Page:Vol 3 History of Mexico by H H Bancroft.djvu/179

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INDIAN REVOLTS.
159

brought back by force, the governor Centeno employing to that end energetic measures. A gibbet was erected wherever he went, and death threatened to all who would coöperate in concealing fugitive Indians. Thus in the coast districts alone more than sixteen thousand tributaries were restored in a short time to their settlements.[1] A more extensive outbreak, however, occurred in 1636, occasioned probably by the efforts of the governors to exact the contributions for the Barlovento fleet. Gradually the revolt assumed greater dimensions, and in 1639 only the villa of Salamanca had remained faithful, the remainder of the Bacalar district having openly declared its sedition, and relapsed into idolatry. Armed expeditions were proposed, but objected to by the governor, Santo Floro, and after long deliberations only some friars were sent to the seditious region, a proceeding which utterly failed. It was only in 1644 that part of the fugitives were induced to return to their villages.[2] Later revolts, though most of them of less importance, occurred in 1653, 1669, and 1670, when the Indians of Sahcabchen rebelled, and again about 1675.[3] Still there remains no doubt that the natives were gradually brought under subjection, and the zealous missionaries by their incessant labors obtained more and more influence over the native population.

The successor of Santo Floro, Francisco Nuñez Melian,[4] took charge of the government the last day of December 1643, but his sudden death on April 13, 1644,[5] again made necessary a temporary appointment by the viceroy at Mexico. Enrique Dávila y

  1. For details of this expedition see Cogollvdo, Hist. Yuc., 593-5; also Ancona, Hist. Yuc., ii. 224-5.
  2. Governor Francisco Nuñez Melian succeeded in bringing back about 9,000 Indians. Cogollvdo, Hist. Yuc. 679.
  3. The date for the last revolt cannot be exactly fixed, as it is not given by Villagutierre, who, in his Hist. Conq. Itza, 146-7, merely alludes to them.
  4. The general Luis Fernandez de Córdoba, previously appointed, was promoted to the government of Cartagena before undertaking the voyage. Gogullvdo, Hist. Yuc., 678.
  5. During a review of the military forces at Mérida.