the conquest and colonisation of his country.
In 2024, his successor, Sheinbaum, took the unusual move of not inviting King Felipe to her inauguratio
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