Page:Vol 3 History of Mexico by H H Bancroft.djvu/692

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672
REVENUE AND FINANCE.

April, 1550; in 1591 Philip II. repeated the prohibition and adopted measures for the purpose of making the supply of coin adequate to the demands of trade.[1]

By an act of 1552 the chief smelter and the assay master were made royal officials. This step appears to have been the first instance of the crown withdrawing any part of the management from the control of the lessees. The principal officials were the treasurer, smelter, marker, weigher, blancher, engraver, and secretary. By cédula of August 21, 1565, these positions were declared vendible and instructions were issued ordering the sale of them to the highest bidders, provided that they were duly qualified to fill them.[2]

From this time until the year 1731 no affair of great importance, with one exception, occurred in connection with the mint. A few events caused temporary excitement, it is true, and occasionally disturbed its management. About the middle of the seventeenth century three hundred thousand pesos of Peruvian money were imported into the country, and were so violently objected to that it required a special order from the king to enforce its circulation.[3] In 1663 the viceroy imprisoned Juan Vazquez Medina, the treasurer, and confiscated his property for refusing to pay into the royal treasury two hundred thousand pesos which he had demanded of him a demand in contravention of the contract by which the office had been sold to Medina.[4] Permission was granted by

  1. In some districts there was a deficiency of the circulating medium, in the larger cities a superabundance. The viceroy and governors of provinces were instructed to purchase the bullion and gold dust of the former with the surplus coin of the latter. Recop. de Ind., ii. 93-4.
  2. Recop. de Ind., ii. 90. The minor offices also were made salable in 1625. Fonseca and Urrutia, Hist. Real Hac., i. 122.
  3. Rivera, Gob. de Mex., i. 189; Fonseca and Urrutia, Hist. Real Hac., i. 125.
  4. Guijo, Diario, in Doc. Hist. Mex., 1st ser. i. 508. In 1064 restitution was made by the king ordering that whatever sums had been paid by Medina into the royal treasury should be restored to his son. Id., 538-9. From this it may be inferred that Medina had died in the mean time.