Francisco de Montejo (the Nephew)

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Francisco de Montejo (the Nephew) (Spanish: Francisco de Montejo (el Sobrino), 1514–1572), was a Spanish conquistador.

The 3 Montejo's house, circa 1548. Located in the Plaza Grande in Mérida, Yucatán. 19th century lithograph.
Church of San Gervasio in Valladolid, Yucatán.

At 13 years old, he embarked with his uncle, Francisco de Montejo "El Adelantado," and his cousin, Francisco de Montejo y León "El Mozo", toward to the conquest of Yucatán in 1527.[1] On May 28, 1543[2] he founded the town of Valladolid (now part of the Mexican state of Yucatán) on the banks of the Chouac-Ha lagoon.[3] A year later, the town was moved further inland to the site of a Maya town, Zací. Valladolid is still known in the contemporary Yucatec Maya language as Saki, the modernized spelling of Zací.

In the third phase of the conquest of Yucatán, he attended the first garrison in San Pedro Champotón, a locality in which the native people began to pay tribute to the Spaniards. Because "El Adelantado" and "El Mozo" were pooling resources and soldiers, the offensive of the campaign took a long time to start, and their position was endangered by Maya caciques. Anticipating that the caciques would conspire against the Spaniards, "El Sobrino" kidnapped the principal lords of the area and led them to his cousin in Tabasco, where they renewed vows of obedience to the crown. The name of Champotón would change from "San Pedro" to "Salamanca de Champotón" after this incident.

Finally, with resources obtained, "El Sobrino" began the third and final campaign of the conquest, moving from the west to the east of the peninsula alongside "El Mozo" and other captains sent by "El Adelantado." "El Sobrino" was usually at the forefront of these military campaigns.[4]

"El Sobrino" lived his final years in Mérida, where he died as a councilman in 1572, at the age of 55.

References[]

  1. ^ Landa, Diego de (1568) Relación de las cosas de Yucatán cap. IV Conquistadores y clérigos Archived February 17, 2011, at the Wayback Machine texto en la web arteHistoria, Junta de Castilla y León"...He came to Sevilla with a thirteen years old nephew with his same name, and in Seville found his son 28 years who brought with him..."
  2. ^ "La Ciudad de Valladolid". Diario de Yucatán. Archived from the original on March 25, 2010. Retrieved June 14, 2010.
  3. ^ "Encyclopedia of the Municipalities of Mexico: Yucatan". Archived from the original on November 20, 2008. Retrieved November 1, 2009.
  4. ^ "Conquista y Colonización de Yucatán", capítulos XI y XII de Robert S.Chamberlain, Ed. Porrúa 1974
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