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These personal letters illuminate the author and the history of New Mexico as don Diego experienced it.
Volume 5 in The Journals of don Diego de Vargas.
The sixth and final volume of the journals of don Diego de Vargas.
Having retaken Santa Fe by force of arms late in 1693, Diego de Vargas faces unrelenting challenges, waging active warfare against defiant Pueblo Indian resisters while maintaining peace with Pueblo allies; providing homes, food, and supplies for 1,500 unsure colonists; and bidding unceasingly for greater support from viceregal authorities in Mexico City. At the head of combined units of Spanish and Pueblo fighting men, the governor in 1694 leads repeated assaults on castle-like fortified sites. Through combat, prisoner exchange, and negotiation, he reestablishes the kingdom. Franciscans reopen some of the missions. Vargas founds the villa of Santa Cruz de la CaƱada. Pueblos north and west of Santa Fe rebel again in 1696; wearily, Vargas reports more blood on the boulders. Through The Journals of don Diego de Vargas, translated from official and private correspondence, we are drawn back, through conflict and compromise, into New Mexico's formative era.
The second volume in a multivolume series collecting from many locations and translating from Spanish the documents connected with the career of New Mexico's late-17th-century governor and recolonizer. The first volume comprised letters written to his family; the second, and those which will follow, focus on events rather than the man, in particular, the early years of the reestablishment of the Spanish presence north of El Paso. Introduced and thoroughly annotated. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
Don Diego de Vargas was determined to reclaim the New Mexico territory for Spain without bloodshed. Twelve years earlier, in 1680, the Pueblos rose up against the Spanish colonists and killed 21 missionary priests, forcing the colonists back to Mexico. When De Vargas returned in 1692, he paid for the entire excursion out of his own money and placed his mission under the protection of Our Lady of the Rosary La Conquistadora. His mission was initially successful, but was fraught with political sabotage and ultimately more bloodshed. Yet, Deigo remains to history The Peaceful Conquistador.
A documentary account of the resettlement of New Mexico composed of journals and official government records from the late 17th century.