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Spanish period of Belize

Coordinates: 17°00′N 88°30′W / 17.0°N 88.5°W / 17.0; -88.5
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Spanish
1500–1638
LocationBelize
Including
  • Conquest (to 1544)
  • Post conquest (to 1638)
Monarch(s)
Leader(s)
  • Melchor Pacheco (first)
  • Julio Sanchez de Aguilar (last)
Key events
  • Spanish conquest
  • Catholic prosyletisation
  • rise of piracy
  • Maya rebellion
Chronology
Postclassic Precolonial class-skin-invert-image

The Spanish period of Belizean history began with the arrival of the Spanish in 1500, and ended with the Tipu rebellion in 1638. The period was marked by Spanish conquest and ensuing attempts at establishing political, economic, and religious authority, all of which succeeded to varying degrees, especially in northern Belize. Further trends included the rise of Elizabethan piracy in the 1570s, and of Maya resistance to Spanish rule in the 1600s.[n 1]

Geography

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Political map of Belize prior to Spanish conquest / 2024 map based on Becquey, Feldman, Jones & Roys 1957–2012 / via Commons
Political map of Belize after Spanish conquest / 2024 map based on Becquey, Feldman, Graham, Jones, Masne & Roys 1957–2012 / via Commons

At the start of the Spanish period, Belize, then part of the central and southern Maya Lowlands, is thought to have been split into at least two cultures (Yucatecan, Cholan) and four polities (Chetumal, Dzuluinicob, Mopan, Manche Chol).[n 2]

Upon Spanish conquest, said polities came 'theoretically' under Yucatan's (and therefore New Spain's) jurisdiction.[1] Practically, however, the lower polities were further claimed by Verapaz (and therefore Guatemala), resulting in a grey zone of 'two poorly delimited colonial jurisdictions' that persisted into the Precolonial period.[n 3]

History

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Conquest

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La conquista / 1970s mural by Castro Pacheco / via Commons

First contact with the Maya civilisation is ascribed to the 1502 Honduran leg of Columbus's fourth voyage, 1508–1509 Pinzon–Solis voyage, 1511 stranding of Guerrero, Aguilar, and company, or 1517 Hernandez de Cordoba expedition.[n 4] News of these events is thought to have 'travelled rapidly' across the Maya region, trickling down through long-established trade routes, thereby giving even uncontacted polities prior notice of the Spanish.[2] Belize's polities, in particular, 'almost certainly' heard tell of Columbus's 1502 landing, with Chetumal further benefitting from Guerrero's insider knowledge (said sailor having relocated or been relocated there from Ecab).[3]

The first impact of conquest, even prior to its proper start in 1527, is thought to have been either epidemic disease, economic collapse, or impressment or enslavement.[4] By the time the Spaniards arrived to conquer, they may have come upon 'a wary population and a hard-hit landscape.'[5]

Conquest did not properly start, however, until Montejo's failed entrada of 1527–1528, which entered Chetumal by sea, and further intended to enter by land.[6] In 1528, Montejo decided they needed a more strategic location for their recently founded villa of Salamanca de Xelha.[7] He set off due south in a brig, while his lieutenant, Davila, followed over land.[8] Montejo then entered the port of Chetumal (possibly Santa Rita).[9] Its officials led him to believe that Davila had met an ill end, and so Montajo carried on his reconnaisance south.[10] Davila, meanwhile, was told that Montejo had met an ill end, leading him to turn back without reaching Chetumal.[11] The manoeuvre afforded Chetumal, and lower polities, a brief respite from Spanish incursions.[11]

The next entrada to Chetumal, Davila's of 1531–1533, likewise failed, but this time not so easily.[12] Davila managed to actually take over the port in 1531, rechristening it Villa Real, though he was eventually routed in 1532.[13] Chetumal and the lower polities 'were left to their own devices until late 1543 or 1544, when a most cruel conquest of the area bagan.'[14]

The final entrada to Chetumal and lower polities, Melchor and Alonso Pacheco's of 1543–1544, is thought to have been particularly brutal, even for the time.[15] Their atrocities reportedly included the use of dogs, starvation, and mutilation.[16] In the end, though, the Pachecos are thought to have conquered at least Chetumal and Dzuluinicob, founding their villa, Salamanca de Bacalar, by late 1544.[n 5]

The work of conquest was still not done, however, as widespread revolts erupted in 1546–1547, including in Bacalar.[17] Not until these were quelled could the Yucatan province 'be said to have been pacified.'[18]

Post conquest

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Bacalar soon found itself cut off from the rest of Yucatan, given 'poor roads [...] many of which remained impassable throughout the year,' and obstructed sea routes dotted by 'dangerous shallows and reefs,' resulting in the villa's protracted poverty, and a tenuous grip on northern Belize.[n 6]

Catholic proselytisation

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Ruins of Spanish mission church in Dzibilchaltun / 2010 photograph / via Commons

Missionary efforts are noted for having been 'militantly anti-pagan' (with paganism loosely defined), and for extending into temporal affairs (such as reduccions).[n 7] Franciscan efforts (from Yucatan) are further deemed to have been assidious, and to have extended 'as far south as Monkey River,' with Dominican work (from Verapaz) more periodic and restricted to southern Belize.[19]

Evangelising work may have begun upon Cortes's 1525 crossing of Mopan and Manche Chol territory, or Montejo's 1528 landing in Chetumal.[n 8] The earliest non-expeditionary friar in Belize is thought to have been the Franciscan Lorenzo de Bienvenida, who may have catechised independently as early as during the 1543–1544 Pachecos entrada, whilst en route from Golfo Dulce to Merida.[20] Bacalar itself may have had no resident clergy in its first two decades, though, as the earliest record of such dates to 1565 with the arrival of Pedro de la Costa, a secular priest.[21]

Lamanai and Tipu are known to have been visita missions, possibly as easly as during the Pachecos entrada.[22] They are thought to have been primarily serviced by Franciscans.[23] A further number are thought to have been founded in northern and southern Belize.[24]

Piracy

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The Retreat of the Pirates / 1836 engraving by Stanfield / via HathiTrust

Piracy is thought to have been first introduced to the Bay of Honduras by Pedro Braques who, in a patax with 22 Frenchmen, had 'sailed to Honduras' and been apprehended in 1544.[25] In 1558, their compatriots took Truxillo for the first time, followed by Puerto Caballos in 1559.[26] The French were followed into the Bay by the Dutch and English, with the latter first arriving in 1572 or 1573.[27] The earliest known notice of piracy in Belizean waters is Francisco de Acles's raid of Bacalar in 1578.[28]

Piratical activity in the Bay was sporadic at first, but noticeably intensified in the 1570s, due principally to Elizabethan sea dogs, who more than offset a concomitant decline in French presence.[29] This tide is thought to have reached Belize in the 1630s, and to have contributed to demographic flight away from the coast.[30]

Maya rebellion

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By the opening years of the seventeenth century, 'resistance and rebellion were in the air' in the Bacalar district.[31] The yet unconquered Peten Itza kingdom is thought to have been the primary driver of resistance, encouraging widespread flight towards its zone of refuge.[32] Further motivating factors may have included famine conditions (from increased encomienda demands, and harvest shortfalls), and piratical depradations.[33]

The earliest sign of something being awry was the desertion of encomienda towns near Tipu, possibly due to increasingly burdensome tribute obligations, necessitating reduccions in 1608 and again in 1615.[34] Three years later, the Fuensalida–Orbita mision left the friars with a (well-founded) fear 'that an alliance was developing between Tipu and the Itzas,' and further strained Spanish relations with Peten Itza.[35] Further missions to Peten Itza in 1619 and 1623 similarly failed, the latter spectacularly so (the entire missionary party of over 80 having been executed, purportedly for desecrating an Itza temple).[36] Said mass execution or massacre was promptly followed by another in 1624 in La Pimienta, this time due to egregiously ill treatment by an entrada party.[37]

Conditions only worsened for the Spanish in the 1630s.[38] The decade opened with desertion in Xibun and Soite, and closed with the pivotal Tipu rebellion, which (within a few years) depleted Bacalar of most of their Maya population.[39]

Demographics

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The majority of the pre-conquest population is thought to have been settled in riverine towns and villages during the wet and dry seasons, with a minority moving to coastal villages during the dry.[n 9]

The post-conquest Maya population of Bacalar is thought to have been spread around some 25 settlements across the district in 1544.[n 10] But both 'flight and population loss characterised the years after 1544 in the Bacalar province,' with Bienvenida claiming that a town of 100 households would have been large in 1548, where once there were towns of 500 to 1,000.[n 11] In the district (unlike in the rest of Yucatan), 'original population levels were never recovered' after conquest.[40]

The Spanish population of Bacalar is thought to have never surpassed some estimated 130 individuals, with vecinos numbering fewer than circa 30.[41] The tributary Maya population is estimated to have been some six to seven times greater, at least, possibly reaching circa 1,500 or 1,600.[42] The non-tributary Maya population, living beyond Spanish reach, is thought have amounted to 'perhaps an equal number or even more.'[43]

Economy

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Belize's pre-conquest polities are thought to have been especially focussed on trade.[44] Archaeological and historical evidence strongly suggest Chetumal, for instance, maintained overland or maritime trade with at least Uaymil (a neighbouring polity) and Acalan, Ecab, and Mani (polities further afield), while Dzuluinicob and Manche Chol maintained heavy overland trade with at least Peten Itza.[45] Additional economic activities are thought to have included cash crop farming (of cacao, annatto, vanilla), beekeeping, and subsistence farming, hunting, and fishing.[46] Commerce and these enterprises are thought to have carried on after conquest.[47]

Encomiendas were first established in Belize in 1544, and lasted 'for about a century and a half.'[n 12] They are not thought to have been altogether different from the pre-conquest tributary system, though, except that tributaries now paid 'different people different things in different amounts,' with the Spanish now primarily demanding (possibly onerous quantities of) cotton, honey, salt, beeswax, maize, and especially cacao.[48] Though details are scarce, total encomienda income has been estimated at 'no more than 1,500 pesos' per annum, leading Jones to posit that it 'must have comprised a relatively small proportion' of the villa's revenue.[49]

The Spanish in Bacalar are thought to have similarly focussed on trade with coastal Mopan and Manche Chol villages, and with Yucatan and Honduras, in addition to internal commerce.[50] Further minor economic activities possibly included cattle ranching in Chetumal, cacao farming on New River, and salt making in Ambergris Caye.[51]

Society

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Post-conquest society was 'formally and functionally' split into native and Spanish classes, with the former heavily outnumbering the former in Yucatan, which disparity is thought to have afforded the former some degree of autonomy.[52] Nonetheless, the Spanish are thought to have 'in general, behaved towards their Maya neighbours and "subjects" as though the native population was there to be exploited for the comfort and survival of the colonists.'

Warfare

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Though little is known of Maya warfare prior to conquest, its rules of engagement are broadly thought to have been quite distinct to Spanish ones.[53] Most starkly, Mayanists have noted the 'tacitcal discrepancy between the Spaniards' willingness to kill large numbers of Mayas indiscriminately, and the Mayas' preference for person-to-person combat and the taking of captives.'[54] Furthermore, batttle is thought to have been ritualised, with rules of engagement 'which were agreed upon by all parties concerned–except, of course, Spanish soldiers.'[55] Aims of warfare have also historically been thought to differ, with the Spanish waging war for acquisition of territory, profit, and conversion to Catholicism, and the Maya for acquisition of slaves and human sacrifice.[56] The latter has come under scrutiny recently though, with some scholars arguing that profit (via the acquisition of tributary rights) was likely the primary motive for war.[56]

Government

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Pre conquest

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Maya polities at the eve of conquest are now thought to have been primarily defined as networks of interpersonal relationships, rather than well-delimited territories.[n 13] That is, the polity is thought to have been constituted by a set of people (and whatever space they happened to inhabit), rather than being made up of a demarcated space (and whatever people happened to inhabit it).[57] Polities may have arisen from pre-existing chibals, and the newly-formed interpersonal relationships further knitting them together may have been patron-client ones entailing allegiance, tribute, among other rights and obligations.[58] That is, an ambitious chibal may have risen to power (and thus formed a polity) 'not based on control of resources through acquisition of territory in which the actual resources lay or grew or were extracted, but rather, on control of resources through acquisition of rights to what was produced.'[59]

Post conquest

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The cabildo was the principal institution of governance in Bacalar. In its early years, the cabildo of Bacalar was comprised of two alcaldes and three regidors (plus the escribano and procurador, ex officio), with alcaldes holding principal executive and judicial authority.[60] By the 1570s, the cabildo had been reorganised to include only one alcalde and four regidors.[61] Members were resident, encomienda-holding vecinos elected annually by outgoing members, though offices 'tended to be dominated by strong men [...] as there were probably never more than ten or so qualified vecinos.'[n 14]

Some aspects of pre-conquest political organisation 'were maintained under Spanish rule,' such as tribute arrangements.[62]

Legacy

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Modern Catholic church in San Antonio, Toledo / 2013 photograph / via Commons

In culture

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The Spanish colonial project in Belize is popularly deemed a failure.[63] Catholic misions, on the other hand, 'had a lasting religious impact,' with Graham contending that Mayas genuinely came to see themselves as Christians, and so kept said faith even upon Spanish withdrawal.[64]

In scholarship

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Spanish records are especially scarce and unreliable for Belize, particularly for its southern half.[n 15] Such historical and ethnographic sources nonetheless remain the mainstay of scholarship on this period, though increasingly supplemented by archaeological evidence, especially in Mayanist works.[65] Graham, for instance, used excavations at Tipu and Lamanai for their study of Hispano–Maya religious interaction.[66]

Some of the earliest published historical work on this period was Cogolludo's Historia de Yucatan, written 1647–1656 and published 1688.[67] Further landmarks included Chamberlain's 1948 Conquest and Colonization, Roy's 1957 Political Geography, and Jones's 1989 Maya Resistance.[68]

Timeline

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Prominent Spanish period events in Belize and periphery.[n 16]
Start End Place Event Notes
14 Jul 1502 Aug 1502 BayH Honduran leg of Columbus's fourth voyage cf[n 17]
Jun 1508 29 Aug 1509 BayY Pinzon–Solis voyage cf[n 18]
Jan 1511 Dec 1514 Chet Stranding of Guerrero and company cf[n 19]
Jan 1515 Dec 1515 Bay First Spanish slaving expeditions cf[69]
Feb 1517 Dec 1517 BayY Hernandez de Cordoba expedition cf[70]
14 Nov 1518 14 Nov 1518 Far Velazquez named Adelantado of Yucatan cf[n 20]
Jan 1519 Dec 1519 Alvarez de Pineda map cf[n 21]
Aug 1519 Oct 1521 Near Smallpox or measles epidemic
3 May 1524 3 May 1524 BayH Triunfo de la Cruz established cf[n 22]
Mar 1525 Dec 1525 MnMp Cortes crossing cf[71]
Jul 1527 Jul 1528 Chet Montejo entrada cf[n 23]
Jun 1531 Mar 1533 Chet Davila entrada cf[n 24]
Jan 1537 Dec 1537 Far Casas–Maldonado pact cf[n 25]
22 Feb 1542 22 Feb 1542 BayH First landing of bozal slaves cf[n 26]
Apr 1543 Dec 1544 ChDz Pachecos entrada cf[n 27]
Jul 1544 1 Feb 1547 Bacl Bienvenida voyage cf[n 28]
Nov 1544 Dec 1544 BayH Braques cruise cf[72]
Nov 1546 Jun 1547 Bacl Avila survey
8 Nov 1546 Mar 1547 Bacl Pixtemax revolt cf[73]
Jan 1553 Dec 1553 Bacl Lopez retasacion cf[74]
Jul 1558 Dec 1558 BayH Truxillo sacked cf[n 29]
Jan 1559 Dec 1559 Far Campeachy sacked cf[n 30]
Jan 1560 Dec 1561 Far Toral assumes bishopric cf[n 31]
Jan 1565 Dec 1565 Bacl Bacalar parish established cf[75]
Apr 1568 Dec 1568 Bacl Garzon entrada and reduccion cf[n 32]
Jan 1570 Dec 1571 Bacl Carillo owns Black slave cf[n 33]
13 Jan 1572 13 Jan 1572 BayH Lutheran raid of Puerto Caballos cf[76]
23 Feb 1573 22 Mar 1573 BayH Honduran leg of Drake's expedition
Oct 1577 Apr 1578 Bacl Acles sacks Bacalar cf[77]
Jan 1598 Dec 1598 BayH Parker sacks Puerto Caballos cf[78]
Jan 1602 Dec 1602 Far Blauveldt sets up base in Bluefields cf[79]
Jan 1603 Dec 1603 ManC Esguerra reduccions cf[n 34]
Jan 1605 Dec 1606 Bacl Bacalar reduccions cf[80]
Jan 1608 Dec 1608 Bacl Tipu reduccions cf[81]
Jan 1615 Dec 1615 Bacl Sanchez reduccions cf[82]
1 Apr 1618 8 Dec 1618 Bacl Fuensalida–Orbita mision cf[n 35]
Jan 1620 Dec 1620 Bacl Diaz visita cf[83]
Jan 1620 Dec 1620 ManC Salazar voyage and survey cf[n 36]
9 Mar 1622 31 Mar 1624 Bacl Mirones entrada, Delgado mision, Sakalum massacre cf[84]
Sep 1628 Dec 1630 Bacl Vargas repartimientos and Arguellos inquiry cf[85]
Mar 1630 Mar 1631 Bacl Xibun–Soite flight, Sanchez reduccion cf[86]
Apr 1631 Dec 1631 ManC First Tovilla entrada cf[n 37]
Jan 1632 Dec 1632 ManC Second Tovilla entrada cf[n 38]
Jan 1633 Dec 1633 ManC Manche Chol revolt
Jan 1633 Dec 1633 BayH Truxillo sacked by Dutch cf[n 39]
Jan 1637 Dec 1637 Bacl Lamanai reduccion cf[87]
Jan 1637 Dec 1637 ManC Salazar reduccion
Jan 1638 Dec 1638 Bacl Cogolludo–Vivar voyage cf[n 40]
Jan 1638 Dec 1638 Bacl Tipu rebellion cf[88]

Glossary

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Glossary of terms employed in literature of the Spanish period of Belize.[n 41]
Term Gloss Definition Notes
adelantado someone entrusted with command of a maritime expedition, and granted in advance authority over discovered or conquered lands
alcalde alcalde ordinario mayor, magistrate
  1. native justice, magistrate, or judge
  2. principal magistrate and administrator of a cabildo
auto de fe ecclesiastical sentencing, or resulting punishment
batab* mayor most senior office holder in a batabil cf[59]
batabil* mayor's jurisdiction first order subdivision of a cuchcabal
bozal non-Hispanicised slave slave recently taken from Africa cf[n 42]
cabecera encomienda seat seat of an encomienda
cabildo council town or village council
cacique cacique native lord or high office holder cf[n 43]
cah* community, home in Yucatan, town or village, plus surrounding places to which residents had rights of access or use cf[n 44]
capilla de indios Indian chapel mission chapel for natives cf[89]
capitan general general most senior office holder in a capitania general
capitania general first order military subdivision of a virreinato
capitulacion agreement or pact
casta mixed-race person, mixed-race caste
  1. someone of mixed European, native, or African ancestry
  2. category of such
cf[n 45]
chibal* patronym group, lineage in Yucatan, group of individuals sharing surname or paternal ancestry cf[n 46]
cuchcabal* kuuchkabal province in Yucatan, a pre-conquest polity cf[n 47]
cuch cab* alderman, councillor most senior office holder of a cuchteel cf[90]
cuchteel* ward, neighbourhood first order subdivision of a batabil cf[n 48]
diezmo tithe tithe
distrito district first order subdivision of provincia
encomienda tributary grant, tributary duty, tributary system
  1. arrangement by which a native was required to render labour or tribute to a Spaniard
  2. settlement for such established
  3. first order subdivision of a distrito
  4. the system itself
cf[n 49]
entrada campaign hostile military mobilisation or action against natives
escribano escribano publico public scribe secretary or clerk of a villa
fray title for friar
gobernador governor most senior office holder in a provincia
halach uinic* halach winik regional lord most senior office holder in a cuchcabal cf[91]
indio natural Indian native
macehual native commoner member of native commons
maestro choirmaster, sacristan, or chapel master cf[n 50]
matricula census census of population
mision mission
  1. ambulating expedition by Spanish clergy or missionaries to proselytise natives
  2. settlement so or for such established
nacom* war chief in Yucatan, a high military office holder cf[92]
principal hidalgo member of native elite
probanza record of individual merit or service
procurador comisario, comisario de la real hacienda attorney-accountant attorney and accountant of a villa cf[93]
provincia province first order civil subdivision of a virreinato cf[n 51]
real audiencia audiencia real royal high court high court of justice with civil (sala de oidores) and criminal (sala de alcaldes) jurisdiction
real cedula royal decree royal decree
reduccion congregacion reduction
  1. forcible relocation or resettlement of natives
  2. settlement so established
cf[n 52]
regidor councillor member of cabildo
regular regular friar in a mendicant order cf[94]
repartimiento
  1. collective form of encomienda
  2. forcible Hispano-native barter agreement
  3. the practice itself
cf[n 53]
requerimiento manifesto conquistadors were required to read to natives before engaging in hostilities
residencia juicio de residencia routine job performance review of public officials upon vacating office cf[n 54]
retasacion census census of native population to adjust encomienda obligations cf[95]
secular secular cleric who is not a regular cf[96]
vecino
  1. someone who paid taxes to and held land or property in a town
  2. Spanish resident of a town
cf[97]
villa district capital seat of a distrito
virreinato viceroyalty first order subdivision of Spanish Empire
visita
  1. extraordinary job performance review of public officials
  2. mision with no resident clergy

See also

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Notes and references

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Notes

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  1. ^ Masne, para. 19, map 3; Restall, p. 3; Graham, pp. 110–113, 142.
  2. ^ Graham, p. 122.
  3. ^ Graham, pp. 122, 124, 126–127; Jones, p. 28.
  4. ^ Graham, pp. 109, 121, 123–124, 130, 133–134.
  5. ^ Graham, p. 130.
  6. ^ Reichert, pp. 18–19; Graham, pp. 124–127; Jones, pp. 26–28.
  7. ^ Graham, pp. 125–126.
  8. ^ Graham, p. 126; Jones, p. 26.
  9. ^ Graham, p. 126.
  10. ^ Graham, pp. 126–127; Jones, pp. 27–28.
  11. ^ a b Graham, p. 127.
  12. ^ Graham, p. 128; Jones, pp. 29–39.
  13. ^ Graham, pp. 128–129.
  14. ^ Graham, pp. 132–133.
  15. ^ Graham, pp. 133, 153, 157; Jones, pp. 41–45.
  16. ^ Graham, p. 133; Jones, pp. 42–43.
  17. ^ Graham, pp. 132–204; Jones, pp. 17, 45–47.
  18. ^ Graham, p. 132.
  19. ^ Graham, pp. 135, 138–139, 148, 162, 196; Jones, pp. 100–101.
  20. ^ Graham, pp. 159–160; Jones, p. 60.
  21. ^ Graham, pp. 142, 151; Jones, p. 85.
  22. ^ Graham, pp. 109, 195–197, 199, 204, 224, 236, 375; Jones, p. 13.
  23. ^ Graham, pp. 158, 162–163, 196–197.
  24. ^ Graham, pp. 195, 199; Jones, p. 13.
  25. ^ O, p. 183.
  26. ^ Masne, para. 27; Reichert, p. 22.
  27. ^ Masne, para. 28; O, p. 287.
  28. ^ O, pp. 285–286.
  29. ^ O, pp. 193, 203, 228, 241, 280–281, 295, 301, 347, 357.
  30. ^ Masne, para. 29; Graham, p. 246; Jones, pp. 191–192, 229–230.
  31. ^ Graham, pp. 50, 239; Jones, p. 132.
  32. ^ Graham, pp. 50–51; Jones, p. 5.
  33. ^ Graham, p. 246; Jones, pp. 18–19, 23, 58, 61–62, 214.
  34. ^ Graham, pp. 243–244; Jones, pp. 18, 132, 192–193.
  35. ^ Graham, pp. 243–244; Jones, pp. 18–19, 135–148.
  36. ^ Graham, p. 244; Jones, pp. 148–152, 176–178.
  37. ^ Graham, pp. 244–146; Jones, pp. 19, 178–187.
  38. ^ Graham, p. 246; Jones, p. 199.
  39. ^ Graham, pp. 246–247; Jones, pp. 19, 23–24, 199–230.
  40. ^ Jones, pp. 45, 110.
  41. ^ Jones, pp. 70–73.
  42. ^ Jones, pp. 116–118.
  43. ^ Jones, p. 117.
  44. ^ Graham, pp. 45, 47, 58, 116, 119.
  45. ^ Graham, pp. 47, 52, 157; Jones, p. 101-106.
  46. ^ Jones, p. 101-104.
  47. ^ Jones, pp. 102–106.
  48. ^ Graham, pp. 196–197; Jones, pp. 18–19, 39, 41–42, 106.
  49. ^ Graham, p. 164; Jones, pp. 41, 45, 69, 73.
  50. ^ Jones, pp. 39–40, 69–70.
  51. ^ Jones, p. 69.
  52. ^ Graham, pp. 181–182, 196–197.
  53. ^ Graham, pp. 40–41.
  54. ^ Graham, p. 41.
  55. ^ Graham, p. 42.
  56. ^ a b Graham, pp. 40–43.
  57. ^ Graham, pp. 34, 36.
  58. ^ Graham, pp. 31, 34, 38.
  59. ^ a b Graham, p. 38.
  60. ^ Jones, pp. 44, 59–60, 75, 78.
  61. ^ Jones, p. 75.
  62. ^ Graham, p. 37.
  63. ^ Graham, pp. 105, 107–108.
  64. ^ Restall, p. 10; Graham, pp. 3, 164, 197–198.
  65. ^ Graham, p. 12, 16, 194-195; Jones, p. 4.
  66. ^ Graham, pp. 1, 3–4, 12, 16–19, 189–192.
  67. ^ RAH, art. 'Diego López Cogolludo'; Graham, p. 240.
  68. ^ Graham, pp. 5, 29; Jones, pp. 24–25, 94.
  69. ^ Graham, p. 130.
  70. ^ Reichert, p. 15.
  71. ^ Graham, p. 157; Jones, pp. 100, 102–103, 295–296.
  72. ^ O, p. 183.
  73. ^ Graham, p. 204; Jones, pp. 45–47.
  74. ^ Jones, p. 60.
  75. ^ Jones, pp. 41, 44–45
  76. ^ O, p. 287.
  77. ^ O, pp. 285–286.
  78. ^ Reichert, p. 22.
  79. ^ Reichert, p. 23.
  80. ^ Jones, p. 131.
  81. ^ Jones, pp. 18, 61, 73, 132, 193.
  82. ^ Jones, pp. 73, 76, 83, 113–114, 132, 192–193.
  83. ^ Jones, pp. 84, 191, 193.
  84. ^ Graham, pp. 244–246, 315; Jones, pp. 155–187.
  85. ^ Jones, p. 197.
  86. ^ Graham, p. 246; Jones, pp. 199–203.
  87. ^ Jones, pp. 116–117, 204.
  88. ^ Graham, pp. 246–247; Jones, pp. 19, 23–24, 51, 101, 108, 115, 190–191, 204–224.
  89. ^ Graham, pp. 167, 175.
  90. ^ Graham, p. 164.
  91. ^ Graham, p. 46.
  92. ^ Graham, p. 42
  93. ^ Jones, pp. 61, 75.
  94. ^ Graham, pp. 138–139.
  95. ^ Jones, p. 60.
  96. ^ Graham, p. 139.
  97. ^ Jones, p. 68.
  1. ^ The Spanish period is variously dated in literature. See Periodisation of the history of Belize for further discussion. Some terms used in a historical sense, eg Bay of Honduras to mean the gulf bound by Cape Catoche and Cape Gracias a Dios (Reichert, pp. 11, 13; Graham, p. 112); Yucatan Peninsula to mean headland bound by Laguna de Terminos and Amatique Bay (Aliphat, pp. 870–872; Restall, p. 8). See § Glossary for unfamiliar words.
  2. ^ Becquey, paras. 10, 19; Graham, pp. 32–33, 108; Jones, pp. xiv–xvii, 9–10, 94–99. With possibly a number of unorganised settlements, eg in cayes and western Orange Walk. Political geography of Belize prior to conquest 'still not known with certainty' though (Graham, p. 29). Furthermore, polities may have been primarily organised as interpersonal networks, rather than 'a delimited space or place' (Graham, pp. 30–34).
  3. ^ Masne, para. 19, map 3; Graham, pp. 111–112, 134–135. Lower Toledo possibly claimed by a Guatemalan province other than Verapaz, at least since 1570 (Graham, p. 112). Notably, Yucatan and Guatemala contested the conquest of Peten (including Manche Chol territory) in the 1680s–1690s, with the latter winning secular and the former ecclesiastical jurisdiction in the end (Aliphat, pp. 851–853, 865).
  4. ^ Reichert, pp. 13–15; Graham, pp. 122–125; Jones, pp. 26–27. In particular, the second is thought to have sailed up Belize's coast or reef, and the third to have set foot in the country by 1514 (Reichert, p. 14). Other candidates possible, given likelihood of maritime voyages 'for which no records are preserved' (Graham, p. 123).
  5. ^ Graham, pp. 133, 157; Jones, pp. 43–44. They were originally tasked with conquering territory 'as far south as the Golfo Dulce' (Graham, p. 133).
  6. ^ Reichert, pp. 20–21; Masne, map 2; Graham, pp. 111, 162–163, 207; Jones, pp. 5–6, 11–12, 17, 52–53, 57–59, 64–66, 84. Notably, a royal officer in Merida wrote in 1620 of Bacalar–

    That villa is inhabited by the most miserable people in all the Indies, in a region so remote and poor that there is scarcely anyone who knows how to read and write, and where a mulatto, the son of an alcalde, was alcalde ordinario. And it is lucky that there is anyone who wants to inhabit that villa.

    — Jones, pp. 55, 84.
  7. ^ Graham, pp. 142–143, 150–151, 160, 162; Jones, p. 52. Mendicants, in particular, are reputed as having generally 'planned towns, built churches, and governed and educated [mission] communities,' all of which 'came at the expense of indigenous ways of life, and did not reflect indigenous choice but instead Spanish ideas of what was good for the Indians' (Graham, pp. 144–145). Franciscans, though, 'in general tried to keep Indian communities separate and protected from encomienda exploitation' (Graham, p. 141). Bienvenida, for instance, complained to the Crown of the Pachecos' atrocities, and when the Maya of Bacalar district complained to Merida of their secular priests' behaviour, it was Franciscans who replaced them in 1617–1618 and 1641–1642 (Graham, pp. 133, 158, 160; Jones, p. 85).
  8. ^ Graham, pp. 126, 131, 140, 157. Franciscan friars with Cortes are known to have preached in Peten Itza, to moderate success (Graham, p. 157). Montejo's secular chaplain is likewise known to have proselytised enthusiastically (Graham, pp. 126, 131, 140).
  9. ^ Except for San Pedro and Santa Rita, coastal pre-conquest settlements seem to have been seasonal villages only (Graham, pp. 118–119).
  10. ^ Though 'locations of only five [Chanlacan, Chetumal, Colmotz, Lamanai, Tipu] are supported to varying degrees by archaeological evidence' (Graham, p. 199).
  11. ^ Graham, pp. 203–204; Jones, p. 45. Though depopulation of Chetumal or Dzuluinicob may have begun 'as early as 1531, if not before' (Graham, p. 203).
  12. ^ Graham, pp. 49, 109, 156–157, 163, 203. There are thought to have been at least five encomiendas initially, held by two alcades and three regidors of the Bacalar cabildo (Graham, p. 203). Restructured at least once, during 1608– or 1615–1622 (Graham, pp. 207, 239–240).
  13. ^ Graham, pp. 29–34, 46. Originally elucidated by Roys, and historically since the Spanish period, 'rather too strictly in terms of territorial boundaries' (Graham, pp. 29–30).
  14. ^ Jones, pp. 75–76, 78. By the end of the period, for instance, 'members of the Sanchez, Aguilar, and Diaz families rotated through these various [cabildo] positions throughout the [17th] century, tightly controlling every aspect—especially the financial one—of the community's affairs' (Jones, p. 76).
  15. ^ Geographically and ethnographically (Aliphat, pp. 839–840, 845–846, 849–851, 869–872; Becquey, paras. 2-3; Masne, para. 34, fn. 31; Restall, pp. 5–6; Graham, pp. 37, 39, 46–47, 110–111; Jones, pp. vii–viii, 93.). In this regard, Graham noted –

    Belize never crystallised as a place in European consciousness of the sixteenth century. If Belize was anything, it was a liminal, elusive, shifting, dangerous space, neither land nor sea, neither here nor there, betwixt and between an idea of a ‘Yucatan’ and an idea of a ‘Kingdom of Guatemala.’

    — Graham, p. 107.
    Which sentiment Restall felt applied likewise into the Precolonial period (Restall, pp. 2–3).
  16. ^ Upper and lower bounds given. Some dates in Julian calendar. Polities abbreviated as Bacl (Bacalar), ChDz (Chet and Dzul), Chet (Chetumal), Dzul (Dzuluinicob), Far (none of those listed here), ManC (Manche Chol), MnMp (ManC and Mopn), Mopn (Mopan), Near (surrounding polities). Bodies of water abbreviated as BayA (waters off Amatique or otherwise equidistant from BayH and BayY), BayH (waters off Honduras including islands), BayY (waters of Belize and Quintana Roo including atolls, cayes, islands, reefs), Bay (any of the preceding). No other places given. Only one place given per entry. Places in or off Belize given in preference to or to exclusion of others.
  17. ^ RAH, art. 'Cristóbal Colón'; Graham, p. 122. Earliest notice of Honduras Bay (Reichert, p. 13). Though Pinzon possibly in Bay in 1496–1499 (Graham, p. 123).
  18. ^ RAH, art. 'Vicente Yáñez Pinzón'; Reichert, p. 14; Graham, pp. 122–123. Possibly noted the Cockscombs, Belize's 'most conspicuous landmark from the sea' (Graham, p. 122). Pinzon possibly in Honduras Bay in 1496–1499 too (Graham, p. 123).
  19. ^ RAH, art. 'Gonzalo Guerrero'; Reichert, pp. 14–15; Graham, pp. 124–125; Jones, pp. 27–28. Including presence of mestizo children prior to 1528 Jones, pp. 27–28. Including possible Spanish enslavement (Jones, pp. 27–28).
  20. ^ First such (RAH, art. 'Diego Velázquez de Cuéllar'). Title and offices pass to Montejo on 8 Dec 1526 (RAH, art. 'Francisco de Montejo').
  21. ^ First to depict Yucatan as a peninsula 'clearly and with some accuracy' (Restall, p. 8).
  22. ^ Earliest Spanish settlement in Bay (Masne, map 2). First founded 'a few miles east of Puerto de Caballos' (Melendez, p. 76). Relocated east and renamed Truxillo (modern Trujillo) on 18 May 1525 (Melendez, p. 76). (Confused with Puerto Caballos (settled 1525 and 1544–1605; port use since 1524 and especially since 1536) in Reichert, p. 16 (Melendez, pp. 69–70, 72–73). San Gil de Buenavista also established 1524, but in mouth of Golfo Dulce, and shortly moved inland to Valle de Naco by 1527 (Melendez, p. 71; Reichert, p. 16).)
  23. ^ Graham, pp. 125–127; Jones, pp. 26–28. Including earliest (non-permanent) Spanish settlement in Peninsula, Salamanca de Xelha, near Tulum (Reichert, pp. 18–19).
  24. ^ Jones, pp. 29–39. Also called de Avila entrada (Reichert, p. 19). Including earliest (non-permanent) Spanish settlement in Belize, Villa Real de Chetumal, near Chetumal (Reichert, p. 19). Including coasting down the shore of Belize (likely inside the reef) from Chetumal Bay to Truxillo (Reichert, p. 19; Graham, pp. 107, 128–130; Jones, p. 39).
  25. ^ Las Casas spent 1537–1539 setting up Verapaz, the only colony where he deemed the Spanish had ius in re due to natives' 'freely given consent' (RAH, art. 'Bartolomé de las Casas').
  26. ^ First in Bay and Central America; 150 slaves (Masne, para. 25).
  27. ^ Graham, pp. 132–133; Jones, pp. 41–45. Including founding of Salamanca de Bacalar in 1544 (Reichert, p. 20).
  28. ^ Jones, pp. 42, 60, 85; Graham, pp. 111, 158–160, 314. Earliest known non-expeditionary friar in Belize (Graham, pp. 111, 314). Stayed in Bacalar 'for an unknown period of time' (Graham, p. 158).
  29. ^ Earliest such by pirates in Bay (Masne, para. 27; Reichert, p. 22).
  30. ^ O, pp. 215–216. Earliest such by pirates in Yucatan (Reichert, p. 25).
  31. ^ Jones, p. 39. Fourth appointed but first to take office and reside in Yucatan (Graham, pp. 323–324).
  32. ^ Graham, pp. 205–207, 314; Jones, pp. 17–18, 22, 47–52. Including Franciscan burning of Maya records (Graham, p. 207; Jones, pp. 48–51). Including constitutional crisis (Jones, pp. 78–81). Including possible Maya enslavement (Jones, pp. 50–51).
  33. ^ Jones, pp. 71, 73, 89. First and only Black individual on record (Jones, pp. 73, 89). Including presence of mulato alcalde prior to 1620 Jones, p. 71.
  34. ^ 'Officially, the first Spanish incursion' into Manche Chol territory, though 'the very first contact' attributed to Davila's 1524 founding of San Gil Buenavista near Nito, or Cortes's 1525 crossing to Nito (Becquey, para. 20).
  35. ^ Graham, pp. 240–244, 315; Jones, pp. 135–152. Orbita visited Peten Itza 'probably in 1617' (Graham, p. 314). Fuensalida visited again in 1619 (Graham, p. 315).
  36. ^ First to circumnavigate the peninsula (Aliphat, p. 853). Map not extant (Aliphat, pp. 853–854).
  37. ^ Proved 'a real failure' (Becquey, para. 20). Breach of Verapaz's and Dominicans' pacifist policy (Becquey, para. 20).
  38. ^ Tovilla loses Real Audiencia of Guatemala support (Becquey, para. 20). Followed by a period of 'about forty years [to 1670s] during which the Manche Chol were again out of Spanish rule' (Becquey, para. 20).
  39. ^ Resulting in period of 'decline and abandonment that lasted until the second half of the 18th century' (Reichert, p. 22).
  40. ^ Jones, pp. 311–312, no. 31. Cogolludo possibly crosses Belize (Graham, pp. 160, 316).
  41. ^ RAE; RAE a; Graham, pp. 375–384; Jones, pp. 341–343. Sources here not further cited in table. Mayan terms marked with asterisk.
  42. ^ As opposed to a ladino ie Hispanicised slave (Masne, para. 25).
  43. ^ In Yucatan, at least batabs and halach uinichs (Graham, pp. 45–46).
  44. ^ Graham, pp. 37–38, 163–164. Not territorially bound (Graham, pp. 34, 37–38). A 'basic indigenous geographical, political, and organisational entity that represented a fundamental unit of society and culture' (Graham, pp. 163–164).
  45. ^ Including mestizo (European–native ancestry) and mulato (mulatto).
  46. ^ Thought to have formed 'a kind of extended family' within each cah, and fostered kinship outside one's cah, at least after conquest (Graham, p. 38).
  47. ^ Either unitary or confederal (Graham, p. 46).
  48. ^ Had 'an important role in pre-Columbian tribute, particularly regarding labour requirements' (Graham, p. 164).
  49. ^ Graham, pp. 5, 35, 163–164, 203; Jones, pp. 41–42. In Yucatan, 'loosely consonant with the pre-Columbian tribute system, in the sense that the basis of extraction comprised labour and products owed as tribute to particular individuals,' and possibly organised by cahs (Graham, pp. 163–164).
  50. ^ Graham, pp. 49, 82, 156, 175, 207. Including maestro cantor, maestro de capilla, sacristan mayor, maestro de escuela, ah cambesah (Graham, pp. 207). In Yucatan, included young Maya men taught in Franciscan schools who 'often supervised in rituals and practices' in visita missions (Graham, pp. 49, 82).
  51. ^ In Yucatan, also a pre-conquest polity, or succeeding first order subdivisions of distritos, or distritos themselves (Graham, pp. 37).
  52. ^ To concentrated settlements within their original territory, as opposed to expatriation, 'a coercive and violent means' which 'very quickly led to the assimilation and disappearance of' peoples like the Manche Chol (Becquey, para. 47).
  53. ^ Was 'an exploitative system, and technically illegal.'
  54. ^ Apparently, primarily to check for misuse of funds.

References

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