Jump to content

Page:Vol 3 History of Mexico by H H Bancroft.djvu/174

From Wikisource
This page has been validated.
154
YUCATAN.

On the 13th of July 1618 the title of 'Muy noble y muy leal' was bestowed on the city of Mérida, and in August of the same year a coat of arms was presented to the cabildo.[1] Still further to testify his regard for the inhabitants of the capital the monarch condescended to ask of them, four years later, a contribution in money.

In order to justify the cherished title, liberal donations were made to the royal mendicant by the city council, the encomenderos, and many other settlers, the governor himself setting the example with a gift of one thousand pesos out of his own salary. Little else is known of his rule, which seems to have been unusually quiet, Merida Coat of Arms. not even the customary dissensions with the clergy being mentioned by the historians, who represent Cárdenas as a pious and charitable man. After a reign of seven years[2] he gave place to Juan de Vargas,[3] who entered into office on the 15th of September 1628. A change now occurs in the peaceful condition of affairs, for Vargas is characterized as one of the worst governors ever appointed to the province.

Soon after the conquest of Yucatan the natives were made to feel the bitterness of their bondage. They were robbed and maltreated by their taskmasters, first under the title of alcaldes and corregidores, and later by officials under different names.[4] During

  1. The text of the cédulas by which the title and coat of arms were bestowed is given in Cogollvdo, Hist. Yuc.,461-2. Calle is in error when he gives 1619 as the date in Mem. y Not., 82.
  2. Ancona says erroneously he ruled only four years.
  3. A knight of Santiago and descendant of the renowned Spanish general, Alonso de Vargas.
  4. Jueces de grana, de vino, ó de agravios.