Page:Vol 2 History of Mexico by H H Bancroft.djvu/529

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MENDOZA’S SUCCESSES.
509

composed of Chichimec tribes, and of these such as escaped slavery fled with their leader toward the mountains of Zacatecas and Nayarit[1]"

There were some further military movements, but apparently no serious resistance north of the river Tololotlan. From Juchipila the Spaniards marched down the river of that name to San Cristóbal, at the junction with the former. Thirty thousand native warriors had fortified themselves near Tepeaca, but on the approach of the Spaniards they were persuaded by Romero, the encomendero of the place, to scatter and abandon the idea of further resistance. In thus looking out for his own interests, he had but followed the example of Ibarra; but he had allowed the escape of the fierce Cascanes, one of the leaders of the rebellion. He was condemned to death by Mendoza, but afterward pardoned in consideration of past services. The viceroy next marched toward the peñol of Ahuacatlan, where all the natives of the province of Compostela were understood to be fortified. Passing with his army south of the Rio Grande, probably in January 1542,[2] visiting many of the disaffected towns in that region, he extended his operations to Etzatlan and Tequila, where two friars had been murdered during the year.[3]

The inhabitants now seemed ready to submit without further resistance. After several days at Etzatlan, and when about to march on Ahuacatlan, the viceroy learned that Juan de Villalba had taken that peñol

  1. Just before the attack on Mixton there was a day's discussion between the leaders and the iriars about the justice of the war. Mota Padilla, Cong. N. Gal., 149. According to Herrera, dec. vii. lib. v. cap. ii., Mixton surrendered without a struggle. The statements in regard to the number of killed and captured vary greatly.
  2. After the fall of Mixton, during Christmas festivities, they were near Jalpa. At Ahuacatlan, February 2d. Acazitli, Rel., 318-27. At Tequila January 23d. Hernandez y Dávalos, in Soc. Mex. Geog., Boletin, 2da ép. ii. 481-2.
  3. According to Torquemada, iii. 607-9, the friar Calero was killed June 10, 1541, and was the first martyr of Nueva Galicia; Father Cuellar perished at the hands of the savages in the following August. Fernandez, Hist. Ecles., ree mentions another, Fray Juan Padilla, as having been killed here about that time.