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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/38748-8.txt b/38748-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..bcb30b5 --- /dev/null +++ b/38748-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,8922 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898, Volume +29 of 55, by Various + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898, Volume 29 of 55 + Explorations by Early Navigators, Descriptions of the + Islands and Their Peoples, Their History and Records of + the Catholic Missions, as Related in Contemporaneous Books + and Manuscripts, Showing the Political, Economic, Commercial + and Religious Conditions of Those Islands from Their + Earliest Relations with European Nations to the Close of + the Nineteenth Century + +Author: Various + +Editor: Emma Helen Blair + James Alexander Robertson + +Release Date: February 1, 2012 [EBook #38748] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PHILIPPINE IS., 1493-1898, VOL 29 *** + + + + +Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project +Gutenberg. + + + + + + + + + The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 + + Explorations by early navigators, descriptions of the islands and + their peoples, their history and records of the catholic missions, + as related in contemporaneous books and manuscripts, showing the + political, economic, commercial and religious conditions of those + islands from their earliest relations with European nations to the + close of the nineteenth century, + + Volume XXIX, 1638-40 + + + + Edited and annotated by Emma Helen Blair and James Alexander Robertson + with historical introduction and additional notes by Edward Gaylord + Bourne. + + + The Arthur H. Clark Company + Cleveland, Ohio + MCMV + + + + + + + +CONTENTS OF VOLUME XXIX + + + Preface 9 + + Documents of 1638 + + Events in the Filipinas, 1637-38. [Unsigned; probably + written by Juan Lopez, S.J., at Cavite, in July, 1638.] 23 + + Letter to Felipe IV. Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera; + Manila, August 21. 50 + + Letter to Felipe IV, from the treasurer at + Manila. Baltasar Ruiz de Escalona; Manila, August 31. 52 + + Relation of the Filipinas Islands. Hieronimo + de Bañuelos y Carrillo; Mexico, 1638. 66 + + Glorious victories against the Moros of Mindanao. Diego + de Bobadilla, S.J., and others; Mexico, 1638. 86 + + Royal orders and decrees, 1638. Felipe IV; Madrid, March + 15, and September-December. 102 + + Fortunate successes in Filipinas and Terrenate, + 1636-37. [Unsigned; published in Madrid, 1639.] 116 + + Value of Corcuera's seizures in Jolo. [Unsigned and + undated; probably 1638.] 135 + + Documents of 1639-1640 + + Events in the Philipinas from the year 1638 to that of + 1639. [Unsigned; probably Juan Lopez, at Cavite, 1639.] 141 + + Letters to the Holy Misericordia. Sebastian Hurtado de + Corcuera; Manila, December 4, 1637, and October 26, 1639. 172 + + The university of Santo Tomás. Felipe IV; Madrid, + November 9, 1639. 175 + + Royal orders and decrees. Felipe IV; Madrid, 1639. 178 + + Events in the Filipinas Islands from August, 1639, + to August, 1640. [Juan Lopez?]; Cavite, August, 1640. 194 + + Relation of the insurrection of the Chinese. [Unsigned + and undated; probably in March, 1640.] 208 + + Ecclesiastical and Augustinian affairs, 1630-40. Casimiro + Diaz; Manila [1718?]. [From his Conquistas.] 259 + + Relation of the Filipinas Islands. [Diego de Bobadilla, + S.J.; 1640.] 277 + + Bibliographical Data. 313 + + + + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + + View of city of Manila; photographic facsimile of engraving in + Mallet's Description de l'univers (Paris, 1683), ii, p. 127; + from copy in the Library of Congress. 67 + + View of one of Ladrones Islands; photographic facsimile of + engraving in Hulsius's Eigentliche und wahrhaftige Beschreibung + (Franckfurt am Mayne, M.DC.XX), p. 66; from copy in library of + Harvard University. 169 + + Portus Acapulco (view of harbor of Acapulco, Mexico); + photographic facsimile of engraving in Arnoldus Montanus's + Nieuwe en onbekende Weereld (Amsterdam, 1671), p. 246; from + copy in library of Harvard University. 188 + + Archipelagus orientalis, sive Asiaticus (Eastern or Asiatic + archipelago); photographic facsimile of map by Joannis Blaeu + (Amsterdam, 1659); from original map in Bibliothèque Nationale, + Paris. 279 + + + + + + + +PREFACE + + +The present volume (1638-40) is largely occupied with the annals +of those years, and the hostilities of the Moro pirates. This +period is a troublous one; "wars and rumors of wars," conspiracies +(among both Chinese and natives), storms, shipwrecks, and disease, +disquiet the colony. The Chinese revolt of 1639 is described at +length. Corcuera administers the government with a high hand, and +arouses many enmities. Two interesting descriptions of the islands +are furnished, by a Spanish officer and by a Jesuit. + +The Jesuit annalist at Manila contributes (1638) the news of the past +year--apparently the contents of his note-book or diary, as written +therein at each occurrence or arrival, and free from the "improvements" +of any official editor, in which fact lies its especial value. This +document strongly resembles in this respect, and in its scope, the +famous Journal des Jésuites of Quebec. To some extent, the same remarks +are true of all the annals written, actually or presumably, by Juan +Lopez; but the present document is unusually fresh and primitive in +style. He relates the depredations committed by the Dutch on Spanish +and Portuguese commerce, especially about the strait of Malaca. The +Dominican faction of "Barbones" has been suppressed. The Chinese +at Manila present a large sum of money to Corcuera, with which +a gift for the king is purchased. Information is given regarding +several priests and other persons. The settlement at Formosa is +being abandoned, and the missionaries there are going to China. The +Camucones have attempted to raid the Visayas, but are repulsed by +the Indians and Spaniards. The Jesuit Mastrilli has been martyred in +Japan, and funeral honors are paid to him in Manila. Corcuera has +gone to punish the Joloans. The Jesuit church at Cavite, and that +of the Dominicans at Manila, have been entered by thieves. There +are a few slight encounters with the Dutch. In China, persecutions +of the Christians have begun, due largely to the imprudence of the +friars. The missions in Siam and adjoining countries are endangered +by the machinations of the Dutch. The Joloan stronghold is captured +by Corcuera; two of his best officers are sent home to regain their +health, but are slain by their Chinese crew. Jesuits are conducting a +successful mission in the island of Hainan. The Japanese are growing +weary of their persecutions against the Christians; only three +Jesuits are left there of all the missionaries and nothing certain +is known of these. Corcuera arrives at Manila on May 23; he brings +back many captives, of whom a considerable number died en route, but +"it is a cause of great consolation that no Moro has died without +baptism." A triumphant entry is made into Manila by the victorious +army. In Mindanao Moncay is killed, and Corralat is no longer aided +by the Ternatans; the Moros generally are in wholesome fear of the +Spanish power. The missions in China are doing well, and are aided +by the emperor. Lopez notes many little items of news, of all sorts, +about matters civil, ecclesiastical, and foreign, with various gossip, +some of the cloister, some of his seaport. + +A short letter from Corcuera to the king (August 21, 1638) states that +he has appointed Luis Arias de Mora "protector of the Sangleys;" +this man (a lawyer) also acts as counselor for the archbishop, +exercising a wholesome restraint upon that prelate. + +A letter from the royal treasurer at Manila to the king (August 31, +1638) laments the injuries and losses caused to the royal estate +by Corcuera's reckless and extravagant management. He is blamed for +refusing to send the trading ships to Mexico, for establishing a force +for the nightly patrol of the city, for forming several companies of +Indian soldiers, for paying certain salaries which are claimed to be +needless, and for building a church for the soldiers. Escalona declares +that the trade of the islands with Mexico is neglected and unregulated, +and thus the colonists are being financially ruined. He asserts that +the expeditions against Mindanao and Jolo had cost much unnecessary +expenditure of both money and lives; and that Corcuera has attempted +to cover up these expenses under specious pretexts. The treasurer +complains that the governor has spent too much on the royal hospital, +and has interfered with the duties and rights of the royal officials; +and entreats the king to see that he is restrained within due bounds. + +An interesting description of the Philippine Islands is furnished +(Mexico, 1638) by a Spanish admiral, Hieronimo de Bañuelos y Carrillo; +it is addressed to the president of the Council of the Indias; the +original is, so far as known, no longer extant, and it is found only +in the French version by Thevenot. Bañuelos finds life in Manila +"altogether delightful," as it has abundance of all supplies and +comforts. He describes the Parián, and praises the ability of the +Chinese; but he asserts that they are injuring the islands by their +illicit connection with the Mexican trade. The condition and character +of that trade are here presented, in a description very different +from that furnished by Grau y Monfalcón. This writer objects to the +silk trade between Filipinas and Nueva España, which only benefits +the Chinese, the Portuguese of Macao, and the Mexicans. Moreover, +"the encomiendas are ruined," while the natives are not instructed in +religion, and are hostile to the Spaniards. The Malays of Ternate and +other outlying islands are in league with the Dutch, and the trade +with them is going to ruin. Bañuelos proposes a new plan for the +Filipinas commerce; he would (still limiting its amount) restrict +it mainly to raw silk and cotton, which could be manufactured in +Mexico; he enumerates the advantages that would result from this +course. The Japanese trade need not be considered in this question, +as it is closed to the Spaniards on account of religious persecution; +of this last and its effects Bañuelos gives some account. He again +urges that the trade in Chinese stuffs be suppressed; and makes +recommendations as to the manner in which it should be conducted, +describing various abuses and scandals which he has discovered therein. + +The Jesuit Bobadilla published (Mexico, 1638) a "Relation of the +glorious victories ... against the Mahometan Moros;" it contains +Mastrilli's letter of June 2, 1637 (published in VOL. XXVII of this +series), and other matter obtained from letters which the editor had +received from Manila; we present here such part as is new. Bobadilla +prefaced this compilation by a short address to Governor Corcuera's +brother Iñigo (a military officer in Mexico), in which he takes +occasion to eulogize the virtues of both in glowing terms. The first +section of the book is occupied by a relation (here only briefly +outlined) of the miraculous cure wrought upon Father Mastrilli, and his +entrance into missionary work; then follows "an account of the great +island of Mindanao," partly descriptive and partly historical. The +piratical raids of the Mindanaos upon the Spanish settlements and the +Visayan coasts are briefly recounted, with mention of the establishment +of Spanish missions and forts in Mindanao; also the raids made by the +Camucones, Joloans, and Borneans. Then follow a description of the +naval battle at Punta de Flechas, Mastrilli's letter describing the +Mindanao campaign, and Lopez's account of Corcuera's triumph--all of +which we have previously published. + +Various royal orders and decrees issued in 1638 are here +presented. Corcuera is warned (March 15) to proceed cautiously in +regard to the free negroes whom he has removed from the city, and to +obtain royal permission henceforth for any important measures that +he may contemplate. A decree of September 2 imposes restrictions +on the religious orders in the islands, and permits the governor to +use secular priests as missionaries. The king orders him (October 2) +to appoint to new missions native secular priests instead of friars; +also to treat the nuns of St. Clare with more consideration, and +to pay them for certain inconveniences that he has caused them. He +is authorized (November 8) to take such measures as are necessary to +maintain the seclusion of the inmates of Santa Potenciana. The viceroy +and Audiencia of Mexico are ordered (December 8) to report whether it +will be best to increase the amount of trade allowed to the citizens +of Filipinas with Nueva España; and other decrees of the same date +give the officers of the galleons authority to punish any infractions +of law committed by their men while in port, and require stricter +enforcement of the regulations in regard to lading those vessels. + +A printed pamphlet, "Fortunate successes in Filipinas and Terrenate" +(Madrid, 1639), gives a brief outline of the Moro raids into the +Philippines during several years, and Corcuera's successful campaign +against those pirates; it is evidently written by a Jesuit, or largely +compiled from Mastrilli's letter. At the end is a description of the +encounter between Spanish and English ships at Malayo. We append a +short document enumerating the spoils seized in the Jolo campaign by +the Spanish forces, with the value assigned to each item; the expenses +of the expedition are covered thereby mainly by the proceeds from +the sale of Moro captives. + +"Events in the Philipinas during the year 1638-39" are recorded, as +before, by a Jesuit, presumably Juan Lopez. The news from Mindanao +and Jolo is not encouraging; the Moros are revolting, and in Jolo a +plague and epidemic is feared; besides, the commandant there has proved +unfit. A letter from the Jesuit Gutierrez relates events in Mindanao; +these relate mainly to the measures taken by the Spanish commandant +to control and pacify the disaffected Moros. Spanish friars exiled +from China have arrived in Formosa, but hope to reënter China. The +Jesuits of Macao also indulge the hope of gaining foothold anew in +Japan. The writer gives various interesting news items about the +arrival and departure of the ships at the port of Cavite; and the +escape, on several occasions, of Moro captives held at Manila, and +the recapture of many of them. A letter from Father Alejandro Lopez +describes the attempt of the men of Jolo to recapture by treachery +their stronghold from the Spaniards, and the severe punishment +inflicted by Pedro de Almonte upon the rebels. Chinese pirates commit +depredations on the Luzón coasts; and plots of the resident Chinese +against the Spaniards are discovered and punished. A revolt by the +Indians of Nueva Segovia is also quelled. Recent news from Mindanao +and Jolo tells of increasing Spanish ascendency, but at a fearful +cost to the Moro natives--slaughtered people, devastated lands, and +consequent deaths by famine. One of the trading ships to Mexico has +been wrecked, which is a great blow to the colony. A fierce hurricane +causes great damage at Cavite and in its vicinity; and there have been +epidemics of disease in Luzón, in which many persons have died. It +is feared that both of the Acapulco galleons have been lost at sea; +and all these things fill the people with sadness. The small remnant +of the crew of a Spanish galleon wrecked the preceding year among +the Ladrones Islands arrive at Manila. + +Letters from Corcuera to the confraternity of Santa Misericordia +ask (December 4, 1637) their prayers for the success of his Jolo +expedition; and (October 26, 1639) that they will take into their house +two Moro hostages, to train them in the Christian doctrine. Letters +from Felipe IV to Rome (November 9, 1639) ask that the college of +Santo Tomás at Manila be erected into a university. + +A group of royal decrees issued during 1639 is presented. The +governor's action in stationing religious ministers in Mindanao +is approved. The municipal authorities of Manila are ordered to +retain Grau y Monfalcón as their agent at the royal court. The +newly-appointed governor of the islands, Diego Fajardo, is ordered to +correct (but with mildness and prudence) the Augustinians in trading +and in oppressing the Indians; and to restore to the secular priests +Quiapo and other districts assigned to the Jesuits by Corcuera. The +bishop of Camarines is ordered to return to his diocese, and the royal +officials to withhold his salary until he shall do so. Directions +are given to the viceroy of Nueva España regarding the inspection +of Philippine vessels at Acapulco, and the necessity of sending more +colonists to the islands. Answer is made to various points in a former +letter from the archbishop; and the Audiencia are commanded to treat +the Indians more justly. + +Events in the Filipinas Islands from August to November, 1639, are +recorded by the Jesuit annalist of former years (presumably Juan +Lopez). The arrivals and departures of ships form the chief of these +events, and the writer furnishes much interesting news in connection +with them. A fierce storm delays the galleon to Nueva España, and +wrecks two Chinese junks, drowning many of their men. The two Acapulco +galleons arrive, about this time, at Nueva Segovia, and are wrecked in +that port, with much loss of life. The recent conquest of Jolo is being +completed. The king of Macasar is friendly, and has sent provisions +to the Portuguese colony at Malaca. A Dutch squadron sent against +the city of Goa has been almost destroyed by the Portuguese. The +people of Tidore and Ternate are leagued together, which causes the +Spaniards to fear a revolt against their control. The Moro chiefs +in Mindanao are plotting together against the Spaniards. Nearly +half of this document is occupied with an account of the Chinese +insurrection late in November, 1639; it is soon quelled, with the +slaughter of many Sangleys. A detailed account of this episode, +presumably the one mentioned in the last note on Lopez's record, is +here presented; it is a valuable if not altogether edifying document, +especially for its revelations of human nature. Lopez's statement that +the revolt was soon over was premature; it lasted nearly four months, +and caused great loss of property to the Spaniards, and of lives to the +insurgents. Most of the Chinese population in Luzón was exterminated, +thanks to their lack of cannon and firearms and "the special protection +of our Lord over our army," which lost not even fifty men. It is a +sickening record of slaughter--not only in so-called battle, but in +the cold-blooded, deliberate, and systematic butchery of unarmed men, +taken by surprise or lured by treacherous promises. The most striking +instance of this is the cruel slaughter, caused by a blind and panic +fear, of the house-servants and other Chinese in Manila; another is the +burning of the Parián, with all the rich merchandise stored therein; +while in Cavite several hundred Chinese are deliberately taken out +by tens and beheaded. In both cases, however, opportunity is kindly +provided for the wretched victims to receive baptisms, if they were +infidels, or to make their confessions, if Christians. Peace is finally +made with the small remnant of the insurgent force, who are taken to +Manila and carefully guarded within a stockade. The writer describes +their method of warfare; and enumerates the villages burned by them, +and other damages committed, during the revolt. + +The history of the Augustinian order in the Philippines, presented in +VOLS. XXIII and XXIV of this series from Medina's Historia, is here +continued for the decade 1630-40 by an extract from Diaz's Conquistas +(written about 1718), partly in synopsis and partly in translation. He +relates the contest over the vacant see of Manila, finally settled +(1630) in favor of Fray Pedro de Arce; the election of Gerónimo de +Medrano as provincial in 1632; the persecutions in Japan, the lives +of martyrs there, the controversy between Corcuera and the bishop, +biographies of noted Augustinians, and various secular matters (all +of which we omit). There is an interesting relation of the life and +labors of a useful missionary, Alonso de Mentrida, among the Indians +in Panay Island; he wages unceasing war against the devil and his +agents, the native priests of idols--the former often appearing in +visible and hideous form. A similar account is given of the life +of Juan de Medina (above cited). In 1638 Fray Martin Errasti is +elected provincial. The Visayas Islands have been, of late years, +harassed by the Moro pirates; but a notable expedition is undertaken +(1639) against those of the Lake Lanao region, in which the Recollect +missionary known as "Padre Capitan" is a prominent figure. For the +time, those Moros are awed and warned. Diaz recounts the main events +of that time--Corcuera's expedition to Jolo and the insurrection of +the Chinese. Errasti dies in 1639, and his vacant office is assumed +by Fray Juan Ramírez, the past provincial. + +In 1640 the Jesuit Bobadilla writes a description of the Philippines +and their people. The former is but a brief outline; most of the +document is devoted to the Indian natives, and the natural products of +the islands. The father writes of the custom of slavery among them; +their religious beliefs, customs, and superstitions; the practices +of their priests; their physical appearance, and dress; their customs +of tattooing, filing the teeth, and bathing; their language, writing, +and music. He describes their marriages, houses, occupations, boats, +and weapons; and their medical practice and mortuary customs. Then he +considers the climate of the islands, the culture and uses of rice, +and the natural products--animals, minerals, and fruits, especially +the palm and bamboo. He describes the buyo, so commonly used there; +also various peculiar animals. Bobadilla then mentions the manner in +which the Spanish colony is governed; their garrisons in the islands; +and the bishoprics therein. He describes briefly the city of Manila, +the trade of Filipinas, the relations of the Spaniards with the +Chinese and other peoples, and the voyage between Manila and Acapulco. + + + The Editors + July, 1905. + + + + + + + +DOCUMENTS OF 1638 + + + Events in the Filipinas, 1637-38. [Unsigned; probably written by + Juan Lopez, S.J., in July, 1638.] + Letter to Felipe IV. Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera; August 21. + Letter to Felipe IV, from the treasurer at Manila. Baltasar Ruiz + de Escalona; August 31. + Relation of the Filipinas Islands. Hieronimo de Bañuelos y + Carrillo; 1638. + Glorious victories against the Moros of Mindanao. Diego de + Bobadilla, S.J., and others; 1638. + Royal orders and decrees, 1638. Felipe IV; March 15, and + September-December. + Fortunate successes in Filipinas and Terrenate, 1636-37. + [Unsigned; published in 1639.] + Value of Corcuera's seizures in Jolo. [Unsigned and undated; + probably 1638.] + + + +Sources: The first and seventh of these documents are obtained from +MSS. in the Academia Real de la Historia, Madrid; the second and third, +and two of the decrees in the sixth, from MSS. in the Archivo general +de Indias, Sevilla; the rest of the sixth, from the Archivo Historico +Nacional, Madrid; the fourth, from Thevenot's Voyages curieux, t. i, +part ii--from a copy belonging to the library of Harvard University; +the fifth, from a book in the Museo-Biblioteca de Ultramar, Madrid; +the eighth, from Pastells' edition of Colin's Labor evangélica, iii, +pp. 528-533. + +Translations: These are made by James A. Robertson--except the second +and part of the sixth, by Emma Helen Blair; and the fifth, by Arthur +B. Myrick. + + + + + + + +EVENTS IN THE FILIPINAS, 1637-38 + + +The patache for España left here August 24. It had a propitious season +[for departure], and therefore it has apparently enjoyed favoring +vendaval blasts. [1] A short time before that, the patache had left +for the island of Hermosa; its commander was Don Alonso de Alcoçer, +and the governor of that island, Sargento-mayor Pedro Palomino, +sailed in it. On the fifth of September, a xalea arrived from Yndia +on its way to Macan, which had been obliged to put in here on account +of the weather. It left Malaca August 16, in order to advise the +inhabitants of Macan to be on the lookout, for there were many Dutch +in the strait. Now they are going in the galleon "San Juan Baptista" +under command of Juan Lopez de Ariduin, to buy materials of importance +for his Majesty's fleets. The xalea remains here to be used for the +expedition to Xolo, for which it seems well fitted. They report as +news that Goa was almost surrounded by Dutch vessels. Six galleons +went out to attack them and sank three of the Dutch vessels. The +latter retired after three days of fighting, with the intention of +returning to Jacatra and getting a larger force. On the way they met +eleven Portuguese fustas, which took shelter in a river. The Dutch +employed strategy in fighting them, and captured seven of the fustas, +while four escaped. One of the latter was an excuse for a galley. In +consequence [of that victory], the enemy are now committing great +depredations in the strait. + +It is also reported that the Malabars with seventeen paroos [i.e., +praus] attacked last year a ship from Macan with a crew of thirty +Portuguese, and carrying great wealth, a thing never before seen. It +is reported that the Dutch there have shown great anger at what +the relief galleons did this year with their ships and the fort of +Malayo; and that, for the coming year, they are intending to send +out a squadron to punish the jest that was played on them. + +It is reported that a Portuguese, named Antonio Carnero, has taken +up arms together with others, and that they have adopted the calling +of pirates, and are committing depredations on Moros and Christians. + +When the king of Achen was about to go to attack Malaca with a fleet, +he died. The kingdom was inherited by the king of Paon, an old-time +friend of the Portuguese. He has renewed friendship with them--a +great piece of news. + +Fray Antonio del Rosario, the ancient of Macan, of [the Order of] +St. Dominic, bishop-elect of Malaca, died on the way [to that city] +before being consecrated. + +The fathers who accompanied Father Marçelo, who were captured last +year by the Dutch, together with that famous Polish father, are now +at liberty. Father Antonio Magallanes, procurator of the province of +Goa, whom I saw at Roma and Madrid, was to conduct Father Marçelo and +his companions; but he remained in España to finish some business, +has been elected bishop of Japon, and they are awaiting him in Yndia. + +Among the Portuguese of that xalea is one who is a lay-brother of +St. Francis. He came last year from Lisboa as companion of a bishop, +the friar Francisco Froan de Benavides, who was once in the mission +of Nuevo Mexico. He died on his arrival at Goa, and this religious is +trying to pass to España by way of these islands, with papers left him +by the bishop. This is the principal news brought by the Portuguese. + +On the morning of the seventh of this month, Fray Juan de Subelço [2] +came here from the province of the Rosario, to ask assistance by virtue +of an order that he brought from the governor. This was given to him +[by the authorities], and he entered the convent, took possession of it +for his province, and sent to Manila the father rector, Fray Francisco +Pinelo, who surrendered the house peaceably and quietly. The day +before, with the same aid, they had taken possession at the same time +of Minondo, the hospital, and the Parián, and conveyed Father Collado +and the other fathers to their convent. The community received them +at the door of their church, amid the chiming of bells, the playing +of organs, and with candles lighted on their altars; thence they took +the fathers to their cells. As a thank-offering they began a novena, +on November 7, of masses and Salves, accompanied by fine music, the +chiming of the bells, and a goodly crowd. All the people rejoiced +because they were at peace. Your Reverence will be pleased to know +how this happened. Collado wrote bits of satire against the governor, +calling him filius diaboli flagellum dei et alia hujus modi. [3] +His original letters were returned to hands that placed them in +those of Don Sebastian. Finally the governor allowed the claims of +the province of the Rosario to stand. That province had made Fray +Andres del Santisimo judge-conservator, who summoned Collado to show +his despatches that had been passed by the Council [of the Indias], +but he did not answer. The judge-conservator cited him for the second +time, but there was no answer. The judge-conservator proclaimed the +cause at an end, and sentenced his province to be suppressed. Aid +was asked for the execution of the order and was given, etc. + +On Saturday, the twelfth of this month, excommunications were read +here in four churches against those who had or knew of moneys, +clothing, books, or other things of the bearded fathers, [4] unless +they gave them up to those of the Rosario. Almost two thousand pesos +were declared here belonging to Pinelo, who had deposited them with +a friend. He came to Manila instantly, and begged protection from Don +Sebastian, saying that they were his--five hundred pesos received from +a berth on ship, given him by his Lordship for Mexico, and which, with +his Lordship's permission, he sold when he remained; one hundred and +seventy pesos from a pay-warrant which his Lordship had ordered to be +paid to him; and he had been given one thousand or more pesos, which +his nephew the reader Ochoa (whom he brought with him as a witness) had +given him. All this did he state, for even as he left here, he tried +to go to España in this galleon by way of Macan, which was conceded to +him. The governor wrote to Fray Juan de Subelço to let him have that +money, which was proved to belong to Pinelo. He gave him another and +very stringent letter for his provincial in Manila that declared the +same thing. Father Fray Juan, who narrated the matter to me, went to +talk with him, and told him that the books showed that the expense was +more than eight hundred pesos ahead of the receipts; and that, besides +this, he had just received two hundred pesos belonging to a deceased +man, and one hundred and seventy pesos belonging to another, and that +he will have to give account of this--besides which, in any event, +it all belonged to the order, and nothing was his. He answered that +they should have it there, and that he would write to his provincial; +and that, notwithstanding his letter, Fray Juan should do his duty, +in conformity to the rules of his order. I have now learned that they +gave up all the money to Pinelo, which he carried away. The galleon +sailed September 19. + +Of their own accord the Sangleys offered the governor [5] a gift of +six thousand pesos, giving the following reasons for so doing: first, +because he had redeemed thirty-one of their people from the captivity +of Corralat; second, because he had made the seas free and secure +for their ordinary trade; and third, because he maintained them in +peace and justice. Consequently, the expense of the war of Mindanao, +taking into account the artillery, and the pillage which pertained +to his Majesty, and the above-mentioned six thousand pesos, was not +only covered, but there were also one thousand five hundred pesos +left over, as I was told by his Majesty's accountant. The latter +also adds that the golden water-jug and plate that had belonged to +Auditor Alcaraz were bought for the king our lord with those one +thousand five hundred pesos; and the governor Don Sebastian added to +that sum more than two hundred pesos as a gift from his own purse, +in order to make up the cost of the said water-jug and plate. Dated +at Cavite, September 15, 1637. + +September 27, sentence was declared in favor of the Augustinian +fathers of Castilla, and that sentence makes a complete end to the +alternative. A sentence was also given in which the will of Espinosa +el Tuerto [i.e., "the one-eyed"] was declared null and void. The +property has been delivered to the fund belonging to deceased persons, +and those who have any right to it are to demand their justice. + +I had a letter from Father Melchor de Vera, [6] in which he says that +the people who escaped alive from the six large Javanese ships which +were at Lamitan were accommodated in one caracoa, and passing before +Basilan, full of fear of the Spaniards in the fort of Sanboangan, +talked with the chief men [of Basilan], and told them that they were +those who had been driven from the hill, and that many more than they +had thought had been killed; and that there was no one in Mindanao +who did not mourn a person of very near kin--the father for his son, +the son for his father, etc. + +I shall add here what occurred last year in the month of September, +and which I did not learn until the same month of this year 1637. The +captain and commandant of Caragan was then Juan Nicolas Godino. He +went with a fleet to commit depredations on the tributaries of +Cachil Corralat. He met six caracoas at sea, which he attacked and +conquered--although most of the enemy escaped to land, as they were +near the shore. However he killed some of them and captured others. He +also did much damage in a village that he attacked. He returned +to his fort laden with plunder and with one hundred and twenty +captives. Among the dead was one Dumplac, who had formerly killed +Alférez Blas Gonzalez, and had done great damage to the Christians +of our missions and those of Caragan. Among the captives was a very +famous chief, who was regarded as a brave man, and who killed Captain +Pedro Baptista in the insurrection of Caragan. + +October 24, the patache from the island of Hermosa entered the port, +and it brought back most of the people in those forts. They say +that the Franciscan friars are all going to China, as are all the +Dominicans, except one who remained there. It is reported that they +are suffering famine, and that no ships from China go there. + +The day before, the twenty-third, Sargento-mayor Don Pedro de Corquera, +the governor's nephew, died at Manila. The governor had reared him from +childhood in Flandes. He was well liked and respected in these islands, +for his affable manners had obtained for him much popularity. Three +or four days before, a galley-captain, named N. Ramos, and some +other discontented Spaniards had deserted in a boat with a topmast, +for their provision robbing two Sangley champans. + +The master-of-camp, Pedro de Heredia, died at Manila November 5. He +left all his property to charity. But the Audiencia sequestered it +all immediately, until the end of his residencia. Captain Don Diego +de Miranda also died from an accident, which carried him off in +thirty hours. + +News was received on November 15 that the enemy were passing the +Mindoro coast. That same day, Don Sebastian despatched some vessels +to attack them. Alférez Arexica went from this place to attack +them with fifty firearms in the xalea and two brigantines. He also +despatched his company from Manila in champans, to pursue and punish +them. Shortly after, Father Hernando de Estrada [7] arrived here +from Marinduque. He states that he met some champans which had been +pursued by the enemy, whom they thought to have been Camucones. The +two brigantines returned on the night of November 24. On account of +the wind and rain they had lost the xalea, which was the flagship, +the night that they had left. They went to Balayan, where they learned +that the Camucones had attacked Lobo, but that they had done no damage, +for the Indians resisted them; whereupon the pirates had taken their +course toward their own country by way of the sea side of Mindoro. The +xalea returned November 29, without having met the enemy. Then came +news that one night the flagship and one other of the champans that +had sailed from Manila had collided. The shock was more severe on +the flagship, which sprang a leak and went down. Only one Spaniard +and one Sangley were drowned. + +The champan that carried Father Marçelo Mastril did not go to China, +but to the Lequios, which are subject to the king of Saxuma. Some +Japanese accompanied the father. Accordingly they made use of the +following stratagem. Those of the champan talked with the Lequians, +whom they told that those Japanese had been wrecked on an island, +and that they had rescued them; and that, if the Lequians would give +them some provisions, they would leave the Japanese there; but, if +not, that the latter would return [to Manila]. The Lequians gave them +some food, and immediately despatched the father and the Japanese, +as they wished, in a funea, while the champan returned here. They +learned there that the Dominican fathers who had tried to go to Japon +last year by way of the Lequios had been seized, and sent to the king +of Saxuma by the tono of that land. + +Yesterday, December 9, Don Sebastian set out from Manila for Xolo. He +sailed in the galley flagship. With him went the xalea, brigantines, +champans, and the two galleons for Terrenate, under the command of +Geronimo Enriquez; and as admiral Don Pedro de Almonte, the same as +last year. The second galley was launched yesterday, and the commander +of the galleys, Nicolas Gonzalez, will leave here in it in a week, +in order to follow Don Sebastian. Admiral Andres Lopez de [word partly +illegible; Nozadigui?] will govern this port in his absence. + +A patache arrived at Manila on December 27 from Macan, laden with +five thousand arrobas of iron for Captain Juan Lopez de Ariduin. It +was bought from some English, who were near Macan with three galleons +and this patache. It brought news of the remarkable martyrdom of Father +Francisco Marçelo Mastril, who reached Japon September 19. Having left +Manila on July 10, he landed at the kingdom of Saxuma with only one +companion. He immediately went inland to go to the emperor's court. But +he was seized October 4, and, having suffered most cruel tortures, +he was beheaded October 17 with his aforesaid companion. Since I +translated the relation from Portuguese into Castilian, and enclose +it herewith, I shall only add that the bells in our church and others +were rung as soon as the news arrived. In the afternoon a notable Te +Deum laudamus was sung. The dean again put on his clerical robes. The +archbishop came, as did the royal Audiencia, and a great crowd of +people, and the orders, as well as the master-of-camp, Don Lorenço +de Olaso, and the flower of the soldiery. From our house they went +to [the church of] St. Dominic to sing another Te Deum for three +martyrs of that order. At night there was also a chiming of bells +and an illumination. The entire city celebrated the glory and virtues +of the holy father Marçelo, with tender tears; for he was generally +loved and regarded as a saint. + +Among the Dominican fathers died a mestizo of Binondo, son of a Chinese +and a Tagál woman. He was prosecuted by justice, in order to hang him +for his crimes; and he embarked with the fathers, in order to escape +with his life. Arriving at the Lequios, and his other companions +remaining in the boat, he refused to return, but wished to continue +with the fathers. They tell and do not finish telling of the valor, +fervor, and courage of that holy mestizo, who suffered cruel tortures +with a rare constancy, ever preaching the Divine law of God. + +It was learned, at the coming of that patache, that those fathers +who had accompanied the holy father Marçelo who went with the +captain-general of Macan had arrived safely; and that the champan +which had fled hence with eighteen sailors had made port at that +city. It was also reported that the Portuguese have not been well +received in Japon either this year or last, and all that is because +of the preachers who go. It is learned also that Father Alberto de +Polonia was brought to Cochinchina, and that he is now in Macan, +where for some time he suffered from a most severe illness. + +A champan, which had sailed from the island of Hermosa some years +ago with a load of people, and had been given up as lost, made port +at Sian because of the violence of the wind. That king treated them +well, and gave them the means with which to return. Afterward they +were driven upon the coast of the kingdom of Patani by other fierce +tempests--where, having been supplied and sailing near the strait of +Sincapura, the Dutch followed them. They landed, and at length made +port at Macan, whence some of the men have come, while the others will +come in the galleon "San Juan Baptista." It is said by those who come +in this patache, who had gone in the galleon "San Juan Baptista," that, +on discovering the English ships, lanchas came from them to reconnoiter +them; and the English, having heard that it was a galleon belonging +to the king of España, threw up their caps into the air joyfully, +and eagerly cried out, "Hurrah for the king of España!" Then they took +the news to their own ships, which fired many salutes, and by way of +toasting the health of the king our sovereign, fired a hundred pieces +of artillery. They told our men that the daughter of their king [8] +was in España for all her lifetime. + +Father Fray Francisco de Pinelo and other religious who went from +here to pass to España embarked in these English ships, on condition +that there should be no disputes on matters of religion. + +News came through the fathers of St. Augustine at Panhay on January +15, 1638, that one of the champans which left Manila to attack +the Camucones became separated from the others. It fell in with +the Camucones, and did them great damage, sinking their flagship +and almiranta. Twelve Borneans were captured, and six Christians +were freed. The enemy's loss was a hundred counting drowned and +killed. Sargento-mayor Pedro de Fuerçios was commander of that champan. + +Almost all the month of January and that of February was taken +up with prayers in various churches, for the fortunate success of +Don Sebastian. Now we are not the only ones to offer them, as we +were last year; but all make them, both the secular clergy and the +friars. The Sangleys have said very solemn prayers in their Parián +church, of their own accord, as an expression of thanks for the peace +and justice in which the governor maintains them. + +Don Sebastian had sent those Borneans and Camucones from Otong to +Manila, ordering them to serve the various orders and hospitals, +so that they might be carefully catechized and made Christians. When +they reached Maribeles, an old Morabite [9] persuaded the others, and +they rose against the Spaniards who were bringing them. There were two +Spaniards in the champan who were wounded, but they killed the Morabite +and wounded some of the others. Some of them were thrown into the sea, +where they were drowned, and with this fortune they reached Manila. + +On the night of February 10, robbers entered the church of this +residence at Cavite, and stole two silver lamps. They set a trap in +the stairway, so that the first one who should descend, if the robbers +were perceived, would undoubtedly be killed. It has been impossible to +find any trace of the robbers. A week later, about two thousand pesos' +worth of jewels were stolen in Manila in [the church of] St. Dominic, +Nuestra Señora del Rosario. But the thief (who was a Spaniard) was +discovered, and most of it has been recovered. + +Letters were received March 19, announcing the governor's arrival at +Sanboangan and Jolo. The news therein contained is in a separate paper. + +A despatch was received from the governor in the middle of April from +Jolo, from which it was learned that he was pressing as closely as +possible the siege of the stronghold, which the Macasars and Joloans +were defending with great obstinacy. There are things worthy of +history, which will go [in a letter] by themselves. + +It was learned from the same despatch that the Terrenate galleons +had already returned to Sanboangan, and that they had arrived safely +with their reënforcements, without the Dutch enemy having shown them +any resistance, although the latter had vessels of great burden. Six +Dutchmen deserted to our men; the three who were aboard the flagship, +where Father Pedro Hernando de Estrada was, were converted to our +holy Catholic faith by his efforts. One of them is a fine student, +and very talented. He knows Latin and Greek, and had studied the +whole course of arts, and some years in law, in Flandes. + +A patache which left Macan some days after our galleon "San Juan +Baptista," arrived from that city on May 4, and they expected to find +the galleon here; however, experienced persons say that it is not +late. There are six brothers in the galleon--students who are to be +ordained--and Father Bartolome is coming with them as superior. That +patache brings two Franciscan friars, Castilians, who have been driven +from China. They say that the Chinese have driven them away through +love of us, saying that Ours preach Christ risen, and those fathers +Christ crucified--a reason that I do not understand. The statement of +the pilot of the patache is that they have been driven out because they +proceeded in the preaching with but little caution, and I regard that +as true. Some nine months ago, I heard a prudent and experienced man +say that a great persecution was feared in China, because of the little +caution of the preachers. One week after the arrival of the patache, +I received a letter from Father Antonio Cardin, [10] commissary of +the Holy Office for Macan and China, who gives me the following news: + + + "Section of a letter from Father Antonio Cardin, dated Macan, + April 15, 1638 + + "I shall relate here the news of the missions that your Reverence + desires to know. Japon is a thing of the past if God do not, in + His mercy, aid it. China was increasing greatly in Christianity + during these years, but with the entrance of the friars, it is + being thrown into confusion; for all the religious have been exiled + in Chincheo, and the churches destroyed, where they and we were + [laboring] in a flourishing Christian church. For as the friars + treat of conquests, saying openly that China can be conquered + with four thousand Spaniards, such talk can have no good effect + on the natives, who immediately tell it to their mandarins, + and we are all lost. + + "The fathers have been restored to their former liberty in + Cochinchina. The old king died, but his son has given the Dutch a + factory, and they are doing as much harm as possible. In Tumquin + that Christian church is increasing greatly; but the Dutch are now + there, and, although the king has not conceded them a factory, + they say that they will do us as much harm as possible in order + that we may be exiled. Father Raymundo de Govea is arranging + matters in Tumquin, in order that he may go to the Laos. There + is no news from Siam. They killed Father Julio Cesar there, and + until now they have been at war with Malaca. They now send to + ask for peace, and they also tell me that they will ask it from + Manila. It is said that they are doing this through fear of the + Dutch, who they fear are going to seize their kingdom. Father Lope + de Andrada was ordered to retire from Camboja, on account of ill + health, and Father Antonio Capechi was sent there. The sending + of a large ship directly to Lisboa is being discussed here, but + this is so great a blessing that I doubt whether it will be done." + + +At the closing of the hour of prayer on May 13, the day of the +glorious ascension of our Lord, news arrived of the capture of the +[fortified] hill of Jolo. It is a matter of the greatest consolation +for all nations; at least, all joined in the festival with great +appearances of rejoicing. The bells of all the churches were rung, +and the Te Deum laudamus, so due to God, was sung in some of them as +a thank-offering. There was a great illumination at night, and more +ringing of bells. I refer to the history for particular. + +The above news was received on the occasion of the arrival of five +or six ships from Great China, laden with merchandise, which was +needed in the islands. They give as news that eleven other and more +powerful ships have been given chapas. That has been of the greatest +consolation, for in the last two years those ships have had so little +custom, because of the small amount of silver that had been sent +from Mexico, that it was feared that the Chinese would not come this +year. [11] + +The commander of the galleys, Nicolas Gonçalez, and Captain Carrança, +who was general of the artillery, having fallen very sick at Jolo +almost at the beginning of the siege, were sent away by Don Sebastian +so that they might recuperate. They arrived at Octong safely more +than two months ago, and this their delay was already causing +anxiety. Today, May 17, I have been told that the Chinese of the +champan in which they were coming [to Manila] killed them through +greed, in order to rob them, and five other Spaniards with them. One +they cast into the sea badly wounded, where some Indian fishermen +rescued him, to whom he related what had happened. Scarcely had they +reached land before he died. + +Some influential men were killed in the assaults on Xolo, among whom +were Sargento-mayor Melon, Captain Juan Nicolas, Alférez Aregita, etc. + +Yesterday, May 16, while talking with the commandant of Macan, +a very honorable Portuguese, of the Order of Santiago, I asked him +some questions, the replies to which I shall state here, as they have +some interest. He says that the kingdom of Tumquin is a part of Great +China, but has a different king; and it differs in language from China, +as does Galicia from Castilla. He asserts the same of Cochinchina, +although there is a greater difference in language. Tumquin is ninety +leguas from Macan, and is reached by traveling between the island +of Ainao [i.e., Hainan] and the mainland of China. Cochinchina is +one hundred and twenty leguas [from Macan], and is reached by going +outside that island. One of four ships that sailed recently from Macan +to various kingdoms, which was en route to Macasar with two hundred and +fifty persons, was wrecked on this island of Ainao, but only fourteen +persons were drowned. The commandant added that the Society of Jesus +is now preaching in that island, and that the people are rapidly +embracing Christianity. The fathers had brought six boys, sons of +the most influential men, to Macau to be educated better, and they +show signs of great ability. When I asked him about the exile of the +preachers from Chincheo, he only replied that the Castilians, as they +are prepared to hold subject all the Indians of their conquests--as +Mexico, Peru, and these islands--enter into other kingdoms with great +bragging and boasts, which is the occasion of their ruin. + +I have learned from some fathers of St. Dominic and the cura of Nueva +Segobia (which is, one hundred and thirty leguas away from here) that +Fray Diego Collado wrote a paper to Don Sebastian, after the reunion +of the fathers of St. Dominic, which was entitled "Deceits, tricks, +and plots of Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera," in which he made +disgraceful remarks to him. His Lordship sent it to his provincial, +and the latter retired the father to the house of Nueva Segobia. He +remained some months in prison, where he could neither hear nor say +mass; and he is now locked up where he can hear it through a church +gallery. + +Today, May 20, at two o'clock, quite without our expecting it, +and without the fires in Maribelez having announced it, the galleon +"San Juan Baptista"--which had taken fifty days to come from Macan, +a voyage which the patache made in nine--arrived. God delivered them +from a great danger on some shoals, to which the currents were taking +them swiftly during a calm. The fathers assert that they invoked the +holy father Marcelo, the martyr of Jesus Christ, with great faith +in the greatest danger. Thanks to the Lord, who has allowed them +all to arrive safe and happy! Father Bartolome Roboredo has told +us glorious things of the Christendom of Tumquin--where, this year +alone, nine thousand have been baptized. He says that there are some +fathers and a bishop even in Etiopa; and that the rulers do not molest +the Catholics. The fathers of Jentafee, Tibet, and the kingdoms of +Potente and Siranagar, have suffered various fortunes. In the court +of the Megor [i.e., Mogul], the church was destroyed, and the fathers +seized by those Moros, because they were confirming in the faith those +Christians who had been taken captive from Bengala. But now affairs +have begun to brighten; they have been granted liberty, and are aiding +the Christians. By that means it is to be hoped that there will be at +some other time a gateway into Tibet and Siranagar, the way to which +must necessarily lie through [the country of] the Megor. It has been +learned from Japon, from the very ones who are in power, that they +are now tired and weary of killing Christians; and that they are not +well satisfied with the Dutch and their trade. He adds that, because of +what the holy father Marcelo declared to them in his martyrdom--namely, +that they were rendering their nation infamous and obscuring their fame +by the tortures that they were inflicting upon the private parts of +Christians--the Japanese are generally angry, and do not wish that to +be done. All the priests in Japon at present are three of the Society +of Jesus, all Japanese. It is not known where they are wandering, +and no letters have been received from them, because of the severity +of the persecution. There is one other father, a European, named Juan +Baptista Porro. They do not say that he is alive, for, although his +death is not known, it is presumed that he is dead; for he was very +old and worn out with labors, and it is several years since letters +have been received from him. It is also said that there are hopes that +that persecution will soon cease. Would to God that it might be so! + +Yesterday, May 23, the day of the Holy Ghost, Don Sebastian arrived +at this port, having left Tanaguan that morning--a distance of ten +mortal leguas. He came in the Terrenate galleons, which, as the +weather was bad, he left at the landing at Mindoro. He, as well as +Father Juan de Barrios, was fatigued, which we could see was from the +hardships that they have suffered; but, thanks to God, these have +been well recompensed in service to God and to the general welfare +of these islands. The chaplain Don Pedro de Francia died of fever in +the ship, and, six days later, Captain Don Lope de Barahona, of the +same sickness. Upon the arrival of Don Sebastian, the bells in our +house were rung for a long time, as a mark of rejoicing. Later the +bells were rung in the cathedral church, and that night there were +illuminations in all the houses and convents. + +Yesterday, May 27, the galleons of the Terrenate relief expedition +anchored at this port. Father Hernando de Estrada says that twenty +persons of various nations (for the galleons carried Joloans, Basilans, +and the Bisayans who were freed from the captivity of Xolo) have +died in the flagship since their departure from Sanboangan, and that +sickness was caused by their close quarters; and that a goodly number +have died in the almiranta and the patache; but it is a cause for great +consolation that no Moro, male or female, has died without baptism. + +Yesterday, May 31, Don Sebastian made his triumphant entrance into +Manila, in the same manner as he had done, the year preceding, upon +his arrival from Mindanao. I wrote concerning it, by the patache; +and will only state here the number of pieces--namely, eleven of cast +iron and one bronze culverin, these being large pieces. Among the +medium-sized pieces and falcons there were fifteen. The best falcon +had the arms and name of King Don Sebastian [of Portugal]. There were +eleven smaller versos. The crowd of people in the windows and streets, +the illuminations of the night, and the masquerades of the city, +were the same as I wrote last year. + +June 3, Corpus Christi day, the procession of thanks for the victory +was united with that of the most holy sacrament, as I wrote last +year. That same day the xalea which had been left in Xolo arrived. It +brings news that the king and queen, who had fled from the stronghold +with the other Joloans, have sent to say that they desire to settle +in whatever place may be assigned to them, and to pay tribute to +his Majesty. They promise to obey the conditions imposed on them by +Don Sebastian. + +Monday, June 7, the honors for those killed in war were performed in +the soldiers' church with the same solemnity as those of the past +year. The father rector, Francisco Colin, preached to a generally +appreciative audience. + +Friday, June eleven, the flagship galley entered this port with a +round sail, but no bastard; for a flash of lightning, which struck it, +had torn it from top to bottom and killed two men. It brought some +bronze artillery of the pieces captured at Jolo, in addition to what +I mentioned in the triumph--as was told me by a man who comes from +there, and who is well versed regarding artillery. The pieces with +ladles mounted in the stronghold numbered in all eleven of cast iron, +and eleven of bronze; also eleven other large falcons, besides the +ordinary versos. + +He says of Dato Ache, who is the greatest pirate, and the one who +has done most damage to the Christians of all those of Jolo--and +who is the one who persuaded the king and the others to fortify +themselves, and to refuse to surrender to the Spaniards--that a +mine which exploded and killed fifty Joloans, also caught him, so +that he was completely buried. With only power to move one hand, he +beckoned imploringly for help; his men hurried to his assistance, +and got him out, much hurt. He recovered afterward, and when the +others descended from the stronghold, he, with some other Malays, +who were steadfastly of the opinion that they should not surrender, +escaped, and left the island in great dudgeon at the king. + +Sunday, June 20, when we celebrated the feast of the most holy +sacrament, Father Francisco Rangel chanted his first mass in this +college. He was one of the six who came from Macan to be ordained, +and since his residence here has told us some remarkable things that +happened four or five years ago, and, as I believe that very few +there have any knowledge regarding them, I shall relate them here. + +First, he says that the island of Ainao is as large as the island of +Çicilia; and that it has its own natives, who are white-complexioned, +and have a different aspect from that of the Chinese. The latter +conquered the seacoast many years ago, and the natives retired to +the mountains, whence it is their custom to descend to harry the +Chinese--who are scattered, and have never subjected the natives to the +payment of tribute. While Father Bento de Matos was in that island, +two remarkable things occurred to him. In a city of the Chinese, +where no means have yet been found whereby to make an entrance to +instruct the natives--both because the language is special, and +because they are always at war--it happened that the father, having +no lodging, learned that there was a good unoccupied house, for, +because of fear at I know not what noises that had been heard in it, +no one would live in it. The father determined to enter and to live +in that house, although his friends dissuaded him and told him their +fears. He lived there quite a number of days, at the end of which, +in the darkness of the night, a dead man appeared to him in the habit +of a mandarin. The dead man told the father to look well at him, +and note well his marks, and to go to the mandarin So-and-so, who +was his brother, and tell him to disinter his body, which was buried +in such and such a place near the altar; for it was the will of God +that there should not be the body of a condemned heathen in a place +where the holy body of His son Jesus Christ was offered to Him in +acceptable sacrifice. The father gave the marks to the mandarin, who +recognized that it was his brother. They dug in the place noted, and +found the body entire in a casket and preserved with precious spices, +with which it had been embalmed, and carried it to a separate place. + +The other circumstance is, that every day when the said father said +mass there, it was heard by a devout Christian, who, after rising +suddenly, appeared so joyful and happy that the other Christians +came to consider and even to believe him as mad. They resolved to +censure him, and to advise him to have more moderation and modesty in +the presence of so great a Lord. He answered them that he could not +do otherwise than he had; for, on rising from the eucharist, he saw +two most beautiful youths kneeling before the most holy sacrament, +amid such lights and splendors that they bathed his soul in joy so +great that it overflowed in its abundance to his body, and he could +not restrain himself from manifesting it. + +It happened to that same father that, while on a mission to Chincheo, +some literati suddenly entered a chapel in which he was, to make a jest +of him and of the God whom he was adoring. He kneeled down before a +crucifix and said "Lord, do not abandon me among thine enemies." The +holy crucifix answered "No, son, I shall not abandon thee; but I am +always with thee to aid thee." Thereupon the literati, thunderstruck +and full of fear, left the father, and went out of the chapel. + +In one of these recent years, during a great baquio or typhoon, +eighteen Dutch ships were wrecked on the coast of Chincheo. The Chinese +beheaded some of those who escaped alive, and, having seasoned those +heads with salt, took them with the other men whom they left alive to +the court of Paquin, where they were all beheaded. For the aversion +of the Chinese to people with blue eyes is great; and the reason is +that it is said that there is an ancient prophecy that men with eyes +of that color will conquer their kingdom. + +About two years ago, six out of seven ships that left Olanda with +reënforcements for India were sunk in the open sea, and only one +arrived. + +The king of China is commonly regarded by his vassals as a Christian: +1st, because he has only one wife; 2d, because he only adores the God +of heaven; 3d, because he has tried to exterminate the bonzes. Among +other plans [for the accomplishment of that], he employed that +of having six thousand bonzes enlisted for the war against the +Tartars. He sent them under the command of a great war mandarin, +and all the six thousand died in the war. The captain alone escaped, +and he was shortly after baptized; he is a very devout Christian, and +is known as Doctor Miguel. The manner in which the king [12] became +a Christian is said to have been that the famous Doctor Pablo (who +is now dead), having free entrance into the palace, often conversed +with the king, whom he converted and baptized. The king has shown +Ours favor by giving them a large convent of the bonzes in Paquin, +and has given them lands for their support. + +July 6, Father Melchor de Vera passed by way of this college, en +route from Sanboanga. He gives us some particulars which it is well +to know. Cachil Moncay attacked the new village which Cachil Corralat +had built. He killed or captured about one hundred of his men, but +Corralat escaped. Afterward when Dato Siqui brought his customary +tribute to Corralat from the island of Little Sanguil, he attacked +Moncay and killed him and others, so that the number of killed and +captives reached eighty. + +Father Vera met on his way here a champan from Terrenate, which +tells him that Corralat, seeing himself expelled [from his towns] +by Don Sebastian, sent messengers to the Moros of Terrenate, to beg +for aid; but that the latter had refused it to him, as they had enough +of their own affairs to attend to. The men of that champan also told +him that the petty king of Great Sanguil talked with them, and said +that he wished peace with the Spaniards, and would pay tribute to his +Majesty. For greater security he gave them the young prince his son, so +that they might give the boy to the governor as a token of peace. All +these are the results of the two victories of Mindanao and Jolo. + +Today, July 11, a large champan, which had sailed from the port of +Macasar at the beginning of Lent, arrived at this port. They relate +many acts of affection and favor which the king has shown to the +Spaniards. Those aboard the champan assert that the king will be +very glad of whatever ill-treatment Don Sebastian accords to the +Macasars of Jolo, because they have taken arms against the vassals +of his brother the king of Castilla. + +Today, July 18, the patache sails with the reënforcements for the +island of Hermosa, under the command of Don Pedro Fernandez del Rio. + +Yesterday, July 23, at dawn, a Macan patache anchored in this +roadstead. It comes from Camboja laden with rice, camanguian or +benzoin, and other drugs. + + + + + + + +LETTER FROM CORCUERA TO FELIPE IV + + +Sire: + +Last year I informed your Majesty that I had appointed Don Luis +Arias de Mora as protector of the Sangleys in the Parián; he is a +lawyer well known in this royal Audiencia, a man of virtue and of +excellent abilities. On this account, with the salary of that office +of protector (which he draws from the communal treasury of the said +Sangleys), he is obliged to act as counsel for the archbishop in +affairs of justice, in order to prevent the troubles that the friars +brought upon him last year--inducing him to issue acts against the +Order of the Society, and excommunicating the royal Audiencia and +the governor of Filipinas. Since he promised that he would issue +no mandates without the signed approval of this counselor, we have +lived in peace, without there having been the least annoyance, or +any interruption of our harmony; for the said counselor will not sign +any act or document which the said archbishop causes to be drawn up +if it contravenes the patronage and jurisdiction of your Majesty, +or encroaches in any way upon your rights. For these reasons, and on +account of the said Luis Arias de Mora's long service as advocate +in this royal Audiencia, and his excellent reputation for learning +and talent, I entreat that your Majesty will be pleased to grant him +the favor of confirming him in the said office of protector of the +Sangleys, until some greater favor be bestowed upon him; any office +will be well served, if conferred upon him. May our Lord protect the +Catholic person of your Majesty, as Christendom has need. Manila, +August 21, 1638. Sire, your vassal kisses your Majesty's feet. + + +Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera + + +[Endorsed: "February 26, 1639; provision is made for this."] + + + + + + + +LETTER TO FELIPE IV FROM THE TREASURER AT MANILA + + +Sire: + +If my so great obligations to your Majesty--not only since you +are my king and natural sovereign, but since you have honored me +so generously in these islands by employing my person in the post +of official judge-treasurer of your royal estate--necessarily and +strictly did not oblige me to inform your Majesty of the manner in +which the said royal estate is administered here, its condition, +and the so great ruin that it has suffered and is suffering since it +was your Majesty's pleasure to have Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera +come to govern these islands in the year thirty-five, I should have +to arouse myself and take courage to place before the pious eyes of +your Majesty this memoir of disasters; for no other title or name can +be given to the calamities that have rushed pellmell both on the said +royal estate, and on us afflicted ministers who have it in charge, +to the so great peril and discredit of our persons. The matter, Sire, +is a very long drawn out one, and hence it is impossible to compass +it in a few lines; and I in my rashness will weary your Majesty's +ears. But the love and zeal which move me will perhaps avail to remove +from me censure for my boldness. + +Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera entered this city in the latter part +of June, 635, to assume this government. He showed apparent signs of +an endeavor to excel, in his honest and careful attitude toward your +royal estate; but we were soon undeceived by his so unexpected and +inconsiderate resolution not to despatch the ships which your Majesty +has ordered, by so many decrees and ordinances, to be sent annually +to Nueva España with the property of the inhabitants of this city--so +that the usual situado might be sent back in them to these islands +from the proceeds of your royal duties, and serve as a help to the +great and numerous expenses which your Majesty is incurring annually +in the increase and preservation of so many of the faithful as have in +these regions deserved to receive the holy water of baptism. Yet it +was a fact that Don Juan Cereço de Salamanca (who was concluding his +governorship, to which he had been appointed by the viceroy of Nueva +España), had prepared two ships, and their cargoes were aboard--the +lading-space having been allotted, in accordance with the orders +given by your Majesty, among the inhabitants of this city. The losses +and damage that have resulted, both to your royal estate and to the +property of the merchants of these islands, are so considerable and +momentous that I would not dare to name them. Your Majesty's ministers +in Mexico, in whose charge is the management of your royal estate, +will have already reported them to you, for they will be able to do +it with more accurate knowledge and certainty; and, consequently, +I think that they will already have come to your Majesty's ears. + +A few days ago the governor introduced in this royal camp of Manila a +cavalry company of twenty-nine men or soldiers, with their captain, +one lieutenant, one alférez, one standard-bearer, and one corporal; +each soldier was to receive 168 pesos' pay per annum, the captain +1,200, the lieutenant, 480, the alférez, 380, the corporal, 216, and +one trumpler, 120--the total amounting to 7,248 pesos. It was for the +sole purpose of being employed nightly in squads to close the gates of +the city and to patrol it; and it was all to spare the infantry from +fatigue, although the latter had until then been employed in that +duty with much more security to the city, and with the correction +of many lawless acts which we have been experiencing here since, +and which have been committed by the very men who are deputed to +obviate them. When the said governor ordered us to inscribe that +new order in the royal books, and to furnish the papers to the said +soldiers with pay so increased, we, seeing of how little importance +and effectiveness the said company was, and that there was no order +from your Majesty for its creation, warned him of that--besides giving +him other reasons which will already have been seen by your Council, +for we enclosed a copy of both of them in the letters that we wrote +in the year 1636. Still, notwithstanding that, the governor ordered +the command to be obeyed. Accordingly we did so, and the command has +been, and is being, observed; and the governor refuses to recede +in so pernicious a decision as is the increase of [expenses with] +pay so large as this, and so unnecessary, and, moreover, when your +royal treasury in these islands has so many and so great necessities. + +Although there was, upon the arrival of the said governor, as much +infantry in this city and these presidios, as in the times of previous +governors, and even more, inasmuch as he had brought in those ships +a very large and fine consignment of men (for they numbered more than +five hundred men)--a considerable reënforcement, and sufficient to have +garrisoned and manned your Majesty's forts--he raised two companies +of ninety-six Pampango Indians apiece, on his own counsel alone, +and unnecessarily, so that they might take part with the Spaniards in +the guard and watch of this city. The following pay [was assigned]: +the captain, 240 pesos per annum; two drummers, each 24 pesos; the +alférez, 120 pesos; his standard-bearer, 24 pesos; the sergeant, 84 +pesos; the four corporals, 60 pesos apiece. Hence, both companies have +an annual expense of 10,728 pesos, for those two companies are paid +monthly the amount of their pay. Not only are those companies still +kept up, but they have also been augmented since the past year, 637, +by two other companies--one for this camp, which is here at present; +and the other in the new presidios of Jolo and Camboja--besides 72 +other Pampango Indians, who are stationed in the fort at the port of +Cavite. All together mean an expense of 25,092 pesos per year to the +royal treasury. I assure your Majesty that this matter ought to be +looked at with the greatest attention, in order that things might +not be so managed; for it is a useless and needless expense when, +as I have said, your royal treasury suffers so great losses as it +does, by the so terrible and irreparable damage which the province +from which those Indians are drafted has suffered, as they are all +tillers of the soil, and tributaries of your Majesty. Many losses to +your royal estate follow, because they and their wives are exempted +from paying the tribute during the time while they serve in their +posts as soldiers. Besides, as this province [of Pampanga] abounds +so plentifully in rice, and your Majesty needs so much of it for the +rations of so great a number of persons as are employed in the building +and repairing of the vessels in the port of Cavite, and for the sailors +and soldiers, it is obvious that the said province will be diminished; +for it is necessary to allot the vendalas and repartimientos upon the +few who remain, instead of on the many, so that with a few exactions +of this sort the poor Indians will be driven to the wall, and will +find it necessary to desert their huts and take to the woods. That +would mean the total ruin and destruction of that district, which is +the support of this colony. + +As the governor immediately undertook to despatch the usual +reënforcement and situado to the forts of Terrenate, he appointed a +chief commander with 3,000 pesos, and an admiral with 2,000--although +until then there had been no such officers as commander-in-chief and +admiral; but only one commandant, who received 60 ducados of eleven +reals per month, while those who were placed in command of the other +pataches received very moderate pay. We remonstrated, as we were bound +to do, warning the governor that there was no order from your Majesty +for the creation of such salaries. He referred the decision of this +matter to the treasury meeting, where we found two auditors and Doctor +Juan Fernandez de Ledo (who was exercising the duties of fiscal), and +the factor and treasurer. All except the said Doctor Juan Fernandez +de Ledo, who was of the governor's opinion, opposed the said pay, +giving very powerful and cogent reasons therefor. Notwithstanding that, +the governor ordered the said salaries to be made good, and said that +he would report the matter to your Majesty. Hence, Sire, he will by +no means listen to any proposition which is made for the benefit and +use of the royal treasury, if it is contrary to his opinion. + +The same thing happened in the said meeting when they were assigning +the salaries to the chaplains whom he appointed in the said galleons +of Terrenate, and in all the others that sailed from these islands +for any place. It was an expense as avoidable as the others which he +has introduced, for it is a fact that religious are always ready to +serve those posts because of the accommodations that they receive in +the galleons, especially in those that sail to Nueva España. For when +the religious sail in them as passengers they must obtain permission, +and the accommodation of a berth, and, as this costs money and trouble, +it is found to be no little convenience to give them the posts as +chaplains; and they have not claimed or demanded any pay, and they +have been employed in this ministry in all the past. Therefore one +can understand how superfluous is that expense. + +There are five convents of religious within the walls of this city of +Manila, and one of nuns; the church of La Misericordia, the seminary +of Santa Potenciana, the cathedral church, and the hospital for +the Spaniards or soldiers. That makes ten churches in all, and they +are so near and close to one another that the divine offices can be +heard from one to another, if one pays moderate attention. So small +and narrow> is the district of the city, and so few the people in the +churches, that if there was no more than one convent of religious and +the cathedral church, they could be sufficiently taken care of and +without too great fatigue [to the priests]. Although this was the fact +of the case, the governor, a very few days after his arrival, began +to build a church for his soldiers, saying at the beginning that the +expense for the building was to be taken from the soldiers' own pay, +and that no expense would be incurred by the royal treasury. But he +did not keep his word, although the said church was fully built, +together with some barracks and quarters for the said soldiers to +live in. In the erection of it, more than eighty thousand pesos have +been already spent, while the amount charged to the infantry is not in +excess of sixteen thousand pesos. Consequently, it has been necessary +that the remaining funds should be supplied from the royal treasury, +although it would be more proper to expend that sum in building +galleons to carry the goods of this city to Nueva España. For with +galleons the royal treasury will be increased, and thereby will the +governor obey the many and urgent orders which your Majesty has been +pleased to issue in this regard; and the vassals and inhabitants of +these islands would not be so ruined, and so hopeless of returning to +their former state. It was all occasioned by the governor's resolution +not to despatch any ships during the year of 635 and that of 637; and +even next year, 639, there is little assurance that he will despatch +them, for there is no money with which to prepare them. If that were +done, we could entertain stronger hopes; because, as I write this, the +usual succor from Mexico has not yet arrived, as only one very small +patache was despatched last year, and there is doubt that it was able +to reach port. On that account we are so perplexed and afflicted that +it is even a special providence of God that we are able to breathe. + +The ships which are being despatched this year are sailing without a +register; for, as yet, the inhabitants have not registered a shred of +cloth with which to lade them, as they do not know the condition of +their property in Nueva España. As they are so ruined as regards their +capital, they are, according to my way of thinking excusable. But +I have been unable to find any excuse in any way for the governor, +who has, by his so extraordinary and unadvised resolutions, placed +this city in the last straits; and has paid no attention to those who, +with foresight, have represented to him these great damages, besides +those which have followed and will follow to the royal estate of your +Majesty. For this year alone (and I do not speak of former years), +more than one hundred and fifty thousand pesos have been spent on +these ships, both for the preparation that has been necessary, and +for the pay of the commanders, pilots, and other seamen and other +officials who sail in them, and for the food. Your Majesty will +never be reimbursed for that sum, for, as no cargo goes in the ships, +there can be no duties collected; and it is from these duties that +the funds for these expenses must be obtained, as your Majesty has +ordered and commanded. Hence, Sire, it becomes necessary to say that +it seems as if your Majesty had sent the governor to these islands +to ruin and destroy your royal estate, rather than to increase and +preserve it. This conclusion, if relief does not come speedily, will +be seen to be verified with the great loss of all, and the special +sorrow of us who, as your Majesty's faithful ministers and servants, +are bound to strive for the increase of your royal estate. + +In the past year, 637, because these coasts were being infested by +the kings of Mindanao and Jolo, with great loss and damage to the +Christian Indians and your Majesty's vassals, the governor left this +city with two fine large fleets--the first on February two, and the +second on December eight. Both were despatched against the advice of +all the soldiers who were experienced in this country--both because of +the risk to which the governor exposed his person, and because of the +so heavy expenses that it was necessary to incur; and furthermore, +since there are very honorable soldiers in these islands, to whom +these expeditions can be entrusted with the hope that they will give an +excellent account of them. And thus he would have avoided a very large +part of the expense, and even of the loss of very brave soldiers who +died in both expeditions; for more than four hundred Spaniards died, +among whom were many persons of high standing [in this colony]. That +is a loss which ought to be wept with many tears, because of the lack +that they will create when they will be most necessary. In the first +expedition, 9,867 pesos were spent from your royal estate; and in the +second, 47,171 pesos. He has tried and is trying to cover the expense +of both expeditions by the value of the slaves, and other things of +little account, which he took as booty in both expeditions; and by +other communications, which will be seen in your Council, according +to the relations or certifications which he has given to us. Most +of it can have but little foundation, as there is nothing more than +what the governor has been pleased to give. But it will be well to +consider that although the fifth part of any booty taken belongs +to your Majesty (as is a fact), he has ordered all the artillery, +and other war supplies and ammunition to be valued and adjudged as +part compensation for the expense incurred. That is a thing which, +according to my understanding, could not be done; for he is attempting +to persuade your Majesty that he is giving you something. Since that +is clearly yours by law, there is no reason for [thus] adjudging it, +under any of the pretexts of which, [to judge] from appearances like +these, he always avails himself to accredit his own actions. + +Beside the building of the church, barracks, and quarters for the +soldiers, he has constructed other buildings of not inconsiderable +extent, and of the same necessity and importance as the aforesaid, +at the royal hospital of this city. He has bought some houses that +are near it for eight thousand pesos, in order that the chaplain, +apothecary, and physician may live in them. Your Majesty has +assigned them a very sufficient remuneration, and they have always +been contented with it, and have not asked for houses in which to +live. The governor has also added a room to the said hospital (where +the religious of St. Francis had their living apartments before his +arrival), without sense or reason. He has spent a great sum of pesos +in its building; and a great sum has also been and is being spent +in the support of the sick of the said hospital--although they were +supported most abundantly in past years with two thousand five hundred +or three thousand pesos at the most. Now seven thousand pesos and +upward are spent, and we cannot see in what this increase consists, +although we are not ignorant that the sick are less carefully attended +and nursed than before. + +A Portuguese nobleman, an inhabitant of Macan, by name Don Diego de +Miranda Enriquez, came from that city to this during the former year of +636, with a quantity of arquebuses, muskets, nails for the ships, and +rough iron. Having sent for us that we might bargain and pay for it, +we did so, availing ourselves for that purpose of the recent example +that we had for it in the previous year, 1635, which was accredited +and approved by the said governor. Nevertheless, after several months +the governor fined the factor and me (for we were the ones who made +the said contract and rendered payment, as the accountant was then +living in the port of Cavite) without our knowing what crime we had +committed, in the sum of two thousand one hundred and thirty-three +pesos, five tomins; for he said that we had not observed his orders +in the said contract. After he had conferred over the matter with +your auditors, and they being of the opposite opinion, nevertheless, +holding his own even to the end, he had us notified of the act imposing +the said fine. We appealed from it to your Audiencia, where we were +freed from the prosecution. The said governor was indeed very angry +at that; and he even gave your auditors to so understand, and that, +in matters of justice, he even was trying to tie their hands. + +At the very beginning of his governorship, the said Don Sebastian +Hurtado de Corcuera tried to change the inferior employees of the +tribunal of your royal officials. Among the others whom he appointed +was the weigher of coins, notwithstanding that we opposed that. For +your Majesty has been pleased to honor us with your special decrees, +in which you order that we ourselves choose our employees, so that +they may be to our satisfaction; and that your governors give their +titles to those whom we should thus propose to them. [We also opposed +it] because the said governor ordered us to admit the said weigher +to the enjoyment and exercise of his office without bonds, although +all those who had thus far exercised that office had given bonds +in the sum of four thousand pesos for the security of your royal +estate, as it is an office that requires great faithfulness because +of the many and continually-recurring opportunities that present +themselves for him to make considerable thefts without your royal +officials being able to put a stop to it. That has been proved to us +by experience, for, notwithstanding all our efforts in watching him, +at the end of a year and slightly more (for so long a time did he +hold the said office) we found that he had stolen more than three +thousand five hundred pesos from your royal treasury. We began +a prosecution in your royal Audiencia. The said governor, seeing +that the weigher was proved to be a criminal by what was enacted, +and by his confession and deposition, in order that he might not +be completely exposed, had a memorial presented [to the Audiencia] +through a father of the Society of Jesus--in which it is stated that +a man had declared in confession that he was the thief, and that +the said weigher was not guilty; and had given him a certain number +of pay-warrants with which to satisfy, by way of restitution, the +[claim for] three thousand five hundred pesos. The said governor +ordered that this reparation should be accepted; and although the +pay-warrants had no justification--as their owners had been dead for +many years, and the papers contained no cessions or powers by virtue +of which receipts should be given and signed--we had to receive them, +because, as they had been examined before the auditor of accounts, +and attested by him, they were [technically] entirely sufficient, and +could and ought to be received. Thereupon, the said weigher went scot +free from prison. The said governor immediately sent him to Macan, in +order to remove him from the danger that might meet him at any time +in this city. In this manner, Sire, was so serious a crime as the +aforesaid punished; and in this wise does the governor protect his +henchmen, for there is no human strength which can oppose his. This +is a consideration that causes not a little sorrow to your Majesty's +servants and ministers; for only that name is left us, for we have +been stripped, for the sole purpose of being able to depreciate +and even disaccredit us, of all the power and authority which your +Majesty was pleased to give us in our titles, and in the ordinances +and many other decrees. However, I think and trust, God helping, that +that will not be attained, however vigilant the governor may be; for +we are and shall be always in your Majesty's service, and hope that, +as our pious king and sovereign, you will always examine our causes, +and that you will pity us for the calamities and miseries that we are +suffering for the sole reason of being so far from your royal presence, +and that you will take what corrective measures are most pleasing to +you. With that hope we receive new courage, although in the midst of +so many perils, to fulfil our obligations, as faithful and grateful +vassals and ministers of your Majesty, whose royal person may our Lord +preserve, with the increase of greater and more extensive empires, +as is necessary to us all. Manila, August 31, 1638. + + +Don Baltasar Ruiz de Escalona + + + + + + + +BAÑUELOS Y CARRILLO'S RELATION + + +Relation of the Filipinas Islands, by Admiral Don Hieronimo de Bañuelos +y Carrillo [13] + + +The city of Manila is the chief city of the islands of Luçon, or the +Filipinas. It lies in a latitude of fourteen degrees thirty minutes, +is fortified on one side by the sea, and on its land side has a castle +called Santiago, although that castle furnishes no great defense. The +artillery of that castle points seaward, in order to prevent the +entrance of [hostile] vessels--which can, however, enter there, +without the cannon doing them any great damage. The chief port of +these islands is called Cavite, and there the ships from Nueva España +are anchored. That port of Cavite serves as a refuge for our sailors; +it is sheltered from the heavy winds, and very secure. Manila, on the +contrary, is an open bay, beaten by the north winds. The anchorage +there is very poor, and the entrance very difficult; but, on the other +hand, it is very well supplied with all that is necessary for commerce +and for war. One may say that it serves as a magazine for the richest +commerce in the world. There is abundance of bread, flesh, and wine +there; and although the wine is not so good as that of España, those +of the country who are accustomed to it do not hesitate to prefer it +to that of Goa, or that of Mexico--although those are used only for +the mass, and that of España for the tables of the richest men. The +Portuguese of Goa also send abundance of provisions there, so that +they can be bought in Manila at a very good bargain. There are one +hundred and fifty fires [i.e., households] in Manila. The houses of +the city are so suitable and those of the country so charming that +life in those islands is altogether delightful. At one musket-shot +from the city can be seen the Parián, the lodging of the Sangleys +or Chinese merchants. There are about twenty thousand of them, +all merchants whom business has attracted to that place. It is a +very curious place to see, because of the fine order in which they +live. Every kind of merchandise has its own separate quarter, and +those goods are so rare and curious that they merit the admiration +of the most civilized nations. [14] + +Although that Parián is built only of wood, and the Chinese who +live there have no weapons, we do not fail to keep a strong guard on +that side. We even have some pieces of artillery pointed toward that +city, for the Chinese are a very spirited and bold nation. We have +experienced that heretofore, and are still threatened [with danger] +in that hour that we are not so closely on our guard. There is no +Spanish house where nine or ten of these merchants cannot be seen +every morning, who take their merchandise there; for all the traffic +passes through their hands, even all that is used for the sustenance +of the Spaniards. There are some men who say that they mix a slow +poison in our food, which works its effect chiefly on the women. It +is a fact that a woman who reaches the age of twenty-six years is +seldom seen. Those persons add that their intention in doing that is +to prevent the Spaniards from fortifying themselves more strongly in +that island, and that the Chinese would drive them out entirely. That +would be very easy for them, by employing such means, if it were not +for the interest that they have in the commerce of the silver of Nueva +España. These people have a subtle and universal intelligence. They +imitate whatever one presents to them, and they make the article +as well as do those who invented it. The riches of Manila, and the +felicity of existence there, are steadily decreasing. I shall relate +here the causes for it, having regard only to the service of God and +of the king. + +The chief cause for the ruin of these islands is the great trade that +the Sangleys carry on. The king has permitted the inhabitants of the +Manilas to export a portion of their capital to Nueva España. in the +merchandise of that country. The Spanish inhabitants daily lend their +names to those Sangleys and to the Portuguese of Macao, so that they +may enjoy the freedom of that commerce. These people do not attempt +to hide the fact that they are acting as agents for the inhabitants of +Mexico; and these last years they sent such a quantity of merchandise +to Peru and to Nueva España that no sale could be found for it. That +is a hindrance to the voyages of the trading fleet. The king of +China could build a palace with the silver bars from Peru which have +been carried to his country because of that traffic, without their +having been registered, and without the king of España having been +paid his duties, as has been well shown by Dom Pedro de Quiroga y +Moya. That silver was sent at the account of influential persons, who +do not reside at the Manilas. The two vessels which left in his time +paid more duties to the king than all the other ships put together +which had made that voyage before; that clearly shows the neglect +of the other officials commissioned to receive the duties from his +Majesty. They have attempted to conceal this truth, by saying that +those ships were richer than the others because Dom Sebastian Hurtado +de Corcuera had written, in the preceding year, that he would not send +the vessels that year; and that he had even detained and caused the +unlading of those that had been on the point of sailing on the voyage +to Acapulco. I do not know his reason for so doing, but I know well +that he wrote that resolution at the Embocadero of Manila--that is to +say, eighty leguas from the city--and that without having consulted +the inhabitants of the Manilas. Those of the country are agreed that +that delay has been their ruin; for they all know that they cannot +maintain themselves against the Dutch or against the Mahometans except +by means of the regular succor that is sent them from Nueva España. + +The marqués de Cadereta [15] came at that time to act as viceroy +of Nueva España. He sent a large reënforcement to the islands very +opportunely, under command of General Don Andres Cottigllo. The +latter brought news that Don Pedro de Quiroga had arrived at Mexico to +inform against the officials of his Majesty, and that he would go to +Acapulco to inspect the ships and regulate the Chinese commerce. The +inhabitants of the Manilas and the factors of the Portuguese tried +to get back their merchandise that they had already laded on the +vessels, being fearful of that news and that name of visitor. But +having finally recovered courage, they laded the two vessels that +the governor had detained the preceding year, which were worth about +five millions in gold. Nevertheless those of the country affirmed +that they were not so richly laden as those which had sailed before, +for one of the chief merchants [16] had not put a single box aboard. + +They report another reason for obscuring so apparent a truth. They +say that Don Pedro de Quiroga had specified among the orders that +he had drawn up as a remedy for the disorders of the past, that for +those ships; and that it was he alone who prevented their sailing. But +he himself says that that is false, and that he had heard that those +who had encomiendas [Fr., commanderies], and the merchants of Mexico, +had resorted to entreaties to Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera (for I +cannot believe that they were in compact with him); and that they had +represented to him the great quantity of Chinese merchandise then in +Mexico, and declared that, if new vessels were sent there, a market +could not be found for that merchandise, and that the merchants of +Mexico and Nueva España would lose a great amount by it. + +Don Pedro de Quiroga adds that having learned that the governor of +the Filipinas had given his word not to have any new vessels sail, +in order to better carry out his Majesty's service, he had employed +this expedient--namely, that if they entered the port that year, +they would enjoy the benefit of the rules which had been made during +that time; but that, if they came only the following year, they +would not enjoy these, and that they would pay the king's duties +in all strictness. That plainly showed that he was advised of the +promise which the governor of the islands had given to the merchants +of Mexico, to detain the vessels and the merchandise that ought to +have been sent that year. The transaction was, in truth, greatly to +the interest of the inhabitants of Mexico, and of the Spaniards who +have encomiendas--although to the great prejudice of the islands, +which cannot get along without the reënforcement which they ought +to have annually from Mexico; and to the decrease of his Majesty's +duties, which are an aid in the discharge of the expense for that +succor. In fine, if the marqués de Cadereta had not reënforced the +islands as powerfully as he did, they would have fallen into extreme +need. It would be easy for me to show here other consequences of +that delay of the vessels which Don Juan Cereço y Salamanca had +prepared to sail that year, as is done every year; and it will not +be more difficult for me to demonstrate the other damages that we +suffer in that commerce. The inhabitants of the Manilas have nothing +on those vessels; their cargoes belong entirely to the Chinese, to +the Portuguese of Macao, or to the Mexican merchants. If the king +does not put a stop to it, the Chinese will absorb all the riches of +Peru, and the subjects of the king in those islands will be forced to +abandon them. I will go on to represent to your Excellency the other +disorders in the government of those islands, as far as I have been +able to learn them in the short time that I have spent there. + +The encomiendas are ruined. Formerly the king rewarded soldiers +with them, and now the islanders, who were formerly assigned under +those encomiendas, have become our enemies. There has been failure to +instruct those innocent people in the Catholic faith, and that is the +only title under which the king of España holds that country, which +does not belong to his patrimony. Instead of making them our friends +and brothers, we have made them our domestic enemies. We have received +the Sangleys in their place, with whom the profit of the traffic always +embroils us. Let one consider what damage has been committed since +by the inhabitants of the island of Mindanao. They have overrun the +shores of these islands with their caracoas or little boats, and the +governor was forced to leave the city in the hands of the Sangleys, +in order to leave the island and to go to make war on them, where he +lost more than one hundred and thirty Spaniards, without being able +to bring the war to a successful end. In this it cannot be said that +he was not greatly to blame; for one of his officers named Nicolás +Gonzales, at the first war cry, forced one of their best positions +without the loss of a single man, whence the governor had been unable +to drive them with all his forces. [17] + +We have also as enemies the people of Jolo and those of Terrenate, +who are also more to be feared on account of the help that they get +from the Dutch. They declare themselves neutral, but they help the +Dutch underhandedly on all occasions. The chiefs of those Indians take +the title of kings, but they are among the kings who go quite naked +and who live by their labor. True, those of Macassar, of Cochinchina, +and of Cambaya, are more powerful. But for all that, it would be enough +for us, for the little help that we can get out of them, to become the +arbitrator of their differences, and thus to keep them favorable to our +side. But since they have seen that we have made this friendship with +the Sangleys, with the inhabitants of Martavan, of Borneo, and other +neighboring islands, they have broken off all trade with us, and have +begun to take all the products of their country to the Dutch, so that +they do nothing except at their orders. If for that reason also the +king does not prevent the trade with the Sangleys, the Filipinas are +lost. I come now to the remedy that can be applied to this disorder. + +Among all those one hundred and fifty families who are settled +at Manila, there are not two who are very rich. My plan would be +to allow those inhabitants to export Chinese merchandise to the +value of two hundred and fifty thousand escudos, the greater part +of which should be raw silk and cotton bolls, so that they could +be manufactured in this country [i.e., Mexico]. For there is less +[chance for] trickery in that sort of merchandise than in the stuffs +manufactured in China, which ought never to be allowed to be taken to +Manila. The permission of trade to that sum would also be proportioned +to the ability of the Manila merchants; and they would get more than +five hundred thousand escudos in return for it, for the profits of +that trade are exorbitant. Today even, when there is so much of +this merchandise, four hundred per cent is gained on the poorest +quality exported. By that means the Spaniards could be employed in +manufacturing that silk, the textiles would be better, and they would +secure innumerable other advantages. Accordingly, the inhabitants +of the Manilas would not charge themselves with the commissions of +Mexico, and they would get all the profit derived from those islands, +which is now quite universally in the hands of foreigners. Further, as +their affairs in the country became more prosperous, they would become +more interested in its conservation; and they would be more careful +to have the Indians, who have been assigned to them in encomiendas, +instructed and held in subjection. They would save what they give +to their agents in Mexico, who often ruin them. They keep their +merchandise two or three years, and it has a poor sale in Mexico, +because of the great quantity that is taken there; and trading only at +Acapulco, and conducting their own business, they alone would enjoy, +and that every year, the profits of that traffic. + +Fifty thousand escudos could be employed in white mantas, unbleached +[cruës] and of excellent quality; that is a kind of merchandise +very largely used among the Indians, and Mexico has great need of +it. That would be the right commerce that ought to be carried on +by pilots and sailors; for some of it can always be sold, and those +people are obliged to sell it quickly. Care must be taken that only +that quantity be carried, and that any surplus be confiscated; and +the governors and other officials should be very careful in this. In +order that your Excellency may see that I am not trying to weaken the +commerce of those islands, as some might believe, I will state here +that the inhabitants of the Manilas should be allowed to export as +many shiploads as possible of the products of their country--such as +wax, gold, perfumes, ivory, and lampotes. Those they would buy from +the natives of the country, thus preventing them from carrying those +goods to the Dutch. Thus would the people become friendly, and would +supply Nueva España with that merchandise; and the silver taken to the +Manilas would not be exported thence. I may be told that the king of +China does not use that silver to make war on us; but even if it is +used only to swell his treasury, it is as lost to us as if it were +at the bottom of the sea. Your Excellency should consider that one +and one-half millions in gold are sent annually to China. If what I +have just said be closely observed, the merchandise of the Manilas +will be sold to good advantage, and the natives of the country will +become our friends; while their neighbors will leave the Dutch, who +are deriving heavy profits from them; for there is scarcely a place in +those islands where the Dutch do not possess a factory. Thus have they +become the masters, and they give arms to the natives to make war on +us. Add to all these considerations that the Spaniards inhabiting the +islands will not be obliged to be continually on their guard because +of twenty thousand Sangleys or enemies, whom they have in a corner +of the world where the Spaniards can muster scarcely eight hundred men. + +Perhaps your Excellency will be told that, if we break with the +Sangleys, they will go to live in the island of Formosa, or in some +other place among the Dutch, and will carry to them the trade that +they have with us; and that, having enjoyed the trade of Japon as +conveniently as we have that of the Western Indias, they will still +carry their merchandise to Nangazaki, the chief port of Japon, from +which they will also obtain silver. To that I will reply that the +kingdom of China is so full of merchandise, and the Sangleys are +so shrewd in commerce, and so keen after gain, that they know what +quantity of that merchandise is needed by the English, how much by +the Dutch, and what quantity ought to be sold in all of Japon--and +that with so great exactness that a tailor, after once seeing the +figure of a person, decides how much goods is necessary to clothe +him. They do the same in regard to us, and, knowing that only two +ships sail annually to Nueva España, they generally have in the Parian +the quantity necessary to lade those ships. If the inhabitants of the +Manilas had trade with Japon, they would derive great profit from it; +but a secret judgment of God has broken the communication that we had +with those islanders, and has given it into the hands of the heretics, +after having permitted them to destroy our churches there, and their +having put to fire and sword all the Spaniards or Japanese Christians +there. Hence we do not believe that a single religious is now left in +all the country; and the people are compelled, under pain of death, +to come to denounce those whom they know to be Christians. Our +religious go there no longer, for it means certain death to them to +go to Japon. The following is the manner in which that persecution +was reported. + +A Vizcayan captain, named Sebastian, [18] having sailed from the +port of Acapulco for an island called Ricca doro, [19] was blown by +a heavy gale to the latitude of that island; and, not being able to +anchor, put in at Japon, and with the curiosity of a seaman sounded +the ports of that kingdom. That novel proceeding made the Japanese +suspicious. They asked an Englishman who was then allied to them what +could be the design of that Spaniard. He told them that the Spaniards +were a warlike nation, who were aiming at universal monarchy; that +they always commenced their conquest by means of the religious; that +after the religious of that nation had been permitted to preach there, +and to build churches, they considered the conquest of that kingdom +as secure; that that vessel had come to reconnoiter the country, and +the entrance of the ports, and that it would be followed by a great +army, which would complete that design. At that juncture a tono [20] +or prominent lord of the country died. The emperor had formerly tried +to buy from him a house built for recreation; but that lord, who was +fond of that place, refused to sell it. He was a Catholic, and left it +at his death to the Jesuits, whereupon the latter thought it best to +pay their respects to the emperor by offering it to him. That prince +reflected that what an emperor could not accomplish, the Jesuits his +subjects had compassed. Putting that reflection with the advice of the +Englishman, he determined to exterminate the Catholics. That resolution +was so executed that there are no Christians in Japon, except only the +Portuguese from Macao. I am too much ashamed to name the conditions +to which they submit, in order that they may be received there. + +Since that time all the trade of that island has fallen into the +hands of the Dutch, English, Portuguese, and Sangleys, although the +king of China has forbidden the last named to have any communication +with the inhabitants of Japon, under penalty of death, because the +Japanese had formerly revolted against China, of which they had +formed a part. But for all that, their greed for silver makes them +go there as they do to the Manilas, so that Japon does not lack any +of the goods that pass through the hands of those peoples. As for the +silver, the Dutch do not carry any more to China or to Japon, because +those countries get all the amount that they can buy by means of the +Sangleys who live in the Manilas. It would be very advantageous to +the inhabitants of the Manilas and to his Majesty to break off that +commerce with the Chinese, and it is unnecessary to say that by that +means advantageous disposition may be made of the silver of Peru and +the silks of the Filipinas--for in truth the king does not find there +his account; the silks would come to Mexico with greater advantage, +and the islanders and his Majesty would get more profit from it, and +that at the admission of all informed persons. As for the governor, +he should possess the following qualities: he should be discreet; +his distance from Madrid, and his authority as governor, should not +make him presumptuous, but should serve rather as a check than as +a cause for vanity; he should be a fine seaman, and very sedulous +in despatching and making the ships sail every year. All the exports +should be registered. In order that the islands be better reënforced, +the ships should be of five hundred toneladas, and they should have +two decks, better equipped than they have as yet been; for if they are +poorly equipped they take much time in making their voyage, and have +been the cause of great expense to his Majesty. Besides, the viceroy of +Nueva España has been unable to make them depart by the first of April, +as would be necessary. Those vessels ought only to carry seamen. The +offices of the ships ought not to be sold to merchants, but given +as a reward to those who have served well at sea. Great disorders +have happened from that, which was the former custom, and because +the offices of pilot, boatswain's mate, and steward have been sold. + +In the year 1637, when I was about to set out as admiral of the +vessels that were to take the reënforcements to those islands, I went +to the port of Acapulco. There I found the vessel "San Juan Bautista," +which had come that year from those islands, and which had lost its +mast on the way. I endeavored to get Don Pedro de Quiroga to advise +the marqués de Cadereta of the poor condition of the masts and other +rigging of the vessel. He refused to permit it, and compelled me to +embark, telling me that if we failed to embark by the first day of +the month of April, we would run the risk of losing our voyage. While +at sea, I asked the boatswain's mate for an inventory of the sails +and rigging. I found that there were no spare sails, but one single +cable, and one other old cable, which was used to make fast the +pieces of artillery that were rolling about the ship. Ordering him +to bring me also the inventory of what there was when they left the +islands, I found that it had been equipped with three spare sails, +five cables, and a quantity of rigging. He answered me that the sea +had carried away the sails and that the ship had lost its cables as +they left San Bernardino. Without pressing him further, he confessed +to me that he had used the money that had been given him for that +purpose in buying merchandise, in order to discharge a debt of three +thousand escudos that he had paid for his post of boatswain, but +that he had not found his account in that merchandise. I endeavored +to punish him. He appealed to the commander-in-chief, and the latter +ordered me not to prosecute him until I should have arrived at the +Manilas. At the Manilas he was excused, because they said that he had +paid three thousand escudos, although he had made the king lose more +than sixty thousand. Those who furnish the provisions for the crew put +in food of poor quality. The pilots cram their room at the stern with +merchandise, thus endangering the vessel. Had I encountered a capful +of wind during that voyage, I could scarcely have finished it. I had +to take a capstan at Maribeles to lift my anchor, and to make the port +of Cabite, which is three leguas from that place. Thus for the twenty +thousand escudos that is drawn from the sale of those offices, thirty +thousand are lost, and the fleet is in danger of being lost--which +means, of losing those islands. It is not sufficient to give the +offices to sailors who deserve them; it is not at all necessary to +compel them to perform the functions of soldiers when they have no +inclination for it, or to punish them when they gamble, as is done. + +It is of great importance to have galleys on these coasts; that is +the means of keeping away from them the Dutch, and the Indians from +Mindanao and Jolo--who do not cease to be hostile to the Spaniards, +although they have neither courage nor discipline; for one Spaniard has +been seen to put twenty of their caracoas to flight with only one shot +from his musket. The enemy most to be feared are the Dutch, who have +taken possession of that sea. It is easy to manage the oared vessels +of that country, and they have been used in several emergencies to +tow the vessels, which otherwise would have been in danger of being +wrecked. Besides, those boats are more suitable for a sea like that, +full of islands, than vessels with high freeboard. It would also be +very much to the point to have work done in Camboya in the building of +new vessels, as the wood of those parts, and that of Angely, resist +the seaworms and decay better than other woods, and especially those +of the Filipinas. + +In the year 1637, when I arrived at the islands, there were no +vessels ready for Nueva España. They were obliged to send a small +vessel of one hundred toneladas to advise the marqués de Cadereta +of their wretched condition, and to entreat him to send the usual +reënforcement--notwithstanding the prohibition of the commerce with +Peru, and their knowledge that there were no vessels at Acapulco. That +showed how important it is to be continually building vessels for the +Filipinas, and for the governor to be a seaman rather than a soldier +of the Low Countries. It is also important for the governor and the +archbishop to live in harmony. The spiritual government in these +countries is the one thing of greater consequence than the political +government, because of the scandal that the Indians receive from it. It +is also important that those sent by the viceroy be men of merit and +service, and that they be well treated in the islands. The observation +of all the above points will be of use to us in keeping off the Dutch, +who are the most terrible enemy that we have; and who will become +absolute masters of the Manilas, if they can attain their ends. España, +by observing those things, will triumph over its enemies. For my part, +I will fulfil my duty as a subject by doing my utmost for the service +of my master, and for the welfare of my country; and at the same time +I shall discharge my obligation toward your Excellency of serving you. + + + + + + + +GLORIOUS VICTORIES AGAINST THE MOROS OF MINDANAO + + +To the master-of-camp, Don Iñigo Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the +Order of Santiago: [21] + +The despatch-boat which this year arrived from the Filippinas Islands +at Acapulco, a port of this Nueva España, was destitute of the silks +and other costly goods that the ships are accustomed to bring each +year from China, for it carried nothing of that sort. Nevertheless, +it came richly laden, with the news of the happy and fortunate +successes of the arms of Spain in that archipelago, directed by the +valor and prudence of Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, governor and +captain-general there for his Majesty, and a worthy brother of your +Grace. I received in all many different relations--although all of +them agreed, for truth is always one--from different persons, well +worthy of confidence, both ecclesiastic and secular. Every one--not +only the citizens of this great City of Mexico, the capital of this +kingdom, but those of all the other cities and towns--desired to see +these letters, and made urgent requests for them. To satisfy the +desires of so many, and give them pleasure, it was the opinion of +many that they should be printed. The truth is, that I was perplexed +and in doubt as to which one to use, because, as I have said, there +were several. After careful consideration I decided to print one by +Father Marcelo Francisco Mastrillo, a letter written to Father Juan +de Salazar, provincial of the Society of Jesus in those islands, +signed by Father Marcelo himself and sent to me. It gives a detailed +account of every event. No one could give a better account than the +father himself, for he was a witness of everything that happened, as +he always accompanied Don Sebastian with the standard of St. Francis +Xavier. In the simplicity and sincerity with which he recounts these +things, the truth shines more resplendent; so it seemed best not +to alter his style. In order that it may be better known who this +servant of God is, we will describe the miracle wrought upon him by +our father St. Francis Xavier in the city of Naples, and the occasion +of his journey to the Filipinas and his stay in Mindanao. We shall give +some information about the latter island, of the hostility which those +Mahometans have displayed for so many years to the Spaniards, and of +the friendly and subject Indians. We shall also give a description +of the naval battle which preceded the expedition to Mindanao. Then +we shall insert the letter of Father Marcelo, and conclude this +document with a description of the triumphal demonstration with +which Don Sebastian Hurtado was received in the city of Manila, +the rejoicings in that city, the thanks rendered to our Lord, and +the honors paid to those who died in the war, so that there will +be a complete account of everything. Besides the aforesaid reasons, +I was impelled to this on account of the obligations of our Society +of Jesus to Don Sebastian Hurtado (and especially by my own); for we +are always sensible of these, and our hearts will always keep them +alive, with perpetual acknowledgments. Besides, it seems to me that +one could not give your Grace a richer present, a more precious jewel, +an ornament of greater worth, than the exploits and triumphs of such +a brother, in whom one finds zeal for religion and the service of +God, appearing in all he does. The prudence with which he governs +his province, the unwearied solicitude with which he orders affairs, +the disinterestedness with which he serves the king our lord--well +worthy of the favor which his Majesty has shown him (in making him a +member of his Council of War, and sending him two [appointments in] +orders for his two nephews), and of those which I expect his Majesty +will yet grant him; the valor with which he defends those islands, the +grand courage with which he exposes himself to the greatest perils, +although his person is of such importance: all these are especially +praiseworthy, to say nothing of the admirable example by which he +encourages his soldiers to great undertakings, and the compassion +with which he watches over the Indians who were so harassed by so +many enemies. In short, your Grace will see in Don Sebastian Hurtado a +copy of your own holy zeal, prudence, care, disinterestedness, valor, +magnanimity, and many other virtues conspicuous in your Grace's own +heart. In him your Grace will see a true brother--as Tulio [22] said +(book 3, epistle 7), Frater quasi fere alter, "a brother is naught +else than a counterpart of the other brother;" so that they are hardly +two, but rather one soul divided between two bodies, as Quintilian +said (Declamation 321), [23] Quid est aliud fraternitas quam divisus +spiritus? [i.e., "What else is brotherhood but a divided soul?"] So +that your Grace's own valor, prudence, piety, and religion and Don +Sebastian Hurtado's are one; from that which God inspired in you, +may be inferred that of Don Sebastian; and in the virtues of this +great cavalier and captain-general shine those of your Grace, to whom +I offer a thousand congratulations on the triumphs of so glorious a +brother, whose exploits I offer to your Grace, and humbly place in +your illustrious hands. May our Lord watch over your Grace as this +your humble chaplain and servant desires. Mexico, February [25, 1638]. + + +Diego de Bobadilla + +[Folios 1-9 of Bobadilla's work are occupied with a long and detailed +account of a miraculous cure experienced by Father Mastrilli, and its +result in sending him to labor in the foreign missions. Its substance +is as follows: In 1633-34, Mastrilli was in Naples, and assisted, as +a priest, at one of the altars erected for a solemn feast in honor +of the Virgin Mary. After the ceremonies were over, Mastrilli was +accidentally wounded in the head by a hammer dropped from a workman's +hand. His life was despaired of; but an image of St. Francis Xavier, +miraculously endowed with speech, promised to restore his health if he +would go to the Indias. Mastrilli vowed to do this, and to renounce +country, friends, and all else that he held dear, for the sake of +that employ; and the next morning found him cured and sound. In +fulfilment of his vow he went to Spain, and set out for Japan; but +(as related in previous documents) he was obliged to land at Manila, +and accompanied Corcuera to Mindanao.] + + + + + + + +AN ACCOUNT OF THE GREAT ISLAND OF MINDANAO, AND THE HOSTILITIES +COMMITTED BY THOSE MOHAMMEDANS IN THE FILIPPINAS ISLANDS. + + +The great island of Mindanao is one of the largest in the archipelago +of the Filippinas Islands, which seem to be almost innumerable; and it +has even been said that there are over eleven thousand of them. [24] +I believe that if one counts islands large and small, inhabited and +desert, the above estimate is not far from the truth. In size, Mindanao +rivals the island of Manila, the chief and head of the others, for it +is almost three hundred leguas in circumference. Esteban Rodriguez de +Figueroa, one of the first leaders in the conquest of those islands, +and one of the most valorous soldiers who has been in them, made an +agreement with his Majesty to conquer this island at his own cost and +charges, and subject it to his royal crown--his Majesty awarding him as +tributary vassals, ten thousand of the first Mindanaos whom he should +subdue and choose for himself, and granting him other favors which +he sought. His Majesty accepted the agreement; and, with the title of +governor and captain-general, Don Esteban assembled at his own cost a +goodly army of Spaniards, which (as I have heard) numbered about four +hundred, and over four thousand Indians. They were all embarked in a +fleet of caracoas, which are oared vessels much used in the Filippinas, +carrying from fifty to one hundred rowers apiece. There are larger +ones, which are called juangas, and carry from one hundred and twenty +to one hundred and thirty rowers. They sailed from the island of Oton, +where the fleet was fitted out and collected. They reached Mindanao +and the army disembarked. When the enemy saw such a force, they began +to flee, and a victory was declared for España; but our satisfaction +was soon disturbed, for a wretched Mindanao audaciously resolved--it +is said, after he had taken opium, with which these people intoxicate +themselves--to assassinate our captain-general, even though he should +die in the attempt. The deed was to be done with his campilan, a +weapon something like a cutlass, with a lead weight at the hilt. The +weight makes its blows so terrible that it will cleave a man through +the middle. He hid in some bushes near the road on which our men +were marching in triumph. When General Esteban Rodriguez de Figueroa +reached a place abreast of the bush where the Mindanao was hidden, +the latter leaped out unexpectedly and struck the general so fierce a +blow on his head with his campilan that it cleft his skull from ear to +ear. I can account myself a witness of this, because, although I did +not see that event, and did not go to the Filippinas until many years +after, yet in 1632 I saw the skull, when they disinterred the bones +of this famous but unfortunate captain from the old church of our +college at Manila (which he founded, and where his body was brought +for burial), to transfer them to the church which we have recently +built. The skull shows very plainly the cruel blow of the campilan, +so that even I said, as I held it in my hands, with great grief, +"Our founder will not deny the blow of the campilan." Those who +accompanied our general killed the Mindanao on the spot, without much +difficulty. They sounded the retreat, and abandoned their pursuit of +the enemy. This was the origin and the beginning of the misfortunes +and calamities which for so many years have caused us so much sorrow in +the Filippinas. Our army, having lost its leader and captain-general, +did nothing further. The Spaniards retreated, and fortified themselves +in a place on that river, where they remained in garrison; and Father +Juan del Campo, a fervent man and a great minister of the gospel, +gave instruction to several villages, until he died there. Many of +the Indians along this river had rendered obedience, and were paying +tribute to his Majesty. Afterward the garrison moved to another place, +called La Caldera, where the Spaniards remained several years. Although +they made no conquest of that country, they served as a check to +the enemy, because the latter could not sail out with their fleets +on plundering expeditions. As Don Pedro de Acuña afterward decided, +when he was governor in the Filippinas, this garrison was withdrawn +from La Caldera, which resulted in the utter ruin of the islands, +because land and sea remained in the possession of the enemy. + +At that time the island was ruled by a Moro named Buysan who claimed +the entire seacoast as his. Another Moro, named Silongan, ruled the +well-populated district along the river. These two Moros conspired +together, and called to their aid other friends, and even in certain +ways their subjects--as those of the island of Sanguil and Sarragan; +and the Caragas, who inhabit the further [i.e., from Manila] shores of +this same island of Mindanao, which from that side faces our islands +of Pintados. They gathered great fleets of caracoas and jungas, +which at times numbered over one hundred and even one hundred and +fifty vessels--arming them with several large guns, many culverins, +a large number of arquebuses and muskets and many other arms; and +manning them so heavily, that they could land six to eight thousand +soldiers. In this way masters of the land and sea, they infested the +high seas, capturing all our ships that navigated those waters, robbing +and burning towns, sacking churches, carrying off the ornaments and +consecrated vessels, committing a thousand desecrations on the sacred +images, breaking them into pieces and insulting them, and capturing +Christian Indians in so great number that it would break one's heart +to tell of it; for one time those whom they carried away numbered over +two thousand and five hundred. The Spaniards had no better fortune; for +some were killed, and others carried away as slaves. In the year 1616, +they set sail with a powerful fleet, after effecting an alliance with +the Dutch, who came with ten galleons, and entered the bay of Manila +on All Saints' day. They were, however, defeated and destroyed in the +following April, 1617, by our fleet under the leadership of General +Don Juan Ronquillo. While the Dutch aided the Mindanaos, the latter +worked dreadful havoc, capturing, massacring, robbing, and burning +everything there was. They came as far as Balayan, a large and rich +town on the island of Manila, and not far from the city itself. They +attacked the shipyards at Pantao, where a galleon and a patache were +in process of construction, and indeed almost finished. These they +burned, and murdered almost thirty Spaniards--among them Captain +Arias Giron and Captain Don Juan Pimentel, who were in command of +the yards. Others, besides many Indians, they made prisoners. They +captured from us a large quantity of firearms and some artillery, +and inflicted on us great damage. Even the fathers and ministers of +the gospel have not been exempt; for, on the last occasion of which I +have spoken, they captured and murdered two Franciscan fathers. Before +that, on other occasions, they captured Father Hurtado, who was kept +a long time in captivity in Mindanao, and Father Pasqual de Acuña, +who was a prisoner at Caraga and still lives. Before and since the +time of his captivity, he has labored gloriously for the space of +almost forty years in the islands of Pintados--teaching those Indians +until his great age and his failing strength obliged him to retire, +and end his life in the fulness of his years, devoting himself to +God alone. The other fathers and ministers crossed the mountains +to escape the cruelty of these Mahometans, enduring great hunger, +hardship, and distress. + +To King Buysan succeeded Cachil Corralat, his son, who with +great sagacity and cunning set about making himself much more +powerful. Several times he made peace with the Spaniards, but his word +was ever a Moro's. It was soon known that he could not be trusted, +for he made and broke treaties with equal readiness. He infested the +seas with his fleets, sending out his own as he did in the year 1633, +when he sent out a large fleet which plundered and burned several large +and wealthy cities on this very island of Manila. But where he did most +harm was in our island of Pintados; for in the town of Ogmuc alone +he slew or made prisoners more than two hundred people--children and +women, as well as men. They captured the minister there, Father Juan +del Carpio of our Society, and cut him into pieces, of which his head +was the smallest. Cachil Corralat gave orders to his followers not to +carry to him a single father alive, but to slay them, in fulfilment +of a vow which he had made to Mahomet during a serious sickness, +not to leave a father alive if his health were restored. God, in His +just judgment and to punish us, chose to grant his prayer. + +Other Mahometans, their neighbors, joined the Mindanaos--tribes from +the island of Jolo, who at one time paid tribute and then rebelled, +killing all the Spaniards. Although that island is very small, +and there cannot be more than three thousand men able to bear arms, +yet they are very valiant, and they have very plainly proved it to +us when they have sailed forth to scour the high seas--especially +one chief, called Dato Achen, who can be compared with the most +destructive African pirates. This man once attacked a shipyard which +we had established in the province of Camarines, in which several +galleons were being built. After the usual robbery and burning, he +slew or made prisoners many Spaniards and Indians. He carried away +artillery and firearms, with which he strengthened his defenses in his +own country. He overran the Pintados Islands and did a great deal of +damage there. At Cabalian he captured Father Juan Domingo Vilancio +of our Society, a native of Luca--a holy man, and known as such by +Indians and Spaniards, and even by the Moros themselves. As such, +the latter revered him and did not ill-treat him in their own country, +where they carried him. While efforts were being made for his ransom, +it was our Lord's pleasure to give him complete liberty by freeing +him from the prison of this [earthly] body, and giving him in heaven +his reward for his faithful labors. He toiled thirty years or more in +the conversion of the pagans, to the remarkable edification of all; +and he displayed heavenly sincerity, which secured him the love of +God and men. The Moros buried him on their island of Jolo. Although +we have asked for the body, they will not give it up, saying that +they would rather keep it because it is holy (for sanctity and virtue +are pleasing even to Moros and infidels). They allege other things +in proof of his sanctity, which I shall not refer to, because they +are not thoroughly investigated. The Lord will make them clear later, +to His own glory. Returning, however, to the Joloans, they are grown +insolent with their fortunate successes, no less on land than on the +sea; for, although we have gone there three times with powerful fleets, +they have come off with credit and singing victory. In short, we have +returned without accomplishing anything. There was one time, however, +when Don Christobal de Lugo, lieutenant for the captain-general in +the Pintados Islands, went there with a fleet, and sacked and burned +the principal town, and did considerable damage; but they have always +escaped, and repaid to us their losses. They put their trust in a +hill very difficult of access, which they have well fortified with +artillery, to which they retreat whenever they are attacked. + +The evils that are suffered at the hands of these two enemies, the +Mindanaos and the Joloans, never were avenged, because, although +the governors sent out fleets after them, they did not encounter +the pirates on account of the great multitude of islands in the +archipelago; or else, if our ships did meet them, the Moros escaped, +for their vessels are remarkably swift and so have a great advantage +over ours. Then, to remedy so grievous injuries, Don Juan Cereço +Salamanca, who was then governor of the Filippinas, in the beginning +of the year 1634, overcoming remarkable difficulties which arose, +with a holy zeal for the service of God and of the king our lord, +ordered a position to be occupied on the island of Mindanao, at a +place which they call Samboangan. There he began to raise a fort which +should be a check to the Mindanaos and the Joloans, who came past +that place when they sailed forth on plundering expeditions. Although +they could pass us by standing out to sea, or in the darkness of the +night, without being seen from our fort, they would not so lightly +dare to leave behind their houses and lands with the Spaniard so near +a neighbor--for the latter could do them great injury by carrying +off their children and wives, and all their possessions, if their +towns were left unprotected when the men went away in their fleets; +or at least the Spaniards could await them on their return and knock +them in the head. The Moro king, Cachil Corralat, was much disturbed +at the proximity of the Spaniards; since now he could not make raids +in safety, as before; and he called upon the Joloans, the Borneans +and the Camucones to sail from various points to plunder our island, +which they did. + +The Camucones are a nation inhabiting some islands subject to the king +of Burney. Sometimes alone, and sometimes in company with the Borneans, +they have infested our seas with their fleets, pillaging our islands, +capturing many Indians, and killing all the Spaniards whom they took, +because they did not wish to carry these alive to their own country; +accordingly they granted no Spaniard his life. They are a base and +very cruel people. These robbers began as petty thieves, with a few +small vessels; but with the captures which they have been continually +making, they have grown so powerful that they send out great fleets +upon the sea, and do a great deal of damage. In the year 1625, while +the archbishop Don Francisco Miguel Garcia Serrano was visiting the +district of Bondoc, these Camucones attacked the town one morning, and +the archbishop had no little trouble in escaping over the mountains; +they stole whatever they could carry away, with the silver and the +pontifical vestments. That same year, they captured Father Juan de +las Missas of our Society, who had come from Tayabas to preach and was +returning to the island of Marinduque, which was in his charge. They +killed the father, and captured all who were aboard his ship, except +perhaps some one who escaped by swimming. They did much more damage, +continuing their depredations up to the year 1636, when, as I said, +they sailed with a large fleet, at the solicitation of the king Cachil +Corralat. They entered so far among the islands, that from them they +sailed out upon the high sea--an act of great daring. They arrived +at and plundered Palapag, a mission of our Society. They rounded Cape +Espiritu Santo, and captured over a hundred Christians at Baco. There +they divided into two bands. One passed over to Albay, on the island +of Manila, where they were met by the alcalde-mayor, Captain Mena, +of the Order of St. George, with several Spaniards and six Franciscan +friars. The Spaniards pressed the Camucones so hard that seven of +their caracoas went ashore on the island of Capul, where many of their +Christian captives were set free. The natives of the said island slew +some of the Camucones. Three of their caracoas they abandoned on the +sea, going aboard others to make their escape more easily. Not one +of our men was killed in this encounter, except that one Franciscan +father was wounded by a musket-bullet, and afterwards died of his +wound. The other band went out to sea again, coasting the island of +Ybabao. They entered a town called Bangahun and made prisoners there +more than one hundred other Christians. This troop fought a battle with +a caracoa full of soldiers from the city of Zebu, who inflicted some +injury upon the Moros, killing and capturing some. These Camucones, +returning afterward to their own country, while they were coasting the +island of Panay, were overtaken by a sudden storm, which drove three of +their caracoas ashore. Those who escaped with their lives were captured +by the natives, and many of them are now on galleys at the port of +Cavite. Other caracoas stealthily ventured to the Calamianes Islands, +where some Spaniards came out to meet them, and captured two of their +ships, and set free twenty captives from the island of Mindoro who +were among their prisoners. Fifteen other caracoas were coasting the +island of Paragua in company; and, two days before arriving at Borney, +they encountered thirty caracoas of Joloans, who had recently quarreled +with the Borneans. The Joloans attacked the Camucones and Borneans, +captured their fifteen caracoas, and made prisoners many Camucones and +more than one hundred of the Christians carried off by the Camucones; +these latter were ransomed at Samboangan, at a moderate rate. + +After these pirates Cachil Corralat sent his fleet, which did +considerable damage in our islands. In order to stop it and check +all these enemies, the governor, Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, +decided to go forth in person and make an expedition to Mindanao, to +begin the punishment of this enemy, because they were most powerful--as +we shall soon see, describing first the naval victory given us by +our Lord over the fleet despatched hither by Cachil Corralat. + +[The next part of this compilation is an account of the naval +victory over Tagal's fleet in December, 1636; it is practically +the same as that which we have already presented in our VOL. XXVII, +although rewritten and much abridged for publication. Then follows +Mastrilli's letter to his provincial (June 2, 1637) which also we +have published; Bobadilla states that he reproduces it verbatim, save +for the correction of "a few words which are not quite in accord with +our ordinary language, as he was a native of the city of Naples." The +document ends with a description of Corcuera's triumphal entry into +Manila, evidently compiled (with some additional details) from Juan +Lopez's letter on that subject, already presented to our readers.] + + + + + + + +ROYAL ORDERS AND DECREES, 1638 + + +REMOVAL OF NEGROES FROM MANILA + +The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order of +Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the Filipinas Islands, +and president of my royal Audiencia resident therein. In a letter +which you wrote me on the last of June, 1636, you declare that shortly +after your arrival at those islands, that city petitioned you to have +the free negroes and the freedmen, who number about four hundred or +five hundred, removed from it, because of the disorders that they +were creating within the city, as well as the thefts that they were +committing in union with the slaves--the former receiving and taking +to other places to sell what these said negroes had stolen. You +declare that that city demanded that the negroes should go to live +nine leguas away from there, but that that measure has not seemed +advisable; and the fathers of the Society gave you an islet which they +possess in the middle of the river, in order that they might settle +the negroes there, with the obligation to give them instruction--but +there would be no obligation to give the fathers any stipend for +that purpose beyond what is given them from the communal fund of the +Sangleys whom they have in Santa Cruz. Those Sangleys also render me +aid by giving me six reals per annum, besides the general license, +so that they may be allowed to live there with the fathers. They +number from about eight hundred to one thousand Chinese. The fathers +minister to those who have become Christians from this number, as +well as to the negroes--the latter being separated from the former +by an arm of the river. Also the Chinese pay all his salary to the +alcalde-mayor from their communal fund, which has been a saving to +my royal treasury. You declare that, in your desire to economize +and avoid so heavy expenses, you have deemed it best to give the +commander of artillery, who receives seven hundred pesos monthly +salary for his duties, the office of alcalde-mayor of the Parián; +for during the time while he should hold that office, there would +be an annual saving of seven thousand two hundred pesos to my royal +treasury. You also ordered the master-of-camp, Don Lorenzo de Olaso, +to go to live at the port of Cavite with his company, and to serve +there as castellan, chief justice, and governor of that port, with the +same salary as at present, as you say that the sargento-mayor would +be sufficient for you in that city. The above you reported to me, so +that I might understand it; and you say that by the aforesaid measures +and your method of governing, and provided that no one steals from +my royal treasury, you will entirely clear my royal treasury of debt, +and govern those islands from the proceeds of them. The matter having +been examined in my Council, it has been judged best to tell you that +it is thought that you will have given careful consideration to the +removal of the free negroes and freedmen from that city and their +settlement on the islet which was given you by the brethren of the +Society of Jesus; and the rest that you mention in the said letter +touching the said matter is neither approved nor rejected here, +for the present. It is to be feared, however, that those negroes, +having been removed from the city, and settled with the Chinese on +an uninhabited island, may commit more serious damage. Consequently, +you shall watch carefully so that you may remedy what needs correction; +and you are to note that in the matter of government, the best is not +[always] the easiest to execute, nor its results satisfactory. Hence, +for that reason, no new thing can be entered upon suddenly; and you +will, therefore, not carry out the execution of these new measures +until you shall have first reported to me all the things that you shall +see to be for my service, so that orders as to your course of action +may be issued to you. In the meanwhile, you shall not carry out your +proposed change of the persons of the commander of artillery and of +the master-of-camp, Don Lorenzo de Olaso; and I charge and order you, +that, jointly with the session [of the Audiencia], you shall inform +me, both in this regard and in others, of what changes should be made +from the past government, so that in everything decision may be made +as to what measures may be taken. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon + + + + +RESTRICTING THE RELIGIOUS ORDERS + +The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order of +Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the Filipinas Islands, +and president of my Audiencia therein: your letter of June 30, 636, +touching ecclesiastical matters, has been examined in my royal Council +of the Yndias, and answer is [hereby] made you. + +You say that the religious of the Order of St. Augustine need to be +reformed, for they pay no heed to the bulls of his Holiness, or the +decrees despatched in regard to the rotation; and that it would be +advisable not to give them any more religious for eight years--both +because they have many, and because of the causes that you mention for +such measure. I have thought best to charge you to have the rule for +rotation put in force strictly, without allowing more religious in each +mission station [doctrina] than, in accordance with my royal patronage, +shall be necessary for it; and that the others be occupied in missions +[misiones] and in preaching, for which purpose they were sent. + +In regard to what you write me concerning the advanced age of the +archbishop of those islands (who is so aged that his hands and head +tremble), namely, that it would be best to give him an assistant; +and that you are arranging to give such assistant an income of two +thousand pesos in addition to the four thousand pesos enjoyed by the +said archbishop, without taking that sum from my royal treasury, or +from my vassals: I charge you to explain to me the method or means by +which you can get that money without damage to my royal treasury and +the vassals who serve me, so that, if it be worth while to allow it, +you may execute it. + +So that the Order of St. Dominic, and the other orders resident in +those islands, may live with the regulation and good example that +is proper, and so that they may not increase the number of mission +stations granted them by my decrees, you shall allow no new elections +in them, which shall not be in harmony with my patronage. With +the advice of the archbishop, you shall endeavor to unite some of +the stations; and in those that shall be newly founded, you shall +endeavor likewise to have secular priests introduced, if you find +them intelligent and competent. Madrid. September 2, 1638. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon + + + + +APPOINTMENT OF SECULAR PRIESTS TO MISSIONS + +The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order of +Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the Filipinas Islands, +and president of my royal Audiencia therein: in one of the sections of +a letter which that city [of Manila] wrote to me on June 27 of 636, it +is stated that there are two colleges in that city--one that of Santo +Tomas, with religious of the Order of St. Dominic; and the other that +of San Josef, with religious of the Society of Jesus--both of which +have possessed, for several years past, authority to confer degrees +in all the sciences. It is also declared that, with this opportunity, +many students have excelled in those studies, and especially various +sons of poor citizens, who have graduated in all the degrees; but +that, since they have no beneficed curacies on which they can depend +for support, their studies bring them no advantage. It is said that +this is caused by certain religious orders, who have acquired from +the archbishop, bishops, and governors the aggrandizement of their +orders with many benefices which formerly were administered by secular +priests; and that this might be remedied if I would decree that all +the benefices which have been annexed to the religious orders during +the last twenty years should be restored to the [secular] clergy, and +that edicts should be issued in the form which I have ordained. This +matter having been considered in my royal Council of the Indias, I +have thought it best to issue the present, by which I command you that +in the new missions that shall be established, you shall--except when +they are in a territory assigned to the religious--it being understood +that there are virtuous secular priests, take pains to appoint them +to such missions; for such is my will. [Madrid, October 2, 1638.] + + +I the King + +By command of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon + + + + +COMPENSATION TO NUNS OF ST. CLARE + +The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order of +Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the Filipinas Islands, +and president of my royal Audiencia therein: in a letter which the +abbess and nuns of the convent of St. Clare in that city wrote me +on the thirtieth of June, 636, they make the following statements: +That the said convent was established so that they could live in it, +with all decorum and humility, with certain alms from the citizens; +and their house and church were built close to the wall of the said +city that lies next the river--a place that seemed most separated from +the business quarter, and so closely shut in that little save the +sky could be seen. That in front, on the other side of the street, +is the royal hospital for the Spaniards, which from the time of its +foundation has been administered by the religious of St. Francis; +and that in the hospital the religious who was vicar of the said +convent [of St. Clare], and administered the holy sacraments to the +nuns, had a cell, and they helped to support this religious out of +the alms bestowed upon them. That you, without any occasion or just +cause, drove out the religious from the said hospital by force and +violence, with armed soldiers--saying that the hospital should be +managed by a secular priest whom you took thither with you. That the +said vicar was thereby compelled to find shelter in the convent of +St. Francis, which is at a great distance from that of St. Clare; +and consequently, with the inconveniences of the excessive heat +and the violence of the rains in the wet season, he cannot go to +hear confessions and administer the holy sacraments at St. Clare, +especially at night. That their greatest annoyance is, that you are +constructing in the hospital a ward for convalescents, on the side +that faces the said convent; and that it is so high that it looks +down upon the convent, notwithstanding the enclosure of the latter, +and from the windows of that ward may be seen the beds of the nuns +in their infirmary and dormitory--a matter which requires thorough +reparation. They say that on the other side of their house is a +space between the houses and the wall (which was formerly a street), +which is a passage to the convent, and is useful to it; but that you +have closed this way, and are building another house, which abuts +upon their own ground-plot, for barracks and stables for the cavalry +troops. They entreat me that I will be pleased to command that a check +be placed upon this undertaking, and that, considering their poverty, +I order you to pay them the amount of one hundred and twenty pesos +in certified pay-warrants on the treasury there, which they hold, +which sum will be a great benefit and charity to them. The complaint +of these nuns has been considered in my royal Council of the Indias, +and the damage which they say has been caused to them by closing up +the street and by their being in sight of the ward that was built in +the cells [at the hospital], and by the stables and barracks that have +been placed so close to their house. I have therefore thought it best +to ordain and command you, as I do, that you shall not in any way cause +injury or inconvenience to the said nuns; and that the pay-warrants +which they say they hold, you shall cause to be paid--provided they +are duly certified--in their due value and at such time as the said +nuns desire; for such is my will. [Madrid, October 2, 1638.] + + +I the King + +By command of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon + + + + +REGULATING THE SEMINARY OF SANTA POTENCIANA + +The King. To the president and auditors of my royal Audiencia resident +in the city of Manila of the Filipinas Islands: it has been reported in +my royal Council of the Yndias that there is in that city a seminary +named Santa Potenciana, of which I am patron; that it was established +for orphan girls, and for the reception of married women when their +husbands are occupied in my service in various parts; and that for +some years the custom has been introduced of sheltering in the said +seminary certain women who live scandalously. [I am also told] that, +since this is of so great service to God our Lord, you, my president, +have given orders to the mother rector of the said seminary not to +receive in the seminary any woman sent by the archbishop of that +church, or by his provisor; and that no one of its inmates may +leave it. It has been judged best to order you (as I do hereby) +to take what measures appear to you most advisable in this matter, +considering all ends. Given in Madrid, November eight, one thousand +six hundred and thirty-eight. + + +I the King + + +Countersigned by Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon, and signed by the +members of the Council. + +[Endorsed: "To the royal Audiencia of Manila, in regard to the order +given by the president of the Audiencia to the mother rector of the +seminary of Sancta Potenciana of that city, that she should not receive +therein any woman sent by the archbishop or his provisor." "Ordering +that the president take what measures appear most fitting, considering +all ends."] + + + + +COMMERCE OF THE ISLANDS WITH MEXICO + +The King. To my viceroy, president, and auditors of my royal Audiencia +resident in the City of Mexico, of Nueva España: Don Juan Grau +Monfalcon, procurator-general of the Filipinas Islands, has reported +to me that the permission possessed by those islands of two hundred +and fifty thousand pesos of merchandise, and five hundred thousand for +the returns thereon, is very small, as that was conceded thirty-four +years ago, when the citizens and inhabitants were fewer, the duties +and expenses not so great, and the islands less infested by their +foes. Because of this latter, their needs have increased so greatly +that, if the said permission be not increased, it will be impossible +to maintain them, or for their citizens to support themselves. He +tells me that some illegal acts may have resulted from the present +narrow limit of the permission, both in the lading of the merchandise, +and in the returns of the silver. In order that those violations may +be avoided, and those islands and their inhabitants maintained in a +less straitened manner, he has petitioned me to have the goodness to +concede an increase of the two hundred and fifty thousand pesos of the +merchandise to four hundred thousand, and also of the five hundred +thousand pesos of silver to eight hundred thousand. For, besides +the above-mentioned advantages, my royal duties will thus increase, +to supply the expenses of the said islands; illegalities and frauds +will cease; and the inhabitants will increase in wealth. The matter +having been examined in my royal Council of the Indias, inasmuch as +I wish to know what permission the said islands enjoy, and that of +the count and duke of San Lucar, and whether it will be advisable to +enlarge the permission of the said islands; and considering their +needs and expenses, and other advantages: I order you to inform me +very minutely in regard to it all, so that, after examination, the +advisable measures may be taken. Given in Madrid, December eight, +one thousand six hundred and thirty-eight. + +I the King + +Countersigned by Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon, and signed by the +members of the Council. + +[Endorsed: "Don Juan Grau Monfalcon. To the viceroy, president, and +auditors of the Audiencia of Mexico, ordering information as to the +permission [of trade] for the Filipinas Islands, and that conceded +to the count and duke; and as to the advisability of increasing the +amount permitted to the islands."] + + + + +JURISDICTION OVER SEAMEN + +The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order of +Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the Philipinas Islands, +or to the person or persons in whose charge that government shall be: +in a letter which I wrote to you on the second of last September, +on various matters, there is a section of the following tenor: "I +have considered the arguments that you bring forward for its being so +expedient that the commander and the admiral of the ships shall have +authority and jurisdiction in the port of Acapulco, when he is not on +shore, to punish his sailors and soldiers; and that the warder of the +fort there shall not interfere with them by undertaking to punish them +on shore (regarding them as his subordinates, as hitherto they have +been) as they are persons of ability and good qualifications--since +from the time when the ships cast anchor, during all the time while +they remain in port, the men do not respect or obey, as it is right +they should, the said commander or admiral. Desiring to avoid +this difficulty, so that those officers may punish the culprits +in such cases, I have decided that what you propose may be done, +with the conditions that you mention; and, by a decree of the same +date as this letter, I am sending to the viceroy of Nueva España +advices to that effect. [I have told him] that as this seems to be +a general complaint, to judge from the instances [reported] here, +he must give the necessary orders for the execution of this decree, +unless some difficulty shall arise that may oblige him to defer it; +for when those men commit any disorderly acts on shore complaint can +be made against them, and the matter referred to the said commander +and admiral." And now a report has been made to me, on the part of +Don Juan Grao Monfalcon, procurator-general of that city of Manila, +that it is very advisable that the said commander and admiral of +the ships possess all necessary jurisdiction for punishing the men +aboard them--as is done at Cartagena, Portovelo, and other places; +and he entreats that I be pleased to command that this be accordingly +done. The matter having been considered in my royal Council of the +Indias, I have thought it best to issue the present, for such is my +will, that the usage which I have mentioned be put in practice in the +islands, as well as in Nueva España, since that is advisable for my +service. [Madrid, December 8, 1638.] + + +I the King + + +By command of the king our sovereign: + + +Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon + + + + +ON THE LADING OF THE GALLEONS + +The King. Don Juan Grau y Monfalcon, procurator-general of the +Philipinas Islands, has reported to me that certain citizens of those +islands, to whom were allotted toneladas in the amount [of lading] +permitted, have, for lack of means to ship the goods, sold that +space--which has thus been secured by the merchants of Nueva España +and Peru, who for that purpose have their agents in Manila. He states +that this practice is overlooked [by the officials], although, after +the first distribution of the permitted lading space has been made, +and the toneladas allotted, the citizens who through poverty or other +causes are unable or unwilling to lade the goods which belong and +are allotted to them cannot give, sell, or transfer that space to +any other person, unless they again declare the toneladas before the +bureau of allotment. The bureau again shares the space which was thus +declared among such citizens as ask for it, or who can occupy it to +better advantage; and these must pay for it, giving for each tonelada +the amount appraised, according to the season and the circumstances, +by the bureau itself. The proceeds from the said toneladas shall be +given and paid to the owners who had declared them. Thus poor persons +will obtain relief, and the citizens [of the islands] will have the +benefit of the entire amount of trade permitted to them, while those +of Nueva España will be excluded from it. [The said procurator] +entreats me to issue a decree in accordance with these facts, +including therein adequate penalties to secure its execution. The +matter having been examined in my royal Council of the Indias, and +the above statements carefully considered, I have approved [the said +procurator's request]. I command my governor and captain-general of +the said Philipinas Islands who now holds or shall in future hold +that office, and the auditors of my royal Audiencia therein, and other +persons who shall have in charge the allotment of the said toneladas, +and the bureau for the said allotment, that they observe and fulfil, +and cause to be observed and fulfilled, exactly and inviolably, +what is ordained in this my decree, without in any way contravening +or exceeding its tenor or form. And those who disobey this decree +are warned that such act will be charged to them in the visitations +and their residencias, and they will be punished according to law; +for such is my will. [Madrid, December 8, 1638.] + + + + + + + +FORTUNATE SUCCESSES IN FILIPINAS AND TERRENATE, 1636-37 + +Fortunate successes which our Lord has given by sea and land to the +Spanish arms in the Filipinas Islands against the Mindanaos, and in +the islands of Terrenate against the Dutch, in the latter part of +the year 1636 and the beginning of 1637. + + + + +FILIPINAS + +These Filipinas Islands, subject to the Catholic king our sovereign +for the past thirty years, have been so harassed and terrorized +by invasions, robberies, and fires caused by the Moros (Mindanaos, +Joloans, Burneyans, and Camucones), that one could not sail outside +the bay of Manila without manifest danger. Not a single village was +now safe, nor could an evangelical or royal minister perform his +duty undisturbed. These pirates--some at one time, others at another, +and sometimes all together--set out every year from their own lands, +and at first attacked the islands which are called the Pintados, +for these were the nearest; and afterward, becoming more impudent, +they came to coast along the island of Manila itself, and once they +even came to the suburbs of this city (although without making their +presence known). The Christians captured by them on these raids were +numberless; some were Spanish but the majority were natives, who, sold +afterward either among the enemies themselves, or among more distant +unbelievers, either abandoned the faith, or suffered living death in +a wretched slavery. The villages which they had ravaged were pitiful +to see, being either burned to the ground or abandoned and deserted; +for those inhabitants who were able to escape from the hands of the +enemy hid themselves in the thickets of the mountains, among wild +beasts and venomous serpents, without other food than a few roots +and wild fruits. And what is impossible to relate without shedding +tears, the gospel ministers were compelled to flee in this same way, +to endure the same calamities, and suffer the inclemencies of sky and +ground, in order not to fall into the hands of Mahometan cruelty. Even +thus they were not always able to flee, for some, cut to pieces, fell +into their hands; others were captured and ransomed at great cost, +or died of ill-treatment in their captivity. Those barbarians did not +spare the churches, but rather plundered them with an infernal fury; +burned them, and trampled under foot the ornaments; broke the images +and profaned the vessels; and impiously clothed themselves with the +sacred vestments. The most unbearable thing of all was to see all +those evils unchecked, our friends disheartened, the enemy unresisted, +and the villages defenseless. For, although the governors sent fleets +in pursuit of the enemy, nothing was effected--partly because the +latter hid themselves from our men among the numerous islands, and +partly because of the great speed of their boats, in which respect +they had great advantage over us. + +Finally, in the year 1633, the king of Mindanao, named Cachil Corralat, +sent out a very large fleet which did signal damage in the islands. To +put an end to this, Don Juan Cerezo de Salamanca, who was governor of +the islands at that time, surmounting many difficulties, commanded a +certain position to be taken and a fort to be begun in Samboangan, +on the island of Mindanao, and occupied by a Spanish garrison; for +that point was well suited to the purpose of restraining from there +the Mindanaos and Joloans, as they were forced to sight it when they +went forth to pillage. Soon the enemy Corralat felt the damage done +him by the new post of the Spaniards, and since he could no longer +sally forth at his safety, he called upon the Burneyans, Joloans, +and Camucones to set out in various directions to pillage--which they +did. He himself sent out after them, in the beginning of April, 1636, +a large fleet in command of a Moro chief named Tagal. This fleet, +as our garrison was but recently established, was able to proceed to +our islands, and attacking many places, to make many captures--among +them three Recollect religious of the Order of St. Augustine, and a +Spanish corregidor of the island of Cuyo; to pillage much property, +and to plunder the churches. They carried away the ornaments and +vessels, and destroyed the images, and especially the cloth of a +sacred crucifix, from which Corralat made himself a cape. Thereupon +he became arrogant, and boasted that he was carrying away the God of +the Christians a prisoner, because he had taken from among the sacred +vessels a monstrance and a lunette with the most holy sacrament; +and he returned to his own land, where they were already mourning +him as lost, because he had been absent from it for eight months. + +This last invasion, more than all the previous ones, afflicted Don +Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, who at that time had been proprietary +governor of the islands for a year. Inflamed with a zeal for the honor +of God and his king, he determined, after surmounting the numerous +difficulties and oppositions, to avenge in person the insolent acts +of those barbarians. But first of all he sent out, as governor of the +presidio at Sanboangan, Sargento-mayor Bartolome Diaz Barrera, and, +under his orders, Sargento-mayor Nicolas Gonçalez, so that they might +be making preparations and sweeping the seas of those corsairs--a very +important matter, as will be seen subsequently. He then fitted out a +good fleet of champans (sailing vessels of moderate size, which are +used by the Chinese); and, embarking in one of them, made sail on the +day of the Purification of our Lady, the second of February, of this +year 1637. At Oton (which is about half-way) he received definite +information that Tagal was returning to his own country with eight +very well laden ships. The commander of the garrison at Sanboangan +was informed of that; and, preparing in two hours a squadron of five +caracoas (which are swift craft with oar and sail, which are used +by these Indians) and placing in command thereof Nicolas Gonçalez, +the sargento-mayor of that presidio, he set out to round a very steep +cliff, in which a small mountain terminated, projecting out into the +sea, and distant about thirty leguas eastward from our fort. It was +necessary for the enemy to stop there, in order to discharge numerous +lances and arrows at the cliff (for it was their custom to sail by +that point when either outward or homeward bound)--a superstitious +custom of those barbarians. On account of this the place was known as +"the point of arrows" [punta de flechas]. The result was that which +our men desired for on the morning of the day of St. Thomas, the +twenty-first of December (at the time when prayer was being offered +up within the fort), the enemy was sighted; and both then and on the +following night our men made such an attack upon the enemy that, in +spite of a desperate defense, they surrendered. Of the eight ships +only one worthy of mention escaped, and that one in such a condition +that in order to escape, they cast overboard all its merchandise and +slaves. The other ships, heavily laden with merchandise, fell into the +hands of our soldiers and were plundered. There were not many firearms, +but they contained the vases and sacred ornaments, which were declared, +in order to be returned to their rightful owners. There died Tagal, the +commander of the enemy, with more than three hundred other Moros--so +obstinate and furious that they preferred death rather than surrender, +although they were offered their lives. Better was the course of one of +Tagal's brothers, who, when badly wounded, surrendered, protesting that +he had always regarded the faith of the Christians as the true one, +and begging for baptism, after receiving which he died. His example +was followed by fourteen other Moros, who surrendered and besought +baptism. Thus also there were recovered a hundred and twenty Christian +captives and among them a Recollect father, one of those whom the +Moros were taking away with them; but he was so badly wounded that he +soon died, although greatly consoled to have seen with his own eyes +the bravery with which our captains had punished the insolence of +the barbarians, obtaining so signal a victory as that, to the honor +of Jesus Christ and of the Spaniards, without its having cost even +a single man to our side. In that we began to enjoy the benefits of +the fort of Sanboangan; for if it had not been there, we could not +have encountered the enemy--who were none the less frightened by a +miracle which occurred on the very night on which the victory was +won. For having commenced by a terrific trembling of the earth and +sea, with a great noise of groans and screams, which were heard by +some, and which terrified all, that cliff--which we have mentioned +as an infamous place, both on account of the superstitious rite of +shooting arrows at it and many other things, and because there was +a tradition among the natives that the devil had been actually seen +there--became loosened from the land and fell with a great crash into +the sea, our Lord giving to understand thereby that the impiety so +strongly intrenched in that island was to fall and give place to our +holy religion, as events are constantly demonstrating. The shore has +already been consecrated to God with the name of Point San Sebastian, +so that the superstitions by which that place was contaminated may +be transformed by His holy arrows. + +The governor was highly elated with these tidings, and still more +when he received the ornaments, sacred vessels, and images which had +been recovered; and was moved to deep pity by the maltreated holy +crucifix, which had been made into a cape. [25] He ordained the latter +as thenceforth a standard for that expedition, as he did also with the +miraculous painting of St. Francis Xavier which was carried by Father +Marcelo Mastrillo, well known in the greater part of the world for the +so great mark of favor shown him by the Lord through the agency of +that great apostle of India. This father, while passing from Malaca +to Macan, a port of China, in fulfilment of the vow which he made at +Napoles, met with the Dutch corsairs, from whom the Lord delivered him +by a sudden wind which, while it turned him from the course which he +was pursuing, miraculously carried him, without a pilot who knew those +regions, into the bay of Manila. They anchored at the port of Cavite, +on the day of St. Ignatius of last year, for the signal consolation +and edification of all these islands, and for the good success of +this expedition (in which consisted the complete relief and remedy of +all)--especially to the benefit of the sick, of whom he took charge +during the entire course of the expedition. Our fleet reached the +port of Sanboangan on February 22, of this year; and all the men in it +having been confessed and having received communion, and having been +so encouraged (as they made evident to the father) by seeing from the +pulpit, the outraged image of the Crucified One, they cried out that +they would attack the whole world; and that the mothers were fortunate +who had employed their sons in so glorious an undertaking. Then the +soldiers returned to their vessels; they were divided into three +companies of Spaniards, and one of Panpango Indians. Without awaiting +the Spaniards and the volunteer Bisayan Indians they began to lay +their course toward Lamitan, on the fourth of March, in order not to +allow the enemies time to prepare themselves. At that place Corralat +had his principal village. The governor preceded the entire fleet, +with only four boats--both because the weather was contrary, and +because he had heard that there were some Moro merchantmen on the +sea from Java Major, very full of Christian slaves. Without the loss +of an instant's time, by sailing night and day, he came within sight +of Lamitan, on March thirteen. There the same man, in company with +only six musketeers as a guard, personally reconnoitered the coast +and river, with great valor and risk. Having fully ascertained that +the beach and the low grounds were safe, he disembarked with the men +of his four boats, as well as those of two others, that had already +come up at that time--in all, about seventy soldiers. He placed +these in battle-array, and marched with them to attack the village, +without knowing that it was so well fortified as was the case, as he +understood that all their force was about one and one-half leguas +inland on a high hill. It was an especial providence of our Lord, +and a brilliant stratagem, to leave an open road along the beach +(on which, as was afterward seen, the enemy had planted all their +artillery), and to deceive the enemy by taking another road on the +opposite side. This was very difficult and dangerous, both because of +the ambuscades which the enemy had prepared in the thickets (which were +quickly cleared by our men, by means of two field-pieces which were in +the vanguard), and by the swamps and river--which the soldiers forded +twice, with the water up to their breasts, with incredible valor. They +were encouraged by the example of their captain-general, who was the +first in all these hardships, as he was also later, when attacking two +large stockades, one after the other. Those stockades, notwithstanding +the fierce resistance made by the Moros in their defense, he entered +with his men, ever proving himself not less prudent in commanding +than spirited in attacking--personally encountering several Moros, +who set upon him with extraordinary spirit. Thereupon, they caught +sight of the fort with which Corralat had defended his village. It +was exceedingly well fortified with a new ditch, with eight pieces +of artillery, twenty-seven versos, many muskets with rests, and other +lighter arms, and with more than two thousand warrior Moros. But that +was of little use, for so gallant was the assault of the Spanish, +notwithstanding their small number, that they instantly gained +possession of the fort, killing a goodly number of Moros--among whom +was their castellan, who obstinately fought to the death--while the +others fled very badly wounded. From that place a portion of our men +went on ahead to a stockade which, with one piece [of artillery], +defended the house of Corralat, and it soon fell into our power; +for after the commander who had charge of it (and who until then had +kept them in good spirits by his vain and superstitious promises) +had been killed, those who accompanied him lost heart and fled, while +many of them were left there dead. The other body [of the Spaniards] +attacked the river at the same time, and, putting the Moros to flight, +captured more than three hundred craft, great and small. Of these they +sacked some large Javanese merchantmen which were heavily laden with +goods, and set free their Christian slaves. Some boats which were +suitable for our men were kept, and the others were burned, without +a single one being left. Had the fleet that left Sanboangan been all +together on that day, they would have finished matters with the Moro +king Corralat, who, with as many men as possible, withdrew to the hill +which he had fortified, disguised and borne on the shoulders of slaves. + +The governor after having given the village over to sack, having +gathered all the arms of the enemy--which, as aforesaid, consisted +of eight bronze pieces with ladles, one swivel-gun of cast iron, +twenty-seven versos, and more than one hundred muskets and arquebuses; +besides a very great number of cannon-chambers, and iron, balls, +and powder; campilans (what the Indians call by this name resemble +certain cutlasses), lances, javelins, and many other kinds of poisoned +missile weapons; and also after having repaired the fort which the +enemy had (now called San Francisco Xavier) with new and suitable +fortifications, which he planned, and himself commenced with his own +hands to execute; and having lodged his men without the loss of even +one (for only two servants deserted): he retired to a large mosque, +where he established a bodyguard. He first had the mosque blessed, +and a chair and some Arabic books of the cursed Koran burned. Quite +necessary was the garrison and watch set by the vigilant governor +during the days of his stay there, while awaiting the rest of his +fleet, in order to drive away some false and pernicious embassies, and +to defend themselves from the continual surprises which the defeated +Moros sprang upon them, especially at night. Our men did not receive +much hurt from them; on the contrary, various bodies of troops, +leaving their posts, overran the country, burning the villages, and +committing other damage on the enemy. Many Christian captives fled from +the enemy on this account, and were immediately sent to Sanboangan. + +On the sixteenth of the same month, Sargento-mayor Nicolas Gonçalez +came to join the governor with the rest of the fleet, which sailed +from Sanboangan. The governor immediately began to prepare his men +with all temporal and spiritual equipment with which to invest the hill +on the next day. There was well seen the military prudence and skill, +and the zeal for the divine honor, of the captain-general, in the so +well arranged and efficacious address which he made to his soldiers, +and in the so definite orders that he issued. He divided his men; and, +committing about one hundred and twenty Spaniards, thirty Pampango +Indians, and some other Bisayans as carriers, to Sargento-mayor Nicolas +Gonzalez, ordered him to surprise the enemy by the rear of the hill, +first sounding his trumpets, so that he himself might attack the +front at the same instant by this means dividing the enemy's forces, +and weakening their defense. In accordance with these orders, the +sargento-mayor began his march. The governor, with the rest of the army +(after leaving a sufficient defense of soldiers in the fort and boats), +marched toward the hill at six o'clock the following morning. At its +brow was a very fine deserted village, where the governor fortified +a good house, and had a piece of artillery planted and a garrison +of Pampangos established, to be used as a place of refuge for his +men. Commencing to ascend the hill by the road which the Moro who +was guiding them showed him, he stopped near where there was another +road; and, having asked the guide whether that road also led to the +hill, and which of the two was the better, the Moro replied in the +affirmative, and said that both were poor. "Then if both are poor," +said the governor in reply, "let us go by the other, and not by the +one along which the Moro is guiding us." That was the inspiration of +Heaven, and very good military counsel, and so did the outcome declare +it; for that first road was taking them point blank into a cavalier, +garrisoned with three pieces, one of which was of bronze. It was +found afterward that, besides a double charge of powder, the piece +was loaded with two plain artillery balls, two crowbars, and more +than three hundred musket balls--with which, no doubt, at least all +the vanguard would have been swept away. Now freed from that danger, +and marching with great difficulty up the hill, the governor sent +some of the vanguard with orders to reconnoiter only the road, +and to halt at some fitting place in order to await the signal of +those who were to attack the enemy in the rear. In truth the road +was so difficult that it could be ascended in some places only with +great difficulty, by clambering up and laying hold of the shrubs with +their hands. It was narrow and very steep, and had precipices in all +parts, so that they could not mount upward except one at a time. And, +above all, it was so well commanded at the top by three forts--which +were inaccessible, both by the great height of their location, and +by the defenses of ditches, very stout stockades, and a very large +supply of weapons--that very few of the enemy, without receiving +any hurt, could with the use of only stones kill a million men who +might attack them in that part. Notwithstanding this, those who were +sent to reconnoiter the road were so blinded by their overweening +valor and spirit (truly Spanish) that, thinking that they could +easily gain all, they went ahead to attack one of the three forts, +without heeding the order that the general had given them; thereby +they encountered, for themselves and the rest of the vanguard, great +damage from the three forts, without doing anything to the enemy. More +than twenty [of the Spaniards] were killed and more than eighty badly +wounded. Much greater would have been the destruction of our men--for, +not considering those who were falling, they continued to involve +themselves and the others further, with false rumors of victory--had +it not been that the governor, placing himself in the greatest danger, +where the balls were raining down, and where they wounded his squire +(and others who were very near him fell dead), and recognizing that +victory was impossible in that part, and prudently hiding the disorder +which had happened, in order not to discourage his soldiers, caused +them all, both whole and wounded, to retire. This he did with so great +ease and gallantry on one side, while on the other he confronted the +enemy with so great valor, with sword in hand; had he not done that not +a single man would have remained alive, since the enemy were numerous, +the road full of precipices, and our men badly impeded with the wounded +and more than two hours of fighting. That night the governor passed, +with those who remained unhurt, in the retreat at the brow of the +hill--at the greatest risk of perishing, if the enemy had made a sally, +however vigilant our men had been. But God delivered them from that +danger; for the enemy did not make a sally, because they made a great +feast that night over the good result of having, as they imagined, +killed the governor. Already by this time the sick were in the camp, +in which miraculous cures of very deadly wounds occurred. One had +been shot through the head from temple to temple; another was shot +through the mouth by a ball that passed up through the stomach; +another had several poisoned dart-points (here called sompites) +left sticking in his throat; and both those and all the others, +excepting two or three who did not allow themselves to be treated, +are today alive and well. They, and all, attribute their miraculous +health to the special favor with which God chose to repay the holy +zeal with which all risked their lives for His Divine Majesty. + +On the following day, the eighteenth of the same month, while the +governor was hearing mass, the rattle and roar of artillery and +musketry was heard on the hill, which increased his anxiety. Suspecting +that Nicolas Gonzalez was fighting, he sent him, as a reënforcement, +a company of soldiers under command of Captain Don Rodrigo de +Guillestigui. And it was so that, the said sargento-mayor, Nicolas +Gonzalez, not having been able to arrive the day before at the assigned +place because of the great difficulty of the road, it was our Lord's +pleasure that, after conquering many difficulties and great obstacles, +he gained possession of an eminence which dominated the enemy's forts +in the rear. Thence he started to invest them, with such intrepidity +that, although the king, leading his men in person, began to resist him +furiously, he could not however withstand our charges. Consequently, +they were compelled to abandon their three forts, one after the other, +leaving an infinite number of dead Moros, who perished partly by the +balls, and partly through falling over precipices in escaping, as +the way was narrow. Among those who escaped by flight was Corralat; +he fled, badly wounded, to some small villages that he owned, which +were four leguas distant from the hill. The queen his wife, and many +others of his servants threw themselves over the precipices of their +own accord, in order to avoid falling into our hands. Many of the enemy +were captured and the Christian captives there freed. Among the latter +was found alive one of the Recollect fathers, who, as he had been +badly mangled, was judged to have lived as by a miracle until the day +following, when he died as a saint in the camp, after receiving all the +sacraments with great consolation. The third [Recollect religious] was +killed through the fury of the Moros, and it is not known where they +threw his body. The three forts, then, with all their arms (namely, +four pieces of artillery, and other numberless weapons of other kinds), +having fallen into our hands, as well as a great quantity of food, +and a quantity of wealth, and a suitable guard having been placed, the +governor was advised of everything. He was waiting anxiously in camp; +rejoicing over the good news, and more that no one of our soldiers +had been killed, he ascended the hill. In two days' time having taken +down to the camp with very few men the pieces which it had taken the +enemy six months to take up with more than two thousand Indians; +collecting many sacred vases and ecclesiastical ornaments which +were found; giving the house of the king over to sack, and others, +very large and full of riches, by which many Spaniards were greatly +advantaged; and having burned the buildings, and leveled the forts: +as he was no longer able to endure the stench which arose from the +[dead bodies of] the enemy who had been slain and those who had fallen +over the precipices, the forces returned to camp--leaving the Moro +king entirely ruined, as a chastisement for the many outrages which +he had impiously committed on the true God, on His priests, and other +Christians. From there, after having given thanks to our Lord with +a mass, and a solemn procession with the most holy sacrament on the +day of the Incarnation, they set sail for Sanboangan. + +When they left, the governor sent Sargento-mayor Pedro Palomino +with one hundred Spaniards to Cachil Moncay (the legitimate king, +although he had been oppressed by the tyranny of his uncle Corralat), +in order to tell him that, if he wished to be protected by the +Spanish arms of his Majesty, he must render homage and pay tribute +to the Catholic king our sovereign, wage war by fire and sword on +Corralat and his allies, free the Christian captives, and admit +gospel ministers. The king offered in person to do all that, and +afterward through his ambassador and brother-in-law, at Samboangan, +to the governor. The latter having issued the fitting orders in that +presidio, and having received the homage offered to our sovereign +by many--especially by the inhabitants of the island of Basilan, +to whom he immediately assigned gospel ministers, as they asked for +them--he entrusted one hundred Spaniards and more than one thousand +volunteer Indians (who had now arrived, although after the battle), +with orders to coast along the island, doing all the harm possible +to the enemy, and helping the Spaniards' friends. The said captain +performed all the aforesaid excellently, coasting along the island from +Sanboangan to Caraga. And although the Moros had retreated inland, +being terrified by the news of the victory, still the captain did +them considerable damage. He burned as many as sixteen villages, and +many other collections of houses, laid waste the fields and gardens, +destroyed more than one hundred ships (counting large and small), +and seized others for the use of the fleet, whose need he abundantly +supplied with many provisions which he collected. He also beheaded +seventy-two spirited Moros, who defended themselves against him, +whose heads he placed on pikes, in various places along the beach, +in order to terrorize the others. He made prisoners some others, +whom he took alive, with which the whole land became fearful. While +that was being done, as has been said, the governor set sail toward +Manila. He entered that city in triumph on the twenty-fourth of May, +with his four companies in battle-array, with the prisoners in their +midst, and with fourteen wagons heavily laden with many important +arms of the enemy, together with the banners which had been captured +dragging in the dust. There was general applause and rejoicing by the +Spaniards and natives. That was an affair well calculated to inspire +fear in the numberless infidels by whom we are surrounded. + +Finally, his Lordship, having shown certain very splendid honors to +those who had so gloriously perished in the war, and having ordered +a great number of masses to be said for their souls, ended the +celebration most happily on the seventh of June (the Sunday of the +Trinity), by a very solemn procession of the most holy sacrament as +an expression of thanks. In front marched the ransomed Christians, +very handsomely clad, carrying candles and rosaries. Four long paces +behind them were many sacred vases and ecclesiastical ornaments, +which were recovered from the possession of the barbarian. By that +sight the hearts of Catholics were moved to great compassion; and the +people gave many thanks to our Lord for the sight of that which they +had desired for so many years. They entreated Him that the work might +progress until, the enemies who remained in those regions having +received the faith of Jesus Christ, they and the other long-time +Christians might enjoy the desired peace and quiet. + + + + +TERRENATE + +The governor's great care and vigilance in preparing and arranging the +fleet of Mindanao did not cause him to forget the other enemy--infested +posts that his Majesty possesses in this archipelago. At the same +time, he despatched another very good fleet, consisting of two large +ships, one patache, and one galley, under command of General Geronimo +Henriquez, as a guard to a number of champans which were taking the +succor to the forts of Terrenate. Two excellent ships of the Dutch +enemy were awaiting them at the entrance. When they saw the courage +of our men the enemy retired in flight to the shelter of their fort +of Malayo, without daring to await them. The Spaniards were so keen +for fighting that, hastily leaving in safety the aid which they were +taking, they started in pursuit of the hostile galleons, and did +not stop until they met these under the enemy's fort, where they had +gone. There they fired so many volleys, both at the ships and at the +fort and village, that (as was learned afterward from some who took +refuge with our ships) very considerable damage was done, without +the Dutch daring to sail out, or being able to do us any damage of +importance. That was a very great cause for scoffing against the enemy, +and they lost as much reputation among those Moros, as was gained by +the Spaniards, especially with the king of Tidore, our friend, who very +joyfully thanked the commander Henriquez and the admiral, Don Pedro de +Almonte, with presents for that action of so great valor and gallantry. + +One month after that fleet had returned to Manila, Don Pedro de +Mendiola, governor of Terrenate, heard that two Dutch ships were +becalmed not a great distance from there. He instantly despatched +two galleys, which together spiritedly attacked the better of the two +ships. After it had been entirely defeated, and our men were about to +board it, a strong wind which suddenly arose snatched it from their +hands, although it was badly crippled by the discharges from our +galleys. The latter received no considerable damage. Thereupon that +enemy were greatly terrified; the Moro natives received a very exalted +idea of the Spaniards, while the latter were very joyful at beholding +the arms of the king our sovereign, even in these most remote bounds +of the earth, shine with the luster and splendor that they merit. + +With license. In Madrid. Printed by Diego Diaz de la Carrera, in the +year 1639. + + + + + + + +VALUE OF CORCUERA'S SEIZURES IN JOLO + + +[Under date of Manila, August 2, 1638, the city cabildo of Manila write +the king a detailed account of Corcuera's campaign in Joló, which +was begun in December, 1637. Inasmuch as this letter covers ground +sufficiently treated in documents already presented in this series, it +is not here given. The original is conserved in the Archivo general de +Indias with pressmark, "est. 68, caj. 1, leg. 32;" and it is presented +by Pastells in his edition of Colin (iii, pp. 528-532). Pastells +(iii, pp. 532, 533) follows this letter by a document showing the +value of the artillery and other things seized from the Joloans, +and the money value of the captives who were sold as slaves. This +document is conserved in the same archives and has the same pressmark +as the above. It is as follows:] + +The relation of the expense incurred on his Majesty's account during +the expedition made to the kingdom of Joló by Don Sebastián Hurtado +de Corcuera, in December, 1637; also the value of what was seized +and gained from the enemy; and the net gain. Subtracting the one from +the other, the result is as follows: + + + pesos tomins granos + + Gained from the enemy, 28,345 7 0 + Expenses of the expedition, 26,314 5 4 + + Net remainder of gain, 2,031 1 6 + + +The value of what was gained from the enemy can be analyzed in the +following form: + +[A list, partially duplicate, of the artillery taken from the Joloans +follows, of which we present only the final summary, in order to +avoid such duplication. It appears that the artillery when taken to +Manila was appraised by one Melchor Pérez, royal chief of artillery +and artillery-founder.] + + +Bronze artillery, useful + +Pieces Weight in quintals and libras + Make Weight of ball in libras + Value of one quintal in pesos + Total value in pesos + +1 English 11 3 30 330 +1 falcon of King Don + Sebastián of Portugal 11 4 28 308 +2 of King Don Sebastián of + Portugal 15 10 26 390 +1 Manila, of the time of + Tavora 26,80 10 26 670 +21 cámaras [26] 124 + +Bronze artillery, useless, appraised merely at the value of the copper + +1 English 11 3 12 132 +1 Siamese 4 1 12-1/2 54 +10 versos 14 12 168 + +Cast-iron artillery + +1 English 7 35 3 12-1/2 91 +1 Macao 12-1/2 4 12 156 +1 English 11 4 12-1/2 137 +1 Dutch 10 88 12-1/2 136 +1 English 12 25 5 12-1/2 153 +1 Dutch 12 25 5 12-1/2 153 +1 English 10 45 5 12-1/2 130 +1 English 14 63 7 12-1/2 182 +1 Dutch 18 9 12-1/2 225 +1 English 21 33 9 12-1/2 266 +1 Dutch 24 97 11 12, and + 1 tomin 312 +1 iron base [roquero] 4 + + +Firearms + + pesos + +3 Vizcayan arquebuses 12 +10-1/2 Macao muskets 31 +11 Vizcayan field muskets 66 +1 Dutch arquebus 4 +19 Macao arquebuses 57 +16 Dutch muskets 64 +1 musket de pinote of Macao 4 +2 Vizcayan arquebuses 10 +7 arquebuses from Macao 21 +7 Japanese small guns [escopetillas] 21 +2 Vizcayan field muskets 12 +5 Dutch arquebuses 15 +10 Dutch muskets 50 +1 bit of a Vizcayan gun [escopeta] 1 + + +Besides the above, in cloth or money, 2,866 [pesos]; in small darts +and blowpipes, 50 [pesos]. + +Lastly, from 192 captive Indians--men, women, and children--sold as +his Majesty's slaves at royal auction, 20,815 pesos. Of this amount +10,375 pesos were in cash, in coin; and the 10,440 remaining were +charged to the pay due the infantry and seamen. + + + + + + + +DOCUMENTS OF 1639-1640 + + + Events in Philipinas, 1638-39. [Unsigned; probably Juan Lopez, + 1639.] + Letters to the Holy Misericordia. Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera; + December 4, 1637, and October 26, 1639. + The university of Santo Tomás. Felipe IV; November 9, 1639. + Royal orders and decrees. Felipe IV; 1639. + Events in the Filipinas Islands, 1639-40. [Juan Lopez?]; August, + 1640. + Relation of the insurrection of the Chinese. [Unsigned and + undated; probably in March, 1640.] + Ecclesiastical and Augustinian affairs, 1630-40. Casimiro + Diaz; [1718?]. [From his Conquistas.] + Relation of the Filipinas Islands. [Diego de Bobadilla, S.J.; + 1640.] + + + +Sources: The first of these documents is obtained from a MS. in the +Academia Real de la Historia, Madrid; the second, from a MS. volume +in the library of Edward E. Ayer, Chicago; the third, and the eighth +decree in the fourth, from the Archivo general de Indias, Sevilla; +the fourth (except the above-mentioned decree), from the Archivo +Historico Nacional, Madrid; the fifth and sixth, from the Ventura +del Arco MSS. (Ayer library); the seventh, from Diaz's Conquistas, +pp. 267-444; the eighth, from Thevenot's Voyages curieux, t. i, +part ii--from a copy belonging to the library of Harvard University. + +Translations: These are made by James A. Robertson--except the fifth, +sixth, and seventh, and two decrees in the fourth, by Emma Helen Blair. + + + + + + + +EVENTS IN THE PHILIPINAS + +FROM THE YEAR 1638 TO THAT OF 1639 + + +Today, August 14, I learned that thirteen Macasars and Basilas, +of those who had been sold as slaves, had fled in a small boat, +and that they had been furnished with arms. Some suspected that the +Lascars aided them. A few days before, six of them had fled, but they +were captured and brought to this port by the Indians of Maragondon. + +At the end of September Nuestra Señora del Rosario [i.e., our Lady +of the Rosary] was robbed. Only three jewels were taken from her--a +diamond of the value of one thousand two hundred pesos; a cross of +smaller diamonds; and a gold rosary. The holy image was found in a +prostrate condition. It is said that there are some indications of +the robber. A portion of the robe was found in the possession of a +soldier; but he says that he found it on the ground, and it has been +impossible to prove anything else. + +In the beginning of October came a despatch from Sanboangan, in which +it is declared that although the Spaniards tried to constrain Cachil +Moncay to make his men pay the tribute, he replied that he would +not do so, but that he would take arms and declare war. In fact, +he retired to the mountains and took captive Father Francisco Angel; +but another chief, his opponent, had the boldness to take the father +from him and deliver him to the Spaniards. + +We are advised from Jolo that many of our men have been killed; and +that the islanders who have remained there have suffered great famine, +and consequently, an epidemic and plague is feared. It is also said +that Panguian a cachil, together with Dato Ache, has retreated with +almost all the brave men of Jolo to the island of Tabitabi, [27] +where they have fortified another hill, and are preparing ships to +go out to pillage our tributaries. The king and queen are in Jolo +without anyone paying any attention to them; and Panguian Cachil is +trying to make himself king of the Joloans. + +Three ships left this port for Macan: the Macan patache, on the +thirteenth of October; on the fourteenth, that from Camboja; and on +the sixteenth, that which came from India. It has to return here to +collect its goods which it left here [for sale] on commission [fiada], +and will go hence to Goa. + +October 26, a champan from Sanboangan arrived, in which was Father +Gregorio Belin, seeking the reformation that is especially demanded +by affairs in Jolo, whose commandant [28] has prevented many good +results and been the cause of many evils, by his bad government and +scandalous conduct. Don Sebastian [Hurtado de Corcuera] removed him, +as he was already well informed of what has taken place there. Father +Pedro Gutierrez informs us about Mindanao in a letter which he writes +to the father provincial, as follows. + + + + +Letter from Father Pedro Gutierrez + +"These three posts of Sanboangan, Jolo, and Mindanao, were left +so destitute, for lack of the little fleet that was here at the +beginning, that I am surprised that the commandant, Don Pedro de +Almonte, has been able to attend with so great promptness to the +necessities that have arisen. The time when the [lack of the] fleet +began to be felt was when a soldier and a Pampango were brought +badly wounded from Basilan. In order to remedy the damages that +might ensue from not inflicting punishment, it was necessary to +equip a caracoa with Pampangos and servants of the Spaniards. The +matter was entrusted to Adjutant Cristoval de las Eras, who had the +two evildoers shot in Basilan. Then, seeing that the Spaniards who +were in Basilan were poorly accommodated, and without any defense, +he advised the commandant, Don Pedro; and, by virtue of the order +sent him, he built a fortified house in a very good position. After +the people of the mountain (some of whom had absented themselves +through fear) had calmed down, he returned to this port. + +"During that time the commandant, Don Pedro, was already getting ready +a small fleet among the Lutaos, in order to attack the Joloans who had +gone to Tabitabi and other islands. That he might accomplish this, he +requested a good juanga which was at Dapitan, whence it was brought +with fifty Indians. With one that he procured from those that his +Majesty had here, and those which he had made by the Lutao chiefs, +he had five caracoas with four pieces of artillery, besides three +other small boats called pilanes, all of them excellently equipped +with infantry and ammunition. + +"While the fleet was on the point of being despatched, news arrived +from Mindanao of various acts of treachery which Moncay, chief of +Buayen, had attempted against the Spaniards; and that he had seized +Father Angel; and that after the said father had escaped from them, +they fell upon the food and the household effects that the father left, +thus declaring themselves. But the commandant, Don Pedro, seeing the +danger in delaying help, and knowing that if Corralat and Manaquior +were to unite with Moncay much damage might be done, determined to +send the fleet that was prepared for Jolo to Mindanao. For greater +abundance, he added a champan with food and ammunition for the +said fleet, and as an aid to the fort at Buayen. He charged Adjutant +Cristoval de las Eras with all this, on account of his experience as a +good soldier, and his knowledge of wars with the Indians. In addition +he charged me to go in the fleet, so that I might see Corralat and +Manaquior; and as that was my affair, and the Spaniards were not to +meddle in it, it was made certain that those chiefs would not unite +with Moncay. We came near to Lamitan, where Corralat was living, and +I found Father Carrion, who was with Corralat, and who was coming to +Sanboangan to ask for an order to make peace with Manaquior, to make +war on Moncay, to talk to Corralat, in order that he should not unite +with Moncay, and to request succor in some things. I told him that +the commandant Don Pedro had already prepared for all that he wanted, +and more; and that he was sending that fleet, collected as if by a +miracle. The father was very much surprised by that, and even told +me that if they saw what had been done, they would not believe it +in Buayen; for, as they know the limited resources in Sanboangan, +they had not dared to ask for a single soldier. + +"I landed alone, and the fleet went to await me at La Zabanilla. I +talked to Corralat, and he promised me all that I wanted. For greater +security, he told me that he would give two caracoas to guard me. He +offered me four, but I did not desire more than two, which he sent +after me. It was diverting to hear the Mindanaos say that on no account +must they separate from my caracoa; and when I told them, as we were +returning, to stay behind and look for food, that did not avail, for +they told me that they were not to leave me until I should return, +and they kept their word. + +"We arrived at the fort. I informed Adjutant Eras of the condition of +affairs. According to his orders, Manaquior was summoned; and he made +a treaty of peace with Captain Marquez. For a beginning, he offered +an iron piece that uses a ball weighing three libras, which he handed +over to the said adjutant Eras. We continued to ascend the river to +quiet the villages that the hostile Moncay had taken from Manaquior, +and which he had fortified. But when they learned that the Spaniards +were coming, they discarded their foolish ideas, and, as sensible men, +abandoned the village, which was excellently fortified. They set fire +to a part of it, but were unable to burn it all because of their haste +in escaping. They went to join those who were fortified in a village +higher up the same river, which was the village which prevented those +who could have done so from carrying refreshment to the fort of the +Spaniards. The Spaniards went up the river, and before they arrived the +natives deserted that village also, and that so hastily that they were +unable to burn more than one house. We went up as far as the village +of Manaquior, where we were well received. We took five days to reach +that place from the fort. Manaquior said that the inhabitants of the +two villages had united with a third, in order to fight, and that +they were on an arm of the river. The adjutant with his fleet, and +with Manaquior, who had always accompanied him, descended the river; +and, arriving at the entrance of the said arm, as one of the caracoas +was large, the adjutant left it there (it was the one in which I was +embarked), and ascended with the rest. Before his arrival, the enemy +also fled and said that all those who had abandoned the other villages +were going to fortify themselves in another position farther up the +river. Thereupon, those who accompanied Adjutant Eras tried to persuade +him not go any farther, since those Moros did not await them, and the +river was becoming narrower. The adjutant refused to do anything else +but pursue them, and did so for two days by that arm of the sea. He +reached the last site, where the enemy were fortifying themselves +with an excellent stockade. There must have been a great force of men, +since they had done so much in so few hours. They did not hold their +ground there, either, but according to the track that they left went +to the mountains in two divisions. Thereupon we returned to Samboangan, +after having reënforced the fort with food and ammunition. + +"Two bronze versos were found at that last site, which had been +hidden in the river. The adjutant seized them, and is sending them, +I believe, to Don Sebastian. I have been in various fleets, and +have seen in none of them what I have seen in this one--namely, +that although those people had never encountered Spaniards before, +there was not a single soldier who ill-treated any Indian, while the +latter came very willingly. Perhaps the cause for it was the speech +that Adjutant Eras made to the Spaniards--who, as they know that he +treats them with great courtesy, and that for that reason he will +stand no nonsense, did not wish to give him cause for anger. As we +were returning, I saw Corralat, and tried to ascertain from him his +intentions. He does not wish to fight with the Spaniards; but, on the +other hand, he makes impertinent demands--namely, that the country +from Sibuguei to near Catel (a region about two hundred leguas in +circuit), and the lake of Malanao, be left to him. As my intention +was not to make any agreement with him, except that he should not +unite with Moncay, I told him that I was writing to Don Sebastian, +as I did, whose letter I am despatching now. + +"All the Mindanaos fear the Castilians, especially Don +Sebastian. Corralat's whole anxiety was lest he might come here, and +he asked why he should come, when it would be sufficient to send a +captain; and he said other things in this manner. May our Lord arrange +matters as is most fitting to His holy service; and may He preserve +your Reverence, to whose holy prayers and sacrifices I earnestly +commend myself. Sanboangan, September 30, 1638." + + + + +Section of a letter written in Manila + +"Father Belin took with him about eighty Christian captives of those +who have come to our soldiers--both in that entrance which was made in +the villages, and of those who have been escaping from the Moros since +the time of the arrival of Don Sebastian, who exceed one hundred and +fifty Christians. Among them, at times, were some Moros who requested +holy baptism. The eighty who arrived here were disembarked at the gate +of Saint Dominic, where the sargento-mayor was awaiting them with the +captains and adjutants and the company of the governor, who marched +them down in their midst. When the procession or march was ended, +the alcaldes and Father Belin went through the street which leads to +[the house of] the master-of-camp and [the convent of] St. Augustine, +to the palace. Having gone round by the parade-ground, they went up to +the governor, where Father Belin thanked his Lordship for the liberty +that had been obtained through his mediation. His Lordship ordered +them to be lodged in the city; and directed the father to bring the +chiefs to the palace next day, as he intended to clothe them as he +had those whom he sent to Basilan. Among them is a Moro who is a +Christian, who is accompanied by more than twenty persons of his +relatives and household. All of them have resolved to be baptized, +and to live among Christians in Cabuyao. [29] That was the chief who +brought Father Angel to the fort, and withdrew him from captivity +when he came to our people. The fact was that that chief captured a +girl about twelve years old in that village of Cabuya, whom he has +married during this time, with the intention of making her his chief +wife until his death. She, having seen the love that he showed her, +told him that if he wished her to live in his company willingly, +not only was she to be a Christian, but he was to become one also, +in order to be her true husband and live among Christians. In short, +she won him so that he determined to come with her to her village. He +persuaded his men to do the same, and in accordance with that they +have come. In the champan, he told his Tagal wife that she should +not tell the Castilians that he had captured her, lest they kill him +or do him some harm; but that she could say that she was bringing +him and all his people to captivity, as was a fact. Don Sebastian, +influenced by reasons of expediency, orders that that family return +to live in Mindanao." + +October 31, the patache from the island of Hermosa entered this +port. It brings as news that five or six Franciscan and Dominican +friars are there, who have been exiled from China; and that they +hope to be able to reënter that country. The report that the Dutch +had occupied the post of Tanchui, which we had left, is said to +be false. On the contrary, the inhabitants of Tanchui came to beg +friendship and Spaniards, to which the only answer given was that +they should come with safety to the fort with their drugs, which +would furnish them a safe passage. + +A champan also arrived from Terrenate at the end of October. It brought +news that the sargento-mayor, Francisco Hernandez, made an important +raid into the country of the enemies, with good result. He found in +Macasar the Spaniards who deserted from this place last year with +Captain Ramos, whom they had already killed through anger. Francisco +Hernandez begged the king for permission and aid to arrest them; and, +being given it, arrested them and placed them in the galleys. + +A small vessel, called a cho, came from Macan November 2. It brings +more authentic news of the conversion of the king of China, than what +I wrote by the ships. The fathers say of him that he is earnestly +considering becoming and living as a Christian. Word is also received +that the fathers of the province of Macan, which is the same province +as that of Japon, formed a congregation; and that, because they +have strong hopes of the opening of the door for the conversion of +that kingdom, in which the faith has been so severely persecuted, +they have elected two procurators to go to Europa by two different +ways--Father Antonio Cardin, in the first place, who goes by way of +Goa; and Father Reymundo de Gouca, who is about to come to Manila in +order to go by way of Mexico. + +At midnight on November 10, so fierce a gale of wind came from the +south that it broke five of the moorings of the flagship "San Luis," +which was about to set sail to Terrenate, having been already laden +and with its artillery aboard. The wind carried away its shrouds, +and grounded it in the sand near Palañaque, but in such a manner +that it could be floated off after five days. The wind also drove +the second galley ashore, but without doing it any damage. + +At dawn on the morning of the eleventh, the ship from India, which was +the last to go to Macan, anchored in the bay. It lost most of its masts +by the fierceness of the storm, and the others were disabled. That +storm struck them after they had already anchored. Had it struck them +outside, all think that no one would have escaped, to judge from the +way in which the ship is disabled. + +News arrived on the night of November 20 that the second patache, +which was going to Octong to get a cargo of rice for Terrenate, +was driven ashore some leguas from here by the gale of wind above +mentioned, but that all the crew were saved. + +Early on the night of November 21, the two galleons, "San Luis" +as flagship and "San Juan" as almiranta, left for Terrenate. The +commander-in-chief is Don Pedro de Almonte, and the admiral Don Alonso +de Alcoçer, although with the title of governor of the almiranta +galleon. The commander of the flagship as far as Sanboangan is +Don Pedro Fernandez del Rio, who is captain and sargento-mayor for +the voyage. + +A despatch [-boat] arrived from Sanboangan on the last of November, +which carried some Joloan captives. It happened in this wise. The +king of Jolo, desiring to recover his hill, and to fortify himself +anew with the arms that the Spaniards had there, set a snare for +them with this bit of treachery. He caused an Indian (who was a +clever leader of the fishermen), called Cahapitan, and his men to +become very friendly with the Spaniards and to sell them fish--a +thing that our men, not knowing his intentions, valued very highly, +because of the privation that they were suffering. After some days +he came with a message from the king, to the effect that he wished +to submit and to pay tribute, and that he was sending Indians to be +registered. In the meantime the fathers [30] were warned by a certain +Capot, a Christian, who had escaped, that the king was beyond all +question plotting treason, and they advised the commander of those +forts of it. He replied that the fathers were entertaining fears, +and that no attention was to be paid to it. He allowed Cahapitan, +as well as those who were to be registered, to enter the fort with as +much security as if they were in Old Castilla. Eight hundred Indians +having registered, a day was assigned for many more to come. The +Moros chose that day for the execution of their treachery. Cahapitan +arrived, with the word that he was bringing three hundred more, who +should be allowed to enter with him in order to be registered. By +that time there were already about two thousand Moros in ambush, +while others were in ships on the sea, in order that they might, +on seeing the signal, do their part--namely, kill the Spaniards, +and seize the fort. And that would have happened just as they wished, +if God in His ineffable providence had not obstructed it; for, at the +time agreed upon, the commandant caught a high fever, and accordingly +answer was sent them to return on another day, as he would not register +them [that day]. The Moros urged strongly that they be registered, +and their urging caused suspicion. Accordingly, a resolute answer was +sent that he would not register them until next day. Seeing themselves +frustrated in their principal intent, they went to the stone-quarry, +where the force of twenty-three galley negroes and some Sangleys were +getting stone, being guarded by only five Spaniards. Alleging peace, +they landed; and, attacking them, killed two Spaniards, three negroes, +and one Sangley, and wounded two Spaniards, who, with the other one +that was unhurt, escaped; and they captured the others--to the number +of thirty-eight persons, counting dead and captured. The commandant, +having learned of the treachery through those who escaped, sent a +despatch to Sanboangan asking for help. It was God's pleasure (and +that was another of His wonderful providences), that the commander Don +Pedro de Almonte should have determined of his own accord to visit +Jolo with a small fleet, which he had difficulty in collecting. He +was met at sea by the despatch-boat. He made haste and arrived at so +opportune a time that he met Cahapitan and all his men. Cahapitan, +hiding his treason, went to meet him with a white flag. The commander +Don Pedro received him cordially, but told him that he should follow +him to the fort, in order to be well assured that he was free from +guilt. He followed the commander very securely with thirty-six +persons; for he had so deceived the commandant at Jolo that he was +persuaded that Cahapitan was guiltless, and thus he assured the +commander Don Pedro. That deceit was brought about by his having +entrusted to Cahapitan a quantity of goods in order to trade them +for drugs of the country. Yet the commander, Don Pedro, although he +freed Cahapitan and two old men at the persuasion of the commandant, +in order that they might carry a letter to the king of Jolo (for the +commandant petitioned the commander, saying that he would advise that, +and the traitor [i.e., Cahapitan] desirous of performing another act +of treachery, facilitated it), detained all the other men. Cahapitan +went straight to a place where he had three negroes and two Sangleys, +who had fallen to his share as the principal author of the deed. He +ordered them to be killed, and his men killed four more of them; but +one, a Sangley, attacked him, and killed him with his own dagger. The +Sangley came all bloody to the fort, and disclosed the whole evil +plot. Thereupon the commandant awoke as from a profound slumber, in +which his self-interest had buried him. Afterward he confessed that he +had done wrong in not believing the fathers; thereupon the commander, +Don Pedro de Almonte, sent his boats under Captain Gaspar de Morales, +to overrun the island. In that raid much harm was done to the enemy, +to the profit of their allies, who secured rich pillage. Almost all +the people escaped; but those people who were captured, together with +those of Cahapitan, were made slaves. They numbered in all fifty, +besides three who were killed. That punishment made them tremble, +and many have concluded to settle quietly and to give hostages. All +the above I have taken, in summary, from a very long letter of Father +Alexandro Lopez, who took part in the whole affair; and was in the +fleet that went round the island. + +At Christmas came news that the Chinese pirates were pillaging these +neighboring coasts. A fleet was sent to attack them, under command +of Captain Maroto, which returned on the second of January, 1639. The +report he gives is, that some Chinese of the Parián of Manila fled in +a champan. They attacked another champan on the sea beyond Mariveles, +pillaged it, and sent it to the bottom. They attacked another anchored +in a port, and pillaged and burned it. After that they put out to sea, +in order to cross over to China. Our men brought in the Chinese who +had escaped from both champans. + +Later, at the beginning of January, news came that the same men were +pillaging, although in more remote districts where they had captured +some boats and killed many Spaniards and Indians, who were sailing +quite unsuspicious of danger. Consequently, a few champans under +command of Don Pedro Bermudez were again sent against them. + +January 15, General Don Geronimo de Sumonte took possession of [the +post of] castellan and other offices at this port. + +On January 18, news was received that the fleet of our champans +encountered the pirates in the entrance of Mindoro, eight in +number. They were pursuing a boat of the Augustinian fathers. The +Spaniards attacked the pirate's flagship, a champan, which, after our +men had damaged it considerably, escaped, with one other vessel. The +rest were either sunk entirely, or driven ashore with the loss of all +their men. Of those driven ashore, some Chinese were captured alive, +and they were executed by various rigorous modes of punishment. [31] +Our men did not follow the two other champans, as it was already +night. The latter returned toward the coasts of this island of Manila, +where other of our boats were sailing, and committed some depredations. + +January 27, a violent north wind sunk a boatload of Joloan captives +who were fleeing from Manila, six of whom were captured. + +February 24, an advice-boat arrived from Macan with news that the +Portuguese had done a thriving business in the fairs of Japon, but +that the Japanese were very particular that no priests should go +there. Accordingly they came to request that the fathers in these +islands wait patiently, and that no priests go there until God gives +a better opportunity. + +March 4, the father provincial arrived from the visit to Pintados. Two +days previous they had been attacked by two champans of Chinese +pirates--who were beaten off, however, because our vessel had +sufficient defense. Later however, they saw that the pirates were +pursuing another champan, and that of the father provincial hastened +to aid the latter, with which aid that vessel escaped safely--which, +had he not aided it, would infallibly have been captured. + +March 20, came tidings that large pieces of planking, masts, and the +ribs of a vessel which had suffered shipwreck had been found on the +coast of Paracali, opposite Manila. From appearances, it is thought +that it is the almiranta "San Ambrosio," which sailed for Mexico from +these islands last August, quod Deus avertat ["which may God forbid"]. + +In the middle of March, the ship from India set out for Goa. It was +the one which had come from Goa, and after setting out for Macan had +returned disabled to put in at this port. The cho from Macan returned +to its city by November. The four fathers of the Society who belong +to that province are going. Don Pedro Bermudez sailed once more, with +three champans, to attack the Chinese pirates who were harassing the +coasts of this island, and had committed depredations. They attacked +the flagship champan, which was a large vessel; they killed sixty +Sangleys in it, and seized and sent to Manila the others. These men +have disclosed extensive treacheries that the Chinese were plotting +in order to stir up the country. The authorities have been making +arrests and investigations, and they are still doing so; and in +the middle of April they hanged six of the Sangleys. They declared +that they were building two champans on the Pangasinan coast, of the +heaviest planking, and suitable for fighting. The Spaniards went for +these vessels, and brought them to Manila with the carpenters who +were working on them. God had great pity for these islands. + +On April 18 came the flagship and patache of the Terrenate relief +ships; they say that the almiranta was driven to leeward of them +near Macasar. The soldiers remained with the commander Don Pedro +de Almonte, in order to make an expedition in Mindanao, together +with other squadrons of ships that have sailed from Caragan and +Bisayas. From Xolo they write that the inhabitants have attempted to +plan other acts of treason like the past. The leaders have either +been killed or are in the galleys. Father Melchor de Vera writes +of the Moros near Sanboangan that some of them are being baptized, +and that there are hopes of a great conversion. + +On May 30 arrived the almiranta from Terrenate. They have suffered +many hardships, especially of thirst, which was so great that some of +them even drank salt water. They bring as news from Mindanao that our +men are building a fort at La Zavanilla, in the country of Corralat; +and that he, as well as Moncay, has retreated. Manaquior is daily +becoming more friendly. With the ships of Terrenate came one hundred +and fifty Siaos and fifty Terrenatan Christians, to take part in this +war. They were already about to enter the lands of the enemy. The +commander, Don Pedro de Almonte, also sent a portion of a fleet to +coast about the island of Xolo; for a report was current that Dato Ache +was getting ready to go out to pillage. To Mindanao had already come +one hundred and twenty valiant Caragas, who had always accompanied +Corralat from the time when they killed the priests in their land, +[32] and to whom Don Sebastian had sent a pardon. + +News of a new revolt came from Nueva Segobia. The natives killed +seventeen persons, counting soldiers and their wives. They did not +wish to kill the father who instructed them, as he was a mild-mannered +man. Don Marcos Zapata went to attack them, and killed thirty and +captured thirty others. The rest retreated to the mountains. + +It is learned from a ship from Macan, that the second patache, in which +were two of the recently-ordained fathers, and which sailed from here +in November, has not arrived at that city. During the last few days +the report has been current that both it and the vessel from India +(which sailed again from here in March) have been pounded to pieces +on the shoals of Paragua, and that great bits of wreckage have been +washed up at Calamianes, whence they write this. These losses will +be a great calamity. + +News came on May 23 that, our men having arrived overland at the +lake of Malanao, [33] in the island of Mindanao, two thousand five +hundred armed Indians were waiting for them in battle array. They +could not sustain the discharge of our firearms, and retired to the +lake. Our men had carried six boats in pieces, to fit them together +and navigate in them. When the Malanaos saw them on the water, they +gave themselves up as lost. Some five thousand of them fled, while +more than one thousand remained and offered homage and tribute to the +king our sovereign. They were all registered, and began immediately +to render allegiance. They admitted ministers of the gospel, and +gave hostages and security in everything. Doubtless those who fled +and hid will soon appear and submit. + +The fathers write from Jolo that Dato Ache has been entirely unable to +do anything since the occurrence at Lami, in which he was buried. [34] +It is added that since these things are so, all the Joloans are +perishing from famine. They will never humiliate themselves or +give signs of surrendering. In some raids that have been made, the +Spaniards have killed and captured some of their chiefs. Among them +was a pirate who captured the beneficed priest Francisco Vazquez, +and refused to give him up for less than two thousand pesos. Now he +is paying it in the galleys, where he has been put at the oar. + +Father Alexandro Lopez writes from Jolo that the commandant of that +island [i.e., Xines Ros] begged pardon in public from God and the +fathers for the insults that he had uttered, and for the injuries +that he had done them; and that he was building the church for them +with much fervor, before his successor should arrive. + +A champan arrived here on May 30, with fifty arrobas of nails which +had been taken from the wreckage of the ship which, as I said, had run +aground on the coast of Paracali. Those whose opinion is most accurate +in that matter have examined it, and believe that it is all from the +almiranta "San Ambrosio." On that account the profound sadness that +was general in April and May has ceased; for it had been reported +that indubitable signs were found that the flagship had been wrecked. + +On June 17 arrived a despatch from Sanboangan. The news brought by it +will be told by a letter from Father Pedro Gutierrez. "On setting out +for Terrenate, the commander, Don Pedro de Almonte, left an order that, +when the boats of the volunteers arrived at Samboangan, they were to +skirt the coast of Jolo. Six caracoas did that, as well as six other +boats from Basilan, under command of Adjutant Cristoval de las Heras, +and manned by some Spaniards. Inside of a fortnight, they coasted about +the island of Jolo and came to another small islet near by. They burned +many boats, killed some Joloans, and brought back a goodly number of +captives, without having lost any of our men. They did not delay longer +because a fixed time had been assigned to them. The said commander Don +Pedro came back from Terrenate on the sixth of March. As the almiranta +had not arrived, he despatched Sargento-mayor Don Pedro del Rio to La +Zabanilla with most of the fleet, so that he might fortify himself +in La Sabanilla and reduce a village of Caragas who had formerly +come to Corralat, when fleeing from the Spaniards. Thereupon, as +soon as the said sargento-mayor arrived at La Zabanilla, he began to +build the fort, which was finished in good shape, and he reduced the +Caragas; and, when the general arrived, he was already holding them +in La Zabanilla. As the almiranta did not arrive, the commander Don +Pedro came with the rest of the fleet. While he was in La Zabanilla, +a despatch from Captain Don Francisco de Atensa was brought. It gave +advices that he had arrived at the lake of Malanao, [35] having entered +by the gulf of Pangi [i.e., Panguil] with the Spaniards whom he had +in Caraga, as well as with Caragas and Butuanes; and having fought +with those of the lake, the Moros fled, and immediately, on the next +day, the chiefs began to come in to submit to the Spaniards. They +all did that except one, named Mancaya. In order to accomplish that, +the commander sent Sargento-mayor Don Pedro del Rio, with his company +and about five hundred Indians. They all reached the lake where they +found it unnecessary to stop, as Captain Don Francisco de Atensa +had pacified all the inhabitants of the lake, and Mancaya; and they +had given hostages and firearms, and had registered themselves to +pay tribute to the number of one thousand tributes. They promised to +receive fathers. Thus those villages of the lake were already reduced, +and had also given up some Christian captives whom they had taken. The +lake of Malanao is of a cold rather than a warm temperature, and the +people have plenty of rice and native fruits. Between the lake of +Malanao and La Zabanilla there are three chiefs who were related to +Borongon; those chiefs proceeded to some very rough mountains near +the lake. It is said that they have about three thousand warriors, +who are devoted to Corralat; and as he was not a declared friend of +the Spaniards, they gave us plenty to suffer on the return. For, as +the road was in such shape that it was necessary to go single file, +some of the Indians who accompanied the Spaniards were wounded. But +although the enemy made several ambuscades, they could not inflict +more damage, because of the care with which the march was made--until +Holy Saturday, when it began to rain; when a great number of them +attacked us from ambush and killed one Spaniard, who was without +[fire: crossed out in MSS.] arms, as he was sick. They also killed +four Indians, and wounded four others. It was our Lord's pleasure +that, notwithstanding the rain, the arquebuses of the Spaniards, +who were near, were not without effect. With that, no more damage +was done us; the enemy fled, dropping about thirty shields in their +flight, and they received some damage. The troops of Sargento-mayor +Don Pedro del Rio arrived at La Zavanilla, where Captain Pedro Navarro +had been left in command of the infantry, which was in the fort. The +commander, Don Pedro de Almonte, had gone to Buayen with the rest of +the fleet; and, having sent a message to Moncay, the latter answered +that he would fight. In order to seize the posts of the enemy, the +commander, Don Pedro, sent two boats to the mouth of a creek, by which +reënforcements could be taken, so that they could not reach Moncay by +that way; and also to a lake which was up the river of Buayen, which +was not only an entrance to Buayen, but also where the enemy had their +retreat in an excellent fortification. The best fortification was in +a swamp. On that undertaking, the commander, Don Pedro, sent Captain +Juan Lopez Luçero with his company, and our ally Manaquior and his +men. That was all very necessary, because of the great number of men +that the enemy had. They fought for three days, at the end of which, +it was our Lord's pleasure to let our men dislodge the enemy with +heavy loss. Of our men only one Spaniard was wounded and one or two +of Manaquior's men were killed, and one or two others wounded. Our +men burned all the houses and fortifications. + +"At that same time the commander, Don Pedro de Rozas, marched from +the Spanish fort to that of Moncay, which was very strong; for, +besides being surrounded by swamps and water, and by a dike that +had been made, and besides the fort (which was built long ago) of +stone, there had been added ditches, terrepleins, and stockades with +their bulwarks. Having reached it, our men planted two bulwarks upon +fascines with which they could bombard the enemy's fort. At the end +of three days, a white flag was displayed; and there was a cessation +in the hostilities, for the time being. Moncay, having declared +that he wished to become a friend, abandoned the fort that night, +after setting fire to some of the houses. Next day our men finished +burning what was left. Not a little wonder was caused, and thanks +to our Lord, at seeing that so strong a fort had been gained with +the loss there of one Spaniard and two wounded, one of whom died +afterward; and four wounded Indians, of whom one died. Besides that, +they burned many fortified houses, and destroyed palm-trees and sago +plantations. Some days afterward, the commander sent Don Agustin de +Çepada to reconnoiter the creeks. The latter came upon a well-fortified +house, which he burned. He sent Sargento-mayor Pedro de la Mata to +coast along the shores, and do all the damage possible to the enemy. He +found a fortified hill also, and it was regarded as a miracle that it +was taken without any loss of our men. It is thought that the chief +man in the post was one who was in the bulwark; for as soon as he was +laid low by a volley from the Spaniards, all the enemy fled, and the +Spaniards burned all the fortifications and the neighboring houses. + +"The commander, Don Pedro, also sent Captain Don Francisco del Castillo +to an islet which was situated opposite the bar of Buayen. He captured +some Lutaos, destroyed a great number of boats (and the same was done +by Adjutant Don Albaro Galindo, who destroyed some boats); but found +no people. He sent the chief Manaquior to discover whether there were +any means of finding Moncay, and returned at the end of fourteen or +fifteen days. As there was no way of being able to pursue Moncay, +and as the season was advanced, and many were falling sick, and as +he had to go to Jolo, the commander, Don Pedro Almonte, went with +the rest of his fleet to La Zabanilla, after having planned that the +Spaniards who remained in the fort of Buayen, and the men of Manaquior, +should continue to pursue Moncay--all being under the order of Captain +Juan Lopez Luçero, castellan and captain of the said post. + +"The inhabitants of Basilan, who had gone to Jolo to do all the damage +possible to the Joloans--in company with six Spaniards, under command +of Alférez Juan de Ulloa--returned with seventy-seven captives and +some of our Bisayans, who had been seized by the enemy. They destroyed +about two hundred boats, counting large and small, first selecting for +themselves fifteen of the best. They reported that a Lutao chief of +Jolo, named Lohon, had taken to the fort of Jolo fifty other captives, +with which, necessarily, the [forces of the] Joloans must be exhausted. + +"The commander, Don Pedro de Almonte, coming from Buayen, reached +the passage of the river of Sibuguei; and Datan, the chief of the +river, registered eight hundred tributes, and handed over the arms +and Bisayan slaves that he had there." + +We received news here, on the twenty-fifth of June, that the sea +of Camarines is continually floating ashore more fragments of the +wrecked ship, which some think that they recognize as belonging +to the flagship. Consequently, it has begun to be rumored again +as more probable that, if only one ship has been wrecked, it is +the flagship. But others are of the opinion that the wreckage shows +unmistakable signs of the two ships, both flagship and almiranta. That +casts a gloom over all the land. If that has happened (which may God +not have permitted), it is thought that it will be impossible for +these islands to recover in many years. + +June 27, a destructive hurricane came down upon this port from the +northwest, and veered about to almost all points of the compass. It +overturned some houses, and did great damage in all the others and in +the churches. It blew the tiles through the air as if they were bits +of paper. The galleons along the shore were a great cause for anxiety; +and the commander, Don Geronimo de Sumonte, and Captain Pedro Muñoz +hastened to them quickly, with the prominent men of this port, all of +whom worked valiantly. That was very necessary; for the galleon "San +Juan Baptista," although held by eleven cables, came dragging upon "La +Concepcion," which was being made ready to sail to Mexico. They would +infallibly have been dashed to pieces, had they not been attended +to so carefully and diligently. Of the other smaller craft, some +have been wrecked; and some men were drowned. It was God's pleasure +to allow the wind's fury to last only four hours. Had it blown with +the same violence during all the twenty-four hours while it lasted, +no ship would have escaped, and not a house or church would have been +left standing. Two hundred houses were overthrown in the village of +the Indians. But what caused most fear to those natives (and the old +men say that they have never seen such a thing, or heard it told by +their ancestors), is that the hurricane carried into the air the small +boats that they use, which are called bancas and resemble canoes. It +is said that they were blown about like paper, and that when they +fell again they were broken to pieces. The hurricane blew with the +same violence in all the surrounding villages, and caused the same +damage; it blew down one hundred and seventy houses in Palañaque. + +Since July 7 there have been very severe storms of wind and rain. On +the nineteenth the passage boat [36] was wrecked in the bay and +it is said that eighteen persons were drowned. Many illnesses have +occurred during that time, in which a great number of people of all +nations have perished. Because of this, and because many have been +persuaded that the two ships of the past year have been wrecked--not +only because of the signs that the sea has thrown up, but because +news of their arrival is so belated--there is a universal gloom and +sorrow over all the country, such as it has never had before. May +God in His mercy console the land. + +On July 19, a letter was received from the alcalde-mayor of Nueva +Segovia, which states that two English galleons had anchored in a +port of that coast, and that they are coming to this port of Cavite +to trade; if the weather permits them to reach this place, their +intentions will be known. + +In the afternoon of July 24, six of the men who had sailed in the +flagship of last year, which was wrecked September 20, 1638, by the +fury of a tempest in the Ladrones Islands--on an island thirty-five +leguas away from the islands where our ships generally land on the +voyage--arrived here. Besides those who were drowned, many were killed +by lance-thrusts from the natives. Those who escaped went from island +to island to those of Uan and Harpana, [37] where they have been +well treated. The reason alleged for that was, that the Spaniards +are good men, and leave them iron when they pass there. From the +island of Uan the natives despatched six Spaniards and two Indians +in two boats, furnishing them with food from what they had. They +commended themselves to God, crossed the open stretch of more than +three hundred leguas, which they did in but one fortnight--a wonderful +thing, if one will but consider those small boats which are of much +less burden and steadiness than pirogues and canoes, and even smaller +than they. They arrived almost dead with hunger, thirst, and lack of +sleep. Our fathers of the Society of Jesus received them in Palapag, +and cared for them for several days; after that they recovered, +and immediately set out in a champan with a good supply of food. The +Indians of Uan sent those Spaniards, so that they could give the news +and send a boat for the other twenty-two Spaniards who are there alive, +with some Indians and negroes, and carry them iron, etc. + +As soon as the tidings were told in this port of Cavite, the sobs +and cries were so many that all were stunned, for there is no one +who has not lost a son, a father, a brother, a brother-in-law, +a father-in-law, a son-in-law, or a husband. The loss has been one +of the greatest that has ever visited these islands, because of the +loss of men and the poverty of the islands. [38] + +Good news is received of the almiranta, for they say that they saw it +but shortly before they were wrecked, sailing on a good tack; and that +it was a swift sailer, and seaworthy. Consequently it is thought that +it has arrived at Nueva España. May God grant that it has so happened. + + + + + + + +LETTERS FROM CORCUERA TO THE HOLY MISERICORDIA + + +Gentlemen of the financial board of holy Misericordia: Although +we must always have recourse to God in our troubles, the necessity +for so doing that offers itself to me at present, in the expedition +that I shall commence on the day of our Lady of the Conception, is +very urgent; and obliges me to avail myself not only of the regular +and ecclesiastical communities, where we are all friends, but also +of that holy house. [39] Therefore, I beg your Graces, with all the +persuasion in my power, that you cause God to be petitioned with all +earnestness in your holy Confraternity of La Misericordia and in your +residence, to give me favor and good success in this expedition; for, +besides its being for the common service of God and of the king our +sovereign, I shall, in so far as pertains to me, if it be the will +of His Divine Majesty that I return with life, demonstrate my thanks +and favor to that holy house, as far as may be possible to me. And +in order that this petition may carry some merit, I send to that +house one hundred pesos in alms, as an aid in the many alms that it +distributes among the poor. I would be very glad were I more wealthy, +in order that my affection and good-will might be seen. May our Lord +preserve your Graces as I desire. The palace, December 4, 637. + + +Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera + + + + +To the purveyor and deputies of the financial board of the holy +Misericordia: Of the hostages brought from Jolo by General Don Pedro +Almonte, twenty-odd Moros with their servants live here, and the +others are going [back] with the conditions for the peace that they +have made and the tribute which they are to pay. I have thought it +best to petition your Graces to be pleased to receive two of those +chiefs in the house of the holy Misericordia, in order that they may +be instructed in the Christian doctrine, and be gradually converted +and become Christians. This is a work that is befitting to that house, +until the time when all the other inhabitants of Jolo become quiet and +are reduced to obedience. Two or three will be assigned in the same +manner to the orders. If any needs arise with the lapse of time, I +beg your Graces to have me advised, so that I may have them supplied; +and also to entrust the instruction of those chiefs to a careful +person. May our Lord preserve your Graces as I desire. The palace, +October 26, 1639. [40] + + +Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera + + + + + + + +THE UNIVERSITY OF SANTO TOMAS + + +Letter to the Spanish ambassador at Roma + +The King. To the illustrious Marqués de Castel Rodrigo, my cousin, +member of my Council, and ambassador in Roma: the bearer, Fray Mateo +de Villa, of the Order of Preachers, procurator of the province of +Santo Rosario of the Filipinas Islands in my Western Yndias, has +informed me that his province has a college called Santo Tomas in +the city of Manila, of which I am the patron, where there are thirty +secular collegiates; that for some years past that college has been +a university through royal permission; that bulls have been conceded +twice for its conservation; and that grammar, rhetoric, the arts, +and moral and scholastic theology are studied there, with especial +profit to the children of that community. He petitions me to issue +a royal decree authorizing the said college to become a university, +with the same qualifications and [right of] perpetuity as the others +of his order in the convents of Santo Tomas in Avila and Santiago at +Pamplona, in these same kingdoms. The matter having been examined +by the members of my royal Council of the Yndias, in consideration +that the city of Manila of the Filipinas Islands is more than three +thousand leguas from the nearest universities--namely, those of Lima +and Megico--and that the said university suffers some restriction, +I have considered it fitting to lend my royal consent for this case; +and this concession shall continue, for the present. Consequently, +if in the future there should be a disposition to found a separate +university, it may be done, as in the cities of Lima and Megico, +so that it may be a general university, in order that students may +be graduated from it in all branches, and that its degrees may be +recognized everywhere. Accordingly, I charge and order you in my name, +and in virtue of the letter of credit that I am writing, to supplicate +his Holiness to be pleased to concede a bull, so that the said college +may be a university with the same qualifications and [right of] +perpetuity as those of Avila, Santiago, Lima, and Megico; for there +is not a university of that rank in those islands and provinces, and +this is therefore expedient for my service and the general welfare of +those regions. You shall give the matter the care that I expect from +you, so that the said bull may be immediately drawn up; and therein +you will render me a service. Madrid, November nine, 1639. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Graviel de Ocaña y Alarcon + +Signed by the members of the Council. + + +[Endorsed: "Duplicate. College of Santo Tomas of Manila. To the +ambassador at Roma, ordering him to petition his Holiness to concede +a brief so that the college of Santo Tomas of Manila of the Order of +Preachers may become a university."] + + + + + + + +LETTER FROM FELIPE IV TO URBAN VIII + + +Most Holy Father: + +I am writing to my ambassador, in that court, the marqués de Castel +Rodrigo, to petition your Holiness in my name to concede a bull, so +that a college of the Order of Preachers in the city of Manila of the +Philipinas Islands, in my Western Yndias, may become a university, with +the qualifications and [right of] perpetuity of the others which that +order possesses in Avila and Pamplona in these my kingdoms, as well +as those of Lima and Megico; and so that, if there be a disposition +to found a separate university in the city of Manila, it may be done, +because there is a distance of three thousand leguas to the other +nearest universities, which are Lima and Megico. I petition your +Holiness to grant him audience, and to give entire credit to what +he shall say about this matter and propose in my name; and that you +order his affair to be despatched with all promptness and with entire +fulfilment [of the petition]. Thereby I shall receive a special favor +from your Holiness, whose very holy person may our Lord preserve, +and may He increase your life for the good and prosperous government +of His universal Church. Madrid, November nine, 1639. + +[Endorsed: "College of Santo Tomas of Manila. To his Holiness, +petitioning him to concede a brief so that the college of +Santo Tomas of Manila of the Order of Preachers may become a +university. Duplicate."] + + + + + + + +ROYAL ORDERS AND DECREES, 1639 + + +MISSIONS IN MINDANAO + +The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order of +Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the Filipinas Islands, +and president of my royal Audiencia therein: a letter of August 21, +637, has been examined in my royal Council of the Indias, in which +you advise me that you have stationed ministers of the gospel in the +islands of Mindanao and Bacilan--not only for the instruction of the +infidels who are in those islands, but for administering the holy +sacraments to the Castilian soldiers whom you leave there--and that +you have assigned them such stipends as you considered necessary. I +approve what you have done in this matter. Moreover, to provide for +future increase [in the number of infidels converted], the necessary +mission stations [doctrinas] will have to be established; but in this +you must avoid unnecessary expense, and, conformably to my royal +patronage, confer regarding such establishments with such persons +as you should consult. I trust in you that you will carry out my +intentions. [Madrid, February 3, 1639.] + + +I the King + +By command of his Majesty: + +Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon + + + + +IN BEHALF OF GRAU Y MONFALCÓN + +The King. To the council, magistracy, and municipal body of the +city of Manila in the Philipinas Islands: Don Juan Grau y Monfalcón +has reported to me that in the past year, one thousand six hundred +and thirty, you appointed him as your procurator-general; and that +during all that time he has attended to your business affairs, +with the utmost intelligence, personal attention, friendly interest, +and promptness (as is generally known). He states that you assigned +him a salary of a thousand pesos a year, paid in that city, which +was to come here, invested, at his account and risk; but that, even +when it arrives in safety, he can realize very little from it that +remains free from the costs. He regards a thousand pesos as a very +small salary for his continual occupation [in your affairs], and on +this account claims that it be increased. Moreover, besides the many +negotiations that he has despatched, he has been occupied nearly +two years in preparing and composing the printed memorials which +he has presented, and which have been examined in my royal Council +of the Indias; and has given them much labor and solicitude, since +they embrace so many, so diverse, and so important considerations +for the conservation of those islands and their commerce, in order +that they may be presented clearly and distinctly. He has furnished +from his own funds all the money that has been spent for these books, +and has never received one real on account of that expense. This sum +amounts to much more in times so straitened as these, and should be +highly esteemed. It would be a great disappointment to him if, after +he had proceeded in all matters with the greatest tact and discretion +possible (as is proved by the many negotiations which he has concluded +for the benefit of that city), the powers which he has held from the +city should be revoked--as usually happens, and as has been done with +others, his predecessors, solely through interested motives and for the +personal ends of some of the governors who go to that country. They, +being well-affectioned to the correspondents whom they leave here, +urge that city to entrust its affairs to those persons--for which +no opportunity should be given, since that advice is influenced by +various motives and considerations. To obviate this, and because it +is not right that some other person should secure that for which he +has toiled and incurred expense with so much zeal and solicitude, he +has entreated me that I would be pleased to command you not to revoke, +without legitimate cause, the powers that you have given him; and that +you shall, before enforcing such revocation, state what reasons you +have for doing so. The matter has been examined in the said my Council, +where have been and are very evident the personal care, interest, and +solicitude with which he has been and is attending to your affairs +aforesaid--as also you will have understood by my decrees of the +ninth of October in the year one thousand six hundred and thirty-six, +and the twenty-first of October in six hundred and thirty-seven, +to which I refer you for all this; together with what you wrote me +in regard to this in a letter of the fourteenth of June, six hundred +and thirty-six. In that letter you express your satisfaction with the +promptness and care with which he furthers your affairs, and ask me to +confirm the salary which you assign him of the said thousand pesos a +year, from the funds belonging to that city. I have thought it best to +issue the present, by which I approve and confirm the salary which you +have assigned to the said Don Juan Grau as your procurator-general, +in order that it may be paid to him from the day when it was voted +to him. And it is my will that this salary be not revoked, either +now or at any time, while he shall attend to your affairs at this +my court, unless there be legitimate and sufficient cause for doing +so; also that the said my Council be first notified of such cause, +so that, having considered it in their sessions, they may declare +whether or not it is legitimate; and the said salary shall always be +paid to him, until some other decision be made. I also command my +governor and captain-general of those Philipinas Islands, both him +who now is and those who shall hereafter be in that office, and the +president and auditors of my royal Audiencia which resides there, +and yourselves, that you all observe and execute, and cause to be +observed and executed, exactly and inviolably, the commands contained +in this my decree, without contravening or exceeding its tenor and +form in any manner; for such is my will. [Madrid, March 29, 1639.] + + +I the King + +By command of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon + + + + +RESTRAINING THE AUGUSTINIANS + +The King. To Don Diego Faxardo, whom I have appointed as my governor +and captain-general of the Filipinas Islands, and president of my +royal Audiencia therein. It has been reported in my royal Council +of the Yndias that the religious of the Order of St. Augustine are +trading in merchandise with whomever they please; and that they make +use of the natives of the regions and districts wherever they are and +reside, for whatever they need, without paying the poor men who work +in their service, or giving them anything else (employing violence +for this), and thus obtain great wealth for [their houses in] these +my kingdoms. This is all considered to merit severe correction, both +because of the traffic and trading that they openly engage in, and +because of the oppression that many of the said natives receive. I have +thought best to tell you to be very careful in this, and to provide, +by the most gentle and prudent measures, all that may be necessary for +the correction of those transgressions. You shall regulate yourself +by the decrees and orders that have been issued in this regard; and +you shall cause those decrees and orders to be observed according to +their tenor. Madrid, June 2, 1639. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon + + +[From another transcript made from the copy of this decree in the +Archivo general de Indias--its pressmark, "Audiencia de Filipinas; +registros de oficio; reales ordenes dirigidas á las autoridades del +distrito de dicha Audiencia; años 1635 á 1672; est. 105, caj. 2, +leg. 2, libro 4, folio 122 verso" we take the following endorsement: +"To Don Diego Faxardo, whom your Majesty has appointed governor of +the Filipinas Islands, advising him of certain things touching the +religious of the Order of St. Augustine, which require a remedy; +so that he may know them, and take what measures are advisable, in +accordance with the orders and decrees that have been issued regarding +it." This transcript states also that the decree was signed by the +members of the Council.] + + + + +REGARDING ECCLESIASTICAL DISTRICTS + +The King. To Don Diego Faxardo, knight of the Order of Santiago, whom +I have appointed as my governor and captain-general of the Philipinas +Islands: report has been made to me, on the part of the archbishop +of that city of Manila, that Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, +your predecessor, gave the district of Quiapo (which belonged to the +seculars), and the Indians who were reserved for the service of the +cathedral and of the archiepiscopal house (which was the sustenance +of the cathedral), to the fathers of the Society of Jesus, because +of the great pressure that they exerted on him for it, on account of +the advantages that would follow to them, as they have many estates +of importance near that district. One of the conditions of their +removing the said archbishop's exile, was that he must consent to +have that district given to the fathers of the Society. In order to +relieve himself from his distressed condition, the archbishop feigned, +under compulsion, assent to this--regarding it as certain that, as +such action was to the prejudice of my royal patronage, I would not +consent to it. He also petitioned that I would be pleased to have +my royal decree issued, ordering that the fathers of the Society be +despoiled of the said district of Quiapo, and that it be restored +to the seculars, together with the adjoining districts of San Anton +and Santa Cathalina--which the bishop of Camarines separated from +the said district, in the time while he governed the archbishopric +during the exile and absence of the said archbishop; and which he +gave to the cura of Santiago, who was his creature; also the district +of Nauhang, on the island of Mindoro, which has always belonged to +seculars. By negotiations effected by the fathers of the Society, +those districts have been set aside for them, to the prejudice of so +many poor seculars. The matter having been examined by my royal Council +of the Yndias, as well as what was written to me concerning the same +matter by the said archbishop, I have considered it fitting to issue +this my decree. By it, I order you, immediately upon its receipt, +to place those districts, exactly, and without admitting any excuse +or other reason, in the same condition that they always had and have +had, notwithstanding the contract signed by the said archbishop, at +the instance and petition of the said my governor and of the auditor +then in my Audiencia. You shall advise me at the first opportunity +that you have carried out my order. Madrid, July 8, 1639. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Acaña y Alarcon + + + + +REBUKING THE BISHOP OF CAMARINES + +The King. To the reverend father in Christ, bishop of the church +of Camarines of the Filipinas Islands, and member of my Council: +I have been informed that you are not living in your bishopric, [41] +and that you are residing in the city of Manila, where your free life +is giving offense; and that you have attempted to erect a tribunal of +appeals, without leave, declaring yourself to be an apostolic judge +by a brief from his Holiness. Inasmuch as your residence outside of +your church may occasion troubles, besides your necessary obligation +to live there, I have decided to charge you (as I am doing), to leave +the city of Manila or any other place where you are residing, as soon +as you receive this decree, and to go to govern your church. If you do +so, I shall consider myself well served by you. In order that you may +not offer any excuse in this matter, I am ordering the royal officials +of my royal treasury not to pay you any of your stipend from my royal +treasury so long as you do not comply with what I here order you. I +have been surprised that you should have attempted to hold a tribunal +in the said city of Manila, under pretext or title of appeals. Madrid, +July 8, 1639. + + +I the King + +By order of his Majesty: + +Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon + + +The King. To the officials of my royal treasury of the Filipinas +Islands: inasmuch as it was reported in my royal Council of the Yndias +that the bishop of Camarines resides in that city of Manila, where he +attempts to hold his court under pretext of certain appeals, I charge +him, by another decree of the date of this, to go immediately to his +own church, because of the deficiency that his person may cause in +its government. In order that he may offer no excuse in this matter, +I order you to grant him nothing from my royal treasury on his +salary, unless he shall obey my orders; for so is my will. Madrid, +July 8, 1639. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon + + + + +INSPECTION AT ACAPULCO + +The King. To Marqués de Cadereita, my relative, member of my Council +of War, and my viceroy, governor, and captain-general of the provinces +of Nueva España: in a letter written to me by the royal officials of +the port of Acapulco under date of last February 24, of this year, +[they stated] that you sent the auditor [contador], Christoval de +Medina, to that port with a salary of twenty-three ducados which +was distributed among himself, the constable, and the notary, to +investigate the merchandise that came from Philipinas this year in +the patache that was sent from those islands; and that my royal +duties scarcely amounted to four thousand ducados. Since I have +three satisfactory and trustworthy officials in the said port, they +have petitioned me to have the above three men removed from that +place. They say that by the going of such judges they themselves +serve only as witnesses of what is public, since no other thing is +permitted them; and that such an action deprives them of the authority +and exercise of their offices, and they are disaccredited and left +without respect and reputation, as all think and believe that you +did it because of some incapacity in them. The matter having been +examined in my royal Council of the Yndias, together with what you +wrote me in regard to it, I have considered it fitting to issue +the present. By it I give you authority to send such ministers to +Acapulco whenever any extraordinary causes shall arise; but that, +if there are no such causes, this may be dispensed with, because of +the expenses that are incurred by my royal estate, especially since +Don Pedro de Quiroga was there so short a time ago. Inasmuch as the +commerce of those islands has been reported to be in great distress, +I charge and order you to try to encourage and aid it by all possible +means. Since some change has been made in the amount permitted to +them, you shall see what can be done for their greater relief, until +the arrival at those kingdoms of Don Juan de Palafox y Mendoza, [42] +of my royal Council of the Yndias, to whom the settlement of those +matters is committed. Madrid, September 16, 1639. + + +[I the King] + + + + +COLONISTS NEEDED IN THE ISLANDS + +The King. To Marqués de Cadereyta, my relative, member of my Council +of War, and my viceroy and governor and captain-general of Nueva +España, or the person or persons vested with its government: in a +letter written to me by the city of Manila, under date of August two +of the past year, six hundred and thirty-eight, in regard to various +matters, and which has been examined in my royal Council of the Indias, +there is a section of the following tenor: + +"This kingdom finds itself in great need of inhabitants at the present +time, as a result of the said campaign; for they are dying off, and +it is many years since people have come to live in these islands +as citizens. That has been understood to arise from the loss that +the citizens have experienced, both in the affairs of this commerce +and in the execution of the favors and rewards that his Catholic +Majesty Phelipe Second, our king and sovereign (who is in heaven), +was pleased to grant to such citizens. For at present, with those of +account in this community, the citizens do not number ninety. This +is very pitiful, and it is fitting that your Majesty please to have +it corrected by ordering the said viceroy to use all possible and +effective efforts in sending as many citizens as possible every +year. They should be persons of good standing and ability, both for +the service of your Majesty and for the greater renown and authority +of this kingdom." + +And inasmuch as it is proper that you attempt to relieve such +necessity, I order you to try to procure this by all possible ways +and plans, and with all the mildness and prudence that is fitting. By +so doing I shall consider myself well served by you. Given at Madrid, +October three, one thousand six hundred and thirty-nine. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon + +Signed by the members of the Council. + + +[Endorsed: "To the viceroy of Nueva España, ordering him to endeavor +by all the means possible to send to Filipinas every year as many +citizens as possible who should be of good standing and ability."] + + + + +DIRECTIONS TO THE ARCHBISHOP + +The King. To the very reverend father in Christ, archbishop of the +metropolitan church of the city of Manila: your letter of July 31 +of the past year, 1638, has been examined in my royal Council of the +Yndias, and I shall answer you in the present in regard to some points +that have been decided. + +You state that, although the mode of the presentations for the missions +has been resolved upon and determined, the decrees are not obeyed; +that there is a very great need of seculars for those missions, and +those who are there are but youths who do not understand the language +[of the natives]; and that hence you have deemed it advisable not +to assign any mission to seculars: You state that having conferred +on this point with the Audiencia, they resolved that no innovation +should be made until the arrival of the governor, who had gone on +the Jolo expedition. It has been deemed best to tell you that when +the governor shall arrive, and shall come to a decision, you shall +advise me of the results of it. In the meanwhile you shall observe +the decrees, unless serious troubles result from doing the contrary. + +The prebends that you state are vacant in that church have been +provided with incumbents, as you will have heard. My royal Council +of the Yndias will take care of the names which you present to me, +for the occasions that arise. + +In regard to the property of Don Fray Francisco Zamudio, bishop +of Nueva Caceres, who died on the twenty-seventh of last April, +you shall cause the orders that have been issued to be observed, so +that his creditors may be heard and paid, in accordance with justice, +and upon legal proof of their claims. + +I have read what you wrote about the great exhaustion and distress +experienced by the natives of those islands through the many +assessments that are made continually, throughout the year, on all the +products of the country. I am writing to the governor and Audiencia +not to make any innovation in these matters, so that this evil may +be corrected; and under no consideration to load any new troubles or +burdens on the Indians. Madrid, December 16, 1639. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon + + + + +OPPRESSION OF THE INDIANS + +The King. To the president and auditors of my royal Audiencia of the +city of Manila: in a letter written to me by the archbishop of that +church, July 31 of the past year, 638, he states that the natives +of those islands are greatly exhausted and burdened by the many +assessments made on them every year, in all the products of the +country, by my governors. The latter take the products from them +at a loss, gathering and collecting them with great trouble to the +natives, and no money is given them; while they are seized and beaten, +and thrust into prison for many days, because they do not give what +they do not possess--although the goods can be bought at a somewhat +higher price in the market-place. On account of this, and by the +hardships consequent on sending them to the forests to cut wood, the +natives are being exterminated, and are dying off. The matter having +been examined in my royal Council of the Yndias, I have considered +it fitting to issue the present. By it I order you not to make any +innovation; and you shall not, under any consideration, cause new +troubles or burdens to the Indians. Madrid, December 17, 1639. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon + + + + + + + +EVENTS IN THE FILIPINAS ISLANDS + +FROM AUGUST, 1639, TO AUGUST, 1640 + + +On the fourth of August, 1639, orders were given that the ship +"Concepcion," built in Camboja, should leave the port for her voyage +to Nueva España; and in the afternoon of that day began a furious +vendabal, which lasted three days. This compelled the ship to ask +for aid by firing two cannons, as its people feared some danger; +but when the storm was over, the ship began its voyage. + +At that very time, five large ships had sailed from Manila, on +their return to Great China; and two of these were driven ashore by +the great force of the wind, four leguas from Manila. Six hundred +China-men were drowned, although a still larger number escaped [to +land]; for, on account of the lack of succor in these two years, +[43] many were returning, leaving their houses and shops deserted. + +On the seventh came the unexpected news of the relief-ships; their +arrival was celebrated with the utmost joy, and all the bells were +rung. The people were revived by this news, all the more because +these ships were the almiranta of last year, and the patache of two +years ago--which, with so great injustice and excessive harshness, +had been detained at Acapulco--the [sort of] injury of which this +country has complained to God and to the king for many years. Wives +who had put on mourning for their husbands took off those garments, +giving thanks to God and receiving from His hand their husbands, +as it were, restored to life. The Chinese, who learned the news on +board their ships, disembarked, and returned to their shops and their +trading. There was also a circumstance in this coming of the ships, +in which God displayed the providence that He exercises over this +country; for they arrived at the port of Nueva Segovia, from which +had just departed two hostile Dutch galleons, who had pretended that +they were English and friendly [to us]. + +On the eleventh of August arrived from Maluco Father Manuel Carballo, +rector [there] of the Society; he came on behalf of the governor, +Don Pedro de Mendiola, to ask for aid, because the kings of Tidore and +Terrenate had formed an alliance--a thing which we had never expected, +because those peoples were more hostile to each other than dogs and +cats. The reason which the king of Tidore gives for this unfriendly +act against the Spaniards is, that the present which the governors [of +Filipinas] were wont to send every year, in the name of his Majesty, +to the kings of Tidore his ancestors, has not been sent to him for +the last four years. The father rector of Maluco says that this may +be true, and is perhaps the ostensible reason; but that the king has +other and hidden reasons, which go deeper and give more cause for +anxiety. Now Francisco de Figueroa is going [there] as proprietary +governor, and he will aid in soliciting the proper assistance for +any emergency. + +On the fifth of August, Captain Cristobal Marquez set out for Hermosa +Island; he is going as successor to Sargento-mayor Pedro Palomino, who +is governor there. The warder of this port of Cavite is Sargento-mayor +Alonso Garcia Romero, of the Order of Santiago; [he fills that office] +to the great satisfaction of all. + +On the twenty-first of August, at daybreak, a Spaniard arrived here +from Nueva Segovia; he says that the two relief ships from Mejico +were wrecked at that port, and one hundred and fifty persons were +drowned, which has been a severe punishment from God upon the past; +[44] and with this news the people have returned to their former +sadness. The ships were lost on the fifth of August. It was afterward +learned that the succor despatched by the king had been taken out +of the ships before they were wrecked; but that the property of the +citizens that has been lost will amount, in luxuries [45] and money, +to five hundred and fifty thousand pesos. + +At the end of September, General Don Pedro de Almonte arrived from +Joló, where our affairs have been steadily improving. The natives of +the island remain subdued; almost all their chiefs who would undertake +to defend themselves are dead; and even those who never paid tribute +to the king of Joló are now registered and are our subjects. All +the pirates have fled, and the king is hiding in the mountains; and +our men have taken more than three hundred captives during the last +three months. + +On the sixth of October, the cho (craft) which came last year arrived +here from Macasar. It came loaded with slaves, and pepper, and various +kinds of cotton cloth. Its people say that the king was sorry that +he had not put to death those of his vassals who fought against +the Spaniards in Jolo; and that if any of them should go there, +the king would take his life. Knowing that Malaca was expecting +to be blockaded by the Achenese and the Dutch, and that the city +had not sufficient provisions, the king had ordered his people to +collect a quantity of rice--two hundred coyos, each coyo containing +thirty-two fanegas--and had sent it [to Malaca] in his galleys; it +is not yet known what success they had. Those people say, moreover, +that in Macasar they have heard the English and the Dutch themselves +say that in the independence and strength of Holanda there are solid +foundations for believing that that state will make strong efforts +to extend its power from the year 1640 on. + +They also relate, as news, that the Dutch were at the entrance to Goa, +with fourteen ships; and the Portuguese came out in staunch galleons +to fight them, sending eleven of the Dutch vessels to the bottom; +while two of their own were sunk. It is also stated that the patache +which was purchased at Macao from the English, and despatched from +here for Yndia, was seized by the Dutch in the strait of Sincapura; +its captain, one Carballo, remained in Macasar, and it was he who +related this misfortune. + +Ytem: [it is said] that a man named Caldeira went from Malaca as an +envoy to the king of Achen, regarding himself as quite safe; but that +the king gave orders that his men should arrest the envoy as soon as +he should enter the palace. When they tried to carry out this command, +this man and the other Portuguese placed themselves on the defensive; +all the men on the ship hastened to their aid with fire-balls, [46] +and with these they killed many Achenese; and the palace was set on +fire, being entirely consumed. They estimate the losses of the king +at five millions. All the Portuguese there were killed. + +On the last day [of October], a ship from Terrenate arrived at +Manila. Its people say that the Tidorans and Terrenatans, aided by +the Dutch, had put to death Cachil Naro, the former king of Tidore--a +very regrettable event. He was deposed by the master-of-camp Pedro +de Heredia; and recently had come an order from his Majesty that our +people should restore Naro to power, because he had given more evidence +of friendship to us than had the present king. Indeed, the authorities +were endeavoring to accomplish that change, even if this order had +not arrived. Extensive revolts are feared there; and on this account +reënforcements are being sent, together with galleys, which are very +effective in those islands. It is also said that the Dutch will lie +in wait for these reënforcements; so, in order to circumvent them, +we shall endeavor to send the relief earlier than ever before. + +By this ship comes some news from Mindanao: that Moncay had +captured a brigantine from our then and slain all the Spaniards +(who defended themselves bravely)--except their commander, who was +soon laid low by them, and remains a captive. Ytem: they say that +Moncay is making great efforts to form an alliance with Corralat; +who has answered Moncay that he must try to gain over Manaquior, and +that, if the latter shall declare himself against the Spaniards, he +[i.e., Corralat] will garrison his forts against them. Those chiefs +have assailed Manaquior with their entreaties, urging him to desist +from aiding the Spaniards; and it is reported that he already shows +himself lukewarm in his friendship to us. + +From Joló we are informed that the islanders are in such haste to be +enrolled for paying tribute that now very few of them are missing +from the list. The rest of the news will be told by extracts from +the following letters. + +In one from Father Alejandro Lopez, of the Society of Jesus, dated +at Joló on August 9, 1639, sent to Father Luis de Pedraza of the same +Society: "On the second of August, I baptized two women--one a Lutao, +the other the slave of another Lutao," etc. + +In one from Father Andres de Zamora, of the Society of Jesus, in +Mindanao, at La Sabanilla, August 13, 1639, to the same father Pedraza: +"In Buhayen, thanks to our Lord, our affairs are prospering. On the +occasion of an expedition which Lucero made to Taulan, the Spaniards +obtained by a clever plan and stratagem a crowd of captives, both men +and women. Part of them are going in this champan, and the rest will +go with the brigantine--which Captain Lucero sent, in order that some +reparation might be made to them; I baptized them all. The Spaniards +who were with Manaquior went down to the lake with the dato; and +Balatamay was there with five hundred Moros, waiting for the Spaniards, +to fight against them. But they did not remain there, recognizing that +our troops were stronger than they. Our men killed twenty-five of +the Moros, and carried five to the fort. One man, who came mortally +wounded, asked for baptism, and died within twenty-four hours. On +the eighth of October, Captain Don Pedro Bermudez set out with fifty +Spaniards, in two champans, to be stationed in the presidio at the +lake of Malanao in Mindanao; Father Gregorio Belin goes with him. At +the same time, Don Pedro will pursue the Camucones, who have appeared +on a piratical expedition with sixty boats. It is known that they +have captured some vessels and the licentiate Raymundo de Quiñones." + +In this month of October came from Hermosa Island Sargento-mayor +Pedro Palomino, who was governor there and goes with the same office +to Samboangan. Of the two champans that went with Captain Cristobal +Marquez, one foundered in mid-ocean, with its men and the money. On the +return voyage of those who came with Palomino, one was separated from +the rest by a storm, and up to this time has not arrived at Manila. + +The patache "San Nicolas" is going with the relief for Terrenate; +its chief pilot is Captain Machado, a pilot of long standing and +great experience. This vessel has orders to go, on the return voyage +from Terrenate to the Ladrones Islands, in order to carry away the +Spaniards and other people from the wrecked ship who are there. + +On the fifth of November the relief for Terrenate left this port; +it carries an abundant supply of men and provisions, and is under +the command of Captain Andres de Urbina. On the same day we learned +of the depredations committed by the Camucones; and it is believed +that Dato Ache is coming, who was in Borney, urging the king to send +a large armed fleet against these islands. + +On the twenty-first of November, in the morning, confused reports +reached us that the Sangleys had revolted at Calamba; and all the +rest of the day they spent in strengthening their forces. They +killed the alcalde-mayor and two priests, and burned the church; +and destroyed other churches in neighboring villages. Don Sebastian +received the news on the twentieth, at night; he had the gates of +Manila opened, although keeping them under close watch, in order +that the people living outside the walls might take refuge within, +with their goods. That very night, he despatched by land Captain +Pedro Martin de Aduna with his company of horsemen, in order to find +out how the matter stood, and punish the insurgents. On the morning +of the twenty-first, they encountered the Sangleys, who, they said, +amounted to three thousand men, while the Spanish cavalry numbered only +thirty. The captain and three others carelessly advanced into a marshy +place, where they could neither extricate themselves nor be aided, +and were slain. The rest, after killing some Chinese, retreated, +as they were so few and their horses were tired out, to Parañaque, +to await the orders of the governor; and this was the condition in +which affairs remained yesterday. It is said that the Sangleys attack +like mad dogs, and that the weapons that they carry are the sickles +with which they cut their rice, fastened to poles, and some lances. + +At this port of Cavite the Chinese have remained peaceable, and with +the Indians and Japanese they very willingly dragged out some pieces +of artillery, with which Sargento-mayor Alonso Garcia Romero, who is +in command of the port, armed two small forts, which are at the end of +the village. With these and other precautions of an excellent soldier, +we all consider ourselves very safe. The natives, although they have +not forsaken their village, have sought shelter, as far as possible, +with the religious orders. The Japanese, blacks, and Indians are +full of courage, whatever be the outcome; I believe that they will +rejoice, if the opportunity arise, to satiate themselves for once +with killing Chinese. + +In order that the origin of this disturbance may be understood, it +must be noted that Don Sebastian, desirous of augmenting the estate +of his Majesty, set a great number of Chinese at work in some large +meadows which are watered and rendered fertile by certain rivers, +and are called Calamba. Many of these men were levied by force, +and entirely against their will; many of them fell sick during the +past months, and it is said that more than three hundred of them +died. Accordingly, they became desperate; and it is well known that +the season is an unwholesome one. The time came for the Chinese to pay +their license money and rent, which in all was more than twenty-five +pesos for each one. The officials harassed them for the pay, and they +had not the means to pay what was due; accordingly they have broken +loose in this revolt. The rents from the lands, too, have proved to +be unprofitable, from the manner in which they have been let; while, +if they belonged to individuals, they would be a source of gain. + +Since the twenty-second of November, when I wrote the above, I have +purposely omitted to write an account of current events, for along with +the facts were reported a thousand lies; but today, the twenty-eighth +of the same month, everything is now known and manifest. + +After the Chinese killed Captain Martin de Aduna, they came close to +Manila, rousing to revolt all the Sangleys whom they encountered. They +arrived at San Pedro de Macati, the novitiate's residence of the +Society of Jesus. As the church there was strongly built, and vaulted, +Father Francisco Vicente and the brothers Esteban de Oliver and +Raimundo Alberto, who were the only inmates of the house at that time, +went up into it. Some mulattoes and house-servants had also taken +refuge there, as well as over one hundred persons from the native +village. These made some resistance to the enemy, but, as they had +no other weapons than tiles and bricks, finally the multitude of the +Sangleys (who numbered more than three thousand) broke down the doors +of the church and the house, and set fire to the buildings. Those +who were in the church, tormented by the smoke and flames, within +twenty-four hours came to an agreement with the insurgents, who +assured them of their lives and kind treatment. Some of the mulattoes +and natives came out with the father and the brethren; the Chinese +treated the father well, and manacled the brethren, but they killed +all the rest (fifteen in number), on the spot. At this sight, those +who had not come out of the church held back, and refused to leave +it; and this saved their lives, for at that time the sargento-mayor, +Don Juan de Arceo, arrived, with two hundred Spanish infantry and +eighty horsemen. He also had a hundred Pampango and four hundred Tagal +Indians, all carrying firearms; and two field-pieces. These began to +do damage to the enemy, but only for a short time; for the Sangleys +asked for a truce, which was granted them. The Sangleys sent Father +Francisco Vicente to negotiate a peace for them with the Spaniards. By +a special providence of Heaven, at that very time arrived, by way of +the river, Adjutant Benavides with twenty-five men. He dashed upon +them like a lion, and with his men made so fierce an attack upon +the crowded Sangleys that many of the enemy were slain. The Sangleys +who were engaged in discussing a peace sent Brother Alberto to tell +the Spaniards who had come from the river not to do them any harm, +because they were already making an agreement for peace. Arriving, he +saw that some of the enemy were beginning to make some resistance, and +he called aloud, "Spaniards, at those who are fleeing!" But they had +no need to do so, for the enemy were already in flight; the Spaniards +followed them and dislodged them from the church, and all the Sangleys, +in confusion, began to disperse. In this confusion, Brother Esteban +was able to make his escape, and those who were in the church could +now leave it. The troops of Don Juan de Arceo seized their weapons, +and also fell on the conquered ones; and the latter were quickly +dispersed through the fields, leaving some three hundred Sangleys +dead. The mulattoes and Indians from Manila killed many, and captured +more than three hundred; most of these are here in the galleys. More +than a thousand Sangleys must have been killed in these encounters. + +Don Juan de Arceo, thinking that most of the enemy would go back +toward Calamba, went after them. At this time Don Fernando Galindo, +who was then at Los Baños, assembled five hundred Indians, to fall +on the Sangleys. But the sargento-mayor arrived, and learned that +fifteen hundred Sangleys had fortified themselves on a lofty hill +[47] that is above Calamba; and they agreed that their men should +ascend this hill, the Indians on one side, and the Spaniards on +the other. This was accordingly done; the Spaniards reached the top +first, and overcame the enemy, killing more than thirteen hundred +Sangleys. The rest broke away on the side where the Indians were, +and have been driven into the mountains; a company of Spaniards and +some Indians have gone in pursuit of them. With this encounter, which +was on Saturday, the whole affair has come to an end; and therefore on +yesterday, which was Sunday, the Te Deum laudamus was sung in Manila. + +Among those who distinguished themselves in this last combat were Juan +de Montoya, Lezcano, and Ugalde. This last one came here this year; +although he had received three lance-thrusts, he pursued the enemy, +fighting valiantly. Don Fernando Galindo, moreover, did valuable +service in urging forward the men to the attack. + +Among those whom we mentioned above as being killed with Aduna in the +marshes of Viñan was Alférez Don Antonio Tornamira, who fell senseless +when they attacked him with clubs, and they left him for dead. Later, +he came to himself, and while he was looking for some place where +he could hid himself he came upon a Sangley, who also had hidden in +a thicket; he did not wish to go with the insurgents. They agreed +together to seek for some way of escape, and the Sangley advised the +Spaniard to dress himself in Chinese garb; he did so, and finally +the two reached Manila. The governor, Don Sebastian, gave Alférez +Tornamira a suit of his own garments; and to the Sangley he granted +an exemption [from tributes?] for several years. The latter declared +that he wished to be baptized. + +Yesterday and day before yesterday, the entire revolt was regarded as +suppressed and ended, without there having been any disturbance on the +other side of the river. This morning, the twenty-ninth of this month, +we saw many large fires toward Manila; we knew not what to think, until +we received a letter in which we were informed that from the other side +of the river from the river San Mateo, many new insurgents had come, +who were burning everything; and the fires that we saw were Meyhaligue +[48] and Santa Cruz, on opposite sides of the river. From the Parián +alone different troops of soldiers, both foot and horse, have sallied +out against them; we are hoping for their entire success. We are +informed that people are talking very earnestly of taking steps to +prevent such things from ever happening again; for this purpose there +was held yesterday a general conference of all the civil, military, +and religious. [49] + + + + + + + +RELATION OF THE INSURRECTION OF THE CHINESE + + +Its causes and beginning + +Desires for the increase of the royal revenues, which Don Sebastian +Hurtado de Corcuera, governor of those islands, always tried to carry +out, with greater exactitude in intention than success in the outcome, +gave occasion to the Chinese of the city of Manila and its environs +to attempt an insurrection, the destruction of that country, and +the complete extermination of the Spaniards there. I do not mention +other causes, [50] in order to reduce them to those that have existed +and those which the Sangleys have tried to assign as a pretext for +their insurrection. That which surpassed the others, as being the +greatest in their estimation, was that many laborers saw that they +were obliged to live in a new village which the governor built in the +lands of Calamba, [51] for certain advantages to the royal service; +the object was, to produce there the rice sufficient for the presidios +of these islands, by which his Majesty would be spared a great expense, +and the government employees the neglect and difficulty [usual] in its +provision. The good intention of the one who made this arrangement was +recognized, if it had also been so on the part of those on whom its +fulfilment depended. Its execution was not without hardships, which +occasioned all the more resentment the more the comforts experienced +in their old villages, attracted them. The exemptions promised by +the government, with the desire of keeping the Chinese contented, +because of the advantage that accrued to his Majesty in obtaining +the necessary food from those lands--by which the Chinese could gain +greater profits, and the Indians, being exempted from such burdens, +could make extraordinary gains--were sufficient to overcome those +difficulties. Attention was given to both of those peoples in the +change. But as it caused many of them to fall sick in a short time, +and more than three hundred died because of the unhealthful climate, a +great disturbance was caused in their minds--which was greater because +they were oppressed by the alcalde-mayor with continual extortions and +punishment. Consequently, desirous of lifting so heavy a yoke from +their necks, they rushed on to the last risk, whether to themselves +or to others; and determined to kill him who ruled them there, and +to go ahead, committing all the damage possible in all the Indian +villages, and on the possessions of the Spaniards, until they came +in sight of Manila, where they would call out the other Chinese from +the Parián and the villages round about--if they did not rise before, +of which it has not been possible to gain certain information; for, +the cause being their own, they all would force the governor, who +had but few infantrymen, to pardon their deed; and, if they did not +succeed in this, confident in their multitude, they would go forward +to besiege the city. Then, in conformity with the resolution adopted, +they assaulted the house of the alcalde-mayor [52] on November 19. He +was entirely unguarded, the more for [having no] fears of so fatal +an outcome. They treacherously killed him, manifesting their cruelty +against him, as in revenge for the cruelties that they were shortly +before lamenting as caused by him on themselves. They burned the +village, ordering their wives to hide in the mountains, while they +went to try their fortune--saying that, if they found a good one, and +gained the victory over the Spaniards, they would return for them; +or, in case of adverse fortune and their own defeat, their families +would remain alive and safe in their place of retirement. + + + + +Advice is given in Manila. First assault of the enemy, and its result + +News of the insurrection reached this city on the night of November +20; and warning was given to the entire city and its environs by two +cannon that were fired. The gates were opened, although with care +and caution, so that those outside could seek shelter, and those +who wished could guard their property. Inasmuch as the importance +of the matter did not admit of any delay, the governor despatched +Captain Martin de Aduna that same night overland, so that with his +company of cavalry, he might go to see what was being done, and mete +out the suitable punishment to the enemy, since people here were on +the outlook because of the news with warning. The governor also sent +advices to the castellan and chief magistrate of the port of Cavite, +namely, Sargento-mayor Alonso Garcia Romero, so that he might be on +the watch. Captain Aduna left Manila immediately, and taking thirty +horsemen with him, he came within sight of the enemy on the morning of +the following day, to the number of more than three thousand. All were +armed with spears, or with bamboos hardened in fire, and on these were +fastened the blades with which they harvest their rice. They defied +the Spaniards to come on and fight. Their own guilt, the number of +men, and the fortified position that they were occupying--which was +certain swamps in the lands of Viñan, whose houses and churches they +had burned--caused them to be bold. Our captain attacked them with +greater valor than prudence, for, not heeding the danger, [53] he +advanced into the swamp, where, finding it impossible to manage his +horse, he and three others who followed him in the same enterprise +were killed. The others having killed more than two hundred Chinese, +and being but few in number, retreated (since the horses were tired, +and they were in a position where they could not be aided) to the +village of Parañaque, to await the governor's orders to whom a +father of the Society, who had accompanied the captain to confess +and encourage our men, went to give advices. + + + + +The enemy advance to San Pedro. They are pursued, and are defeated +in Calamba + +The news of the death of Captain Martin de Aduna caused disquiet and +sadness in the city, for he was well liked there. Greater damages +were feared if they did not immediately summon all their forces, +in order to deprive the enemy of their strength and hobble their +feet. In order to do that the governor sent out his sargento-mayor, +Don Juan de Arceo, with two hundred infantrymen, eighty cavalrymen, one +hundred Pampangos, and four hundred Tagal Indians, all with firearms, +and two pieces of cannon. They were being prepared with all possible +rapidity in Manila, when the enemy began to march toward San Pedro, +the house of the novitiate of the Society of Jesus, doing all the +harm possible along the way. They had about four thousand men, +and were joined, either through force or willingly, by those of +Calamba and the farm-lands round about. That same day, November 21, +they reached San Pedro, where a father and two brothers were then +living. The father confessed all the people of Pasay, a village +whose people had, in order to escape the danger, taken refuge in +that house. The brothers, with some of the more courageous Indians, +tried to put themselves in a state of defense; and, although with only +tiles and bricks, they wounded many Sangleys, and killed some. However, +the fury of the multitude was greater than that of the resistance; and +accordingly, the doors of the church having been battered down, the +Sangleys entered it, whence they penetrated into the house, to which +they set fire. Thereupon those above, in sore straits, surrendered +after twenty-four hours with assurance of their lives and of good +treatment--although, not trusting to the promises of the enemy, many +remained upon the vaulted roof of the church. On account of the fire, +in a short time these could not descend, nor could the insurgents +climb to the roof; consequently the former escaped with their lives, +which [otherwise] they would have lost through the barbarous cruelty of +the infidels. This was further displayed [by the Chinese] in breaking +the promise that they had given; for they put to death those who had +descended with the father and the brothers, who numbered some fifteen +persons. They bound the father securely, carrying him to their own +camp, and manacled the brothers--the chief leaders of the Sangleys +not daring to treat them more severely, as others claim, in order +not to provoke further the anger of the governor and the Spaniards +against themselves. By this time the Spanish forces, not only troops +of infantry but horsemen, had reached the enemy's camp, and began to +skirmish with them; the Chinese lost some men on their side, but we +none. An entire stop was put to this presently, by the arrival of a +great number of Sangleys from Manila to treat for peace. In order +to settle the terms of peace, the insurgents sent to the governor +the father of the Society. The suspension of hostilities lasted but +a short time; for the adjutant Benavides (now captain), having no +knowledge of it, or of the discussion that was going on, arrived +at San Pedro by way of the river, with twenty-five Spaniards. These +attacked with such fury that, suddenly falling upon the Chinese where +they least expected it, the latter immediately fled; the Spaniards went +in pursuit of them, and the enemy left three hundred dead [scattered] +through the fields, while as many more were captured by the Indians +who were scouring the country, and were taken to the galleys at the +port of Cavite. On account of the Chinese being surprised by this +unexpected attack, the brothers of the Society who were their prisoners +had an opportunity to regain their liberty; they took refuge among the +twenty-five Spaniards, and coming with them reached that same night +their college at Manila, both wounded, although not dangerously. When +the governor knew that the enemy were marching back to Calamba, +he ordered the sargento-mayor to go there with his men in pursuit +of them. By this time Admiral Don Fernando Galindo, who was at Los +Baños, seeing how the country was disturbed, collected five hundred +Indians to attack the Sangleys. But when the sargento-mayor arrived, +and learned that two thousand of the latter had fortified themselves +on a hill, in the ruggedness of which they placed their main hope +of defense, [the two Spanish leaders] determined to attack them in +various places [at once]--sending by some paths troops of Indians, +by others Spanish infantry and Pampangos, and horsemen with both +these parties. As soon as our men came in sight of the enemy, they +saw how difficult was the task; but Spanish valor conquered it. The +Spaniards arriving first, with the Pampangos, began to climb the hill +so courageously that the Chinese, although at first they thought to +beat back our men with stones and lances from the ascent, finally, +losing courage and judgment, rushed down from the hill, those who +escaped from our infantry encountering our horsemen. Thus some one +thousand five hundred of them were killed in a short time; and those +who remained alive tried to escape into the most hidden ravines and +passes of the mountains, but even there they did not find themselves +safe from the Spaniards and the courage of the Indians. This was the +first victory that was obtained over that enemy; and it was generally +understood that it had put an end to the insurrection, and taken away +the courage of those who had caused these first disturbances. It +was proposed to sing the Te Deum at Manila, by way of thanksgiving +that a fire which threatened so great destruction had been so easily +extinguished, by means of the company and soldiers of Sargento-mayor +Don Juan de Arceo, to whom the Lord had given so brilliant a victory +without any cost. This result was greatly aided by the experience and +courage of Don Fernando Galindo and of the captains who took part in +the combat--Don Rodrigo de Guillestegui, Juan de Montoya, [Francisco] +Lezcano, [Estéban] [54] Ugalde, and Don Martin de Ocadiz. The Pampangos +behaved nobly and courageously. [55] + + + + +The Chinese of Sagar and Santa Cruz rebel + +In proportion to the satisfaction which the news of this victory +caused in Manila was the resentment of the Sangleys when they heard +of the death of their comrades. Eager for revenge, those on the lands +of Sagar [56] rose in arms, and hurried that establishment; and then +they summoned [to join them] the Chinese who were scattered among +the other estates, as far as Manila. A large number of them arrived +at daybreak on Tuesday, November 29, at the residence of Meyhaligue, +to which they set fire. At the same time when we heard of this new +enemy, we learned of the arrival of Sargento-mayor Don Juan de Arceo, +victorious, with all his men; and orders were immediately given to +him that, without entering Manila, he should proceed to Santa Cruz, +to occupy that post and check any commotions among the Sangleys who +were there or those of the Parián--preventing them from joining and +uniting their forces by way of the river. + +In order to be ready for everything, the governor also went to Santa +Cruz with Master-of-camp Don Lorenzo de Olaso, on the possibility that +the enemy (who were running, not marching) would attempt an entrance +by way of Santa Cruz--as they actually did, not having had warning of +the arrival of our troops, or knowing how ready the city was to resist +them without the soldiers. The Chinese at Santa Cruz who were friendly +were told that they might go down the river, with their vessels, to +the shelter and protection of the fort; and those who were not were +told to do as they pleased, so that they might be thoroughly aware how +little importance was attached to their revolt. Many others went on +board their boats, to the number of some two hundred; professing to be +loyal, they asked permission to go out and fight their own countrymen, +in order to drive them back. Those who had charge of them had strong +suspicions of their undertaking and intentions, but the governor gave +his consent; and in his very sight those Chinese approached and joined +the traitors, and began with them to take possession of Santa Cruz--now +declared enemies to us, although they had a little while before been +pretended friends. Half the street they held as their own, the careful +arrangements of the governor giving them all this space so that our men +might manage their guns more safely. The Spaniards began to fire these +so skilfully, and to oppose the enemy so valiantly that, many of the +Chinese being killed, they found themselves compelled by the force +of our resistance to turn and run, displaying no little swiftness +in their flight. The governor left their punishment to General Don +Juan de Esquerra and his brother, Admiral Don Francisco--the first +with some horsemen, the second with his infantry company and some +other footmen, who intercepted the enemy on the rear--at the same +time ordering the master-of-camp to fortify himself in the church of +Santa Cruz, planting in it some strong artillery, so that he might +be well prepared for resisting the insurgents, and for checking +the designs, suspected although not manifest, of the Chinese in the +Parián. Immediately all that company [of infantry] fell apart, so as +to give room for the free handling of the cannon; and, the village of +Santa Cruz being set afire, the Spaniards and Indians pillaged it. [57] +In it were the troops from Manila; and when they reached the lands of +Meyhaligue the horsemen, infantry, and Japanese attacked the Sangleys; +the latter fighting with barbarous desperation, were aided by the +great number of their men in stations and ambuscades. They killed +some of our men, among these Captain Agustin Tenorio, Captain Juan +Martin[ez] de Avendaño, Adjutant Cristobal de Saldado, and Alférez +Pedro de Soria; and others were wounded. Thirteen [58] Japanese +were killed, who could not be relieved [in time] by the valor of our +horsemen--which, although great on all occasions, in this one even +surpassed itself. Those who died sold their lives dearly, and those +who survived risked their lives nobly. The danger was alike for all, +and their courage equal; but their fate was not the same. Finally, +those who remained alive thought themselves fortunate that they could +retreat, considering the great number of those who attacked them, +the exhausted condition of their horses, little used to such raids, +and the advantage of position which the insurgents had over them. The +latter, although they saw many of their men stretched on the field, +held that loss as gain--since they were so numerous, and constantly +saw more men joining them--on account of the decrease of the Spaniards' +number by death, of which they made haughty boasts, cherishing hopes of +greater successes. The governor commanded that the troops and artillery +that were in Santa Cruz should that night be withdrawn to the city, +in order not to leave Manila in danger from a sudden insurrection +in the Parián, which was momently feared; also to leave the enemy +in perplexity--having seen that fortification by day, and not being +aware of the [Spanish] retreat so that they might not dare to approach +the river, or attempt to pass it, in the night. He commanded that the +bridge over it should be removed, and the boats that were there broken +up, so that the Chinese [of Santa Cruz and the Parián] might not cross +to each other; at the same time he gave orders that, if there should be +any tumult in the Parián, it should be demolished by the artillery on +the city walls. The whole city remained in suspense and uncertainty, +which was greatly increased by seeing how numerous grew the forces +of the insurgents. These, made arrogant by their recent exploit, +roamed through all the [surrounding] districts, nothing escaping their +cruelty. Several times they attacked the church and convent of Tondo, +[59] which was fortified; but our people in it were prepared for them, +so that, having lost many men, they saw themselves obliged to desist +for the time from their intention. They undertook to make themselves +masters of the church at Binondo, [60] but with the same result; +for the Sangley mestizos who were in the church, desirous of giving +proof of their loyalty, resisted the enemy, who accordingly regarded +their attempt as impracticable, or [at least] exceedingly difficult. + + + + +The Sangleys of the Parián revolt + +From the twenty-sixth of November to the second of the following +month the insurgent Sangleys continued to be so elated that every +day we saw them from Manila, on the other side of the river, with +many little banners which they proudly waved, daring the bolder of +our men to fight; for they thought that even if every Spaniard cost +them fifty of their own men, they would finally remain conquerors, and +masters of the country, on account of the smallness of our numbers, +the many men in their camp, and the accession of those who were +continually joining them. Our artillery quickly made them disperse +and retreat; but the decision was reached that it was not expedient +to sally out against the enemy, on account of the little confidence +that was felt in the Sangleys of the Parián, and because our army +could not hold these in check [no les cogiesen por las espaldas] +if it were engaged in a campaign. But on the second of December, +the day of the great apostle of India, St. Francis Javier, between +ten and eleven o'clock in the forenoon, the suspense came to an +end, and our uncertainty regarding the fidelity of the Parián was +cleared up. For those Sangleys, seeing that the insurgents had more +troops than on former occasions, and that they were more daringly +undertaking to make an attack at one side, also raised the banner +of revolt, and sallied out from the shops in which they were; and +they killed some negroes and Indians, and a few soldiers who were +stationed near the church of the Parián itself. They raised an outcry, +"For the bridge!" and "To arms against the Spaniards!" desiring to +join their countrymen by way of the bridge, which for this purpose +had been replaced. The sargento-mayor went out against them with the +infantry which were in garrison on that side, and made them turn back, +retreating toward the church of the Parián; and because the greatest +danger was at the bridge, the master-of-camp, Don Lorenzo de Olaso, +went to defend that passage. Although his men were few, with gallant +defiance he repulsed the main body of the enemy; but he saw that he +was in great danger, and his very courage extricated him. Immediately +they began to demolish the Parián, and to throw down their houses on +the land side. The governor went to the walls, to give orders as to +what must be done in view of the present necessity; and, since there +was so great need of men, all the ecclesiastics and religious were +obliged to go with arms to guard the walls, as it was suspected that +the enemy might attempt to scale them. At that time the city was full +of confusion and tumult; for as there were even in the [Spanish] houses +so great a number of Sangleys, the people within these saw that they +were in danger if the Sangleys escaped outside. To free themselves +from this, the cry was made, I know not by whose order, that, under +penalty of treason all should kill the Sangleys whom they kept, [61] +which immediately rendered active the indignation or the hatred against +them. Through all the streets the Sangleys were seen lying dead; and +everywhere were heard their outcries or their weeping, causing in all +natural compassion, [even] in the midst of the general danger. In the +fort were many Sangleys who had been seized in various sallies, who, +seeing death so near, tried to escape it, defending themselves even in +the place where they were imprisoned; but they all died there, slain +by arquebus-balls. The artillery continued its fire from the walls, +killing thus a great number of the Sangleys. Others flung themselves +into the river, but immediately fell into the hands of some of our +men who were guarding it in boats, and perished miserably. Fire was +set to the Parián; it immediately began to burn, and a great quantity +of wealth was reduced to ashes by the flames. [62] Many persons who +had concealed themselves were burned to death; others, who thought +it a less evil to be the object of our men's harshness than to become +the prey of the flames, rushing from the buildings, threw themselves +upon the sharp swords. Thus in a few hours the costly structure of the +Parián [perished], and its beautiful church alone was left [63] as a +memento of what had been there--the pillars of stone which remained +standing being monuments, as it were, which proclaimed, "Here stood +Troya." The number of those who died that day in the city and fort, +in the Parián, and in the river, amounted to three thousand, according +to the statement of those who make the most moderate estimates. On the +morning of the following day, some two hundred traders came out from +some marshes and miry places that were behind the Parián; they had +buried themselves in the mud there, in order to preserve their lives +in the general misfortune of their countrymen. All came with crosses +in their hands, entreating mercy; this could not be denied to them +by Christian charity, all the more when it was known that these men +were not accomplices in the insurrection. Command was therefore given +that they be conveyed to the fort, where they were kept under guard; +and they were aided with their support in a time of so great need, +in which they were utterly destitute. Many of those who died had time +[allowed them] to become Christians first, and those who already +were such, to make their confessions; others were deprived of this +by their own obstinacy, or by the sudden anger of our people. + + + + +Events at the port of Cavite and other places at this time + +There was anxiety at the port of Cavite when they heard the cannon +from Manila, and saw the clouds of smoke from the Parián; then news +of the result arrived, with an order to the warden of the fort, +Sargento-mayor Alonso García Romero, to put to the sword all the +Sangleys who were in that port. [64] Hardly was this information +guessed at when all the people--Spaniards, Indians, Japanese, Sangleys, +and mulattoes ran in dismay through the streets; all suspected one +another, and all tried to secure their own safety. The women and the +more valuable articles of property were collected in the churches; +and there prayers were offered aloud, entreating God for mercy. In +the present tumult, the prudence with which the warden acted was of +great value; for he restored tranquillity among all, especially the +Sangleys, who were most disturbed. Within half an hour he gathered +about a thousand of them in the royal buildings, making it known that +this was for the purpose of securing them from the public fury. They +were satisfied with this, closed their houses, and proceeded to take +refuge in the buildings assigned to them. While the Ave Maria was +ringing, the warden went to all the religious orders, requesting that +priests should go to baptize the infidels and hear the confessions +of the Christians, since all of them must die. They went immediately; +and the warden commanded that the Chinese should be taken out by tens, +on the pretext that the governor had summoned them to Manila. In this +way, they cut off the heads of as many as three hundred Sangleys, +many of them receiving the sacrament of baptism, and many who were +Christians that of penance. At this time a Spaniard made the mistake +of cutting off the purses which the Sangleys always carry with them; +this was seen by some, who immediately called out that they were +taking the Chinese away to kill them, and that the rest would better +put themselves on the defensive, and either save their lives or sell +them dearly. The Spaniards who were inside at once tried to escape, and +did so, although with some wounds from stones, taking the precaution to +close the gate of exit--a prudent act of great importance, because the +rest of the Spaniards, running up to that place, began to fire their +arquebuses wherever they could. The Sangleys then set fire to the royal +building, close to the gate, in order to make an opening by which they +could escape; others, climbing above, began to throw stones and tiles +at the Spaniards, and broke in pieces an ivory image of the blessed +Christ, with which they wounded some of our men. Many Indian women +had been sheltered in these buildings the day before, thinking that +they would there be safe, and seeing themselves suddenly in extreme +danger. Only three of these, with one child, died on this occasion, +at the hands of the Sangleys; another woman and another child flung +themselves down from the windows, but, falling upon some dead Sangleys, +they received no injury of importance. Nor did the rest of these women, +who, seeing their danger, did the same; they threw themselves down +and remained safe, although bruised by the fall. The fire was now +seizing on the entire building; [65] and those within, with death +so near and in their sight, broke down the wall on two sides, and as +many as four hundred flung themselves through this opening, the rest +remaining among the flames. Here they were opposed by the Spaniards +and Japanese, whom the Sangleys confronted with such mad fury that, +although armed only with stones and clubs, they strove to make way +for themselves, wounding some of our men (among these the warden), +and killing two Japanese. Finally they took the road to the beach, +and, being pursued thither, many of them continued to fall until, +being hindered by a fishing corral in which they were crowded together, +they were a mark for the bullets of our soldiers, and for the balls +from a blunderbuss which was fired from the fort of La Magdalena, +and thus thirty of them died. Those who remained alive went out into +the country, continually pursued by our soldiers at short range, +so that few escaped; and most of those were caught next day by the +ranchmen. Others hanged themselves from the trees; and, according to +the best information that can be obtained, only twenty three were left +who could carry the news to those in Manila. The slaughter continued +on the following day, since there were many who were hidden in the +houses. This success was a great mercy of God; for it was afterward +known that the Sangleys of the port had agreed upon an uprising +for that very night; they had planned to set fire to the village in +all parts of it, which they could have executed all the more easily +because their houses were very near to those of the Spaniards. In the +house of a rich Chinese Christian was found the banner to which they +were to rally. Many kept hidden in the fireplaces pincers with which +they intended to torture certain Spaniards by tearing away their flesh +piecemeal, in revenge for the Sangley pirates who were punished by that +torture in Manila in the past year. [66] The number of those who died +in the port of Cavite reached one thousand three hundred. Immediately +afterward all the Sangley laborers on the lands in that district +revolted, of whom some five hundred perished at the hands of the +Indians and ranchmen--not to speak of others who were scattered in +Maragondon and Silan, probably four hundred and fifty. Many were also +killed in the neighboring jurisdictions: in Bulacan, three hundred; +in Pampanga, six hundred; in Pangasinan, two hundred; in Taal and +Balayan, five hundred. Besides this, the corpses of more than six +hundred Sangleys have been encountered in the villages and coasts of +Zambales, the coasts of Maderas, and other places. [67] + + + + +Encampment of the insurgents; damages which they inflict; levies of +men to oppose them + +The damages which the Sangleys continued to commit--which were +especially seen among the recent arrivals in the Parián--have been very +heavy. They set fire to many houses of Spaniards and of religious; +and they burned the villages, with the churches, profaning all +that was sacred [68]--hacking the images with knives, wearing the +chasubles, and making from the altar-coverings garments to cover +themselves, and flags. Some of these articles were taken from them, +in encounters which the Spaniards had with them. The villages which, +with their churches, were burned were: Santa Cruz (although they did +not entirely destroy it), Quiapo, Meyhaligue, Sampaloc, San Sebastian, +San Francisco del Monte, and part of San Juan de la Penitencia. They +also burned the ranches of Santiago Castelu (or Gastelu), General +Asaldegui, Admiral Ezquerra, and others; and a large part of the +villages of Tondo and Binondo. + +They arrogantly continued these forays, and they were further +confirmed in their notion that they were masters of the field by +having therein more than twenty-six thousand fighting men, and knowing +that the Spaniards who could be assembled hardly amounted to three +hundred. Accordingly they formed their encampment opposite Manila, +with fortifications at intervals, where they remained about twenty +days, without our men crossing the river to attack them--the Spaniards +contenting themselves with depriving the Sangleys of boats, so that +the latter might not cross from the other side; and they waged war on +us in two directions. It was our prudent decision, and its importance +was recognized by the insurgents, not to let our force of soldiers be +weakened; and they exerted all their strength to overcome it, sparing +no effort in order to carry out their intention, and in one case +almost succeeding. Only by their great [number was it] [69] possible, +and their natural ingenuity; they undertook to intercept the river, +although it was so broad and deep, with a causeway of stone--a work +which they were able to complete in a short time, by each Sangley +carrying only one stone. With this they were masters of the river +as regards its passage, which they prevented to the boats which were +coming down with provisions from Laguna de Bay; but they were checked +in this by the diligence of those who had in charge the safety of +those supplies. These were General Asaldegui and Captain Ugalde, who +had various skirmishes with the Sangleys to keep them back from the +passage of the river, killing many of them without serious loss of our +men. By that time, recognizing the dangerous character of the war, +and that it would apparently be a long one, the governor continued +to make provision of all sorts of munitions and food; and raised +levies of men from Pampanga [70] and other jurisdictions--not only +arquebusiers, but Indians armed with arrows, lances, and shields. At +this summons, all showed their fidelity to the king, their affection +for the Spaniards, their hatred to the Chinese, and their promptness +in obedience. The Pampango Indians quickly rallied, constrained +not only by their ancient loyalty but by the present need; in this +they were not a little encouraged by seeing the spirited conduct of +their women whom they left behind, who offered to come with them to +fight. As it was impracticable to accept this offer, they were ready, +even at the cost of their lives, to defend their homes and villages, +in case the insurgents should undertake to enter these. + + + + +The enemy are dislodged, and pursued as far as Bocaue + +The new soldiers who had come to the succor of Manila, desirous +of encountering the enemy--for which there was not yet opportunity, +according to the arrangements of the governor--made forays through the +open country, in small bands, always with good success. [71] They were +encouraged to these sallies by the reward which the governor offered +to any one who should bring in the head of an enemy; as a result, +many heads came in to the city every day. A large number of men having +been collected, the governor resolved to post troops close to the very +camp of the insurgents, in order to surround them; and although they +tried to prevent this, they were unable to do so. Instead, they found +themselves, in all the attacks that they made, compelled to retire with +losses always of many men--although on one occasion, when the governor +with the master-of-camp and some Spaniards undertook to reconnoiter a +position, the Sangleys came about them, placing them in such evident +danger that they were very fortunate in being able to escape. This was +secured by the coming, with succor, of Captain Sebastian de Gastelu, +who was stationed at a neighboring post, with his men. Some took +the governor for the master-of-camp. The sargento-mayor, Don Pedro +de Jara, and Captain Gastelu peppered them well with the artillery, +which caused them so great loss that even within their very camp +they were not safe. Preparations were now made [on our side] for +attacking them on a set day; but it seems that the enemy, guessing +this plan, and the disastrous result which they might expect from +it, since they were surrounded on all sides by towers and redoubts, +concluded to take flight. This they did on Thursday, December 29, +at night, with so much silence (since the [word in MS. missing] was +so great) that there was no indication or suspicion of their resolve +until, on the morning of the next day, certain knowledge of their +departure was furnished by our noticing that they did not sally out +into the open country. The governor, who was in our camp, immediately +commanded that the enemy's camp be delivered over to pillage; in it +they found more than ten thousand fanegas of rice, by which not only +the Spaniards but the negroes and Indians of the surrounding villages +profited. The governor went in pursuit of them with his men, and got +sight of them between the villages of Pasig and San Mateo, to which +they had gone with the intention of crossing the river on rafts, for +which purpose they had cut there twenty thousand bamboos. They were +prevented from this, and our people prepared to give them battle on +Saturday, December 31; but the Chinese did not wait for them, but took +to flight that night also. Our troops continued to pursue them, [72] +and reached them at nightfall, finding them encamped in the village of +San Jose, a visita of Bocaue, which is a mission village of the fathers +of St. Francis. When the governor was asked there where our men were +to be lodged, he replied, "Where the enemy are." Our soldiers were +so honorably obedient that, crossing a stream that separated the two +forces, they dislodged the Sangleys from their camp, compelling them +to flee; the enemy left behind the supper that they had prepared, as +spoils [for our men, disregarding] the opportunity, and its importance +for the hungry and needy condition in which they were. [73] + +On the first of January, 1640, in the morning, the Sangleys were +attacked by our men, and forced to do as they had done the night +before--although with greater loss, since many in their flight rushed +head-long into the river, where they perished. The rest took the road +to Pampanga, intending to secure through that province a passage to +that of Pangasinan; but, after fighting their way, and receiving damage +on all sides, they fell back to Bocaue. This move caused anxiety among +our people, who feared that the Sangleys did this with the intention of +again crossing the river of Manila, in which case they would destroy, +as they had already done on the side opposite [Manila], the churches +and villages on the other side. Seeing, then, the danger at this time +of need, and considering that the soldiers were with the governor +and the citizens acting as garrison, and that in no place could the +forces be divided, since everywhere they were so small, father Fray +Juan Ramirez, the Augustinian provincial, offered to keep guard over +the river with his religious, and asked the other religious orders to +help him in this with such men as they could spare. All willingly gave +their aid, and the governor also sent the commander of the galleys, +Andres Lopez de Asaldegui, for the same purpose; and, aided by so many +religious, he kept the river safe for our trade, and prevented the +enemy from crossing it. At Bocaue the governor was confronting the +enemy, and having various skirmishes with them, being sometimes the +attacker, sometimes the attacked; and although usually these occasioned +loss to the enemy, sometimes also our people lost--especially one day +when a large troop of Indians, with a number of Spaniards, sallied out +against the Sangleys. The latter resorted to the artifice of setting +fire in all directions to the patches of sedge (or rather the fields +of cogon [74]), which were a great cause for fear; and the Indians, +unexpectedly surrounded by fire, took to disorderly flight. This was +the cause of some few Spaniards being left there dead; their firearms +were seized by the Sangleys, who with these did considerable damage +to our men. On this occasion the governor was in notable danger; for +he, considering that the enemy's encampment was in an advantageous +location, convenient to food-supplies, and having plenty of water +(which our camp lacked), determined to dislodge them from it. For +this purpose, on the night of January 9 he erected a tower near the +enemy's camp, defended by ditches, spikes driven into the ground +[empuyados], and a stockade, and well furnished with artillery. He +appointed as its commander the chief captain of the artillery, Juan +Bautista de Molina, with Captain Gastelu [as second]; and placed in +it two artillerists, twenty soldiers, and a hundred Indians armed with +arrows and arquebuses. When the Sangleys, in the morning, saw the new +fort, so unexpected to them, they rushed with great fury to carry it +by assault; but those within defended it valiantly, making great havoc +among the enemy. Hearing the report of the cannon, the governor and +the master-of-camp hastened to give them aid. Before they could arrive, +the enemy turned their backs and fled to their camp; the governor and +those who accompanied him therefore returned to their quarters. At one +o'clock the Sangleys again endeavored to seize the fort; they found +the same resistance and valor among our men as in the morning, and +many of their people were killed, without any loss to us, except that +a bullet wounded Captain Gastelu in the knee. At the time, this injury +was not considered dangerous or likely to last long; but finally, +at the end of five months it caused his death, to the sorrow of +every one that his Majesty should lose in him a valiant and energetic +officer. The governor and the master-of-camp came, as in the morning, +to the aid of the fort; but the enemy were now retreating, and, the +governor sending four men on horseback to reconnoiter their course, +God inspired such fear in those who were retreating that they began +to flee in a disorderly crowd, leaving in their camp their weapons +(lances and arquebuses) and a large quantity of provisions. Some of +our men followed them for the distance of half a legua, and in that +space killed more than one thousand five hundred of them; and when +the soldiers of our force were called together, the affair could +be considered by them all as concluded. It was regarded as a great +victory, on account of the great fear which had filled the minds of +the Sangleys, the utter disorder and confusion with which they fled, +and our having gained from them an encampment so convenient, with the +death of so many and the booty of so many weapons; and the news of it +was sent to Manila at ten o'clock that night. It was received with +general satisfaction and the ringing of bells; and on the following +day in all the churches solemn masses were said before the most holy +sacrament, by way of thanksgiving for so fortunate a success, and in +supplication to that same Lord that He would continue that favor to +our forces. + + + + +The enemy return to Sagar and San Mateo + +The governor had no information of the road that the enemy took +in their flight; accordingly, while he was waiting for this, +he endeavored to have his army take some rest in the village of +Bocaue. But little rest did the insurgents have; for, seeing the +misfortunes that pursued them, and so many of their men (in whose +numbers they were trusting to make themselves masters of the country) +dead, or wounded, or disheartened, they resolved to remove from [the +vicinity of] our camp. Returning to their familiar haunts of Sagar and +San Mateo--which is a visita of the village of Pasig, belonging to the +fathers of St. Augustine--desirous of avenging their defeats and the +loss of their dead, and feeling safe on account of our troops being +so far away, they sent some bands of their people to burn the church +and village of Pasig, which they did. Other Sangleys, roaming through +the hills, found among them some tiny hamlets of the natives, where +they had concealed their valuables, and their children and wives, to +save them from the common danger; and these were in very great danger +of falling into the hands of these enemies. Our Lord delivered these +people, although the Sangleys took possession of what they found in +the huts. Then their scattered bands being reunited with those whom +they had sent to hunt for provisions, they formed their camp on a hill, +and the various bands built shelters for themselves. + +As soon as the governor knew where the enemy were now encamped, he +went in pursuit of them, and on the twelfth [of January] he halted +on the river San Mateo. The next day he went in person, with some +few horsemen, to reconnoiter, and on the way encountered a troop of +about a hundred Sangleys; fifty of them were armed, and the rest +were laden with rice and other provisions. Our men attacked them +and killed twenty or more of the Sangleys, without any loss on our +side--although Captain Juan Fiallo found himself in great danger. On +this as on other occasions he displayed honorable proofs of his valor; +for, having wounded a Sangley in the forehead with a lance-thrust, +and felled him to the ground, the latter, suddenly raising himself +from between the horse's feet, slashed at him with a Japanese catana, +with which at one thrust he wounded both the captain and the horse. The +captain quickly turned his horse about, and securing room for using +his lance, ran it entirely through the Sangley's body, at one side; +it pierced so deeply that it was impossible to pull out the weapon, +so he had to leave it sticking in the body. But the Sangley, with the +anguish or the desperation of death, eager to avenge it rather than +endure it, with his own hands drew out the lance, and, bracing himself +with it on the ground, attempted to attack the man who had wounded +him. But at this moment he was himself attacked by a lay religious +belonging to the Society of Jesus, who rendered good service in the +war throughout its active period--and at this time with especial good +fortune, since he freed the captain from danger by completing the +killing of the Sangley. All the rest of the Sangleys fled, and the +governor returned to his camp, to give orders for the attack on the +enemy, who during all the time while they remained in the hills never +ceased from inflicting damages. They burned the church of San Mateo, +and that of Taytay, a house and church of the Society of Jesus, and a +visita of Antipolo; also Santa Cruz and Mahayhay. According to what +many of them said, their chief incentive to setting these fires was +what happened to a certain Sangley. Desiring to become a Christian, he +buried an idol which he had, of which they relate fables very similar +to those about Mars, calling it "the god of battles." This Christian +Sangley was one of the insurgents, and, desiring to appease this god, +managed with others to disinter it, entreating its protection on the +present occasion. They say that the idol spoke to them, saying that +it considered itself appeased and satisfied for the previous injury +done to it; and promising them, besides this, its favor, provided +that they would burn all the churches, profane all that was sacred, +and inflict on the Christians all the harm that they possibly could. + + + + +Success of our troops, and defeat of the enemy in Antipolo + +The enemy, not regarding themselves as safe in the mountains where +they had hidden, managed to retreat to those of Antipolo, as being more +suitable for the fortified post which they built there. On account of +the extent of the place, the greater part of their people had gone +into it, after burning the village and the residence of the Society +of Jesus; they attempted to do the same with the church, but could +not accomplish this, as it was built of stone. Some remained behind, +and, desirous of reconnoitering the place, and doing the enemy some +damage, Captain Juan Fiallo went out with as many as thirty horsemen, +and a large number of Indians with lances and bows. The roads were +exceedingly rugged, and both footmen and horsemen had to trust to their +own exertions for success. They commenced to make their way through +the mountains, with more spirit than reflection, for at the middle of +their journey they found themselves unable to go on. The enemy were on +their rear, and at either side were precipices and deep ravines--all +the fault of ignorant guides. It was impossible either to advance or +to retreat; and so they fell in death, one after another, their courage +ineffectual, and without room in which to make resistance. Accordingly, +they rushed to fling themselves down the precipices, abandoning some +their horses and some their weapons, and all in this danger losing +their presence of mind. The enemy had the opportunity to put an end +to all of our men, if God had not blinded their eyes. Five or six +Spaniards, with their arms and horses, returned to the camp and gave +news of this disaster; and within a few days some others returned, +unarmed and on foot; as for the rest, the Sangleys disposed of them +as we shall see later. + +The governor, grieved at this result, collected more horses from the +neighboring ranches, and, sending to Manila for saddles, equipped his +men anew, all eager for vengeance. This consumed much time, which gave +the enemy leisure to fortify themselves in four places, in the village +of Antipolo and in the mountain region thereabout; but it deprived +our troops of [the opportunity of] marching against the enemy until +they arrived in sight of the new fortifications. The difficulty of +the attack was very evident, for the enemy held the heights, and had +stones with which they had built their enclosures, by hand-work, very +strong and well-arranged, as was remarked by our men. In this work, +the great number of their men, and their strenuous efforts, had made +up for the lack of time. No less active were our men in making ready +[for the attack]; and the more difficult the undertaking, the more +their courage rose. The Indians displayed great gallantry, with a +few Spaniards making themselves masters of the first two strongholds +or intrenchments--from which the enemy retreated with the loss of +some of their men; the rest, a crowd of armed men, taking refuge in +the other two defences, at the highest part of the fortification, +regarded these as impregnable, and accordingly kept in them provisions +of all kinds, enough to last a long time. There they awaited our men, +who marched in good order, and attacked the first intrenchment on +three sides. They were everywhere preceded by Indian shield-bearers, +in order that these might with their shields stop the stones and +other missiles that the Sangleys were throwing; the Indians did this +valiantly, being thus very helpful to the rest of the army; for the +Spaniards, being able to use their firearms without hindrance, with +them everywhere drove back the enemy. The latter, discouraged at the +death of so many of their number, and seeing our soldiers ascending +the hill, took to flight. This gave new energy to our victorious men, +who in order to complete their conquest at once continued their +march, with the same good order and precaution, to the innermost +fortification, the strongest and most difficult of all, and the most +skilfully built and best provided with supplies. Nothing withstood +the perseverance of our men, flushed by their recent success, and +stimulated by the sight of their governor, who was present throughout +the action; they eagerly attacked the enemy, who valiantly resisted, +replying with their firearms to the volleys from our arquebuses, and +with stones to the javelins and arrows [of our Indians]--relying on +these weapons alone, as they had the advantage in position. But their +courage alone could not equal that of our men; and, seeing that ours +were now pressing them hard, and, almost on their hands and knees, +steadily gaining possession of their last height, the Sangleys, +having little strength to defend it, turned their backs and began +to flee. Our men kept up the pursuit of the enemy for more than a +legua, until they drove out the fugitives from their hiding-places, +and many of the latter flung themselves over the cliffs in those +mountains--where the enemy, although at the outset he had been well +defended, was on this occasion thoroughly defeated. + +Those [of the Spaniards] who were killed in this combat and assault +were about twenty; and as the victory had been so glorious, not only +by the strength of the enemy but by the valor of our soldiers, all the +bells were rung in Manila, and on the following day, at the governor's +request, solemn mass was said in all the churches, and the most holy +sacrament was exposed, in thanksgiving for so fortunate a success. + +In the enemy's camps were found large quantities of supplies and +arms; and on the ground were many books which they had taken from the +religious houses that they burned; from these they made breastplates +and other defensive armor. In the cemetery of Antipolo, which was the +quarters of their leaders, were found several of their proclamations, +in Chinese characters; these were fastened to the trees, to serve +for the proper government of their forces. There were twenty dead +horses who had fallen into the ravines, with their saddles broken; +and three Spaniards were found whose heads had been cut off. These +were part of those who had flung themselves from the precipices; among +them was a lay religious of the Augustinians, who had accompanied +the soldiers on that expedition. These bodies, although they were +putrid, were so tightly bound that the cords had cut into the flesh, +all indicating the cruelty of the Sangleys. Although this moved our +men to deserved compassion and just indignation, they felt much more +keenly the discovery of many fragments of holy images that lay on +the ground. In especial, there was found a carved figure of the holy +Christ, three palmos in height, among the embers and ashes of a house +which the Sangleys had undertaken to burn; the fire had been content +to blacken the image a little, in order that it might testify to the +miracle--since all regarded it as such, that the image should remain +unhurt in the midst of so hot a fire. The soldier who found the image +presented it to the governor, who at sight of it was deeply moved, +as were the army also when it was raised on high, [made] by him who +had abased it more glorious than before; and all entertained hopes +that the army which should fight under such a banner would annihilate +the enemy by a signal victory. + + + + +Injuries which the enemy committed during their flight + +It is characteristic of cowards to affect courage when they meet no +opposition or do not fear resistance; the enemy did not encounter +this in the ranch of Antipolo, whither he went when he emerged +from the mountains and hollows in which he had taken refuge from +our attacks and the slaughter which he could not make among our +troops. For the latter were marching accompanied by the governor, +who was desirous of catching the enemy in the flat country that he +might offer them battle there, when they would not be able to avail +themselves of the ruggedness of the mountains or the depth of the +ravines; the armies faced each other, now ready to come to blows, and +the enemy were almost surrounded by our troops on all sides. Although +without realizing how little they could depend upon their hands, they +trusted to their feet; they now placed their main defense in flight, +burning the village and church of Baras--valiant for only such acts +of cowardice. Our men kept at the heels of the enemy, although it was +one of the greatest hardships of this war to have to march so long +through very rough roads amid the inclemencies of heat and rain. The +insurgents pursued the route toward the village of Tamar, whither also +our army proceeded, in order to compel them to give battle, or else to +harass and disturb them by never allowing them opportunity to have any +rest. Our men reached the flat top of a hill, and halted on the summit, +without having any knowledge of the enemy--who were so near that even +their voices could soon be heard. When our men perceived the enemy, +and saw how few they were (for at that time they did not number two +thousand), they began to surround the Sangleys in order to attack them; +and the battle began with such fury that the enemy, in desperation, +came close to the mouths of the Spanish arquebuses. Our men defended +themselves valiantly, at little cost to themselves but with much +loss to the enemy; since, although the battle began with great risk +[to us] on account of their multitude, our weapons were well plied +on both sides [of them]. When the enemy had attacked our position and +would have gained the advantage, Don Rodrigo de Guillestegui arrived, +whom the governor had sent with a company of horsemen and five hundred +Indians, sounding the alarm to them through the rearguard. At the sound +of the drums, and when the enemy saw themselves attacked on both sides, +and knew that the rest of our army (which had been absent) was there, +they already used their weapons with less spirit; and, their hopes of +gaining the victory being dashed, they began to retreat, so as not +to give it to our men--but with much loss of their own--and as they +were in a place where the cavalry could range freely. The damage that +they received was much greater [than what they inflicted], and was +sufficient to enable those of their number who had more prudence to +urge more strenuously, from that time on, negotiations for peace--of +which they had begun to talk a few days before, but with little, +if any, effect. + + + + +Garrisons are placed in the churches, and peace is discussed + +When the governor saw the destruction that the enemy had wrought in +the churches, and that he could not check it because the army that was +fleeing always had the start of the other, he determined to put the +churches in a condition of defense, and accordingly assigned to each +one a number of soldiers who should confront the Sangleys--so that, +since the people of the villages could not deliver themselves from +the enemy's fury, the temples and the dwellings of the religious, +which were most important, might be saved. The governor also sent +them word, threatening that he would put all the Sangleys that were +left in the country to the sword, if they did any more damage to the +villages or the churches, since it was a token of cowardice to wreak +vengeance on him who was not to blame, or who made no resistance. They +replied that they did no harm where they were not harmed, and that +they would leave the villages in peace if the roads were left free +to themselves by which they were intending to pass to Los Limbones, +in order to build champans there to make ready for [their return to] +China. This reply was less haughty than the tone of their earlier +bravado. From that time they did not burn any church, although they +burned the village of Santa Maria and that of Siniloan, with a visita +of Pangil, because the Indians had been stationed there and many of +the Sangleys slain. After this, they continued their march to Cainta, +and the governor in pursuit of them to the post of Mahayhay--a place +through which the enemy must necessarily pass if they would go to Los +Limbones--in order to fight there with the enemy the battle which +was impossible in the mountains which the enemy had selected for +their encampment. Many from the enemy's camp came every day to ours +asking for mercy, alleging [that they had been coerced by] violent +measures on the part of their leaders in the revolt. They readily +found mercy, and with this and kind treatment they were sent back to +Manila. The opinions of the rest were as vacillating as their courage, +many of them lacking confidence in the governor. Thinking that they +did not deserve pardon for their offences, they preferred to persist +in these obstinately, rather than to yield to the governor's mercy +and surrender; and although there were embassies from one side to +the other, this intercourse was carried on with little confidence +on either side. On ours, negotiations for peace were carried on by +a father of the Society of Jesus, [75] who was a minister to the +Sangleys, and General Geronimo Enrriquez, their alcalde-mayor of +the Parián, for whom they had the utmost affection; on their side, +by some of their leaders, with the mandarin--although not with so +much privilege, [76] on account of having been created for their +purpose--the lieutenant-commander of the Sangley forces. He was a +boastful and audacious man, who resisted the negotiations for peace, +and had with his own hand killed several men because he was suspicious +of their being concerned therein. But the father of the Society, +anxious that peace should be secured, in order that the shedding of +so much blood might be stopped--especially for the sake of the many +Sangleys who were there more because they trusted others than to +carry out their own purpose--laying aside any consideration of his +own life, went many times, at the evident risk of death, to confer +with the mandarin and the leaders, assuring them, on the part of the +governor, of pardon and kind treatment to those who laid down their +arms and surrendered themselves to him. He answered their complaints, +the chief of these being that the governor had commanded that their +comrades who were scattered through the provinces should be slain, +when they had committed no offence. The answer was that the very +people in their own camp who had been caught by our men had revealed +that those others were accomplices in their guilt, and cognizant of +the revolt; for they had confessed that it was general throughout the +provinces. He said that there was therefore no wisdom in leaving some +of the Sangleys free while we were fighting others in the field, since +the former would take up arms against us at the first opportunity; and +finally that they should avail themselves of the present opportunity, +as being invited to make peace, and should not constrain the governor +to an extreme demonstration of his anger, as that would result in +the entire destruction of them all--as they themselves could see by +the few who had been killed on our side, and the thousands that had +fallen on theirs. Persuaded by these arguments, they undertook to +hold another council and give an answer on the following day. + + + + +Peace is concluded, and both armies return to Manila + +After thorough reflection, while those of our camp were waiting for +the enemy to submit and give up their arms, the latter saw that the +conditions demanded for making peace did not depend on him whose +strength had been broken, but on him who was able to boast of his +advantage and superiority; and how, if the negotiations for peace +arose more from the needs of the case and from our strength than from +mercy and compassion, the governor would have closed, as it were, +the gates of mercy with the determination to destroy them, if he had +not checked his anger, and given to the religious in whose hands was +this affair time for endeavoring to convert them to a more prudent +decision. Finally, they agreed that all should surrender themselves +and give up their weapons. A place was appointed at a little distance +from our camp, between which and theirs was a river; at its crossing +stood our men in two ranks, before whom the Sangleys passed, laying +down the weapons that they carried. As soon as all of them, some +eight thousand in number, had reached their station, arrangements +were made for their return to Manila, the governor charging the +master-of-camp to set out with the two armies. This was done, and +they marched until they arrived in the parade-ground at Bagumbayan, +opposite the city, on the evening of Friday, March. 15. The governor +arrived that same evening, and the two armies encamped there for the +night. At dawn of the following day, the drums sounded for the march, +which was conducted in this order. In the vanguard went Captain +Juan Fiallo with the cavalry, to the sound of trumpets; next some +companies of Pampango infantry, those of the Cagayan Indians, the +Zambal archers, and the Indians who carried javelins and shields in +the battalion. Next came all the Sangley forces, and in the rearguard +the Spanish infantry, with the master-of-camp. The halberdiers of +the governor followed, and in their midst was one on horseback, who +carried as a standard the image of the blessed Christ from Antipolo, +mounted on a staff. Last of all came the governor, accompanied by his +suite, and by many volunteer horsemen who had gone to the war. In this +order they proceeded along the causeway to the bridge over the river, +and across it to Tondo; and there our troops left the Sangleys inside a +stockade which they had built as a precaution, with soldiers guarding +them on all sides. The governor went thence to his palace by water, +and the master-of-camp marched with his soldiers to the city. The +people received them with great joy at seeing the war ended, as it +had caused them so much anxiety and lasted so long a time--for it +began on November 20, 1639, and came to an end on March 15, 1640. + + + + +The slain in both armies; the enemy's weapons and mode of warfare; +and the damage committed by them. + +Those who make the most careful estimate of the deaths on both +sides state that the number of Spaniards who died in the war, +from its beginning to its end, were about forty or forty-five, and +of Indians three hundred; and it was always the main care of the +governor to watch over his men. On the side of the enemy, they make +the number of deaths approximate twenty-two thousand to twenty-four +thousand--including therein those who died in the provinces. [77] +Thus is made very evident, by the unequal and disproportionate number +[of deaths] on both sides, the special protection of our Lord over +our army--a fact acknowledged even by the very infidels. + +The weapons that the Sangleys collected, besides some few firearms, +were: javelins and Japanese catanas, fastened to poles (and some were +made in Manila), some of these weighing more than an arroba, which +will indicate the force with which they could be used; sickles and +pruning-hooks, also fastened to poles; iron tridents; and bamboos with +sharp points hardened in fire, four or five brazas in length. They +also carried away the iron from the houses and churches that they +burned, and whenever they were left undisturbed in any encampment, +they set up their forges and made weapons, in order that no one might +he unprovided with them. The men were divided into tens, like [the +Roman] decurias, so that the exact number of their men was known; and, +of each ten, six fought, and four were responsible for their food, +in order that the fighting men might be entirely relieved from that +work. [78] They did not fight all at one time, but only three from +each decuria, in order that while these were fighting the others +might rest, and thus always they could have men who could enter the +battle in fresh condition. They employed stratagems in fighting--in +the beginning, when they had not so many arms, they made sham weapons, +covering these with cloth, so that they looked like steel. In their +camp near Sanpaloc, [79] in some towers that they built they placed +straw figures of Sangleys, so that our infantry might fire at these +and use up their bullets, and then the Sangleys could, without risk +of being hit, rush to attack our men. + +The damages which they committed throughout the period of the +insurrection are very great. They made havoc among the sacred images +and utensils, besides which they burned the village of Calamba and +its church; the village of Taluco, [80] in charge of secular priests, +with a wooden church and a stone clergy-house; houses and property +in Viñan; the house of San Pedro, belonging to the Society of Jesus; +the house and church at Meyhaligue and Santa Cruz; the village and +church of Quiapo, belonging to the Society of Jesus; many houses in +the villages of Tondo and Binondoc; the village of Sanpaloc, with a +house and church of stone belonging to the fathers of St. Francis; +the village of Taytay, with house and church of stone belonging to the +Society of Jesus; the villages of Mahayhay, Santa Cruz, Antipolo, and +Baras, belonging to the Society of Jesus; the villages and churches +of San Mateo and Pasig, belonging to the fathers of St. Augustine; +the villages of Santa Maria and Siniloan, and some visitas, belonging +to the fathers of St. Francis. They also burned ranches and country +houses belonging to [the fathers of] St. Augustine, the Society of +Jesus, Captain Gastelu, General Don Juan Claudio, Alférez Medrano, +General Azaldegui, Admiral Ezquerra, and Admiral Juan Alonso; besides +other stone houses and property belonging to private persons. + + + + +The persons who most distinguished themselves in our army + +From the very outset of the war the governor was active in it, not +sparing himself from any of its dangers, which were very great. If +any proof were needed of his energy, valor, executive ability, and +military circumspection, the present emergency would have furnished +it. Distinction was honorably gained by the master-of-camp, Don +Lorenzo de Olaso; he was always the first in dangers--none of which +he shunned, although he experienced several attacks of illness, +and even lay stretched at the foot of a papaw tree--escaping from +them, or being drawn out of them by his brave heart and valiant +spirit. Many personages of Manila in private life displayed their +courage, adding merits to their former ones by their service in +the army, and causing the enemy to recognize their bravery in the +skirmishes and assaults, that they might relate how they had conducted +themselves in these; it is sufficient to mention who they are. The +commanding officer of the artillery, Juan Bautista de Molina, was +present in some of the engagements, and the rest of the time he was +directing his artillery in the city. General Geronimo Enrriquez, +lieutenant of the master-of-camp, and general in the army, having +been appointed on New Year's day alcalde-in-ordinary, preferred to +fight in the campaign rather than to remain in Manila in the quiet +and repose of his house, although opportunity to do so was given him +by so honorable a title. General Don Juan Claudio de Verastegui, who +fulfilled the obligations that he had inherited by birth and acquired +by military service. Admiral Don Francisco Ezquerra, who, sometimes +accompanying his brother, General Ezquerra, and sometimes following +the army, everywhere gave proof of his valor. Captain Don Rodrigo +de Guillestegui, his deeds making him appear like a veteran soldier, +although he was so young. All the encomenderos and citizens of Manila +also played the part of veterans, either guarding the city by day and +by night, or serving in the camp, being present in various notable +encounters, wherein the cavalry distinguished themselves. The company +of Captain Juan Fiallo, who with his men was the terror of the enemy; +Captain Juan de Montoya, and Alférez Alfonso Gomez. The ranchmen and +mulattoes, as being accustomed to the management of horses and skilful +in hurling javelins, caused the greatest losses to the enemy on all +occasions. The Spanish infantry, with their captains Don Manuel de +Rivera and N. [sic] de Ugalde (who are worthy of the highest praise), +always fulfilled their duties with good results. The Pampango infantry +was not without glory--the archers and shield-bearers from Pampanga, +whose leader besides their captains was father Fray Juan de Sosa, prior +of the convent of Betis, always as thorough a religious as he was, +on occasion, valiant and courageous; they never returned to our camp +without leaving tokens of their presence in that of the enemy. The +Zambal archers, who went under the orders of Fray Antonio de las +Misas--a Recollect religious, and a person who was in all respects +such as the emergency required--always endeavored to win a reputation; +and if they were previously known by report, they were now by their +deeds. The companies of Cagayans and Terrenatans, as war was not a new +thing to them since they were born and trained in it, did not hesitate +to risk their lives, at the cost of a great number of enemies whom +they left dead behind them. The Tagal Indians of all this province +accompanied their valor with their loyalty, which was so great that, +although their losses had been so considerable in villages, houses, and +possessions, forgetful of all these, and remembering only the treason +plotted, the sacrilege committed, and the design of the Sangleys to +make themselves masters of the country, [81] these Indians took up +arms against them most of the villages serving in their companies, +and by so honorable an act giving proof of their fidelity toward God, +and of their affection for the Spaniards, tokens also of their loyalty, +subjection, and obedience to the king our lord and his officials. + + + + +The activities in Manila during the time of the war, not only in +defense of the city, but in prayers + +In proportion to the anxiety which the war occasioned was the +solicitude that was felt in the city for its protection; no citizen +shunned the performance of the duty that was allotted to him, and +all were [in turn] continually serving on the walls. The direction +of the fort [82] was in charge of the commander and castellan, +Don Fernando de Ayala; the cavalier [i.e., tower] of San Gabriel +was in the keeping of General Don Juan de Ezquerra; and the gate +of the Parián, in that of Sargento-mayor Don Pedro Jara, until he +had to take his station and plant artillery against the enemy at +Sanpaloc. At the new gate, Captain Don Gregorio Mujica commanded; +at that of Dilao, Sargento-mayor Palomino--and afterward Captain Mena +of the cavalier, whom they call De Carranza; in charge of San Pedro, +Captain Lorenzo Lopez. Admiral Luis Alonso de Roa attended to the +foundry [for artillery]; and Captain Aumada, to emergencies [del +inmediato]. Alférez Orgaz was in charge of the gate of Santa Lucia; +and Alférez Bernave Martinez and Sargento-mayor Don Marcos Zapata +of that of Santo Domingo. But, as the Spaniards were few in number, +it was necessary that they should be aided by the ecclesiastics +and the students. The clerics were placed in charge of a cavalier; +the students or collegians of Santo Tomas were under the orders of +the fathers of St. Dominic; those of the other, San Jose, under the +[fathers of the] Society of Jesus. They wore the clerical garb all the +time while the war lasted, with that of the military. The religious +hastened to take arms and defend the walls on the day of the attack; +and, every night when there was cause to suspect another, they were +found at the posts assigned them. + +The city was provided with a new moat, which continuing with the +old one by the side of the foundry, extended almost to the sea--a +celebrated work which was completed in a very short time, all due to +the assiduity and personal attention of the master-of-camp of the +artillery. Its commander, General Don Juan Zapata de Molina, gave +much attention to this work; it was greatly aided, and new inventions +and devices for [the use of] fire were furnished, by the solicitude +and experience of Captain Geronimo de Fuentes [Cortes]. There was +no one who did not, on occasion, render all kinds of service. A +company of free negroes [83] was formed, who were very useful within +the city, being distributed through the cavaliers for the effective +management of the artillery. Duties were assigned to the slaves, but +with discreet caution, on account of rumors which had been current +(although without foundation) that they were making great plans +when they saw the Sangleys in revolt; this was done partly [to give +them] occupation, and to deprive them of any notions of undertaking +another insurrection to the injury of the colony. But as its citizens +recognized that its main defense must come from the Supreme Power, +they did not neglect to raise their hands toward heaven, everywhere +offering continual petitions to our Lord for the fortunate result +of the war, and for the repose and pacification of these islands. In +the cathedral was begun a novenary [i.e., nine days' prayer] to the +glorious St. Joseph, all the [religious] communities repairing thither, +each on its own day, to recite solemn mass to him. The fathers of +St. Dominic, at the request of the city, celebrated another mass to +our Lady of the Rosary, all the religious orders also going thither +to say mass before her image. On the last day, [the image of] the +glorious patriarch St. Francis, who so loved this city, was carried in +procession to the cathedral, with supplication for favors through his +agency--which have been received heretofore, as is acknowledged, in the +first insurrection; and finally a procession was made in honor of the +immaculate conception of the Virgin, and other prayers were offered. + +[The following additional points regarding the Chinese insurrection are +taken from a pamphlet entitled Relacion verdadera del levantamiento +de los Sangleyes (i.e., True relation of the Sangley insurrection), +which was printed in Madrid, by Catalina de Barrio y Angulo, in +1642 (our transcript of the same having been made from the original +existing in Biblioteca y Museo de Ultramar, Madrid): "Calamba is +twelve leguas from Manila. The Chinese corresponded with a Chinese +pirate named Yquan Sanglus; it was arranged that he should come to +aid them on Christmas Eve, 1639 (the day set for the treason), and +to capture the galleons from New Spain. There were 35,000 licensed +Sangleys in Manila and its vicinity, besides 10,000 more in remote +provinces. In Manila at this time there were thirty foot-soldiers, +thirty horsemen, fifty Japanese, and seventy Siyaos. The value of the +goods destroyed in the Parián was 5,000,000 pesos; and the houses +(built of molave wood), with the church and the stone houses, all +together were worth 2,000,000. Twenty champans brought to Mariveles +the Sangleys from neighboring provinces, to join the Manila insurgents; +but a Spanish and Pampango force went out against than, who sank eleven +of the champans and killed six hundred and fifty men. Among the troops +levied by the governor were a company of Japanese, and two of Sangley +mestizos. Chinese prisoners confessed that their general had offered, +to each Sangley who should bring in a Spanish head, a large reward, +including a Spanish woman to be his wife. A body of religious from all +the orders, aided by some Indians and ten soldiers, undertook to defend +the passage across the river, and killed many of the enemy. On February +24, 1640, the starving Sangleys surrendered, to the number of 7,793."] + + + + + + + +ECCLESIASTICAL AND AUGUSTINIAN AFFAIRS, 1630-40 + + +[In VOLS. XXIII and XXIV of this series was presented the history of +the Augustinian order to the year 1630, as written by Fray Juan de +Medina. Continuing that history to 1640, we give (mainly in synopsis) +the most important matter on this subject in the Conquistas of Fray +Casimiro Diaz (Valladolid, 1890), book ii, pp. 267-444. As usual, the +parts synopsized or merely referred to are printed within brackets; +these will be readily distinguished from words or phrases supplied +in translation, which are printed in the same manner.] + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +After the death of the lord archbishop Don Fray Miguel García Serrano, +the ecclesiastical cabildo of Manila attempted to interfere in +the government of the vacant see--alleging for this purpose that +the brief of Paul V, and the royal decree, had been obtained by +underhand means and misrepresentations. The bishop of Cagayán, Don Fray +Hernando Guerrero, also brought forward his claim to the vacant post; +accordingly, both parties presented the arguments in behalf of their +respective claims. The decision thereon was deferred for some time, +the cabildo always resisting Don Fray Hernando Guerrero's efforts to +take possession of the see, and denying not only the claim which he +preferred, but also the right which the bishop of Cebú, Don Fray Pedro +de Arce, had--which he, moreover, had yielded to Señor Guerrero. This +contest lasted two years in the royal Audiencia; then, the auditors +having declared that the government of the archbishopric belonged to +Don Fray Pedro de Arce, the cabildo appealed to the Council of the +Indias. Nevertheless, the royal Audiencia and the governor sent for the +bishop of Cebú, who reached Manila on the twenty-second of January, +1630. The cabildo having been commanded, by a royal decree, to hold +a session, Don Fray Pedro de Arce presented himself at that meeting, +and made the following proposition: "Sirs, it is well understood, as +you will satisfy yourselves, that my coming to this city, and just +now to this cabildo, is quite contrary to my own inclinations; for +I desire and love a quiet life, and I hold very dear the sheep of my +bishopric. The example [of this that I have given] is very evident; +for Fray Hernando Guerrero having gone to my diocese so that I might +confer upon him the orders for which he had been consecrated, I also +transferred to him the right to the government of this archbishopric +that I hold in virtue of a brief from his Holiness Paul V, issued +by him on January 7, 1612. But the claim of the said bishop of Nueva +Segovia was not allowed, for reasons which you know. After that, Don +Juan Niño de Tavora, governor and captain-general of these islands, +wrote to me so urgently in the name of the gentlemen of the royal +Audiencia, sending me his Majesty's royal decree, and laying a burden +upon my conscience if I did not accept this duty, that I could not +refuse it; accordingly, I come to this city, certainly against my own +wishes, and to the injury of my health in my advanced years. But, sirs, +it has seemed to me expedient to come, as a measure of peace and love, +to expostulate with you, and ask that you carefully consider all these +motives and reasons. I ask that, without delay or opposition, you at +once admit me to the government of this archbishopric, to which his +Holiness and his Majesty call me, considering that my earnest desire +and intention is to strive to labor in the service of both Majesties, +and to promote, for yourselves and all this commonwealth, the welfare +and harmony which should prevail, and which are right." Thus spoke +Don Fray Pedro de Arce; and answer was made to him by the dean, +Don Miguel Garcetas, in behalf of the cabildo. He said that they all +fully appreciated the bishop's kindness, and that all were entirely +satisfied of his good intentions in this matter, and of his great +virtue, prudence, and learning; but that, in order that they might +proceed in this matter with all harmony, certainty, and deliberation, +it was necessary that all the members of the cabildo should assemble +(for some were not present at this meeting). The dean added that in all +their acts they would follow the rulings of the sacred canons and the +constitutions of the cathedral church, and that his Lordship might be +certain that all of them confessed themselves to be his affectionate +children, and desired to render him service; and that they entreated +him to show them the bulls and other documents that he possessed, +in order that all these might be duly fulfilled. To this the bishop +replied that the bulls were already before the cabildo, and by virtue +of them he had been admitted to the government of the archbishopric +by the death of Don Diego Vazquez Mercado; accordingly, they must +settle the matter without delay because, if they did this amicably, +they would find in him a father and protector; but if not, he would +enforce his claims by the severe measures which he could by law employ. + +The cabildo met on the twenty-ninth of January, and decided that, +after having consulted learned persons, they were of opinion that the +cabildo ought not to surrender the government; but that, on account of +the many and serious difficulties [that might arise from this], they +would yield under protest. Accordingly, they received Don Fray Pedro de +Arce on the same day as ruler of the vacant see, although the cabildo +took much umbrage at it; and from this affair originated continual +strife and dissensions. At the outset, they denied to Don Fray Pedro +the seat in the choir, the cabildo asserting that the bishop was not +competent to possess it because he was not a proprietary bishop; and +that, although he had been consecrated, it was in another diocese, and +one suffragan to that of Manila. The prudent bishop felt this slight +keenly, for they had given him this seat when he first administered +the vacant see; but finally they gave him the seat (to which he was +legally entitled), as they had done before. Don Fray Pedro de Arce +ruled with the prudence and uprightness which in him were so eminent, +which together with his virtue and piety, made him a most accomplished +prelate, and truly a father to all. In the course of his government +he made enactments very important for the conduct of the church; +in especial, he imposed the cuadrante [84] for the choir in the +cathedral of Manila with great exactness--aiding the prebends with +great readiness in their choir, the subsidy that they receive being +still so small that some of them have hardly enough for their support. + +[The rest of this chapter is mainly occupied with secular occurrences, +which we omit here because they have already been fully related in +other documents for that time--the fruitless expedition against +Jolo under Lorenzo de Olaso, shipbuilding in Cambodia attempted, +the despatch of an envoy to India to secure Portuguese coöperation +against the Dutch, the coming of the royal visitor Don Francisco de +Rojas, and the death of the governor Niño de Tavora--and the relation +of various miraculous cures and deliverances performed through the +Santo Niño (or image of Christ) in the church of Cebú. The following +paragraph states the proceedings at the meeting of the Augustinian +provincial chapter of 1632:] + +The year 1632 having arrived, the provincial chapter was convened +in the convent at Manila, on the first day of May; the president at +this session was father Fray Juan de Tapia, and the election [for +provincial] resulted, with the general consent of the entire province, +in the choice of father Fray Gerónimo de Medrano--a very courteous and +discreet religious, who governed this province well. As definitors +were chosen the fathers Fray Juan de Montemayor, Fray Francisco de +Mercado, Fray Luis Ronquillo, and Fray Juan Ramirez; and as visitors, +the fathers Fray Alonso Carbajal and Fray Antonio de Porras. They made +regulations very useful for the proper government of the province; +and as its procurator for España was appointed father Fray Diego de +Ordás, at that time prior of the convent of Santo Niño at Cebú. He +made the journey that year, and, having performed it very successfully, +returned [to the islands] in the year 1635. + + + + +CHAPTERS VII-XIV + +[These chapters are occupied with accounts of the persecutions in +Japan, and the biographies of Augustinian priests who were martyred +therein.] + + + + +CHAPTERS XV-XXXIV + +[These chapters relate the coming of Corcuera as governor, +his controversies with the bishop, and the exile of the latter; +biographical accounts of various noted Augustinian missionaries, +some of whom were martyrs in Japan; and the final incidents of the +persecution in that country, so far as Diaz could learn of them, up to +about 1715. Nearly all of this matter is either a repetition of what +we have already presented in previous volumes, or irrelevant to our +purpose; but we select occasional passages which properly belong to +the history of the islands, especially its ecclesiastical aspects. In +our VOL. XXV may be found extracts from Diaz's work regarding the +contest between Corcuera and Guerrero (chapters xv-xviii). Chapter +xix is devoted to the opinion of "a learned auditor of Manila" on the +banishment of the archbishop; the editor of Diaz, Father Tirso López, +prints this opinion, in order to reproduce all of Diaz's history, +which is his only reason for not suppressing "this conceited, most +tedious, and ill-digested document." Chapters xx and xxi are devoted +to the biographies of two Augustinian missionaries, Fray Alonso de +Mentrida and Fray Juan de Medina respectively. The former excelled +as a linguist.] + +[Pp. 353-355:] He composed a curious and ingenious grammar [arte], by +which the main difficulty in [learning] those languages was surmounted +in a short time. He also composed a copious vocabulary of the languages +of the two islands, Panay and Cebú, which are quite distinct. In the +mountain region of Ogtón a very harsh language is spoken, which they +call Halaya; and along the coast another, more polished and elegant, +which is called Hileygueina. This work [i.e., the vocabulary] cost him +much labor, and is very useful to the ministers. He left it complete, +and after his death it was published by father Fray Martín Claver. [85] +He [Fray Alonso] composed a brief catechism, accurately written, +in the Bisayan language, which is very useful for instructing those +natives in the mysteries of our holy faith; this was printed twice, +in order that there might be an abundant supply of a work so important +for the welfare of souls. He also published the ritual by which the +holy sacraments are usually administered in these islands; and this +work is deserving of esteem, since one finds therein a compilation of +what is strictly necessary for the more safe administration [of the +sacraments]. It is so highly regarded by the other religious orders +that, although two large editions of the work have been printed, +it is now necessary to issue a third, since all are trying to obtain +this book. [86] + +Father Fray Alonso de Mentrida spent many years in the provinces of +Ogtón and Panay, [87] where he gathered much fruit in the conversion +of those souls, especially in the district of Ogtón--which in those +times was, in the greater part of its mountain region, shrouded +in the darkness of error. There the devil was well entrenched in +those rugged mountains, having solidly established his kingdom and +worship among those simple natives--who, influenced more by fear +than by any other consideration, prostrated themselves before that +demon, and gave him their worship and adoration. His crafty designs +were successful among them through the agency of many priests and +priestesses (in the Bisayan idiom called babaylanes), who, being +especially assisted by that infernal spirit, concoct certain frauds +and delusions, with which they deceive the simple Bisayans. These +priests, moreover, secure much advantage from this mode of life, +since by it they make their living, and are feared and looked up to; +for most of them have a compact with the devil, by means of which +they wreak such evil as they can on those persons on whom they try +to be revenged, or whom they wish to injure because some one else +has done them harm. Against this infernal horde father Fray Alonso +de Mentrida waged continual battle, roaming through those mountains +on foot, and accompanied only by one servant, a very good Christian, +who aided him much in his work. This man died at a great age (more +than one hundred and ten years); he lived in the village of Guimbal, +of which he was a native, and his name was Vilango. They journeyed +so destitute of human aid that they carried in their pouches only +some roots, cooked, which in that country are very common, called +camotes, with a little rice, eaten cold and half-cooked. This sort of +abstinence was so continual in Father Mentrida that he ate nothing +else than the vegetables and pottages of the country, with a little +fish when he wished to appease his more pressing hunger; and it is not +known that he ate meat until, in his old age and in several attacks +of illness that he suffered, the duty of obedience compelled him to +moderate so austere a diet. In such a mode of life this apostolic +man wandered through those mountains, preaching to the infidels the +word of God, and persuading them to leave their straggling hamlets +[rancherías] and settle in some small villages, that he might more +advantageously call them together and instruct them, separating them +from their errors and blindness. With great benefit to their souls +the simple mountaineers of Ogtón received the gospel preaching, +as they all are gentle and well-inclined people; the father's only +opponents were those ministers of Satan and children of perdition, +the babaylanes, who with their lies sowed their diabolical tares +upon the grain of heaven, and easily smothered the seed that took +root in piously-inclined hearts. Those priests artfully suggested +to the natives the anger which their divatas (thus they name the +spirits to whom they give adoration) felt against them, and on +their own part uttered threats against them, menacing either their +lives or their poor property--which is a scanty grain-field of rice; +and by these shameless acts they terrorized the people, and caused +some of them to lose their solicitude for attending church. Father +Fray Alonso de Mentrida spared neither hardship nor effort to bring +back to the fold of the Church those whom these malicious ministers +had, through their crafty methods, caused to backslide; and he held +with those priests extraordinary discussions, from which, in place +of gaining good results, he obtained only their plots. With these +they tried, on several occasions, to deprive him of life by their +arts and witchcraft; but the Lord, who watched over His servant, +did not permit them to succeed in their damnable attempts, and, +for the greater humiliation of the common enemy [i.e., the devil], +held back the father from the greatest dangers. + +During the time when this apostolic minister was preaching in the +mountains of Ogtón, there were visible apparitions of the devil, +standing upon a rock and teaching superstitions and giving laws +to a great multitude of Indians, who, deceived by him, followed +him. Moreover, in those mountains are many demons, who appear to the +natives in horrible forms--as hideous savages, covered with bristles, +having very long claws, with terrifying eyes and features, who attack +and maltreat those whom they encounter. These being are called by +the Indians Banuanhon, who are equivalent to the satyrs and fauns of +ancient times. Even at this day these hideous monsters are wont to +appear to the Indians, some of whom remain in a demented condition for +months from the mere sight of them; others go away with these demons, +and are lost for a long time, and then will return in a terrified +and fainting condition, few of them failing to die soon afterward. I +would have much to tell and relate if I should stop to mention what +has occurred with such monsters, who have been seen not only in the +mountains of Ogtón and Panay, but very frequently in the province +of Taal. They are called in the Tagal language Tigbalang; and many +persons who have seen them have described to me, in the same terms, +the aspect of the monster. They say that he has a face like a cat's, +with a head that is flattened above, not round, with thick beard, and +covered with long hair; his legs are so long that, when he squats on +his buttocks, his knees stand a vara above his head; and he is so swift +in running that there is no quadruped that can be compared with him. + +[Diaz proceeds to relate several incidents connected with these +demons, and the difficulties encountered by Mentrida, caused by the +hostility of the native priests--who much resembled the "medicine-men" +of the North American Indians; and adds (p. 356): "In these holy +occupations he passed much time in that mountain wilderness, as his +companion Vilango has told me; and gradually those hearts, hard as +diamonds, were softened, and they were converted to our holy faith. He +proceeded to gather those people into villages, founding those of +Agra (with the advocacy of St. Nicholas), Baong, Santiago, Limao, +San Pedro, Taytay, and Catingpan--which remain to this very day, +and in my time preserve the memory of this apostolic man, to whom, +as they recognize, they owe the knowledge of the truth." Mentrida +remained in the missions until 1618, when he was summoned to Manila, +to become prior of the Augustinian convent there; and in 1623, he was +elected provincial. The rest of his life he was afflicted by age and +broken health; and he died at Manila, March 22, 1637.] + +[Diaz sketches the life and labors of Juan de Medina (whose history +of his order in Filipinas we publish in VOLS. XXIII and XXIV of this +series), giving the following summary of his achievements: "It is +not easy to relate in full the great labors of this religious in the +conversion of the Indians in the province of Ogtón, when they all, +on account of the coming of the Dutch the first time to the point +of Iloilo, took refuge in the mountains, forsaking their villages, +so that it was difficult for several years to bring them back to a +sedentary life. During that time, this religious traveled, carrying +little more than his staff, through all the mountains of Ogtón, +preaching to the people that they might be converted, and maintaining +a continual battle with the devil--who had, through the agency of his +ministers the babaylanes, persuaded the people that the Spaniards could +not deliver them from the Dutch. During that time he suffered many +dangers through the plots of those infernal ministers, who at various +times tried to take his life--divine Providence delivering him from +them all, for the greater gain of those Christian communities. Amid +those dangers did this religious convert most of the peoples in +Ogtón, Xaro, Baong, and Pasig. In all places where this minister +went, he left an especial reputation for his virtue and apostolic +teaching. He visited some nine times the entire province of Bisayas, +and usually held the office of vicar-provincial--obedience obliging +him to accept it, on account of the great importance of his direction +for the greater glory of the order." After twenty years spent in these +labors, he obtained permission (1631) to go to Spain, and miraculously +escaped from the wreck of his ship in the very port of Cavite. He then +returned to the Visayan missions, but again set out for Spain in 1635; +while crossing the Pacific, he was carried away by disease. Chapters +xxii-xxv are devoted to the persecutions and martyrdoms of Christians +in Japan; chapter xxvi treats mainly of the controversy within the +Augustinian order regarding the "alternation" of offices between the +friars sent from Spain and those who had taken the habit in the Indias +(already related in our VOL. XXVIII). The following paragraphs are +of interest here.] + +[Pp. 386-388:] After the father provincial Fray Juan Ramirez (who +was one of the best superiors of that time) had governed this +province very successfully and judiciously, the time arrived for +the provincial chapter; it was held at the convent of San Pablo in +Manila, on the twenty-fourth of the month of April, 1638. Father Fray +Jerónimo Cornuetano, the general of the entire order, presided over +the meeting; and it resulted in the election, by unanimous consent, +of father Fray Martín Errasti, a religious who was much endeared to +all the rest by his many fine qualities. The definitors elected were +fathers Fray Juan de Trexo, Fray Jerónimo Venasque, Fray Francisco +de Madrid, and Fray Francisco de Villalón; and the visitors, father +Fray Juan de Boan and Fray Jerónimo de Paredes--all being religious +of recognized abilities, and men to whose care the interests of +this province could be confided. It was decided to send to España a +procurator to conduct a party of religious to this province, although +the choice of one was not effected until the following year; this fell +upon father Fray Pedro de Quesada, prior of the convent of Bulacán, +who had recently arrived, driven back by stress of weather, from [a +voyage to] the kingdom of Japón--whither he went with some religious +of St. Dominic; but stormy head-winds obliged them to return to Manila, +divine Providence keeping them in reserve for another ministry. + +The Moro pirates of Mindanao and Joló did not cease to infest the +Pintados Islands every year with their armed fleets--capturing +the natives, burning the villages, plundering the churches of the +consecrated vessels, and then destroying those temples by fire. So +far had gone the boldness of Corralat--who came to those islands, +subjected to his anger, without the Spaniards displaying any purpose +to defend them, or going out to hinder those injuries--that he +soon attributed this negligence to cowardice, and to the fear of +him which the Spaniards felt. This so increased his boldness that +his little fleets were daring enough to approach even the bay of +Manila. They experienced no resistance, save only in the province of +Caraga--[whose natives are] a warlike people--and this was due to +the valor of its alcalde-mayor, Captain Don Francisco de Atienza y +Bañes, a native of Toledo; and to the great courage of a discalced +Augustinian religious named Fray Agustín de San Pedro, who was very +celebrated in those times, and feared by the pirates, [who was known] +by the name of "Father Captain" [Padre Capitán]. [88] The exploits +of this religious in defending the villages where he was a minister +of religious instruction, and in going out to find the enemy in their +own country, would be material for many chapters of history. He was a +religious of great virtue, and of zeal for the welfare of souls; and, +besides this, God had given him extraordinary courage, and a genius +worthy of Scipio and Hannibal. Accordingly, seeing that those who ought +to conduct military operations remained with folded hands, without +going out to the defense of those harassed peoples, he determined +to do so himself. On one occasion he went out from Butuan, where +he was prior, with some Spanish soldiers, and men whom he gathered +in Caraga; and with them he faced and put to flight an armed fleet +of Corralat. When Don Francisco de Atienza saw what aid he had in +the valor and experience of father Fray Agustín, the two laid their +plans to perform an exploit that should do them credit; and, manning +some caracoas with the best soldiers from the presidio of Tanda, both +Spaniards and Caragas, and providing two boats which could be taken +to pieces and carried overland in sections, and afterward be again +put together and framed, Don Francisco, accompanied by father Fray +Agustín, took the route to the lake of Malanao, [89] which was under +the jurisdiction of Corralat. This lake is in the island of Mindanao, +opposite the island of Bohol; from north to south it is eight leguas +long, and it is four leguas wide. Its shores are thickly settled by +several tribes, some Mahometan and others heathen (although all of +them are vassals of Corralat); but they are people who are very poor +in all except foodstuffs, of which they have a great abundance. Don +Francisco de Atienza and father Fray Agustín de San Pedro arrived at +this lake; and, as the water at its entrance was very low and there +were many miry places, they took the four [sic] vessels to pieces and +placed them on the lake, where they again [put them together and] +manned them. By this means the Spaniards went through that region, +carrying on hostilities among those tribes, and leaving them subjected +to the crown of España--although this submission did not last long, for +Corralat again reduced them, because the Spaniards had not left behind +a fortified post. This conquest was not one of much profit; but it +was enough to leave the Moros warned for some time by this punishment. + +[Chapters xxvii and xxviii are occupied with the expedition of +Corcuera against Joló, already described in our VOL. XXVIII. Chapters +xxix-xxxiv are devoted almost entirely to the Chinese insurrection +in Manila and its environs in 1639, and to an historical account of +former disturbances caused by them in the islands, from the time of +the pirate Limahon down. A brief paragraph mentions the death of +the provincial of the Augustinians, and his temporary successor: +"In the middle of the year 1639 occurred the death of the father +provincial Fray Martín de Herrasti, a loss which was keenly felt +by all the province on account of his many endowments and lovable +qualities. He was a native of Guipúzcoa, and a son of the convent at +Burgos. Having come to this province in the year 1617, he was assigned, +by his obedience, to the ministry in Pampanga, where he remained, an +excellent missionary, for a period of twenty years--until the province, +satisfied as to his virtue and discretion, chose to employ so worthy +a minister to govern it, and elected him provincial, although it +enjoyed but little of the direction of so excellent a superior. The +government of the province was assumed by father Fray Juan Ramírez, +as the most recent past provincial; and thus was somewhat lessened +the general grief caused by the loss of the deceased provincial."] + + + + + + + +RELATION OF THE FILIPINAS ISLANDS + +By a religious who lived there for eighteen years [90] + + +The islands called Filipinas, because of having been conquered during +the reign of Felipe II, were discovered in the year 1521, by Hernando +Magallanes, a famous Portuguese, who gave his name to the strait. That +great pilot, after having forever perpetuated his name by a navigation +so new and so difficult, landed on one of the Filipinas Islands--a +very small one, named Matan--where he was treacherously killed by +the Indians. Ruy Lopez de Villalobos sighted the islands again after +him in the year 1539. [91] Finally they were pacified in the year +1571 by the adelantado Miguel Lopez de Legaspi. It is a cause for +surprise that the Portuguese, who had discovered the Malucas, China, +and Japon, some years before, and had made their homes there, did +not know anything about those islands until long afterward, although +they are, as it were, the very center and middle part of their other +discoveries. They knew well the island of Borneo, which is the last of +those islands toward the south, but they had never stopped there while +en route to the Malucas--urged, perhaps, by their too great greed for +the spices and drugs which are produced so abundantly in those islands. + +The geographies say that there are eleven thousand islands in that +great archipelago of which the Filipinas are a part, and that they are +adjacent to Asia as are the Canaries and the Terceras to Africa. They +cross into the torrid zone and extend along the coasts of China and +India. South of them lie the Malucas, and on their northern coast, +Japon. More than forty of them are subject to the king of España, +the largest and most important being Manila and Mindanao. Manila is +the capital of all the others, the residence of the governor and the +archbishop, and the seat of the royal Audiencia. Those two islands are +each six hundred miles in circuit; they are full of mountains, have +rivers and dense forests, and lie in thirteen and one-half degrees +north latitude. The other islands are not so large, some being one +hundred miles in circuit, some fifty, and some even less. Almost all +of them are inhabited by Indians, and those which are not are used by +the Indians for their crops, and for the chase of deer and wild boars, +and for the gathering of wax, with which the islands most abound. + +The islands not yet under the dominion of the king of España have +their own kings, who are Mahometans. The island of Borneo, three +times greater than the whole of Italia, is the largest of all the +islands. Those subject to the king of España are Manila, Zebu, Oton, +Mindanao, Bohol, Leite, Samar, Mindoro, Marinduque, the island of +Negros, the island of Fuegos, Calamianes, Masbat, Jolo, Taquima, +Capul, La Paragua, the island of Tablas, Verde Island, Burias, +Tiago, Maripipe, Panama, Panaon, Sibuian, Luban, Bantajan, Panglao, +Siquior, Catanduan, Imaras, Tagapolo, Banton, Romblon, Similara, +Cuio, Cagaianes, Marivelez, Poro, Babuianes, the island of Cabras +(which is distant from the others), and other smaller ones. + +In the islands subject to the king of España, every married man pays +ten reals of tribute, and he who is unmarried five. Nearly all of them +have received the gospel, and hence there are few heathen. However, +in the islands of Mindanao, Taquima, and Jolo, conquered but recently, +most of the people are Moros or heathen; but it is hoped that the +zeal of the missionaries will convert them very soon to Jesus Christ. + +Before the conquest of those islands by the Spaniards, the natives of +the country were subject to the chiefs among them, who were recognized +as nobles, and all the others obeyed them. Those chiefs possessed a +great amount of gold, and slaves in proportion to their nobility. I +knew two chiefs, one in Bohol, and the other at Dapitan, a village +of Mindanao, who had more than one hundred slaves apiece. They are +not foreign slaves, as those of Angola who are in Europa, but of the +same nation. It was a lamentable thing to see with what violence and +for how little a thing, these chiefs made slaves. For, however small a +sum one owed to another, the interest, for lack of payment, amounted to +so great a sum that it was impossible to pay it; and consequently, the +person of the debtor being pledged for the debt, he became the slave of +his creditor, together with all his posterity. They also made slaves, +with unusual tyranny and cruelty, for crimes of slight importance, +such as not keeping silent at the graves of the dead, and for passing +in front of the chief's wife when she was in her bath. Those captured +in war were also all made slaves. Now with baptism, all those acts +of violence and tyranny have been suppressed--although there still +remains one very peculiar custom among them, which does not follow +that general rule, namely, Partus sequitur ventrem; [92] for there are +some who are wholly slaves, and others who are only half slaves. The +former are those born of a slave father and mother; the others who +are born of a slave father and a free mother, or vice versa. In some +villages it is the custom that, if the father is slave and the mother +free, one of the children is free and the other slave. The privilege +of those half slaves is that if they pay a certain sum of money to +their master, they may oblige him to grant them their liberty--an +advantage that is not possessed by those who are wholly slaves. + +All the religion of those Indians is founded on tradition, and on a +custom introduced by the devil himself, who formerly spoke to them +by the mouth of their idols and of their priests. That tradition is +preserved by the songs that they learn by heart in their childhood, +by hearing them sung in their sailing, in their work, in their +amusements, and in their festivals, and, better yet, when they bewail +their dead. In those barbarous songs, they recount the fabulous +genealogies and deeds of their gods, of whom they have one who is +chief and head of all the others. The Tagáls call that god Bathala mei +Capal, which signifies "God the Creator." The Bisayans call him Laon, +which signifies "Time." They are not far from our belief on the point +of the creation of the world. They believe in a first man, the flood, +and paradise, and the punishments of the future life. + +They say that the first man and the first woman came out of a reed +stalk which burst in Sumatra, and that there were some quarrels between +them at their marriage. They believed that when the soul left the body, +it went to an island, where the trees, birds, waters, and all other +things were black; that it passed thence to another island, where all +things were of different colors; and finally that it arrived at one, +where everything was white. They recognized invisible spirits, another +life, and devils hostile to men, of whom they had great fear. Their +chief idolatry was in adoring and regarding as gods those of their +ancestors who were most remarkable for their courage, or for their +intelligence. Such they called humalagar, or, as is said in Latin, +manes. Each one, as far as possible, ascribed divinity to his father +at death. The old men even died with that conceit, and that is why +they chose a remarkable place--as did one in the island of Leite, who +had himself placed on the seashore, so that those who went sailing +should recognize him as a god, and commend themselves to him. They +also worshiped animals and birds. They regarded the rainbow as a +sort of divinity. The Tagáls worshiped a totally blue bird, of the +size of a thrush, which they called bathala, which was a name of +the divinity. They worshiped the raven, which they called meilupa, +meaning "the master of the earth." They had a great veneration for +the crocodile. [When] they saw it in the water, they called it nono, +or "grandfather." They offered to it prayers regularly, with great +devotion, and offerings of what they carried in their boats, in +order that it might not harm them. There was no old tree of which +they did not make a god, and it was a sacrilege to cut it. I have +seen a very large one called nonog, [93] in the island of Samar, +which a religious ordered to be felled, in order to destroy all those +superstitions. He was unable to find an Indian who would undertake +it for him; and it was necessary for some Spaniards to go to fell +it. They also worshiped the stones, rocks, reefs, and promontories +of land which jut into the sea; and made offerings to these of rice, +fish, and other like things, or fired their arrows at them in passing. + +Between La Caldera and the river in the island of Mindanao, a great +point of land runs into the sea, which makes the coast dangerous and +very high. The sea beats violently against that cape, which is very +difficult to double. The Indians in passing offered it their arrows as +a sacrifice, praying it to allow them to pass. They shot them with so +great force that they made them enter the rock, and hence it is called +the Punta de Flechas. One day the Spaniards burned a number of those +arrows to show their hatred of so vain a superstition; and in less than +one year more than four thousand were found there. When Don Sebastian +Hurtado de Corcuera conquered the island of Mindanao three years ago, +[94] he ordered that that point be called no more Punta de Flechas, +but San Sebastian. They had innumerable other superstitions. If they +saw a snake or a lizard, or if they heard a bird that they called +corocoro [95] sneeze or sing, they took it as a bad sign, and did +not go farther. They had no remarkable temples, and no festivals of +days of public sacrifices; but each one made his offerings to the +humalagar or divata (which was the name of their god) in private, +according to their purpose or need. Although they had no temples, +they had men and women who acted as priests, who were called catolonan +by some and babailan by others. Those priests were most inclined to +allow themselves to be deceived by the devil, and to deceive the +people afterward by a thousand tricks and inventions--chiefly at +the time of their sicknesses, when they are depressed, lose courage, +and crave a prompt remedy; and give all their possessions to him who +promises it to them. + +There are some priests who have special communication with the +devil. He speaks to them through the mouths of their little idols, +and makes them believe that these are the voices of their ancestors, +whom they worship. Sometimes the devil passes into the bodies of their +sacrificers, and, during the short time of the sacrifice, he makes +them say and do things that fill the bystanders with fear. They take +that order of sacrificers from among their friends or their relatives, +who wish to learn the mystery of it from them. Their blindness causes +them to esteem that rank greatly, for besides the reputation and +respect that that employment brings them, they also receive large +offerings. All who have been present at the sacrifice make them gifts, +one cotton, one gold, and one a fowl. The sacrifice takes place in +their houses. The victim is now a hog, now a fowl, now some fish or +rice; and the sacrifice is differently named according to the various +victims. It is performed by the sacrificer stabbing the victim amid +certain ceremonies, which he performs to a cadence marked by a drum +or a bell. That is the time in which the devil takes possession of +them. He causes them to make innumerable contortions and grimaces, +after the end of which they tell what they believe they have seen +or heard. + +As for their persons, those people are well built, have handsome +features, and are light-complexioned. They are clad in a garment +that falls to the ankles, which is made of striped cotton of various +colors. When in mourning, they wear white; however, that mode of dress +is not so general. Those called Pintados, and those of the island of +Mindanao, wear short white, yellow, or red tunics, which hang to the +knees, bound in by a girdle one vara wide and two and one-half brazas +long; this is, as a general rule, white or red, and always falls +to the knees. They wear neither stockings nor shoes; and instead +of a hat they use a bit of cloth, which they wind twice or thrice +around the head. Their whole adornment consists in having very rich +and beautiful necklaces, earrings, and gold rings or bracelets. They +wear those bracelets above the ankle; some wear these of ivory, and +others of brass. They also have little round plates three fingers +in diameter, which they pass through a hole that they make in the +ear. In some of those islands, the men formerly marked all the body +with figures, whence comes the Spanish name "Pintados" ["pictured," +i.e., tattooed]. That operation was performed in the flower of +their age, and at the period when they had most strength to suffer +that torture. They had themselves adorned in that way after they had +performed some illustrious deed. The masters of that art first trace on +their bodies the design of the picture, which they next follow up with +pricks from very sharp points, and throw on the blood which comes out +a powder which never fades away. The whole of the body is not pricked +at once, but bit by bit; and formerly, in order that one might have +the right of making it for each part, it was necessary to perform an +illustrious deed, and to show new prowess. Those pictures are pretty, +and well proportioned to the portions of the body on which they are +made; and, although they are of an ashen color, they are nevertheless +agreeable to the sight. The children are not tattooed at all. The +women do not bear the marks of that adornment except on one hand and +on some part of the other. In regard to their teeth, they imitate +the men in everything. They file them from their earliest childhood; +some making them even in this way, others filing them into points, +thus giving them the appearance of a saw. They cover the teeth with +a black, glossy polish, or one that is flame-colored; and thus their +teeth become black, or as red as vermilion. In the upper row, they +make a little covering which they fill with gold, which shows off to +advantage on the black or red background of that polish. + +The women as well as the men are continually in the water, and they +also swim like fish. They need no bridge to get over rivers. They bathe +at all times of the day, as much for pleasure as for cleanliness. Women +who have but recently given birth cannot be prevented from bathing, +and bathe in the waters of the coldest springs. As soon as the child +has issued from its mother's womb, it is placed in the water; and +on taking it from the bath its head is rubbed with ajonjoli [i.e., +sesame] oil mixed with civet. They do that also on other occasions, +and to show politeness, especially the women and little boys. They +bathe also during their sicknesses, and have for that purpose springs +of hot water, especially at the shore of Laguna de Bay, which is in +the island of Manila. [96] + +There is no one language that is general for all the islands, +but each district has a special one. True, they have some relation +between one another, such as exists between the Lombard, Sicilian, +and Tuscan. There are six dialects in the island of Manila, and +two in the island of Oton; while there are some languages which +are spoken in several islands. The most general are the Tagál and +Bisayan. The latter is very rude, but the former is very polished, +and most remarkable. Thus a religious, who was well versed in those +islands, was in the habit of saying that the Tagál language had +the advantages of the four chief languages of the world: that it +was mysterious, like Hebrew; that it had the articles of the Greek, +both for appellatives and for proper names; that it had elegance and +abundance, like the Latin; and that it was not less suitable than +the Italian for compliments and business. [97] They have only three +vowels, but these serve as five. They have only a dozen consonants, +which they express differently by placing a little dot above or below, +as can be seen in the following figure. + + + Marginal note: "The consonants not marked with any point are + pronounced with 'a;' if they have a point above, they are + pronounced with 'e,' or 'i;' if the point is below, they + are pronounced with 'o' or 'u.'" + + +They have learned to write from us [98] by making their lines from +left to right, instead of their former way of writing from top to +bottom. Reeds or palm-leaves serve them as paper, and the point of +an iron style is used instead of a pen. They use their writing only +to letters from one to another, for they have no histories or books +of any learning. Our religious have printed books in the languages of +the islands, concerning the matters of our religion. In the Malucas, +they have a very pretty method of writing to their friends. They +collect flowers of various colors, and make a bouquet of them; and +he who receives the bouquet understands, on beholding the varieties +of flowers and their colors, as if they were so many different +characters, the thoughts of his friend. They have not sufficient +capacity to apply themselves to learning, and they content themselves +with being good carpenters, and with working gold and iron well. They +have been employed during these last few years in making silk and +cotton stockings; in writing and reading our characters; in singing +and dancing; and in playing the flute, the guitar, and the harp. The +strings used for those last instruments are made from twisted silk, +and produce as agreeable a sound as ours, although quite different in +quality. They formerly had an instrument called cutiape, which some +of them still use. It bears a close resemblance to a hurdy-gurdy, +and has four copper cords. They play it so cleverly, that they make +it express whatever they wish; and it is asserted as a truth that +they speak, and tell one another whatever they wish, by means of that +instrument, a special skill in those of that nation. + +Most of those islanders have only one wife, but it is not true that +there are not some places in the country where they have several, +especially in the island of Mindanao. It may be said that the husbands +buy their wives there, since they generally make some present to +their parents according to their rank: that of dato, for instance, +which signifies "a man of rank;" of tinaua, which signifies "free;" +or oripuen, which signifies "a slave." The women in the islands +of the Pintados are called binocot, or "woman who is in the room;" +for bocot signifies "a room," and the women go outside but rarely, +and even are carried then on the shoulders of their slaves. I have +seen one woman of Dapitan, a settlement of the island of Mindanao, so +delicate and so fine, that she always had herself carried to church +on the shoulders of her slaves whom she best liked. It is a mark of +politeness among those women always to keep the right hand in front +of the mouth when they talk to a man. [99] + +Those people live in houses thatched with straw, with the leaves of +trees, or with large reeds which, divided into two, serve them as a +tiling. There is but little furniture to be seen in their houses. But +rarely are chairs seen there, for they always sit on the ground, or +on carpets made from reeds. They have neither beds nor mattresses, as +their reed mats serve as both. They eat on the ground or on very small +low tables, but the tables are used only among the chiefs. Banana +leaves, which are one braza long and one-half braza wide, serve +them as napkins. Their employment consists of agriculture, the very +abundant fishing along their coasts and in their rivers, and hunting +wild boars and deer with dog and spear--an employment to which their +agility and their skill renders them very suitable. They also go to +gather honey and wax in the mountains or in the trees, where nature +has taught the bees to make both those substances. + +The arms of some are spears, of others arrows; the campilan, which is a +large cutlass; the kris, or poniard; the zompites or blow-guns, through +which they blow little poisoned arrows; and bacacaies, or little reeds +hardened by fire at the end. To defend their grain from animals and +from men who could harm it, they scatter caltrops, which the old men +call tribulos, [100] made so that one of the four points of which they +are composed is always up, and those who pass there get caught without +perceiving the traps. But now the Spaniards have taught them how to +use firearms, and they get along very well--especially a nation called +the Pampangos, many of whom are enrolled in the Spanish troops. These +men serve with great fidelity, and well second the courage of which +the Spaniards set them an example in their combats by sea and land. + +They are very fertile, and I have seen but few married people without +children. When these are born, they name them according to the +incidents that happen at the time of their birth. One will be called +Maglente, because of the thunder that sounded at the time of his birth; +for lente signifies a clap of thunder. Another will be named Gubaton, +because the foes appeared on the coast at that same time; for gubat +signifies enemy. They esteem nobility; and I have known a woman +called Vray--that is to say, "fine gold"--who had been given that +name because of the nobility of her lineage. In some of the islands +they were accustomed to put the head of a new-born child between two +boards, and thus pressed it so that it would not be round, but long; +and they also flattened the forehead, in their belief that it was a +mark of beauty to have it thus. [101] At the birth of a child to one +among them who is of the highest rank, they hold a festival of a week, +during which very joyful songs are sung by the women. + +They lose courage when they are sick. They do not use either bleeding +or other remedies, except certain medicinal herbs, of which there is +abundance in these islands. They use the cupping-glass; but it is not +made of glass, for there is no glass in that country, but of small +shells or the small horns of deer. They drink the liquor of cocoanuts +after it has been kept some time in the evening damp; and that liquor +is so healthful that their continual use of it keeps them from gravel, +a disease of which the name is unknown among those peoples. + +When anyone dies, the music of the mourning and lamentation begins +immediately. Some weep because they are truly touched by their loss; +others are hired by the day to weep. Women are usually chosen, as they +are most apt for that music. They wash the body of the deceased to that +sad cadence, and perfume it with storax, and other perfumes which are +used among them. After bewailing the body for three days, they bury +it. They do not place it in the earth, but in coffins of very hard +and incorruptible wood, which they kept in their houses. The boards of +the coffins are so well joined that the air cannot enter. They placed +a piece of gold in the mouths of some, and adorned their coffins with +precious gems. Moreover they were careful to carry all sorts of food +to their grave, and to leave it there as if it were to be used by the +deceased. Some they would not allow to go alone, and it was necessary +to give them some male and female slaves to keep them company. They +killed the latter after having given them a fine repast, so that they +might go with the deceased. With one of their chiefs of the country +they once encased a galley equipped with rowers, so that they could +serve him in the other world. The most usual place of burial was the +house of the deceased, in the lowest story, where they dug a hole to +place the coffin. Sometimes the burial was in the open field; and in +such case great fires were made below the house, and sentinels were +posted there, for fear lest the deceased should come to take away +those who were yet alive. The tears and lamentations were finished +with the burial; but the feasts and orgies lasted a greater or less +time, according to the station of the deceased. The Tagáls wore black +as a sign of mourning; the Bisayans wore white, and shaved the head +and eyebrows. When a person of rank happened to die, silence was +observed throughout the village, until that the interdict should have +been removed--which lasted a greater or less time, according to the +quality of the deceased. During that time not the least noise could +be made. But the mourning of those who had been killed in war or by +treachery lasted a longer time, and did not end until their children +and relations had killed many others--not only those who were known +as enemies, but even strangers or unknown men; for their fury having +thus been assuaged, they thought that they could put an end to their +mourning, and solemnize it by great festivities and prolonged feasting. + +They are for the most part good sailors--I mean for the navigation +among the islands; for, as they do not use the compass, they do not +get along so well on the open sea. They use various kinds of craft, +which are propelled by sail and oar. The largest craft of the second +class are called caracoas. Although these are not very large, they do +not hesitate to put one hundred Indians in them; for there are three +banks of rowers on each side. They make use of those craft for trading +among those islands; and they lade them with dried fish, wine, salt, +wax, cotton, cocoanuts, and other like merchandise. + +They are cowards naturally, and more apt to make an ambuscade than +to face their enemies. Upon that is chiefly founded their submission +to the Spaniards, for they do not serve them out of affection. + +They readily received our religion. Their meager intelligence does +not permit them to sound the depths of its mysteries. They also have +little care in the fulfilment of their duties to the Christianity which +they have adopted; and it is necessary to constrain them by fear of +punishment, and to govern them like schoolchildren. Intoxication and +usury are the two vices to which they are most addicted. The piety +and care of our religious have not as yet been able to make them lose +those habits altogether. + +The climate of Manila and most of the other Filipinas Islands is very +warm. The difference between the seasons is not perceived, for the heat +is equally great all the year. The rains commence at the end of the +month of May and last for three or four months without interruption; +but beyond that time it rains but rarely. In the months of October, +November, and December, the country is subject to hurricanes, which +the natives of the country call vaguios. They are furious winds which +make the entire round of the compass in twenty-four hours, commencing +at the north. They break the palm-trees, uproot the largest trees, +overthrow the houses, and sometimes carry persons into the air; +and some have been seen which have hurled vessels a musket-shot inland. + +At the extremity of the island of Manila, near the Embocadero, where +the vessels en route from Nueva España enter, there is a volcano or +mountain whence often issue flames, and always smoke. [102] In those +islands there is neither grain, wine, nor olive-oil, nor one of the +fruits which we have in Europa, except the oranges, of which I shall +speak later. Rice grows there in great abundance, and serves instead +of bread. They have two kinds of it. One kind is sown in places always +under water, and the other on the mountains, where it is moistened +only by the water from the sky. Their drink also is made from rice, +by soaking it in water; or it is taken from palm-trees, or cocoanuts, +or from another variety of small palm called nipa. They keep those +liquors in large crocks, and draw from them only on holidays and +days of rejoicing. Those liquors mount to the head and intoxicate, +as much as does the wine of Europa. + +The horses and cows in those islands have been carried thither from +Mexico and China, for there were none there formerly. The flesh of +swine is their most usual food, and there is a great abundance of it; +it is very healthful and savory. There are also innumerable fowl, +deer, wild boars, goats, and civet-cats; also plenty of beans, +cotton, strawberries, and even cinnamon--which is found only in +the island of Mindanao, and which does not begin to be as good as +that of Ceilan. They have no silver mines in those islands, and the +little silver seen there has been carried from Mexico, in return +for the merchandise exported there annually. There are gold mines +in the island of Manila, and on the river of Butuan in the island of +Mindanao. There is truly not sufficient to satisfy the desires of the +Spaniards; but the little that there is of it sufficed the Indians, +who value it only for the little use that they make of it, since it +does not enter at all into trade. There is a quantity of honey and +wax in their mountains; and since the Spanish have lived there they +have built many sugar mills; and sugar is so common there that one may +buy twenty-five libras of sixteen onzas apiece for one teston. They +have three varieties of fruit that are most common: bananas, santors, +and birinbines. [103] There are fifteen or sixteen kinds of bananas, +some of them are sweet, but that sweetness has an admixture of bitter +in others. Some of them smell good, but all of those varieties are +very agreeable to the taste. I know of no fruit in Europa to which +to compare them, unless it be the musas which grow in Sicilia. The +birinbines and santors are eaten preserved more often than in any +other way, because of their tartness; when prepared in preserves, +they taste like plums. If they are allowed to ripen on the tree, +they smell like quinces, although they have no other resemblance +to quinces at all. Those islands have many other trees which grow +wild. Their mountains furnish them with roots, from which they draw +their most usual nourishment; these are called pugaian and corot. [104] +They have other roots which they cultivate, such as the apari, the +ubi, the laquei, and others which they call camotes, which are the +potatoes [105] of España. The Spaniards use the last named, as also +do the Indians. + +But the most useful tree of all is the palm--not that which bears +the date, for they do not have that species, but those which bear +cocoanuts, of the size of an orange. Those nuts are filled with a very +sweet liquor, which is very good to drink. They make wine, vinegar, +and honey of it; and when that fruit becomes dry as it ripens, that +liquor changes into white meat harder than an almond. It is from +that meat that oil is extracted and a milk resembling that extracted +from almonds. The cocoanut has two coverings. The first, which is +less hard, is used for tinder when dried; also for the rigging and +smaller cordage of the ships, or as tow for calking them. The other +covering is harder, and is used for drinking vessels, or as dishes +in which to prepare their food. The palm-leaves are the tiles with +which their houses are thatched. The trunks of the same trees are +used to support the houses, and in making the pillars. They have one +other tree which is no less useful to them, for it serves them as a +perpetual spring, and furnishes water to an entire village--which, +being located on a very high and dry site, has no other water than +what they get from that tree by making incisions in its trunk, and +in its largest branches; for a clear sweet water flows out of it. The +trees of those islands are always green, and there are only two species +that shed their leaves, one called batelan, [106] and the other dabdas. + +The reeds [i.e., bamboos] of those islands have the following +peculiarity, namely, that they are as much as three palmos +in circumference and eight brazas in length. They are used as +the materials out of which to build a whole house. The pillars, +the lintels, the stairs, the floors, and the walls are made from +them. They are used as rafters for the roof, and split into several +parts, as tiles for covering the roof. They have no other saucepans in +which to cook their food than those reeds, and no other wood to burn; +for the trees serve them as material with which to build their little +boats--or rather, rafts--with which they carry for traffic their rice, +cocoanuts, and abacá, the hemp of that country. + +Those islands have a great abundance of various kinds of oranges, +peculiar to those countries for their good taste. I have seen them so +large that they were four palmos in circumference. Some were red as +scarlet inside, and very sweet. There are some which contain another +little orange in the place of the seeds; and these are called on that +account "oranges which have children." [107] + +I will place in the list of vegetables a sort of leaf which serves +them for nourishment, or rather for refreshment. It is used very +commonly among the Indians, both Christians and Mahometans, and even +among the Spaniards. A mixture is made of it which is called mamuen, +into which three things enter: one is this leaf, which is called buio, +which is smooth, and resembles in color and size a large ivy leaf, +but it is not so thick. It smells very good, and is aromatic. It is +planted under some dry tree, on which it climbs. The other fruit that +enters into that mixture is called bonga, and it is as large as an +olive. Lastly, they mix in a small quantity of quicklime. A little +cornucopia is made of the leaf, the bonga and lime are placed inside, +and it is all chewed together. That mixture colors the saliva as red +as blood, and the lips the most beautiful vermilion ever seen. It +preserves the teeth, strengthens the stomach, and produces a very +good breath. Eighty of those leaves can be bought at Manila for one +real. Nevertheless, so great a quantity is consumed that it has been +ascertained that it was sold in one year to the amount of ninety +thousand reals, of seven and one-half sols apiece. + +There are many snakes in those islands, which are very dangerous; +some of them, when they have young, attack people. [108] The bite of +those called omodro is very dangerous, and those who are bitten by +it do not live one-half day. It is from that effect that it derives +its name, for odro signifies one-half day. There is another very +large snake called saua. I have killed one of that species which was +two and one-half brazas long. The skin of another, which measured +thirty-two [Spanish] feet in length, was brought to our residence +at Manila. The sauas hang to the branches of trees along the roads, +whence they dart down upon people, or deer, or on any other prey. They +wind themselves three or four times around the body, and after having +broken the creature's bones devour it. But God has provided a number +of herbs in those islands which are used as antidotes to all kinds of +poisons. Roots and herbs are found in the mountains, which are so many +specific remedies against snake-bites; the chief ones are manongal, +manambo, logab, boroctongon, maglingab, ordag, balucas, bonas, bahay, +igluhat, dalogdogan, mantala. + +There are also animals in those islands of which I ought to give +a description. The civet-cat is found in the mountains. Its skin +resembles that of a tiger, and it is no less savage than the tiger, +although much smaller. It is captured and bound, and, after its civet +is obtained, which is contained in a little pouch under its tail, +it is set at liberty to be caught once more. The crocodiles, of which +their rivers are full, are so huge that when their jaws are open, a +man of the largest size could stand upright between the two jaws. The +crocodile is quite covered with scales; has scarcely any tongue; and +its teeth are set closely together, and are very sharp, and arranged +in several rows. The teeth of the middle lower row fit into holes +or breaks in the others which correspond to them in the upper jaw; +and consequently, when it seizes its prey, there is no force that +can make it let go. It lays a great number of eggs. In the water +it is furious, and attacks boats. It is not so greatly feared when +ashore--where it goes sometimes to seize some prey, or to sun itself. + +The woman-fish [109] is so called because its face and breast are +quite like those of women, whom it also resembles in its manner of +copulation with the male. That fish is as large as a calf, and its +flesh, of which I have eaten, tastes like beef. It is caught with lines +as thick around as the finger, and when the line becomes fast within +[its mouth] it is killed by javelin-thrusts. Its bones and teeth have +great virtue against all sorts of dysentery, especially against bloody +discharges. Some have tried to assert that those fish were the sirens +of the sea, so celebrated among the poets; but they have nothing of +the beauty of face and of the voice that is attributed to sirens. + +I will end [this account], finally by a description of the tabon, an +ashen-colored bird as large as a hen, which lays eggs three times as +large as those of hens, but which lays them in a peculiar manner. It +chooses desert islands and those full of sand, where it first makes +a hole one or one and one-half brazas deep; and after having laid its +eggs, it covers them over with sand. The chicks break the shell, and +gradually turn up the sand that covers them with their feet. If any +of those chicks is so unfortunate as to break the egg at the lower +end, it does not succeed so well, and dies for lack of strength to +overturn the sand. Sometimes one hundred and fifty of the eggs are +found in the same hole. I have eaten those eggs often when I have +had occasion to stop at those islands during my voyages. + +There is cinnamon in the island of Mindanao; and pepper at Patani, +and at Champan, a country lying on the mainland of China. + +The political government of those islands is the same as that of other +provinces subject to the crown of Castilla. The governor resides at +Manila, and is president of the Audiencia; while, as captain-general, +he has charge of all the posts of peace and war, as well as of the +encomiendas of one or two thousand Indians [each], who pay their +encomendero the tribute that the other Indians pay to the king. But the +encomendero who has been appointed by the captain-general is obliged +to get the confirmation of his grant from Madrid within three years. + +The governor establishes the corregidors and alcaldes-mayor, or +governors of the provinces into which these islands are divided. He +appoints the captains and the admirals of the fleets which sail to +Acapulco and Terrenate annually. He takes cognizance of civil affairs, +on which the royal Audiencia pronounces the decisions or decrees. That +Audiencia is composed of a president (who is always the governor), four +oidores or auditors, and one procurator-fiscal. There are four cities +in the Filipinas--Manila, Zebu, [Nueva] Caçares, and Nueba Segovia; +and one town, called Arevalo. There is a garrison at Manila and at +Cabite, which is the port where the warships enter, six miles from +Manila. There are also garrisons at Zebu, Otong, Carouga, Lanbuangang +[sc. Zamboanga], Jolo, Nueva Segobia, the island of Hermosa, and +the Malucas. All those ports are fortified, and have their redoubts +mounted with artillery. Whatever is necessary for those garrisons is +sent from Manila. It would be a very difficult task to mention the +names of all the different peoples among the Indians, and in those +islands, who are subject to the king of España. There are fully three +hundred thousand families, who might count one million souls. + +The archbishop of Manila has three suffragans, those of Zebu, +[Nueva] Caçares, and Nueva Segovia. They have no other income than +what the king gives them; that of the archbishop is three thousand +ducados, while each of his suffragans receives one thousand five +hundred. The city of Manila is small, but it is beautiful and well +fortified. Its houses are all built of stone, and are spacious, +and very airy. Its streets are long and straight, and one may walk +in the shade all hours of the day. The churches are beautiful. There +are five convents: that of the Augustinians (which is the oldest); +that of the Franciscans, that of the Dominicans, [110] and that +of the discalced Augustinians. There are two universities, one in +charge of the fathers of St. Dominic, and the other in that of the +Society. Those religious are also distributed among the islands, +where they have charge of the instruction of the Indians. The city is +enclosed by a fine wall and moat; and its redoubt and its ramparts +are well garrisoned with artillery. At the foot of its wall flows a +river, which is navigable; over this is a wooden bridge, with stone +pillars. There are two thousand Spaniards in Manila (counting soldiers +and inhabitants), and twice as many Indians. There are also twenty +thousand Sangleys or Chinese, who practice all the arts needed in +a community; and every year they pay nine escudos and six reals of +tribute. Galleons much larger than those which sail the Mediterranean +are built at Manila; for there is a great abundance of wood, pitch, +and abacá--which resembles European hemp, and of which good rigging +is made for the ships. The anchors are imported from Goa; and the iron +for the nails comes from China in little bars, and is very serviceable. + +The Spaniards of the Manilas trade throughout the islands of that +archipelago, at Borney and Camboa, whence they carry wax, butter, +camanguien or storax, ivory, and bezoar. They formerly traded in Japon, +before the persecution of the Christians was begun. Thence were carried +iron, flour, all sorts of fruit, and little boxes, and cabinets, +varnished [i.e., lacquered] and very well made. Nangoza [sc. Nagasaki], +which was the port where that trading took place--and for which it was +very suitable, because it is not distant from Manila--is now closed +to us; for the emperor of Japon believes that people are entering his +country, under pretext of that trade, to preach the gospel, the thing +that he fears most of all. We trade also with the Portuguese of Macao, +who come to the Manilas every year with two or three ships, and bring +here silks, musk, precious stones, and eagle and calambac wood--which +is a sweet-scented wood that is very valuable. The inhabitants of the +Manilas also go to Macao sometimes, to carry their merchandise there; +but their chief trade is with the Chinese, who come annually, at the +end of the month of December and the beginning of January, with twenty +or thirty vessels, laden with products and valuable merchandise. They +sail usually from Ocho and Chincheo, ports of Anay, a province of China +which faces the Filipinas. They carry small oranges, nuts, chestnuts, +plums, raisins, and chicuei--a fruit resembling an apple, very round, +transparent, and, when it is ripe, having the color of yellow amber; +its peel is very loose, and its flesh very sweet and very pleasant +to the taste. [111] They also bring all sorts of cloth stuffs, and +some of these are as fine as those which come from France and the +Low Countries; and many black stuffs of which the Indians make their +clothes. They bring silk, plain and twisted, of all colors; damasks, +velvets, tabbies, and double taffetas; cloths of gold and silver, +galoons, and laces; coverlets, and cushions; and porcelain--although +not the finest variety, as the trade in that is prohibited. They bring +pearls and gold; iron, in little bars; thread, musk, and fine parasols; +paste gems, but very beautiful to look at; saltpetre, and flour; +white and various-colored paper; and many little fancy articles, +covered with varnish, and gold in relief, made in an inimitable +manner. Among all the silk stuffs brought by the Chinese, none is +more esteemed than the white--the snow is not whiter; and there is +no silk stuff in Europa that can approach it. + +The Chinese return in the month of March, and carry to China silver +in return for their merchandise. They also take a wood called +sibueno [112]--that is, brazil-wood, which is used in making their +ink. Those Chinese merchants are so keen after gain that if one sort +of merchandise has succeeded well one year, they take a great deal +of it the following year. A Spaniard who had lost his nose through a +certain illness, sent for a Chinese to make him one of wood, in order +to hide the deformity. The workman made him so good a nose that the +Spaniard, in great delight, paid him munificently, giving him twenty +escudos. The Chinese, attracted by the ease with which he had made +that gain, laded a fine boatload of wooden noses the following year, +and returned to Manila. But he found himself very far from his hopes, +and quite left out in the cold; [113] for in order to have a sale +for that new merchandise, he found that he would have to cut off the +noses of all the Spaniards in the country. + +Besides the Chinese merchandise that is brought into the islands, +there is wax, cinnamon, civet, and a sort of very strong cotton cloth +which is called campotes [misprint for lampotes]. All those goods are +exported to Mexico, where they are sold at great profit, and on the +spot. I do not believe there is a richer traffic in the world than +that. The duties that the king gets out of it are large, and, with +what he gets from the islands, amount to fully five hundred thousand +escudos. But he spends eight hundred thousand in the maintenance of +his governor, the counselors, the archbishop, the bishops, the canons, +those who possess the prebends, and the other ecclesiastics. The +greater part of that sum is employed in the equipment of the galleons +that are sent to Mexico and to the Malucas, and of those which are kept +in those seas to resist the Dutch. A considerable sum is spent on the +maintenance of alliance with the kings of those districts--especially +with the king of one of the Malucas, called Tidore. Consequently, +the king of España rather holds those islands for the conservation +there of the faith, as was stated by Felipe the Second in a certain +council-meeting, than for the profit that is derived from them to this +hour. The Dutch have been unable to get a footing on those islands, +although they have attacked them many times. They have a considerable +city [i.e., Batavia] on the island of Java Major, whence they send +what their garrisons at the island of Hermosa, Amboina, and Terrenate +need. They have made an alliance with the inhabitants of that island, +and they secure the greater part of the cloves of the Malucas. They +trade in Japon, in a port called Firando. The Chinese have refused +to have trade with them, because of a tradition current in China, +that blue-eyed men will some day conquer them. + +The voyage from Manila to Mexico lasts four, five, six, or seven +months. Manila, which lies in thirteen and one-half degrees, is left +in the month of July, during the vendavals. The course is taken to +the north, until the ship reaches thirty-eight or forty degrees. The +pilots take that course because they are more certain of finding +winds; for otherwise they would run the risk of encountering calms, +which are more to be dreaded in long voyages than are the most furious +gales. From the time that the Filipinas are left until almost the coast +of Nueva España is reached, no land is seen, except a chain of islands +called the Ladrones, or La Sapana, [114] which lie three hundred +leguas from the Embocadero of the Filipinas. The people who inhabit +those islands are barbarians, who go quite naked. When our vessels +pass there, those people carry to them fish, rice, and fresh water, +which they exchange for neither gold nor silver, but only for iron, +which they value much more, because of the use to which they put it in +the manufacture of their tools, and for the building of their little +boats. The first land sighted after that is the island of Cedros, +quite near the Mexican coast. The open expanse between that island +and those of the Ladrones is subject to great storms, which are to +be feared especially near the Japanese Islands--which are passed, +however, without being sighted. During the whole course of so long +a voyage, scarcely a day passes without seeing a bird. There are +usually some birds that live in the sea, and many large whales and +porpoises are seen. + +As the [American] coast is neared, at a distance of sixty, eighty, +or one hundred leguas signs are to be seen in the sea by which it is +recognized that the ship is within that distance. Those signs consist +of long reeds, brought down by the rivers of Nueva España, which being +massed together resemble a kind of raft; and on those reeds are to be +seen monkeys--another sign that they are approaching the coast. When +the pilot discovers those signs, he immediately changes his course, +and instead of continuing east he puts the nose of the ship south, +in order to avoid getting caught in the land, or in some gulf whence +he would have a hard time to get out; but, when he has sighted the +coast of Nueva España, he follows it to the port of Acapulco, which +lies in eighteen degrees. + +Acapulco is a fine port, well sheltered from all the winds, and +defended by a celebrated redoubt. There the passengers and goods are +disembarked, and are afterward carried by mules to the City of Mexico, +which is eighty leguas distant thence. The way is desert and bestrewn +with mountains; and the pest of mosquitoes is suffered, as well as the +extreme heat. In order to go to España from Mexico one goes to the port +of Vera Cruz, a journey of eighty-five leguas; en route is passed the +city of Los Angeles, which has about six thousand inhabitants, and +whose bishop gets a salary of sixty thousand escudos. The reefs and +rocks at the mouth of the port of Vera Cruz defend the entrance better +than the fortress that commands it, although that fort is an excellent +one. At that port anchor the trading fleets that come from España, +laden with wine, olive-oil, cloths, wax, cinnamon, paper, and other +European merchandise. Those trading fleets formerly passed the winter +there, as they arrived [formerly] in the month of June, and remained +there until the same month of the following year. Now they reach that +port in the month of May, and leave about the month of August. They +take as a rule three months to go to España. For my part, I took +one hundred days in making that voyage. The port of Havana in Cuba, +which is the best port of the Western Indias--and which is very safe, +and defended by three redoubts--is touched at. There the two trading +fleets--that of Mexico and that of Tierrafirme--are united with the +galleons. Thence, after having coasted along the shores of Florida, +and of Nueva Francia, they make the cape of Fineterre [Finisterre] +or San Vincent, in order to lay their course toward Cadiz, which is +the end of their voyage. That will also be the end of this relation, +which I have written in order to be obedient to a person to whom I +earnestly desire that it may prove agreeable. + + + + + + + +BIBLIOGRAPHICAL DATA + + +The following documents are obtained from MSS. in the Academia Real +de la Historia, Madrid--in the collection "Papeles de los Jesuitas:" + +1. Events in Filipinas, 1637-38.--In tomo 84, no. 35. + +2. Fortunate successes, 1636-37.--In tomo 32, no. 17. + +3. Events in Filipinas, 1638-39.--In tomo 4, no. 34, fol. 268. + +The following documents are obtained from the Archivo general de +Indias, Sevilla: + +4. Letter from Corcuera.--"Simancas--Secular; Audiencia de Filipinas; +cartas y espedientes del gobernador de Filipinas vistos en el Consejo; +años 1629 á 1640; est. 67, caj. 6, leg. 8." + +5. Letter from treasurer.--The same as No. 4. + +6. The university of Santo Tomás.--"Audiencia de Filipinas; registro +de oficio; reales ordenes dirigidas á las autoridades y particulares +del distrito de la Audiencia; años 1605 á 1645; est. 105, caj. 2, +leg. 12." (In this same legajo may be found two of the decrees of +1638, those of November 8 and December 8; and that of October 3, +1639, has the same pressmark, save "leg. 2, lib. 4.") + +The following documents are obtained from the "Cedulario Indico," +in the Archivo Historico Nacional, Madrid: + +7. Decrees, 1638.--The first four, in "tomo 39, fol. 235b, 225b, 262, +and 267," respectively; (the fifth and sixth, see No. 6, ante;) the +seventh, in "tomo xxxi, fol. 144b;" the eighth, in "tomo 7, fol. 352b." + +8. Decrees, 1639.--In the same order as printed, these are found +as follows: In "tomo 39, fol. 276b; tomo xviii, fol. 55; tomo 39, +fol. 281; tomo 31, fol. 142b; tomo 39, fol. 285b and 285; tomo 2, +fol. 315b;" (for October 3, see No. 6, ante;) "tomo 39, fol. 290b +and 290." + +The following documents are obtained from the Ventura del Arco +MSS. (Ayer library), vol. ii: + +9. Events in the Filipinas, 1639-40.--Pp. 167-184. + +10. Relation of the Chinese insurrection.--Pp. 185-250. + +The following document is obtained from a rare printed pamphlet in +the Museo-Biblioteca de Ultramar, Madrid: + +11. Glorious victories against Moros.--Part of this is synopsized in +translation. The pamphlet is designated in the Museo-Biblioteca by +the number "111, 21-2a." + +The following document is obtained from a MS. volume in the possession +of Edward E. Ayer, Chicago; the volume is undated, but is supposed +to be written in 1835, and is entitled, Demostración historica de +cuantas depredaciones llevan cometidas las Moros, etc.: + +12. Letters to Misericordia.--In fol. 6b, 7, and 8. + +The following documents are taken from printed works: + +13. Relation by Bañuelos y Carrillo.--From Thevenot's Relations de +divers voyages curieux (Paris, M.DC.XCVI), tomo i, part ii; from a +copy belonging to the Prescott Collection in the library of Harvard +University. (The original printed pamphlet by Bañuelos y Carrillo is +supposed to be no longer extant.) + +14. Value of Corcuera's seizures.--From Pastells' edition of Colin's +Labor evangélica, iii, pp. 528-533. + +15. Ecclesiastical and Augustinian affairs.--From Casimiro Diaz's +Conquistas, pp. 267-444. + +16. Relation of the Filipinas Islands, by a religious.--The same as +No. 13. + + + + + + + +NOTES + + +[1] Spanish, buenas collas de bendabales. In August the prevailing +winds at Manila are from the southwest, the vendavals. It often happens +that in the months of June and July there develop in northern Luzón +centers of minimum pressure so slowly that they appear to remain +stationary for many days, followed, as is natural, by continuous +currents and showers of rain from the third quadrant, known by +the native-born residents as "collas" (Report of U. S. Philippine +Commission, 1900, iv, pp. 229, 236; this chapter is furnished by the +Jesuit fathers in charge of the Manila Observatory). + +[2] Juan Zubelzu, a native of Biscay, and a novice in the Dominican +convent at Mexico, came to the Philippine Islands in the mission of +1615. After his ordination, he ministered to the Indians in Bataán, +and in Cavite and Manila--where he died, December 14, 1657. He built +a stone church in Samal, for which, it is remarked, he did not harass +the Indians, although they were few in number. (Reseña biográfica, +i, p. 350.) + +[3] "Son of the devil, scourge of God, and other similar things." + +[4] Spanish, padres barbados; also known as Barbones, from their +practice of wearing long beards; they came in 1635, with Corcuera, +headed by Collado, and formed the congregation of San Pablo (for +mission work only), by "warrants fraudulently obtained." A royal decree +of February 21, 1637, commanded the Dominican provincial at Manila +to suppress the Barbones; it is the execution of this decree which +is described in our text. See Reseña biográfica, i. pp. 338, 391, 420. + +[5] This statement about the Sangleys is printed by Barrantes +as a postscript to Lopez's letter of July 23, 1637 (q.v., +VOL. XXVII). Internal evidence indicates Juan Lopez as the author of +the present document, and that it was written at Cavite, where Lopez +was in charge of the Jesuit house. + +[6] Melchor de Vera was born in Madrid about 1585, and entered the +Jesuit order at the age of nineteen. Two years later, he departed +for the Philippine mission, and after his ordination labored in the +missions of Visayas and Mindanao. He was for a time minister of Manila +college, and afterward rector of Carigara, and superior at Dapitan and +Zamboanga. He was well versed in architecture and military defense, +and several forts were built (especially that at Zamboanga) under +his direction. He died at Cebú, April 13, 1646. See Murillo Velarde's +Hist. Philipinas, fol. 153 verso; and Combés's Hist. Mindanao. + +[7] Fernando de Estrada, a native of Ecija, Spain, was a missionary +among the Bisayans and Tagáls, and at Ternate. He died at Manila in +1646, at the age of forty-five. See Murillo Velarde's Hist. Philipinas, +fol. 193 verso. + +[8] Charles I sought at various times to play Spain against France, +but his Spanish policy was, on the whole, a failure. + +[9] Morabites: the name of a Mahometan sect, founded by the son-in-law +of Mahomet. The name was also used among Mahometans to indicate a +wise man or a mystic. + +[10] Antonio Francisco Cardim was born at Viana, Portugal, in 1596, +and entered the Jesuit order in February, 1611. Seven years later +he went to India, and labored in Japan, China, and other countries +until his death--which occurred at Macao, April 30, 1659. Sommervogel +describes several missionary reports and other writings by Cardim. + +[11] That is, the small amount of their returns from Mexico prevented +the Manila merchants from making their usual large purchases from the +Chinese traders, and it was feared that the latter would not think +it worth while to bring their goods to Manila. + +[12] This was Tsongching (VOL. XXII, p. 197, and note 44), the last +emperor of the Ming dynasty; he was favorable to the Jesuits, but can +hardly be called a convert to the Christian faith. By "Father Pablo" +is probably meant Paul Siu (or Sin, according to Crétineau-Joly), +a Chinese official of high standing, who was converted by Father +Ricci, and served as an evangelist among his people, besides aiding +the missionaries with gifts and his influence at court, and revising +their writings in Chinese. See Crétineau-Joly's Hist. Comp. de Jésus, +iii, p. 172; and Williams's Middle Kingdom, ii, pp. 302, 304. + +[13] A marginal note reads: "Translated from the Spanish relation +printed at Mexico in the year 1638; dedicated to Don Garcia de Haro +y Abellaneda, count of Castilla, president of the royal Council of +the Indias." + +[14] Marginal note: "The rules of this traffic, which will be found at +the end of the relations of the Filipinas, elucidate this point." This +evidently refers to the Spanish originals. + +The "list of relations and voyages" at the beginning of Thevenot's work +contains this title: "Three relations of the Philippine Islands, with a +large map of China," etc. To correspond with this, the text contains: +the "Relation" of Bañuelos y Carrillo; the "Relation and memorial" +by Hernando de los Rios Coronel; and a "Memorial in behalf of the +commerce of the Philipine Islands," by Juan Grau y Monfalcon--all +with consecutive pagination; and apparently abridged or paraphrased +to suit the editor. These are followed by (Bobadilla's) "Relation +of the Philipine Islands," and an "Account of the great island of +Mindanao" (which contains a letter by Mastrilli)--also with their own +and consecutive pagination; these, however, are not mentioned in the +list above referred to. We translate from Thevenot the documents by +Bañuelos and Bobadilla; but for the others we have recourse to the +Spanish originals. + +[15] Lope Diaz de Armendariz, marquis of Cadereita, the sixteenth +viceroy of Mexico, was appointed (1635) to succeed the marquis +of Cerralvo (who was removed at his own request, because of poor +health). His term of office was quiet, and only marked especially by +his quarrel with the archbishop, with whom the royal Audiencia seem +to have sided. He was removed in 1640, his successor being Diego +Lopez Pacheco Cabrera y Bobadilla, duke of Escalona and marquis de +Villena. See Bancroft's Hist. Mexico, iii, pp. 93-98. + +[16] Marginal note: "Bartolome Tenorione." + +[17] The following letter from the Sevilla archives ("Cartas y +espedientes del gobernador de Filipinas vistos en el Consejo; años +1629 á [1640]; est. 67, caj. 6, leg. 8"), contains an interesting +reference to Bañuelos's relation, and also suggests the well-known +deficiencies in Thevenot's "translations." It is to be feared that +he has omitted much valuable matter from Bañuelos's account; but no +other source is available: + +"I return the paper which your Lordship sent me, concerning the +military exploit in Mindanao, which was written and sent, as appears, +by Father Marcelo Mastrili. Although its contents must be true, and +it is well written, yet as your Lordship knows, the Council thought +it advisable not to have it printed until they could compare it with +the letters that the governor had written about the same exploit, +and with others written by various persons, which make it out to have +been of little value and importance. They even attempt to say that +we have lost rather than gained in that campaign--particularly in a +discourse or treatise printed in Mexico by Don Geronimo de Bañuelos +y Carrillo, and addressed to your Lordship. In it he declares that +those who were conquered were not Moros, but certain poor Indians; +I do not know whether [he says this] from zeal for the truth, or +because he has little affection for the governor. He wounds him quite +to the quick in this and in other things. I was making an abstract of +them in order to report to the Council, as I was ordered; but today, +on going out, Don Juan Grao Monfalcon told me that he is at present +printing another report, to oppose that of Bañuelos. I do not know who +has given permission for it, nor that, in the care of the relation of +Father Mastrili, there is anything that is not well understood. What +the Council discussed was (as I have said), only whether it is exact +and faithful to what happened; and of this I have not yet been able +to form a sufficient judgment or idea. I am getting new documents +hourly from the secretary's office, and I shall detain them until +the one that I am now enclosing is returned, if convenient. May God +preserve your Lordship, as we your servants desire. Today, Tuesday, +February eight, one thousand six hundred and thirty-nine. + + +Don Juan de Solorzano Pereira" + +"The count, my master, has ordered me to send again to your Lordship +the enclosed relation of his success from the governor of Filipinas, +in order that there may be progress in the deliberations of the Council +on this question. May God preserve your Lordship, as I desire. Buen +Retiro, February 16, 639. + +Antonio Carnero" + + +"I return these papers to your Grace, so that you may continue what you +were doing. May God preserve your Grace. My house, February 16, 1639." + +[18] Referring to Sebastian Vizcaino (VOL. XIV, p. 183). The Englishman +here referred to is doubtless Will Adams (VOL. XXII, p. 169, note 39), +then high in favor with Iyéyasu. Regarding the expulsion of religious +at that time, see VOL. XVIII, p. 81. + +[19] A marginal note reads as follows: "Ricca douro is an island which +was discovered by a vessel from Macao. They landed there in order to +repair their galley fireplace, and a week later they perceived that +that earth had been converted into plates of gold. I suffered a violent +tempest in the latitude of that island, as the maps show it; and there +are few vessels that sail in that latitude, without having trouble." + +See also notes in VOL. XIV of this series, p. 183; and VOL. XVI, +p. 204. + +[20] In the margin is the following note: "Tono in the Japanese +language signifies a person who holds the rank that a duke of Cardone +or a marquis of Carpio would have in España." This means a daimio, +or feudal lord (see VOL. XVIII, p. 216). + +[21] Following is a translation of the title-page of the book from +which this account is taken: "Relation of the glorious victories on +land and sea won by the arms of our invincible king and monarch, Felipe +IIII, the Great, in the Filipinas Islands against the Mahometan Moros +of the island of Mindanao and their king Cachil Corralat, under the +leadership of Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order +of Alcantara and one of his Majesty's Council of War, and governor +and captain-general of those islands: drawn from various relations +sent from Manila during this year (1638). 1638. With license. Mexico; +at the press of Pedro de Quiñones, opposite the Professed House." + +[22] Tulio (misprinted Fulio), for Tullius (Cicero). Apparently there +is some error in the reference given in the text, for this citation +from Cicero is not found in the place indicated by it, in the standard +editions of his Epistolæ. + +[23] Attached to the editions of Quintilian's works are 164 +Declamations, which remain out of a collection consisting originally +of 388 of these compositions. It is supposed, however, that these +were written by various persons, at different periods of time. + +[24] "It is believed that the number of islands exceeds 1,400, although +thus far no one has stated their number with exactness." (Archipiélago +filipino, p. 6.) The latest information (Census of the Philippine +Islands, Washington, 1905, i, p. 185), gives the total number of +islands, however, as not less than 3,141, although the exact number +is still unknown. + +[25] This is the literal translation; but it will be remembered, +from previous accounts, that the figure of Christ here referred to +was painted on a sheet of linen or cloth; it was this sheet which +was used by the Moro as a garment. + +[26] Camaras were tubes or cylinders which received the charge and +were introduced into the breech of the cannon, sometimes fitted by +pressure, at other times by screwing (see Diego Ufano's Treatise on +military; Brussels, 1617). Some of the ancient pieces of ordnance +had these spare chambers, so that, after a charge had been fired, the +chamber could be changed and operations carried on more rapidly. Thus +they served as do the cartridges of modern breech-loading guns. Some +camaras were used independently of the cannon, for firing salutes. See +Stanley's Vasco da Gama (Hakluyt Society publications, London, 1869) +pp. 226, 227, note. + +[27] Tawi Tawi is the largest island of a group having the same name, +in the extreme southwest of the Philippine Archipelago, nearly 700 +miles distant from Manila. It contains over 100 islands, mostly +very small; but five of these contain ten or more square miles of +area. The island Tawi Tawi contains 187 square miles; its surface +is one of fertile plains interspersed with forests, and broken by +five peaks ranging from 736 to 1,941 feet in height. The islands +are thinly populated (estimated at 1,815 fighting men) by Malayan +tribes supposed to have migrated thither from Borneo--the Suluanos, +Camucones, and Tirones. Navigation among the islands is difficult +and dangerous, except for the small, light native craft; and they +have been the hiding-places of pirates from the earliest times. + +[28] Referring to Captain Gines Ros y Aviles, who had been left by +Corcuera as governor of Jolo. Combés gives a detailed account of +all this affair (Hist. Mindanao, Retana's ed., col. 369-395). Ros +applied himself, after Corcuera's departure, to the profits of trade, +and was deceived by the Moros, who pretended submission but planned +to surprise and kill all the Spaniards. The officer next in command, +Gaspar de Morales, with the two Jesuits, finding their warnings +unheeded, sent word to the governor's lieutenant at Zamboanga, Pedro +de Almonte--who immediately went to Jolo, again subdued that island, +and placed Morales in Ros's post as governor. Cf. La Concepción's +account, Hist. Philipinas, v, pp. 348-359, 412-427. + +[29] A village in Laguna, Luzón, on the southwest shore of Laguna +de Bay. + +[30] The two Jesuits who remained in Jolo as missionaries, Fathers +Alejandro Lopez and Francisco Martinez. + +[31] "Of these [Sangleys] several champan-crews armed themselves to +infest the seas; and, occupying the narrow passages of Marivelez, +they captured various vessels which came from Bisayas and other +provinces to trade.... Armed ships were despatched against them from +Manila, and, despite their resistance, several of their champans were +seized; and the pirates were punished with death, as their insolence +deserved--several of them being baptized, by dint of exhortations, +just before their torture." (La Concepción, Hist. Philipinas, v, +pp. 429-431). One of these "rigorous modes of punishment" is mentioned +post, on p. 226--that of tearing away the flesh with pincers. + +[32] Probably referring to the revolt of the Caragas, 1629-31, and +their murder of several Recollect missionaries at Tandag. + +[33] Combés describes very fully this and another Spanish expedition +into the region of Lake Lanao in 1639; and "a third and last one," +which was unsuccessful, and compelled the Spaniards to retreat, +in 1640. See his Hist. Mindanao (Retana's ed.), col. 145-177. + +[34] Referring to the injury sustained by this chief in the explosion +of a mine at the siege of Jolo; it is described by Lopez in his +chronicle for 1637-38 ante, pp. 44, 45. + +[35] See Combés's description of Lake Lanao (Hist. Mindanao, Retana's +ed., col. 145-147); lanao means simply "lake," and malanao, "people +of the lake." Cf. A. H. S. Landor's description--in Gems of the East +(New York and London, 1904), pp. 303-308--of the lake legion and +its people. In 1902 the American military authorities constructed +excellent highways from the seacoast to Lake Lanao, from Malabang on +the south to Iligan on the north. A description of this work, with +valuable observations on the character and habits of the Malanao Moros, +appears in the Atlantic Monthly for December, 1903, from the pen of +Major R. L. Bullard, U. S. A., who directed the building of one of +these roads. The Malanaos were never conquered by the Spaniards or +any other people. The present district of Lanao contains part of the +Rangaya range of mountains, 5,000 to 8,500 feet in height; and its +eastern part is traversed by the Pulangui River (Rio Grande). The +lake is twenty-two miles long and sixteen miles wide, and its outlet +is Iligan River. + +[36] Apparently referring to the boat which carried passengers from +Manila to the port of Cavite. + +[37] Also Zarpana, the modern Rota. Uan apparently means the present +Guam. The place where the ship was wrecked was, according to Diaz +(Conquistas, p. 402), the island of Seypán. + +[38] Diaz states (Conquistas, p. 402) that this galleon ("Nuestra +Señora de la Concepción") was "the largest one built up to that time," +and that it contained the greatest wealth of the islands. The few +men who escaped to land were afterward rescued by Spanish ships, and +taken back to Manila--save one, a Chinese blacksmith, who spent the +rest of his life there and acquired great influence over the natives. + +[39] La Concepción states (Hist. Philipinas, v, p. 351) that +when Corcuera returned to Manila in triumph, the Confraternity of +La Misericordia gave him 100,000 pesos from its treasury, for the +expenses of the Jolo campaign. + +"For Governor Corcuera to secure, even in part, the successful result +that he desired in this conquest, he was obliged to resort, for the +necessary succor, to the treasury of Santa Misericordia; for in this +emergency he found closed on all sides the gates of resource for the +accomplishment of his so laudable designs. He found this aid, as prompt +as liberal, in the sum of 104,609 pesos, two tomins, and one grano, +which the brethren carried to him at the royal offices, as a loan, +to aid his needs and enable him to push forward this conquest, which +depended on such aid." This statement is taken from the Demostración +historica (MS. in Ayer library; see following note), fol. 7 verso. + +[40] These two letters are obtained from a MS. volume in the library +of Edward E. Ayer, of Chicago, entitled: Demostración historica +de cuantas depredaciones llevan cometidas las Moros desde que se +incorporaron estas Yslas á la Monarquia Española; inedidas de toda +especie tomadas por el Gobierno para contenerlos; y indicasiones que +se presentan para hacerles la guerra con mejor fruto que hasta aquí, +á fin de que las Visayas se vean libres de las continuas opresiones +qe. sufren--"Historical exposition of the many depredations which +the Moros have committed, from the time when these islands were +incorporated with the Spanish monarchy; the measures, of all kinds, +taken by the government for curbing them; and indications that +suggest how war may be waged upon them with better results than have +hitherto been secured, to the end that the Visayas may be freed from +the continual cruelties that they suffer." This work (evidently +intended for publication) is undated; but the conjectural date +"1835?" appears on the fly-leaf, which is headed "1a. Parte." As +appears by the introduction to the book, it was written by one of +the members of the Sociedad Económica of the Philippines--founded +by Basco y Vargas in 1780, and reëstablished by Folguera in 1819; +and his "only motive in writing it was to meet his obligations to +that society." The MS. is contained in a plainly-bound volume of 291 +folios (582 pages), and displays fine, round, legible, and beautiful +handwriting, from several different hands. Folios 1-11 cover the +period antecedent to 1750; the rest of the book, that from 1750 to +1806--more than two-thirds of this part being dated after 1788. The +writer evidently had access to valuable original documents, some +of which, as these letters to La Misericordia, he cites directly; +and his narrative is well and carefully written. + +[41] This was Fray Francisco de Zamudio, who had come to Manila in +1636, and acted as provisor-general during the temporary exile of +Archbishop Guerrero. + +[42] The great visitor-general of New Spain and the bishop of +Puebla. He had a "special commission to take the residencias of +Cerralvo and Cadereita, and to investigate the commercial relations +with Peru and the Philippine Islands." He was of noble family, although +illegitimate, but was legitimized by his father. He was a man of great +abilities, which won him speedy recognition and high offices until he +decided to enter the priesthood (1629); and, after serving in various +capacities in Spain, he went to Mexico in 1640. He was energetic +and impartial in the exercise of his duties, and before long this +embroiled him with the indolent and easily-influenced viceroy. Finally +he was offered the archbishopric, and at the same time ordered to +assume charge of the government. He refused the archbishopric, but +accepted the latter, and in 1642 assumed that office--which he held +for five months, during which he ruled well and impartially. After +retiring to his bishopric he had various troubles with the Jesuits, +the new viceroy, the archbishop, and others, until he was ordered to +retire to Spain in 1648, where he died bishop of Osma in 1659, much +regretted by the people of his bishopric. See Bancroft's Hist. Mexico, +iii, pp. 98-136. + +[43] Meaning that the failure to receive the usual supplies of money +from Mexico had rendered the Manila merchants unable to buy the +goods brought by the Chinese traders--the latter being thus unable +to maintain their shops in Manila, and obliged to return to their +own country. + +[44] Apparently some words have been omitted in Ventura del Arco's +transcription; probably it should read, "upon us for our past sins"--or +possibly, "for the past two years." + +[45] Spanish, regalos; referring to the articles (mainly those of +luxury) imported from Mexico by citizens of the islands. + +[46] Shells or hollow balls, sometimes of clay, sometimes of heavy +canvas, which were filled with combustible substances; when kindled, +they were shot or hurled against the enemy, either to cause injury +by their explosion, or to set his works on fire. + +[47] "A mountain called Socol, distant from Calamba a short league" +(Diaz, Conquistas, p. 406). + +[48] This was an estate belonging to the Jesuits (Diaz, Conquistas, +p. 408). + +[49] Pastells' transcript of this document (Colin's Labor evangélica, +iii, p. 129) contains a few lines of additional matter, as follows: + +"Of the whole affair a full relation will, I think, be printed; so I +leave it here, entreating our Lord to look with pity on these islands, +which are so full of misery and poverty." + +[50] In passing through Mexico Señor Corcuera found so much cloth +from this [Chinese] commerce stored in the warehouses that, in +consideration for the interests of the merchants, he thought it best +not to send a ship [to Acapulco] that year; as a result, in this year +of 1638 the Chinese found less silver [in the Philippines] than their +business required. It also contributed [to their discontent] that, +since the royal treasury was unable to meet the great expenses of so +many armed fleets and wars, the contributions [levied] on the Chinese +were greater and more exacting--not only in actual money, but in other +necessary supplies." (La Concepción, Hist. Philipinas, v, p. 429). + +[51] Diaz states (Conquistas, p. 403) that besides the Chinese of +the Parián, who were chiefly traders, there were at the time of this +revolt more than 20,000 others scattered through the islands, who were +occupied in tilling the soil, and that of these more than 6,000 were at +work on the rich lands of Calamba. La Concepción says (ut supra) that +there were 33,000 Chinese living in the islands--too large a number +for safety, after the warning furnished by the insurrection of 1604. + +[52] This was Luis Arias de Mora, an advocate belonging to the Manila +Audiencia; according to Diaz (p. 404) he was even more avaricious +and extortionate than his predecessors in the alcaldía of La Lacuna, +and so oppressed those Chinese that in desperation they decided, +to kill him--which they did with much and barbarous cruelty. + +[53] Diaz says (p. 404) that the Jesuit Villamayor, who accompanied +the Spaniards, tried to persuade Aduna not to pursue the Chinese; +but the captain refused to listen to him, and went on to his death. + +[54] The names in brackets are obtained from Diaz (p. 406); and some +names occurring later in this document are similarly filled out, +from the same source. + +[55] Diaz states (p. 406) that the Augustinian friars of Comintan +(the ancient name of Batangas province) after this battle assembled a +large troop of Indians, and with them scoured the surrounding country, +killing the scattered Sangley fugitives. + +[56] A visita of the Augustinian mission station at Pásig. + +[57] According to Diaz's account (p. 408), the Sangleys of Santa Cruz +attempted to seize Corcuera's person; but he escaped their hands, +ordered the village to be set afire, and then attacked the Chinese, +who numbered some 6,000 men. To check their advance, a detachment of +Spaniards was sent to a certain spot with a troop of Moros, "aimed with +campilans, who had come with the ambassador from Sanguyl." Olaso was +soon recalled to Manila, leaving Santa Cruz defenseless--an imprudent +step, which resulted in loss, "since that post was most necessary +and convenient for guarding the river and the Parián." + +[58] Diaz (p. 409) makes this twenty-three, besides a Japanese priest +who accompanied and encouraged his countrymen. + +[59] Diaz (p. 408) says that the friars at Tondo gathered the natives +within the convent, "which, as it was very strong and spacious, +was capable of being a sufficient fortification for 6,000 Indians." + +[60] "In Binondoc father Fray Francisco de Herrera was fortified, with +the Sangley mestizos, and kept within the walls more than 160 Christian +Sangleys; the governor commanded that these should be taken from that +place, because they were continually making signs and writing notes +[to their countrymen?], and they were conveyed to Manila, to the +public prison, in order to make sure of them." (Diaz, p. 413.) + +[61] Diaz states (p. 412) that the governor issued this command, +which was executed by one of the auditors of the Audiencia and the +two alcaldes of the city; "they killed a great many Chinese, although +there were many whom the religious and the citizens concealed." + +[62] "By the fire were destroyed more than 3,000 pesos of rents +from the municipal property of the city, and more than 80,000 pesos +of those belonging to private persons, for the houses in which the +Sangleys lived; the riches lost in the property of the Sangleys were +immense, because the looting of these could not be enjoyed on account +of the fire, and because the [military] authorities would not allow +the Spaniards to be diverted from their attention to the defense of +the city." (Diaz, p. 412). + +[63] Diaz says that the church was burned; but this probably refers +to its woodwork only. + +[64] "On December 5 orders were despatched to the provinces to put to +death all the Sangleys in them--although the opinions of the jurists +[regarding this step] differed." (Diaz, p. 412). + +[65] "They burned the magazines, where there were large quantities +of the supplies necessary for the equipment of the galleons" (Diaz, +p. 413). + +[66] See p. 156 and note 31, ante. + +[67] Diaz's figures are somewhat different, and more extensive +(p. 413). "In Cavite as many as 1,100 were slain, and more than 600 +were seized. In Pampanga, where Santiago Gastelu was alcalde-mayor, +few escaped; for the said alcalde exercised such care and so vigilant +guard that as soon as the order arrived he caused it to be executed +in all places at the same time, so unexpectedly that he gave them +no opportunity to take the defensive; accordingly he beheaded them +all, 1,800 in number, including infidels and those baptised. In the +province of Bulacan, where there were more Sangleys, the slain did +not exceed 500; for as they were farm laborers, and were scattered, +they went away, deserting their houses, and joined the rebels, without +Captain Juan Diaz, the alcalde-mayor of that province, being able to +hinder them.... In the province of Tondo, as many as 300 were beheaded, +because, as the insurrection was going on therein, only those were put +to death who could not easily join the rebels. In the province of Bay +were beheaded 200, of those who had been sheltered in the convents, and +of those who were seized as accomplices of the uprising in Calamba. In +the province of Taal they slew others.... In Pangasinan they beheaded +500 Sangleys, through the energy of the alcalde-mayor, Captain Don +Fernando Suarez Deza; and in that of Ilocos, which was governed by +Sargento-mayor Pedro de Tursis, as many as 100 were slain. The same +was done in the other provinces, by which the forces of the enemy +were diminished, and the revolution checked." + +[68] "The leaders in these sacrilegious acts were the Christian +Sangleys, who showed that they were renegades from the faith which +they had pretended to profess." (Diaz, p. 412). + +[69] The bracketed words are conjectural, to replace some that are +illegible or worn in the original MS. + +[70] "On December 7 Captain Santiago Gastelu arrived from Pampanga +with a large reënforcement of men, and in his company was father Fray +Juan de Sosa, a religious of our father St. Augustine, and minister of +the village of Porac, who came with 800 Zambal archers whose leader +he was in all the fights that occurred, ... urging on the Pampangos, +who were a terror to the enemy; a thousand of them were arquebusiers, +and the [above] 800 were archers." (Diaz, p. 415.) + +[71] Some of these are described by Diaz, whose account throughout +is more full and detailed. + +[72] "On the way, our people heard how the Aetas from the hills had +gone out to lie in ambush against the Sangleys, and had done them much +damage; for in one place seven Aetas, naked and armed with some bamboo +darts, had rushed in among more than 6,000 Sangleys--of whom they slew +seventy, the Aeta band losing only one of their seven men." (Diaz, +p. 418). + +[73] Diaz (p. 418) gives the main credit for this achievement to the +Augustinian friar Juan de Sosa, who offered to dislodge the Chinese +from their camp with his Indian archers--the Spanish troops seconding +the attack of the Indians. + +[74] "Cogon (Saccharum koenigii): a rapidly growing plant reaching +three meters (about 10 ft.) in height, and forming a tangled mass +only penetrable by fire or knife. The areas are burned over during +the dry season, the young shoots being cut for cattle fodder +when 18 inches high. Where nipa does not grow cogon is used for +thatching." (U. S. Gazetteer of Philippines, p. 71.) E. D. Merrill's +Dictionary of Plant Names (Manila, 1903), p. 52, gives the botanical +name as Imperata arundinacea. + +[75] This was Onofre Esbry (Esvri--incorrectly made Esbín by Diaz's +editor); he was a native of Tortosa, and entered the Jesuit order +at the age of fifteen. At the time of this insurrection, Esbry was +but twenty eight years old. In 1647, while sailing to Macao, he was +slain by Chinese pirates, near Sanchon Island. See Murillo Velarde's +Hist. Philipinas, fol. 108 verso, and 154 verso. + +[76] The statement in this sentence is not very clearly expressed; +but the apparent meaning is that the Chinese commander was not +officially entitled to the designation of "mandarin," which had +been conferred upon him by the insurgents without due right to +make such appointment. S. Wells Williams says (Middle Kingdom, i, +p. 326): "The word mandarin, derived from the Portuguese mandar, +to command, and indiscriminately applied by foreigners to every +grade from a premier to a tide-waiter; it is not needed in English +as a general term for officers, and ought to be disused, moreover, +from its tendency to convey the impression that they are in some +way unlike their compeers elsewhere." See his account of the Chinese +government, general, provincial, and local, and the classes of the +Chinese people (pp. 322-352); also Winterbotham's description of the +"mandarins of arms," or military officers, in his Chinese Empire, ii, +pp. 8-10. Cf. note on civil mandarins, in VOL. XIX of this series, +p. 44. + +[77] "For more than six months, it was impossible to drink the water +in the rivers, they were so corrupted by the dead bodies; nor did +the people eat fish in a circuit of many leguas, since all these were +fattened on human flesh." (Diaz, p. 427). + +[78] "Every day those people knew what their losses were, through the +regular plan that they followed. This was as follows: every ten men +formed a mess; of these, two went out to procure food, six to fight, +and two to guard and attend to their lodging. Every ten troops of these +were under a captain; and a field officer commanded ten captains, +with a thousand men each. Each soldier had a chapa (a bronze coin +that is current among them), and at night each one handed this to +his captain; then all these were counted, and the soldiers knew, by +the number of coins that were lacking, how many men they lost each +day." (Diaz, p. 423.) + +[79] In the MS. here and elsewhere, "S. Paloc"--evidently supposed +by the transcriber to be the name of some saint. + +[80] In Diaz, "Tabuco, a visita of Quingua." + +[81] Diaz relates (p. 414) the plots concocted by the Sangleys for +this insurrection, which was set for Christmas; they were to carry +gifts of fowls on that day, as was their custom, to the Spaniards of +their acquaintance; and were to perform a comedy near one of the gates, +to divert the attention of the citizens from any suspicion of their +designs. Then at an appointed hour they were to kill all the Spaniards, +and take possession of the city. This was frustrated by the premature +rising at Calamba; sixty of those concerned therein were slain by their +own countrymen, because they had not waited till the appointed day. + +[82] In the MS., guerra; probably a transcriber's conjecture for a +word poorly written, since the context requires fuerza--referring to +the fort of Santiago at the mouth of Pásig River. + +[83] According to Diaz (p. 414), two negroes (slaves), who under +torture confessed that they had aided the insurgents, were hanged. + +[84] The name of the smallest coin current in former times, the word +meaning literally "one-fourth." Apparently, the bishop imposed a +slight tax on all who attended mass, for the benefit of the poor +prebendaries. It will be noticed that the word coro has several +different meanings. In this sentence, it means the body of clergy +in the church who chant the sacred offices; above, referring to the +bishop's seat, it meant the place which the clergy occupied during +the church services. + +[85] The title-page of the Bocabulario states that additions were made +to it by Claver before sending the work to the press. This friar came +to the Philippines in 1624, and was assigned to the Visayan missions, +where he labored until 1639, when he was sent as procurator to Madrid +and Rome; he died at Madrid, in 1646. Claver wrote several books, +the most important being a history of the Augustinian province of +Philipinas, which has been lost. See Pérez's Catálogo, p. 105, and +T. H. Pardo de Tavera's Biblioteca Filipina, pp. 262, 263. + +[86] For bibliographical account of Mentrida's works, see Pardo de +Tavera's Biblioteca Filipina (Washington, 1903), pp. 262, 263. They +are as follows: Bocabulario de la lengva Bisaia Hiligvoyna y Haraia +(Manila, 1637), and another edition (Manila, 1841); Arte de la lengua +Bisaya Hiliguayna (Manila, 1818), possibly this was a second edition; +and Ritual para administrar los Santos Sacramentos (Manila, 1630), +reprinted in 1669. Pardo de Tavera says: "He died in 1637, leaving +various works which have since been lost, not having been printed; +Father Agustín María says that he had an opportunity to see these in +Panay, about 1770 to 1780." + +[87] Colin says (Labor evangélica, Pastells' ed., i, p. 31): "For +greater convenience in governing it, this island of Panay is divided +into two jurisdictions: the territory belonging to that of Panay is +all of the northern coast, from the point of Potol to Bulacabi; the +rest of the island belongs to the jurisdiction of Otón, the principal +[Spanish] post in which, at this time, is at Iloílo--a point which +projects into the sea on the southern coast, between the two rivers of +Tigbauan and Jaro; and makes, with the island of Imaras, a strait half +a legua wide and an open harbor." This would make the jurisdiction of +Fanay correspond to the present province of Cápiz; and that of Otón +to the provinces of Antique and Iloílo. The boundaries between these +present divisions are the rugged mountain chains which fill a great +part of the interior of the island, their peaks ranging in height +from 3,500 to 7,200 feet; they render traffic between the provinces +almost impossible, except as it is carried on by way of the sea. The +island of Guimarás is 26 1/2 miles long by 12 miles wide, and has +important fishing and agricultural industries. + +[88] One of the most notable names in Philippine missionary annals +is that of Agustín de San Pedro (his family name Rodriguez), born in +Portugal in 1599. He was a student in the university of Salamanca, +but, desiring to enter the religious life, he assumed the habit of +a Recollect Augustinian at Valladolid, and made his profession at +the age of twenty. Three years later, he set out for the Philippine +mission, and soon after reaching Manila was sent to Mindanao. There +he labored with the Indians in the districts of Butuan, Habongan, +Linao, Cagayan, Tandag, and Romblon; and accompanied the expedition +of Atienza Ibáñez (1639) to Lake Malanao. Retana and Pastells +(in their edition of Combés's Hist. Mindanao, col. 725) state that +this missionary converted some 10,000 natives to Catholicism. More +than that, he aided in the defense of his converts, several times +fighting at their head against their heathen and piratical enemies; +and, having been as a student proficient in mathematics and military +science, he constructed forts in the Christian villages which +enabled them to repel their invaders, and taught the natives the +art of fortification. Fray Agustín died in Romblon, in 1653. See +accounts of his life and exploits in Prov. S. Nicolas de Tolentino, +pp. 290-292; and La Concepción's Hist. Philipinas, v, pp. 362-391 +(which will appear in a later volume of this series). + +[89] This expedition, departing from Tandag (on the north-eastern coast +of Surigao, the easternmost province of Mindanao), sailed northwest +to the point near the town of Surigao, then, passing through the +strait of that name, southwest into Iligan Bay on the north shore +of the island. Ascending the Iligan River (which is the outlet of +Lake Lanao), they reached the lake, after a journey of sixteen and +one-half miles. Now, as then, the valley of the river and the vicinity +of the lake are thickly settled, and the Moro inhabitants carry on +extensive industries in agriculture and commerce. On the Jesuit Atlas +de Filipinas (Washington, 1900), map no. 27, appears a village named +P. Capitan--evidently in memory of the soldier-missionary Fray Agustín; +but no such name is given in the U. S. Gazetteer of the islands. + +[90] Marginal note: "This relation has been translated from a Spanish +manuscript existing in the library of Don Carlo del Pezzo." + +This relation is unsigned, and undated, but Rev. Pablo Pastells, S.J., +said during the course of a conversation with one of the Editors, +in 1903, that the author was undoubtedly Father Diego de Bobadilla; +and in his edition of Colin's Labor evangélica (Barcelona, 1904), +he says (iii, p. 798, note): "This father [i.e., Father Bobadilla] +was the author in 1640 of the famous relation which was translated +by Melquisedec Thévenot." + +[91] See our VOLS. I and II for the history of these early +expeditions. It will be noticed that the author of the present relation +is inaccurate in regard to the date of the voyage of Villalobos, +and that he omits mention of some of the early voyages. + +[92] That is "Birth follows the womb." + +[93] See VOL. XXII, p. 300, note 61. + +[94] For this expedition to Mindanao by Hurtado de Corcuera, see +previous documents. This reference proves the present relation to +have been written in 1640, as the expedition above mentioned occurred +in 1637. + +[95] Visayan name (also colocolo, elsewhere) of the fishing gannet +(Sula piscatrix). Delgado says (Historia, p. 820) that he had a tame +one in his house, which would bring home fish that it had caught, +and carry them to the kitchen. + +[96] French, Estang du Roy ("the King's Pool"); evidently referring +to the hot springs near Laguna de Bay (see VOL. XIV, p. 211), and +the word Roy is probably a misprint for Bay. + +[97] It is Chirino who is here (although inexactly) cited; see +VOL. XII, p. 236. + +[98] See Chirino's account, in VOL. XII, p. 241; he says that the +art of writing was imparted to the Visayans by the Tagals. + +[99] Marginal note: "Prudish" (melindrosa). + +[100] That is, "star-thistles"--the common name of a genus (Tribulus) +of plants, which bears prickly fruits, very injurious to the feet of +animals or men. The military instrument called "caltrop" resembles +that fruit, from which it may have been evolved; and the appellation +tribolo is one of the etymological elements in "caltrop." + +[101] See the Cleveland reissue of the Jesuit Relations, lxv, p. 131, +for a description of head-compression by the North American Indians. + +[102] Mt. Bulusan, near the center of the province of Sorsogón, Luzón; +at present "almost extinct, but at times emits an abundance of watery +vapor and sulphurous fumes" (Report of U. S. Philippine Commission, +1900, iii, p. 149). + +[103] Also called balimbín; the fruit of Averrhoa carambola; used for +food and sweetmeats, and also has medicinal qualities. See Blanco's +description, Flora, p. 274; and Delgado's Historia, pp. 505, 506. For +note on santor, see VOL. XVI, p. 87; on banana (Musa), VOL. V, p. 169. + +[104] The corot (Dioscorea triphylla) is very common, with leaves +one palmo long, and very small flowers. Its sap is yellow and very +poisonous, and has cleansing power which is utilized to whiten +abacá. The root is very large and is eaten cooked by the Indians, +after having soaked it in the water for three or four days. + +The ubi is the Dioscorea alata, and the plant grows rather high and is +widely disseminated. The root is violet in color, and often attains a +great size; it is eaten cooked. The best variety is that known as the +Cebú ubi or ube, which comes from Bohol, and which makes a delicious +jelly. The ubi and analogous roots must be carefully prepared, or else +they prove poisonous. See Blanco's Flora, and U. S. Gazetteer of the +Philippine Islands. Delgado (p. 763) enumerates eight varieties of +this root. + +The apari is perhaps the apalia or paria (Montordica balsamina), +a climbing plant, which bears a fruit which is rather bitter to the +taste, and eaten in salads. The juice of its leaves is used instead +of soap. The ripe fruit soaked in olive, cocoa, or beneseed oil makes +an excellent balsam that is used for medicinal purposes. + +[105] French, patanes, apparently a misprint for patatas. The camote +or sweet potato (Convolvulus batatas, Linn.; now named Batatas edulis) +is extensively cultivated in the islands. Blanco (Flora, p. 69) cites +Mozo as saying that this plant was carried to the islands from Nueva +España; but Blanco regards it as indigenous in the Philippines. Delgado +(pp. 766-768) enumerates twenty-nine varieties of camote. + +[106] The Batelan is perhaps the balete; see VOL. XII, p. 214, note +56. For note on dabdab, see ibid., p. 215, note 57. + +[107] Apparently a reference to the variety of orange known at the +present day as navel oranges. + +[108] For a treatise on the snakes and poisonous animals of the +Philippines, see Delgado's Historia, pp. 889-907. He describes the +omodro as the odto (Hemibungarus collaris)--from the word meaning +"half-day" or "noon," and given to it because the bite proves fatal +if given at noon, but at no other time. It is of various colors and +very furious at the hour of noon. The saua (Python reticulatus) is +the largest snake of the islands and is often domesticated, and is +not poisonous to man. + +[109] The dugong (a word corrupted from the Malay name duyong); +not a fish, but a marine mammal (Helicore australis). Crawfurd says +(Dict. Indian Islands, p. 125) that it is found in the shallow seas +of the Malayan archipelago, but is not often captured; and that its +flesh is greatly superior to that of the green turtle. This creature +is one of those from which originated the fable of the mermaids. + +[110] Thevenot has translated the Spanish term for Franciscans +(padres de San Francisco or padres franciscanos) into the popular +French term cordeliers, so called because of their girdle. Similarly +he has translated the term for Dominicans (padres de San Domingo or +padres dominicanos) as Jacobins, also the popular French appellation, +so called from the name of the church of St. Jacques, which was +given them in Paris. See Addis and Arnold's Cath. Dict., article +"Franciscans," p. 356; and Chevin's Dict. Latin-Français, p. 353. + +Either Thevenot the translator, or the author, omits mention of +the convent of the Society of Jesus, only the four above mentioned +being given. + +[111] The persimmon; see VOL. XVI, p. 180. + +[112] A misprint for sibucao (VOL. III, p. 196; XV, p. 256). + +[113] There is evidently a play of words in this passage. The French +reads Mais il se trouua bie loing de ses esperances, & auec vn pied de +nez. Pied de nez (literally "a foot of nose") is an exact equivalent of +the Spanish phrase palmo de narices, and the French expression demeurer +avec un pied de nez is equivalent to the Spanish idiom quedar con un +palmo de narices, which signifies "the frustration of one's hopes," +or "to be left out in the cold." + +[114] Apparently a corruption of Zarpana, the name given by its +inhabitants to the island of Rota, one of the Mariannes or Ladrones +Islands. + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898, +Volume 29 of 55, by Various + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PHILIPPINE IS., 1493-1898, VOL 29 *** + +***** This file should be named 38748-8.txt or 38748-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/7/4/38748/ + +Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project +Gutenberg. + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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+} +</style> + +<style type="text/css"> +.xd19e120width +{ +width:433px; +} +.xd19e885width +{ +width:291px; +} +.xd19e2202width +{ +width:375px; +} +.xd19e2480width +{ +width:534px; +} +.xd19e3338width +{ +width:335px; +} +.xd19e3504width +{ +width:583px; +} +</style> +</head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898, Volume +29 of 55, by Various + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898, Volume 29 of 55 + Explorations by Early Navigators, Descriptions of the + Islands and Their Peoples, Their History and Records of + the Catholic Missions, as Related in Contemporaneous Books + and Manuscripts, Showing the Political, Economic, Commercial + and Religious Conditions of Those Islands from Their + Earliest Relations with European Nations to the Close of + the Nineteenth Century + +Author: Various + +Editor: Emma Helen Blair + James Alexander Robertson + +Release Date: February 1, 2012 [EBook #38748] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PHILIPPINE IS., 1493-1898, VOL 29 *** + + + + +Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project +Gutenberg. + + + + + + +</pre> + +<div class="front"> +<div class="div1 titlepage"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"></p> +<div class="figure xd19e120width"><img src="images/titlepage.gif" alt= +"Original Title Page." width="433" height="720"></div> +</div> +</div> +<div class="titlePage"> +<div class="docTitle"> +<div class="mainTitle">The Philippine Islands, 1493–1898</div> +<br> +<div class="subTitle">Explorations by early navigators, descriptions of +the islands and their peoples, their history and records of the +catholic missions, as related in contemporaneous books and manuscripts, +showing the political, economic, commercial and religious conditions of +those islands from their earliest relations with European nations to +the close of the nineteenth century,</div> +<br> +<div class="mainTitle">Volume XXIX, 1638–40</div> +</div> +<div class="byline">Edited and annotated by <span class= +"docAuthor">Emma Helen Blair</span> and <span class="docAuthor">James +Alexander Robertson</span> with historical introduction and additional +notes by <span class="docAuthor">Edward Gaylord Bourne</span>.</div> +<div class="docImprint">The Arthur H. Clark Company<br> +Cleveland, Ohio<br> +<span class="docDate">MCMV</span></div> +</div> +<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb5" href="#pb5" name= +"pb5">5</a>]</span></p> +<div id="toc" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e155" class="main">Contents of Volume XXIX</h2> +<table class="tocList"> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#preface">Preface</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">9</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#doc1638">Documents of +1638</a> <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb6" href="#pb6" name= +"pb6">6</a>]</span></td> +<td class="tocPageNum"></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1638.1">Events in the +Filipinas, 1637–38.</a> [Unsigned; probably written by Juan +Lopez, S.J., at Cavite, in July, 1638.]</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">23</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1638.2">Letter to +Felipe IV.</a> Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera; Manila, August 21.</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">50</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1638.3">Letter to +Felipe IV, from the treasurer at Manila.</a> Baltasar Ruiz de Escalona; +Manila, August 31.</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">52</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1638.4">Relation of +the Filipinas Islands.</a> Hieronimo de Bañuelos y Carrillo; +Mexico, 1638.</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">66</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1638.5">Glorious +victories against the Moros of Mindanao.</a> Diego de Bobadilla, S.J., +and others; Mexico, 1638.</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">86</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1638.6">Royal orders +and decrees, 1638.</a> Felipe IV; Madrid, March 15, and +September–December.</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">102</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1638.7">Fortunate +successes in Filipinas and Terrenate, 1636–37.</a> [Unsigned; +published in Madrid, 1639.]</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">116</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1638.8">Value of +Corcuera’s seizures in Jolo.</a> [Unsigned and undated; probably +1638.]</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">135</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#doc1639">Documents of +1639–1640</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum"></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1639.1">Events in the +Philipinas from the year 1638 to that of 1639.</a> [Unsigned; probably +Juan Lopez, at Cavite, 1639.]</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">141</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1639.2">Letters to the +Holy Misericordia.</a> Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera; Manila, December +4, 1637, and October 26, 1639.</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">172</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1639.3">The university +of Santo Tomás.</a> Felipe IV; Madrid, November 9, 1639.</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">175</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1639.4">Royal orders +and decrees.</a> Felipe IV; Madrid, 1639.</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">178</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1640.1">Events in the +Filipinas Islands from August, 1639, to August, 1640.</a> [Juan +Lopez?]; Cavite, August, 1640.</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">194</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1640.2">Relation of +the insurrection of the Chinese.</a> [Unsigned and undated; probably in +March, 1640.]</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">208</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1640.3">Ecclesiastical +and Augustinian affairs, 1630–40.</a> Casimiro Diaz; Manila +[1718?]. [From his <i lang="es">Conquistas</i>.]</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">259</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="4"><a href="#doc1640.4">Relation of +the Filipinas Islands.</a> [Diego de Bobadilla, S.J.; 1640.]</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">277</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#bibl">Bibliographical +Data.</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">313</td> +</tr> +</table> +<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb7" href="#pb7" name= +"pb7">7</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="loi" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e285" class="main">Illustrations</h2> +<table class="tocList"> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#p067">View of city of +Manila</a>; photographic facsimile of engraving in Mallet’s +<i lang="fr">Description de l’univers</i> (Paris, 1683), ii, p. +127; from copy in the Library of Congress.</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">67</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#p169">View of one of +Ladrones Islands</a>; photographic facsimile of engraving in +Hulsius’s <i lang="de">Eigentliche <span class="corr" id= +"xd19e304" title="Source: uund">und</span> wahrhaftige Beschreibung</i> +(Franckfurt am Mayne, <span class="sc">M.DC.XX</span>), p. 66; from +copy in library of Harvard University.</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">169</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#p188"><span lang= +"la">Portus Acapulco</span> (view of harbor of Acapulco, Mexico)</a>; +photographic facsimile of engraving in Arnoldus Montanus’s +<i lang="nl">Nieuwe en onbekende Weereld</i> (Amsterdam, 1671), p. 246; +from copy in library of Harvard University.</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">188</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#p279"><span lang= +"la">Archipelagus orientalis, sive Asiaticus</span> (Eastern or Asiatic +archipelago)</a>; photographic facsimile of map by Joannis Blaeu +(Amsterdam, 1659); from original map in <span lang= +"fr">Bibliothèque Nationale</span>, Paris.</td> +<td class="tocPageNum">279</td> +</tr> +</table> +<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb9" href="#pb9" name= +"pb9">9</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="preface" class="div1 preface"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e339" class="main">Preface</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The present volume (1638–40) is largely occupied +with the annals of those years, and the hostilities of the Moro +pirates. This period is a troublous one; “wars and rumors of +wars,” conspiracies (among both Chinese and natives), storms, +shipwrecks, and disease, disquiet the colony. The Chinese revolt of +1639 is described at length. Corcuera administers the government with a +high hand, and arouses many enmities. Two interesting descriptions of +the islands are furnished, by a Spanish officer and by a Jesuit.</p> +<p>The Jesuit annalist at Manila contributes (1638) the news of the +past year—apparently the contents of his note-book or diary, as +written therein at each occurrence or arrival, and free from the +“improvements” of any official editor, in which fact lies +its especial value. This document strongly resembles in this respect, +and in its scope, the famous <i lang="fr">Journal des +Jésuites</i> of Quebec. To some extent, the same remarks are +true of all the annals written, actually or presumably, by Juan Lopez; +but the present document is unusually fresh and primitive in style. He +relates the depredations committed by the Dutch on Spanish and +Portuguese commerce, especially about the strait of Malaca. The +Dominican faction of “Barbones” has been suppressed. The +Chinese at <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb10" href="#pb10" name= +"pb10">10</a>]</span>Manila present a large sum of money to Corcuera, +with which a gift for the king is purchased. Information is given +regarding several priests and other persons. The settlement at Formosa +is being abandoned, and the missionaries there are going to China. The +Camucones have attempted to raid the Visayas, but are repulsed by the +Indians and Spaniards. The Jesuit Mastrilli has been martyred in Japan, +and funeral honors are paid to him in Manila. Corcuera has gone to +punish the Joloans. The Jesuit church at Cavite, and that of the +Dominicans at Manila, have been entered by thieves. There are a few +slight encounters with the Dutch. In China, persecutions of the +Christians have begun, due largely to the imprudence of the friars. The +missions in Siam and adjoining countries are endangered by the +machinations of the Dutch. The Joloan stronghold is captured by +Corcuera; two of his best officers are sent home to regain their +health, but are slain by their Chinese crew. Jesuits are conducting a +successful mission in the island of Hainan. The Japanese are growing +weary of their persecutions against the Christians; only three Jesuits +are left there of all the missionaries and nothing certain is known of +these. Corcuera arrives at Manila on May 23; he brings back many +captives, of whom a considerable number died en route, but “it is +a cause of great consolation that no Moro has died without +baptism.” A triumphant entry is made into Manila by the +victorious army. In Mindanao Moncay is killed, and Corralat is no +longer aided by the Ternatans; the Moros generally are in wholesome +fear of the Spanish power. The missions in China are doing well, and +are aided by the emperor. Lopez notes many <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb11" href="#pb11" name="pb11">11</a>]</span>little +items of news, of all sorts, about matters civil, ecclesiastical, and +foreign, with various gossip, some of the cloister, some of his +seaport.</p> +<p>A short letter from Corcuera to the king (August 21, 1638) states +that he has appointed Luis Arias de Mora “protector of the +Sangleys;” this man (a lawyer) also acts as counselor for the +archbishop, exercising a wholesome restraint upon that prelate.</p> +<p>A letter from the royal treasurer at Manila to the king (August 31, +1638) laments the injuries and losses caused to the royal estate by +Corcuera’s reckless and extravagant management. He is blamed for +refusing to send the trading ships to Mexico, for establishing a force +for the nightly patrol of the city, for forming several companies of +Indian soldiers, for paying certain salaries which are claimed to be +needless, and for building a church for the soldiers. Escalona declares +that the trade of the islands with Mexico is neglected and unregulated, +and thus the colonists are being financially ruined. He asserts that +the expeditions against Mindanao and Jolo had cost much unnecessary +expenditure of both money and lives; and that Corcuera has attempted to +cover up these expenses under specious pretexts. The treasurer +complains that the governor has spent too much on the royal hospital, +and has interfered with the duties and rights of the royal officials; +and entreats the king to see that he is restrained within due +bounds.</p> +<p>An interesting description of the Philippine Islands is furnished +(Mexico, 1638) by a Spanish admiral, Hieronimo de Bañuelos y +Carrillo; it is addressed to the president of the Council of the +Indias; the original is, so far as known, no longer <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb12" href="#pb12" name="pb12">12</a>]</span>extant, +and it is found only in the French version by Thevenot. Bañuelos +finds life in Manila “altogether delightful,” as it has +abundance of all supplies and comforts. He describes the Parián, +and praises the ability of the Chinese; but he asserts that they are +injuring the islands by their illicit connection with the Mexican +trade. The condition and character of that trade are here presented, in +a description very different from that furnished by Grau y +Monfalcón. This writer objects to the silk trade between +Filipinas and Nueva España, which only benefits the Chinese, the +Portuguese of Macao, and the Mexicans. Moreover, “the encomiendas +are ruined,” while the natives are not instructed in religion, +and are hostile to the Spaniards. The Malays of Ternate and other +outlying islands are in league with the Dutch, and the trade with them +is going to ruin. Bañuelos proposes a new plan for the Filipinas +commerce; he would (still limiting its amount) restrict it mainly to +raw silk and cotton, which could be manufactured in Mexico; he +enumerates the advantages that would result from this course. The +Japanese trade need not be considered in this question, as it is closed +to the Spaniards on account of religious persecution; of this last and +its effects Bañuelos gives some account. He again urges that the +trade in Chinese stuffs be suppressed; and makes recommendations as to +the manner in which it should be conducted, describing various abuses +and scandals which he has discovered therein.</p> +<p>The Jesuit Bobadilla published (Mexico, 1638) a “Relation of +the glorious victories ... against the Mahometan Moros;” it +contains Mastrilli’s letter of June 2, 1637 (published in +<span class="sc">VOL. XXVII</span> of this <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb13" href="#pb13" name="pb13">13</a>]</span>series), +and other matter obtained from letters which the editor had received +from Manila; we present here such part as is new. Bobadilla prefaced +this compilation by a short address to Governor Corcuera’s +brother Iñigo (a military officer in Mexico), in which he takes +occasion to eulogize the virtues of both in glowing terms. The first +section of the book is occupied by a relation (here only briefly +outlined) of the miraculous cure wrought upon Father Mastrilli, and his +entrance into missionary work; then follows “an account of the +great island of Mindanao,” partly descriptive and partly +historical. The piratical raids of the Mindanaos upon the Spanish +settlements and the Visayan coasts are briefly recounted, with mention +of the establishment of Spanish missions and forts in Mindanao; also +the raids made by the Camucones, Joloans, and Borneans. Then follow a +description of the naval battle at Punta de Flechas, Mastrilli’s +letter describing the Mindanao campaign, and Lopez’s account of +Corcuera’s triumph—all of which we have previously +published.</p> +<p>Various royal orders and decrees issued in 1638 are here presented. +Corcuera is warned (March 15) to proceed cautiously in regard to the +free negroes whom he has removed from the city, and to obtain royal +permission henceforth for any important measures that he may +contemplate. A decree of September 2 imposes restrictions on the +religious orders in the islands, and permits the governor to use +secular priests as missionaries. The king orders him (October 2) to +appoint to new missions native secular priests instead of friars; also +to treat the nuns of St. Clare with more consideration, and to pay them +for <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb14" href="#pb14" name= +"pb14">14</a>]</span>certain inconveniences that he has caused them. He +is authorized (November 8) to take such measures as are necessary to +maintain the seclusion of the inmates of Santa Potenciana. The viceroy +and Audiencia of Mexico are ordered (December 8) to report whether it +will be best to increase the amount of trade allowed to the citizens of +Filipinas with Nueva España; and other decrees of the same date +give the officers of the galleons authority to punish any infractions +of law committed by their men while in port, and require stricter +enforcement of the regulations in regard to lading those vessels.</p> +<p>A printed pamphlet, “Fortunate successes in Filipinas and +Terrenate” (Madrid, 1639), gives a brief outline of the Moro +raids into the Philippines during several years, and Corcuera’s +successful campaign against those pirates; it is evidently written by a +Jesuit, or largely compiled from Mastrilli’s letter. At the end +is a description of the encounter between Spanish and English ships at +Malayo. We append a short document enumerating the spoils seized in the +Jolo campaign by the Spanish forces, with the value assigned to each +item; the expenses of the expedition are covered thereby mainly by the +proceeds from the sale of Moro captives.</p> +<p>“Events in the Philipinas during the year 1638–39” +are recorded, as before, by a Jesuit, presumably Juan Lopez. The news +from Mindanao and Jolo is not encouraging; the Moros are revolting, and +in Jolo a plague and epidemic is feared; besides, the commandant there +has proved unfit. A letter from the Jesuit Gutierrez relates events in +Mindanao; these relate mainly to the measures taken by the Spanish +commandant to control and pacify the disaffected <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb15" href="#pb15" name="pb15">15</a>]</span>Moros. +Spanish friars exiled from China have arrived in Formosa, but hope to +reënter China. The Jesuits of Macao also indulge the hope of +gaining foothold anew in Japan. The writer gives various interesting +news items about the arrival and departure of the ships at the port of +Cavite; and the escape, on several occasions, of Moro captives held at +Manila, and the recapture of many of them. A letter from Father +Alejandro Lopez describes the attempt of the men of Jolo to recapture +by treachery their stronghold from the Spaniards, and the severe +punishment inflicted by Pedro de Almonte upon the rebels. Chinese +pirates commit depredations on the Luzón coasts; and plots of +the resident Chinese against the Spaniards are discovered and punished. +A revolt by the Indians of Nueva Segovia is also quelled. Recent news +from Mindanao and Jolo tells of increasing Spanish ascendency, but at a +fearful cost to the Moro natives—slaughtered people, devastated +lands, and consequent deaths by famine. One of the trading ships to +Mexico has been wrecked, which is a great blow to the colony. A fierce +hurricane causes great damage at Cavite and in its vicinity; and there +have been epidemics of disease in Luzón, in which many persons +have died. It is feared that both of the Acapulco galleons have been +lost at sea; and all these things fill the people with sadness. The +small remnant of the crew of a Spanish galleon wrecked the preceding +year among the Ladrones Islands arrive at Manila.</p> +<p>Letters from Corcuera to the confraternity of Santa Misericordia ask +(December 4, 1637) their prayers for the success of his Jolo +expedition; and (October 26, 1639) that they will take into their +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb16" href="#pb16" name= +"pb16">16</a>]</span>house two Moro hostages, to train them in the +Christian doctrine. Letters from Felipe IV to Rome (November 9, 1639) +ask that the college of Santo Tomás at Manila be erected into a +university.</p> +<p>A group of royal decrees issued during 1639 is presented. The +governor’s action in stationing religious ministers in Mindanao +is approved. The municipal authorities of Manila are ordered to retain +Grau y Monfalcón as their agent at the royal court. The +newly-appointed governor of the islands, Diego Fajardo, is ordered to +correct (but with mildness and prudence) the Augustinians in trading +and in oppressing the Indians; and to restore to the secular priests +Quiapo and other districts assigned to the Jesuits by Corcuera. The +bishop of Camarines is ordered to return to his diocese, and the royal +officials to withhold his salary until he shall do so. Directions are +given to the viceroy of Nueva <span class="corr" id="xd19e384" title= +"Source: Espana">España</span> regarding the inspection of +Philippine vessels at Acapulco, and the necessity of sending more +colonists to the islands. Answer is made to various points in a former +letter from the archbishop; and the Audiencia are commanded to treat +the Indians more justly.</p> +<p>Events in the Filipinas Islands from August to November, 1639, are +recorded by the Jesuit annalist of former years (presumably Juan +Lopez). The arrivals and departures of ships form the chief of these +events, and the writer furnishes much interesting news in connection +with them. A fierce storm delays the galleon to Nueva España, +and wrecks two Chinese junks, drowning many of their men. The two +Acapulco galleons arrive, about this time, at Nueva Segovia, and are +wrecked in that port, with <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb17" href= +"#pb17" name="pb17">17</a>]</span>much loss of life. The recent +conquest of Jolo is being completed. The king of Macasar is friendly, +and has sent provisions to the Portuguese colony at Malaca. A Dutch +squadron sent against the city of Goa has been almost destroyed by the +Portuguese. The people of Tidore and Ternate are leagued together, +which causes the Spaniards to fear a revolt against their control. The +Moro chiefs in Mindanao are plotting together against the Spaniards. +Nearly half of this document is occupied with an account of the Chinese +insurrection late in November, 1639; it is soon quelled, with the +slaughter of many Sangleys. A detailed account of this episode, +presumably the one mentioned in the last note on Lopez’s record, +is here presented; it is a valuable if not altogether edifying +document, especially for its revelations of human nature. Lopez’s +statement that the revolt was soon over was premature; it lasted nearly +four months, and caused great loss of property to the Spaniards, and of +lives to the insurgents. Most of the Chinese population in Luzón +was exterminated, thanks to their lack of cannon and firearms and +“the special protection of our Lord over our army,” which +lost not even fifty men. It is a sickening record of +slaughter—not only in so-called battle, but in the cold-blooded, +deliberate, and systematic butchery of unarmed men, taken by surprise +or lured by treacherous promises. The most striking instance of this is +the cruel slaughter, caused by a blind and panic fear, of the +house-servants and other Chinese in Manila; another is the burning of +the Parián, with all the rich merchandise stored therein; while +in Cavite several hundred Chinese are deliberately taken out by tens +and beheaded. In both cases, however, <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb18" href="#pb18" name="pb18">18</a>]</span>opportunity is kindly +provided for the wretched victims to receive baptisms, if they were +infidels, or to make their confessions, if Christians. Peace is finally +made with the small remnant of the insurgent force, who are taken to +Manila and carefully guarded within a stockade. The writer describes +their method of warfare; and enumerates the villages burned by them, +and other damages committed, during the revolt.</p> +<p>The history of the Augustinian order in the Philippines, presented +in <span class="sc">VOLS. XXIII</span> and <span class="sc">XXIV</span> +of this series from Medina’s <i>Historia</i>, is here continued +for the decade 1630–40 by an extract from Diaz’s <i lang= +"es">Conquistas</i> (written about 1718), partly in synopsis and partly +in translation. He relates the contest over the vacant see of Manila, +finally settled (1630) in favor of Fray Pedro de Arce; the election of +Gerónimo de Medrano as provincial in 1632; the persecutions in +Japan, the lives of martyrs there, the controversy between Corcuera and +the bishop, biographies of noted Augustinians, and various secular +matters (all of which we omit). There is an interesting relation of the +life and labors of a useful missionary, Alonso de Mentrida, among the +Indians in Panay Island; he wages unceasing war against the devil and +his agents, the native priests of idols—the former often +appearing in visible and hideous form. A similar account is given of +the life of Juan de Medina (above cited). In 1638 Fray Martin Errasti +is elected provincial. The Visayas Islands have been, of late years, +harassed by the Moro pirates; but a notable expedition is undertaken +(1639) against those of the Lake Lanao region, in which the Recollect +missionary known as “Padre Capitan” is a prominent figure. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb19" href="#pb19" name= +"pb19">19</a>]</span>For the time, those Moros are awed and warned. +Diaz recounts the main events of that time—Corcuera’s +expedition to Jolo and the insurrection of the Chinese. Errasti dies in +1639, and his vacant office is assumed by Fray Juan Ramírez, the +past provincial.</p> +<p>In 1640 the Jesuit Bobadilla writes a description of the Philippines +and their people. The former is but a brief outline; most of the +document is devoted to the Indian natives, and the natural products of +the islands. The father writes of the custom of slavery among them; +their religious beliefs, customs, and superstitions; the practices of +their priests; their physical appearance, and dress; their customs of +tattooing, filing the teeth, and bathing; their language, writing, and +music. He describes their marriages, houses, occupations, boats, and +weapons; and their medical practice and mortuary customs. Then he +considers the climate of the islands, the culture and uses of rice, and +the natural products—animals, minerals, and fruits, especially +the palm and bamboo. He describes the buyo, so commonly used there; +also various peculiar animals. Bobadilla then mentions the manner in +which the Spanish colony is governed; their garrisons in the islands; +and the bishoprics therein. He describes briefly the city of Manila, +the trade of Filipinas, the relations of the Spaniards with the Chinese +and other peoples, and the voyage between Manila and Acapulco.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">The Editors</span></p> +<p class="dateline">July, 1905. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb21" +href="#pb21" name="pb21">21</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +</div> +<div class="body"> +<div id="doc1638" class="div0 part"> +<h2 id="xd19e420" class="main">Documents of 1638</h2> +<ul> +<li><a href="#doc1638.1">Events in the Filipinas, 1637–38.</a> +[Unsigned; probably written by Juan Lopez, S.J., in July, 1638.]</li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.2">Letter to Felipe IV.</a> Sebastian Hurtado de +Corcuera; August 21.</li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.3">Letter to Felipe IV, from the treasurer at +Manila.</a> Baltasar Ruiz de Escalona; August 31.</li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.4">Relation of the Filipinas Islands.</a> +Hieronimo de Bañuelos y Carrillo; 1638.</li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.5">Glorious victories against the Moros of +Mindanao.</a> Diego de Bobadilla, S.J., and others; 1638.</li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.6">Royal orders and decrees, 1638.</a> Felipe IV; +March 15, and September-December.</li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.7">Fortunate successes in Filipinas and +Terrenate, 1636–37.</a> [Unsigned; published in 1639.]</li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.8">Value of Corcuera’s seizures in +Jolo.</a> [Unsigned and undated; probably 1638.]</li> +</ul> +<p><span class="sc">Sources</span>: The first and seventh of these +documents are obtained from MSS. in the Academia Real de la Historia, +Madrid; the second and third, and two of the decrees in the sixth, from +MSS. in the <span lang="es">Archivo general de Indias</span>, Sevilla; +the rest of the sixth, from the <span lang="es">Archivo Historico +Nacional</span>, Madrid; the fourth, from Thevenot’s <i lang= +"fr">Voyages curieux</i>, t. i, part ii—from a copy belonging to +the library of Harvard University; the fifth, from a book in the +<span lang="es">Museo-Biblioteca de Ultramar</span>, Madrid; the +eighth, from <span class="corr" id="xd19e471" title= +"Source: Pastells’s">Pastells’</span> edition of +Colin’s <i lang="es">Labor evangélica</i>, iii, pp. +528–533.</p> +<p><span class="sc">Translations</span>: These are made by James A. +Robertson—except the second and part of the sixth, by Emma Helen +Blair; and the fifth, by Arthur B. Myrick. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb23" href="#pb23" name="pb23">23</a>]</span></p> +<div id="doc1638.1" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e484" class="main">Events in the Filipinas, +1637–38</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The patache for España left here August 24. It +had a propitious season [for departure], and therefore it has +apparently enjoyed favoring vendaval blasts.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e488src" href="#xd19e488" name="xd19e488src">1</a> A short time +before that, the patache had left for the island of Hermosa; its +commander was Don Alonso de Alcoçer, and the governor of that +island, Sargento-mayor Pedro Palomino, sailed in it. On the fifth of +September, a xalea arrived from Yndia on its way to Macan, which had +been obliged to put in here on account of the weather. It left Malaca +August 16, in order to advise the inhabitants of Macan to be on the +lookout, for there were many Dutch in the strait. Now they are going in +the galleon “San Juan Baptista” under command of Juan Lopez +de Ariduin, to buy materials of importance for his Majesty’s +fleets. The xalea remains here to be used for the expedition to Xolo, +for which it seems well fitted. They report as news that Goa +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb24" href="#pb24" name= +"pb24">24</a>]</span>was almost surrounded by Dutch vessels. Six +galleons went out to attack them and sank three of the Dutch vessels. +The latter retired after three days of fighting, with the intention of +returning to Jacatra and getting a larger force. On the way they met +eleven Portuguese fustas, which took shelter in a river. The Dutch +employed strategy in fighting them, and captured seven of the fustas, +while four escaped. One of the latter was an excuse for a galley. In +consequence [of that victory], the enemy are now committing great +depredations in the strait.</p> +<p>It is also reported that the Malabars with seventeen paroos +[<i>i.e.</i>, praus] attacked last year a ship from Macan with a crew +of thirty Portuguese, and carrying great wealth, a thing never before +seen. It is reported that the Dutch there have shown great anger at +what the relief galleons did this year with their ships and the fort of +Malayo; and that, for the coming year, they are intending to send out a +squadron to punish the jest that was played on them.</p> +<p>It is reported that a Portuguese, named Antonio Carnero, has taken +up arms together with others, and that they have adopted the calling of +pirates, and are committing depredations on Moros and Christians.</p> +<p>When the king of Achen was about to go to attack Malaca with a +fleet, he died. The kingdom was inherited by the king of Paon, an +old-time friend of the Portuguese. He has renewed friendship with +them—a great piece of news.</p> +<p>Fray Antonio del Rosario, the ancient of Macan, of [the Order of] +St. Dominic, bishop-elect of Malaca, died on the way [to that city] +before being consecrated. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb25" href= +"#pb25" name="pb25">25</a>]</span></p> +<p>The fathers who accompanied Father Marçelo, who were captured +last year by the Dutch, together with that famous Polish father, are +now at liberty. Father Antonio Magallanes, procurator of the province +of Goa, whom I saw at Roma and Madrid, was to conduct Father +Marçelo and his companions; but he remained in España to +finish some business, has been elected bishop of Japon, and they are +awaiting him in Yndia.</p> +<p>Among the Portuguese of that xalea is one who is a lay-brother of +St. Francis. He came last year from Lisboa as companion of a bishop, +the friar Francisco Froan de Benavides, who was once in the mission of +Nuevo Mexico. He died on his arrival at Goa, and this religious is +trying to pass to España by way of these islands, with papers +left him by the bishop. This is the principal news brought by the +Portuguese.</p> +<p>On the morning of the seventh of this month, Fray Juan de +Subelço<a class="noteref" id="xd19e520src" href="#xd19e520" +name="xd19e520src">2</a> came here from the province of the Rosario, to +ask assistance by virtue of an order that he brought from the governor. +This was given to him [by the authorities], and he entered the convent, +took possession of it for his province, and sent to Manila the father +rector, Fray Francisco Pinelo, who surrendered the house peaceably and +quietly. The day before, with the same aid, they had taken possession +at the same time of Minondo, the hospital, <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb26" href="#pb26" name="pb26">26</a>]</span>and the +Parián, and conveyed Father Collado and the other fathers to +their convent. The community received them at the door of their church, +amid the chiming of bells, the playing of organs, and with candles +lighted on their altars; thence they took the fathers to their cells. +As a thank-offering they began a novena, on November 7, of masses and +<i>Salves</i>, accompanied by fine music, the chiming of the bells, and +a goodly crowd. All the people rejoiced because they were at peace. +Your Reverence will be pleased to know how this happened. Collado wrote +bits of satire against the governor, calling him <i lang="la">filius +diaboli flagellum dei et alia hujus modi</i>.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e534src" href="#xd19e534" name="xd19e534src">3</a> His original +letters were returned to hands that placed them in those of Don +Sebastian. Finally the governor allowed the claims of the province of +the Rosario to stand. That province had made Fray Andres del Santisimo +judge-conservator, who summoned Collado to show his despatches that had +been passed by the Council [of the Indias], but he did not answer. The +judge-conservator cited him for the second time, but there was no +answer. The judge-conservator proclaimed the cause at an end, and +sentenced his province to be suppressed. Aid was asked for the +execution of the order and was given, etc.</p> +<p>On Saturday, the twelfth of this month, excommunications were read +here in four churches against those who had or knew of moneys, +clothing, books, or other things of the bearded fathers,<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e539src" href="#xd19e539" name="xd19e539src">4</a> +unless they <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb27" href="#pb27" name= +"pb27">27</a>]</span>gave them up to those of the Rosario. Almost two +thousand pesos were declared here belonging to Pinelo, who had +deposited them with a friend. He came to Manila instantly, and begged +protection from Don Sebastian, saying that they were his—five +hundred pesos received from a berth on ship, given him by his Lordship +for Mexico, and which, with his Lordship’s permission, he sold +when he remained; one hundred and seventy pesos from a pay-warrant +which his Lordship had ordered to be paid to him; and he had been given +one thousand or more pesos, which his nephew the reader Ochoa (whom he +brought with him as a witness) had given him. All this did he state, +for even as he left here, he tried to go to España in this +galleon by way of Macan, which was conceded to him. The governor wrote +to Fray Juan de Subelço to let him have that money, which was +proved to belong to Pinelo. He gave him another and very stringent +letter for his provincial in Manila that declared the same thing. +Father Fray Juan, who narrated the matter to me, went to talk with him, +and told him that the books showed that the expense was more than eight +hundred pesos ahead of the receipts; and that, besides this, he had +just received two hundred pesos belonging to a deceased man, and one +hundred and seventy pesos belonging to another, and that he will have +to give account of this—besides which, in any event, it all +belonged to the order, and nothing was his. He answered that they +should have it there, and that he would write to his provincial; and +that, notwithstanding <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb28" href="#pb28" +name="pb28">28</a>]</span>his letter, Fray Juan should do his duty, in +conformity to the rules of his order. I have now learned that they gave +up all the money to Pinelo, which he carried away. The galleon sailed +September 19.</p> +<p>Of their own accord the Sangleys offered the governor<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e556src" href="#xd19e556" name="xd19e556src">5</a> a +gift of six thousand pesos, giving the following reasons for so doing: +first, because he had redeemed thirty-one of their people from the +captivity of Corralat; second, because he had made the seas free and +secure for their ordinary trade; and third, because he maintained them +in peace and justice. Consequently, the expense of the war of Mindanao, +taking into account the artillery, and the pillage which pertained to +his Majesty, and the above-mentioned six thousand pesos, was not only +covered, but there were also one thousand five hundred pesos left over, +as I was told by his Majesty’s accountant. The latter also adds +that the golden water-jug and plate that had belonged to Auditor +Alcaraz were bought for the king our lord with those one thousand five +hundred pesos; and the governor Don Sebastian added to that sum more +than two hundred pesos as a gift from his own purse, in order to make +up the cost of the said water-jug and plate. Dated at Cavite, September +15, 1637.</p> +<p>September 27, sentence was declared in favor of the Augustinian +fathers of Castilla, and that sentence makes a complete end to the +alternative. A sentence was also given in which the will of Espinosa el +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb29" href="#pb29" name= +"pb29">29</a>]</span>Tuerto [<i>i.e.</i>, “the one-eyed”] +was declared null and void. The property has been delivered to the fund +belonging to deceased persons, and those who have any right to it are +to demand their justice.</p> +<p>I had a letter from Father Melchor de Vera,<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e575src" href="#xd19e575" name="xd19e575src">6</a> in which he +says that the people who escaped alive from the six large Javanese +ships which were at Lamitan were accommodated in one caracoa, and +passing before Basilan, full of fear of the Spaniards in the fort of +Sanboangan, talked with the chief men [of Basilan], and told them that +they were those who had been driven from the hill, and that many more +than they had thought had been killed; and that there was no one in +Mindanao who did not mourn a person of very near kin—the father +for his son, the son for his father, etc.</p> +<p>I shall add here what occurred last year in the month of September, +and which I did not learn until the same month of this year 1637. The +captain and commandant of Caragan was then Juan Nicolas Godino. He went +with a fleet to commit depredations on the tributaries of Cachil +Corralat. He met six caracoas at sea, which he attacked and +conquered—although most of the enemy escaped to land, as they +were near the shore. However he killed some of them and captured +others. He also did much damage <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb30" +href="#pb30" name="pb30">30</a>]</span>in a village that he attacked. +He returned to his fort laden with plunder and with one hundred and +twenty captives. Among the dead was one Dumplac, who had formerly +killed Alférez Blas Gonzalez, and had done great damage to the +Christians of our missions and those of Caragan. Among the captives was +a very famous chief, who was regarded as a brave man, and who killed +Captain Pedro Baptista in the insurrection of Caragan.</p> +<p>October 24, the patache from the island of Hermosa entered the port, +and it brought back most of the people in those forts. They say that +the Franciscan friars are all going to China, as are all the +Dominicans, except one who remained there. It is reported that they are +suffering famine, and that no ships from China go there.</p> +<p>The day before, the twenty-third, Sargento-mayor Don Pedro de +Corquera, the governor’s nephew, died at Manila. The governor had +reared him from childhood in Flandes. He was well liked and respected +in these islands, for his affable manners had obtained for him much +popularity. Three or four days before, a galley-captain, named N. +Ramos, and some other discontented Spaniards had deserted in a boat +with a topmast, for their provision robbing two Sangley champans.</p> +<p>The master-of-camp, Pedro de Heredia, died at Manila November 5. He +left all his property to charity. But the Audiencia sequestered it all +immediately, until the end of his residencia. Captain Don Diego de +Miranda also died from an accident, which carried him off in thirty +hours.</p> +<p>News was received on November 15 that the enemy were passing the +Mindoro coast. That same <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb31" href= +"#pb31" name="pb31">31</a>]</span>day, Don Sebastian despatched some +vessels to attack them. Alférez Arexica went from this place to +attack them with fifty firearms in the xalea and two brigantines. He +also despatched his company from Manila in champans, to pursue and +punish them. Shortly after, Father Hernando de Estrada<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e598src" href="#xd19e598" name="xd19e598src">7</a> +arrived here from Marinduque. He states that he met some champans which +had been pursued by the enemy, whom they thought to have been +Camucones. The two brigantines returned on the night of November 24. On +account of the wind and rain they had lost the xalea, which was the +flagship, the night that they had left. They went to Balayan, where +they learned that the Camucones had attacked Lobo, but that they had +done no damage, for the Indians resisted them; whereupon the pirates +had taken their course toward their own country by way of the sea side +of Mindoro. The xalea returned November 29, without having met the +enemy. Then came news that one night the flagship and one other of the +champans that had sailed from Manila had collided. The shock was more +severe on the flagship, which sprang a leak and went down. Only one +Spaniard and one Sangley were drowned.</p> +<p>The champan that carried Father Marçelo Mastril did not go to +China, but to the Lequios, which are subject to the king of Saxuma. +Some Japanese accompanied the father. Accordingly they made use of the +following stratagem. Those of the champan talked with the Lequians, +whom they told that those Japanese had been wrecked on an island, and +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb32" href="#pb32" name= +"pb32">32</a>]</span>that they had rescued them; and that, if the +Lequians would give them some provisions, they would leave the Japanese +there; but, if not, that the latter would return [to Manila]. The +Lequians gave them some food, and immediately despatched the father and +the Japanese, as they wished, in a funea, while the champan returned +here. They learned there that the Dominican fathers who had tried to go +to Japon last year by way of the Lequios had been seized, and sent to +the king of Saxuma by the tono of that land.</p> +<p>Yesterday, December 9, Don Sebastian set out from Manila for Xolo. +He sailed in the galley flagship. With him went the xalea, brigantines, +champans, and the two galleons for Terrenate, under the command of +Geronimo Enriquez; and as admiral Don Pedro de Almonte, the same as +last year. The second galley was launched yesterday, and the commander +of the galleys, Nicolas Gonzalez, will leave here in it in a week, in +order to follow Don Sebastian. Admiral Andres Lopez de [<i>word partly +illegible</i>; Nozadigui?] will govern this port in his absence.</p> +<p>A patache arrived at Manila on December 27 from Macan, laden with +five thousand arrobas of iron for Captain Juan Lopez de Ariduin. It was +bought from some English, who were near Macan with three galleons and +this patache. It brought news of the remarkable martyrdom of Father +Francisco Marçelo Mastril, who reached Japon September 19. +Having left Manila on July 10, he landed at the kingdom of Saxuma with +only one companion. He immediately went inland to go to the +emperor’s court. But he was seized October 4, and, having +suffered most cruel tortures, he was beheaded October 17 with his +aforesaid companion. Since I <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb33" href= +"#pb33" name="pb33">33</a>]</span>translated the relation from +Portuguese into Castilian, and enclose it herewith, I shall only add +that the bells in our church and others were rung as soon as the news +arrived. In the afternoon a notable <i lang="la">Te Deum laudamus</i> +was sung. The dean again put on his clerical robes. The archbishop +came, as did the royal Audiencia, and a great crowd of people, and the +orders, as well as the master-of-camp, Don Lorenço de Olaso, and +the flower of the soldiery. From our house they went to [the church of] +St. Dominic to sing another <i>Te Deum</i> for three martyrs of that +order. At night there was also a chiming of bells and an illumination. +The entire city celebrated the glory and virtues of the holy father +Marçelo, with tender tears; for he was generally loved and +regarded as a saint.</p> +<p>Among the Dominican fathers died a mestizo of Binondo, son of a +Chinese and a Tagál woman. He was prosecuted by justice, in +order to hang him for his crimes; and he embarked with the fathers, in +order to escape with his life. Arriving at the Lequios, and his other +companions remaining in the boat, he refused to return, but wished to +continue with the fathers. They tell and do not finish telling of the +valor, fervor, and courage of that holy mestizo, who suffered cruel +tortures with a rare constancy, ever preaching the Divine law of +God.</p> +<p>It was learned, at the coming of that patache, that those fathers +who had accompanied the holy father Marçelo who went with the +captain-general of Macan had arrived safely; and that the champan which +had fled hence with eighteen sailors had made port at that city. It was +also reported that the Portuguese have not been well received in Japon +either <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb34" href="#pb34" name= +"pb34">34</a>]</span>this year or last, and all that is because of the +preachers who go. It is learned also that Father Alberto de Polonia was +brought to Cochinchina, and that he is now in Macan, where for some +time he suffered from a most severe illness.</p> +<p>A champan, which had sailed from the island of Hermosa some years +ago with a load of people, and had been given up as lost, made port at +Sian because of the violence of the wind. That king treated them well, +and gave them the means with which to return. Afterward they were +driven upon the coast of the kingdom of Patani by other fierce +tempests—where, having been supplied and sailing near the strait +of Sincapura, the Dutch followed them. They landed, and at length made +port at Macan, whence some of the men have come, while the others will +come in the galleon “San Juan Baptista.” It is said by +those who come in this patache, who had gone in the galleon “San +Juan Baptista,” that, on discovering the English ships, lanchas +came from them to reconnoiter them; and the English, having heard that +it was a galleon belonging to the king of España, threw up their +caps into the air joyfully, and eagerly cried out, “Hurrah for +the king of España!” Then they took the news to their own +ships, which fired many salutes, and by way of toasting the health of +the king our sovereign, fired a hundred pieces of artillery. They told +our men that the daughter of their king<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e632src" href="#xd19e632" name="xd19e632src">8</a> was in +España for all her lifetime.</p> +<p>Father Fray Francisco de Pinelo and other religious who went from +here to pass to España embarked in these English ships, on +condition that there should be no disputes on matters of religion. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb35" href="#pb35" name= +"pb35">35</a>]</span></p> +<p>News came through the fathers of St. Augustine at Panhay on January +15, 1638, that one of the champans which left Manila to attack the +Camucones became separated from the others. It fell in with the +Camucones, and did them great damage, sinking their flagship and +almiranta. Twelve Borneans were captured, and six Christians were +freed. The enemy’s loss was a hundred counting drowned and +killed. Sargento-mayor Pedro de Fuerçios was commander of that +champan.</p> +<p>Almost all the month of January and that of February was taken up +with prayers in various churches, for the fortunate success of Don +Sebastian. Now we are not the only ones to offer them, as we were last +year; but all make them, both the secular clergy and the friars. The +Sangleys have said very solemn prayers in their Parián church, +of their own accord, as an expression of thanks for the peace and +justice in which the governor maintains them.</p> +<p>Don Sebastian had sent those Borneans and Camucones from Otong to +Manila, ordering them to serve the various orders and hospitals, so +that they might be carefully catechized and made Christians. When they +reached Maribeles, an old Morabite<a class="noteref" id="xd19e644src" +href="#xd19e644" name="xd19e644src">9</a> persuaded the others, and +they rose against the Spaniards who were bringing them. There were two +Spaniards in the champan who were wounded, but they killed the Morabite +and wounded some of the others. Some of them were thrown into the sea, +where they were drowned, and with this fortune they reached Manila.</p> +<p>On the night of February 10, robbers entered the church of this +residence at Cavite, and stole two <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb36" +href="#pb36" name="pb36">36</a>]</span>silver lamps. They set a trap in +the stairway, so that the first one who should descend, if the robbers +were perceived, would undoubtedly be killed. It has been impossible to +find any trace of the robbers. A week later, about two thousand +pesos’ worth of jewels were stolen in Manila in [the church of] +St. Dominic, Nuestra Señora del Rosario. But the thief (who was +a Spaniard) was discovered, and most of it has been recovered.</p> +<p>Letters were received March 19, announcing the governor’s +arrival at Sanboangan and Jolo. The news therein contained is in a +separate paper.</p> +<p>A despatch was received from the governor in the middle of April +from Jolo, from which it was learned that he was pressing as closely as +possible the siege of the stronghold, which the Macasars and Joloans +were defending with great obstinacy. There are things worthy of +history, which will go [in a letter] by themselves.</p> +<p>It was learned from the same despatch that the Terrenate galleons +had already returned to Sanboangan, and that they had arrived safely +with their reënforcements, without the Dutch enemy having shown +them any resistance, although the latter had vessels of great burden. +Six Dutchmen deserted to our men; the three who were aboard the +flagship, where Father Pedro Hernando de Estrada was, were converted to +our holy Catholic faith by his efforts. One of them is a fine student, +and very talented. He knows Latin and Greek, and had studied the whole +course of arts, and some years in law, in Flandes.</p> +<p>A patache which left Macan some days after our galleon “San +Juan Baptista,” arrived from that city on May 4, and they +expected to find the galleon here; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb37" +href="#pb37" name="pb37">37</a>]</span>however, experienced persons say +that it is not late. There are six brothers in the +galleon—students who are to be ordained—and Father +Bartolome is coming with them as superior. That patache brings two +Franciscan friars, Castilians, who have been driven from China. They +say that the Chinese have driven them away through love of us, saying +that Ours preach Christ risen, and those fathers Christ +crucified—a reason that I do not understand. The statement of the +pilot of the patache is that they have been driven out because they +proceeded in the preaching with but little caution, and I regard that +as true. Some nine months ago, I heard a prudent and experienced man +say that a great persecution was feared in China, because of the little +caution of the preachers. One week after the arrival of the patache, I +received a letter from Father Antonio Cardin,<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e661src" href="#xd19e661" name="xd19e661src">10</a> commissary of +the Holy Office for Macan and China, who gives me the following +news:</p> +<div class="blockquote"> +<p class="first">“<i>Section of a letter from Father Antonio +Cardin, dated Macan, April 15, 1638</i></p> +<p>“I shall relate here the news of the missions that your +Reverence desires to know. Japon is a thing of the past if God do not, +in His mercy, aid it. China was increasing greatly in Christianity +during these years, but with the entrance of the friars, it is being +thrown into confusion; for all the religious have been exiled in +Chincheo, and the churches destroyed, <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb38" href="#pb38" name="pb38">38</a>]</span>where they and we were +[laboring] in a flourishing Christian church. For as the friars treat +of conquests, saying openly that China can be conquered with four +thousand Spaniards, such talk can have no good effect on the natives, +who immediately tell it to their mandarins, and we are all lost.</p> +<p>“The fathers have been restored to their former liberty in +Cochinchina. The old king died, but his son has given the Dutch a +factory, and they are doing as much harm as possible. In Tumquin that +Christian church is increasing greatly; but the Dutch are now there, +and, although the king has not conceded them a factory, they say that +they will do us as much harm as possible in order that we may be +exiled. Father Raymundo de Govea is arranging matters in Tumquin, in +order that he may go to the Laos. There is no news from Siam. They +killed Father Julio Cesar there, and until now they have been at war +with Malaca. They now send to ask for peace, and they also tell me that +they will ask it from Manila. It is said that they are doing this +through fear of the Dutch, who they fear are going to seize their +kingdom. Father Lope de Andrada was ordered to retire from Camboja, on +account of ill health, and Father Antonio Capechi was sent there. The +sending of a large ship directly to Lisboa is being discussed here, but +this is so great a blessing that I doubt whether it will be +done.”</p> +</div> +<p>At the closing of the hour of prayer on May 13, the day of the +glorious ascension of our Lord, news arrived of the capture of the +[fortified] hill of Jolo. It is a matter of the greatest consolation +for all nations; at least, all joined in the festival with great +appearances of rejoicing. The bells of all the <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb39" href="#pb39" name="pb39">39</a>]</span>churches +were rung, and the <i lang="la">Te Deum laudamus</i>, so due to God, +was sung in some of them as a thank-offering. There was a great +illumination at night, and more ringing of bells. I refer to the +history for particular.</p> +<p>The above news was received on the occasion of the arrival of five +or six ships from Great China, laden with merchandise, which was needed +in the islands. They give as news that eleven other and more powerful +ships have been given chapas. That has been of the greatest +consolation, for in the last two years those ships have had so little +custom, because of the small amount of silver that had been sent from +Mexico, that it was feared that the Chinese would not come this +year.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e687src" href="#xd19e687" name= +"xd19e687src">11</a></p> +<p>The commander of the galleys, Nicolas Gonçalez, and Captain +Carrança, who was general of the artillery, having fallen very +sick at Jolo almost at the beginning of the siege, were sent away by +Don Sebastian so that they might recuperate. They arrived at Octong +safely more than two months ago, and this their delay was already +causing anxiety. Today, May 17, I have been told that the Chinese of +the champan in which they were coming [to Manila] killed them through +greed, in order to rob them, and five other Spaniards with them. One +they cast into the sea badly wounded, where some Indian fishermen +rescued him, to whom he related what had happened. Scarcely had they +reached land before he died.</p> +<p>Some influential men were killed in the assaults <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb40" href="#pb40" name="pb40">40</a>]</span>on Xolo, +among whom were Sargento-mayor Melon, Captain Juan Nicolas, +Alférez Aregita, etc.</p> +<p>Yesterday, May 16, while talking with the commandant of Macan, a +very honorable Portuguese, of the Order of Santiago, I asked him some +questions, the replies to which I shall state here, as they have some +interest. He says that the kingdom of Tumquin is a part of Great China, +but has a different king; and it differs in language from China, as +does Galicia from Castilla. He asserts the same of Cochinchina, +although there is a greater difference in language. Tumquin is ninety +leguas from Macan, and is reached by traveling between the island of +Ainao [<i>i.e.</i>, Hainan] and the mainland of China. Cochinchina is +one hundred and twenty leguas [from Macan], and is reached by going +outside that island. One of four ships that sailed recently from Macan +to various kingdoms, which was en route to Macasar with two hundred and +fifty persons, was wrecked on this island of Ainao, but only fourteen +persons were drowned. The commandant added that the Society of Jesus is +now preaching in that island, and that the people are rapidly embracing +Christianity. The fathers had brought six boys, sons of the most +influential men, to Macau to be educated better, and they show signs of +great ability. When I asked him about the exile of the preachers from +Chincheo, he only replied that the Castilians, as they are prepared to +hold subject all the Indians of their conquests—as Mexico, Peru, +and these islands—enter into other kingdoms with great bragging +and boasts, which is the occasion of their ruin.</p> +<p>I have learned from some fathers of St. Dominic and the cura of +Nueva Segobia (which is, one hundred <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb41" href="#pb41" name="pb41">41</a>]</span>and thirty leguas away +from here) that Fray Diego Collado wrote a paper to Don Sebastian, +after the reunion of the fathers of St. Dominic, which was entitled +“Deceits, tricks, and plots of Don Sebastian Hurtado de +Corcuera,” in which he made disgraceful remarks to him. His +Lordship sent it to his provincial, and the latter retired the father +to the house of Nueva Segobia. He remained some months in prison, where +he could neither hear nor say mass; and he is now locked up where he +can hear it through a church gallery.</p> +<p>Today, May 20, at two o’clock, quite without our expecting it, +and without the fires in Maribelez having announced it, the galleon +“San Juan Baptista”—which had taken fifty days to +come from Macan, a voyage which the patache made in nine—arrived. +God delivered them from a great danger on some shoals, to which the +currents were taking them swiftly during a calm. The fathers assert +that they invoked the holy father Marcelo, the martyr of Jesus Christ, +with great faith in the greatest danger. Thanks to the Lord, who has +allowed them all to arrive safe and happy! Father Bartolome Roboredo +has told us glorious things of the Christendom of Tumquin—where, +this year alone, nine thousand have been baptized. He says that there +are some fathers and a bishop even in Etiopa; and that the rulers do +not molest the Catholics. The fathers of Jentafee, Tibet, and the +kingdoms of Potente and Siranagar, have suffered various fortunes. In +the court of the Megor [<i>i.e.</i>, Mogul], the church was destroyed, +and the fathers seized by those Moros, because they were confirming in +the faith those Christians who had been taken captive from Bengala. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb42" href="#pb42" name= +"pb42">42</a>]</span>But now affairs have begun to brighten; they have +been granted liberty, and are aiding the Christians. By that means it +is to be hoped that there will be at some other time a gateway into +Tibet and Siranagar, the way to which must necessarily lie through [the +country of] the Megor. It has been learned from Japon, from the very +ones who are in power, that they are now tired and weary of killing +Christians; and that they are not well satisfied with the Dutch and +their trade. He adds that, because of what the holy father Marcelo +declared to them in his martyrdom—namely, that they were +rendering their nation infamous and obscuring their fame by the +tortures that they were inflicting upon the private parts of +Christians—the Japanese are generally angry, and do not wish that +to be done. All the priests in Japon at present are three of the +Society of Jesus, all Japanese. It is not known where they are +wandering, and no letters have been received from them, because of the +severity of the persecution. There is one other father, a European, +named Juan Baptista Porro. They do not say that he is alive, for, +although his death is not known, it is presumed that he is dead; for he +was very old and worn out with labors, and it is several years since +letters have been received from him. It is also said that there are +hopes that that persecution will soon cease. Would to God that it might +be so!</p> +<p>Yesterday, May 23, the day of the Holy Ghost, Don Sebastian arrived +at this port, having left Tanaguan that morning—a distance of ten +mortal leguas. He came in the Terrenate galleons, which, as the weather +was bad, he left at the landing at Mindoro. He, as well as Father Juan +de Barrios, was fatigued, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb43" href= +"#pb43" name="pb43">43</a>]</span>which we could see was from the +hardships that they have suffered; but, thanks to God, these have been +well recompensed in service to God and to the general welfare of these +islands. The chaplain Don Pedro de Francia died of fever in the ship, +and, six days later, Captain Don Lope de Barahona, of the same +sickness. Upon the arrival of Don Sebastian, the bells in our house +were rung for a long time, as a mark of rejoicing. Later the bells were +rung in the cathedral church, and that night there were illuminations +in all the houses and convents.</p> +<p>Yesterday, May 27, the galleons of the Terrenate relief expedition +anchored at this port. Father Hernando de Estrada says that twenty +persons of various nations (for the galleons carried Joloans, Basilans, +and the Bisayans who were freed from the captivity of Xolo) have died +in the flagship since their departure from Sanboangan, and that +sickness was caused by their close quarters; and that a goodly number +have died in the almiranta and the patache; but it is a cause for great +consolation that no Moro, male or female, has died without baptism.</p> +<p>Yesterday, May 31, Don Sebastian made his triumphant entrance into +Manila, in the same manner as he had done, the year preceding, upon his +arrival from Mindanao. I wrote concerning it, by the patache; and will +only state here the number of pieces—namely, eleven of cast iron +and one bronze culverin, these being large pieces. Among the +medium-sized pieces and falcons there were fifteen. The best falcon had +the arms and name of King Don Sebastian [of Portugal]. There were +eleven smaller versos. The crowd of people in the windows and streets, +the illuminations of the night, and the masquerades <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb44" href="#pb44" name="pb44">44</a>]</span>of the +city, were the same as I wrote last year.</p> +<p>June 3, Corpus Christi day, the procession of thanks for the victory +was united with that of the most holy sacrament, as I wrote last year. +That same day the xalea which had been left in Xolo arrived. It brings +news that the king and queen, who had fled from the stronghold with the +other Joloans, have sent to say that they desire to settle in whatever +place may be assigned to them, and to pay tribute to his Majesty. They +promise to obey the conditions imposed on them by Don Sebastian.</p> +<p>Monday, June 7, the honors for those killed in war were performed in +the soldiers’ church with the same solemnity as those of the past +year. The father rector, Francisco Colin, preached to a generally +appreciative audience.</p> +<p>Friday, June eleven, the flagship galley entered this port with a +round sail, but no bastard; for a flash of lightning, which struck it, +had torn it from top to bottom and killed two men. It brought some +bronze artillery of the pieces captured at Jolo, in addition to what I +mentioned in the triumph—as was told me by a man who comes from +there, and who is well versed regarding artillery. The pieces with +ladles mounted in the stronghold numbered in all eleven of cast iron, +and eleven of bronze; also eleven other large falcons, besides the +ordinary versos.</p> +<p>He says of Dato Ache, who is the greatest pirate, and the one who +has done most damage to the Christians of all those of Jolo—and +who is the one who persuaded the king and the others to fortify +themselves, and to refuse to surrender to the Spaniards—that a +mine which exploded and killed fifty Joloans, <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb45" href="#pb45" name="pb45">45</a>]</span>also +caught him, so that he was completely buried. With only power to move +one hand, he beckoned imploringly for help; his men hurried to his +assistance, and got him out, much hurt. He recovered afterward, and +when the others descended from the stronghold, he, with some other +Malays, who were steadfastly of the opinion that they should not +surrender, escaped, and left the island in great dudgeon at the +king.</p> +<p>Sunday, June 20, when we celebrated the feast of the most holy +sacrament, Father Francisco Rangel chanted his first mass in this +college. He was one of the six who came from Macan to be ordained, and +since his residence here has told us some remarkable things that +happened four or five years ago, and, as I believe that very few there +have any knowledge regarding them, I shall relate them here.</p> +<p>First, he says that the island of Ainao is as large as the island of +Çicilia; and that it has its own natives, who are +white-complexioned, and have a different aspect from that of the +Chinese. The latter conquered the seacoast many years ago, and the +natives retired to the mountains, whence it is their custom to descend +to harry the Chinese—who are scattered, and have never subjected +the natives to the payment of tribute. While Father Bento de Matos was +in that island, two remarkable things occurred to him. In a city of the +Chinese, where no means have yet been found whereby to make an entrance +to instruct the natives—both because the language is special, and +because they are always at war—it happened that the father, +having no lodging, learned that there was a good unoccupied house, for, +because of fear at I know not what noises that had been heard +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb46" href="#pb46" name= +"pb46">46</a>]</span>in it, no one would live in it. The father +determined to enter and to live in that house, although his friends +dissuaded him and told him their fears. He lived there quite a number +of days, at the end of which, in the darkness of the night, a dead man +appeared to him in the habit of a mandarin. The dead man told the +father to look well at him, and note well his marks, and to go to the +mandarin So-and-so, who was his brother, and tell him to disinter his +body, which was buried in such and such a place near the altar; for it +was the will of God that there should not be the body of a condemned +heathen in a place where the holy body of His son Jesus Christ was +offered to Him in acceptable sacrifice. The father gave the marks to +the mandarin, who recognized that it was his brother. They dug in the +place noted, and found the body entire in a casket and preserved with +precious spices, with which it had been embalmed, and carried it to a +separate place.</p> +<p>The other circumstance is, that every day when the said father said +mass there, it was heard by a devout Christian, who, after rising +suddenly, appeared so joyful and happy that the other Christians came +to consider and even to believe him as mad. They resolved to censure +him, and to advise him to have more moderation and modesty in the +presence of so great a Lord. He answered them that he could not do +otherwise than he had; for, on rising from the eucharist, he saw two +most beautiful youths kneeling before the most holy sacrament, amid +such lights and splendors that they bathed his soul in joy so great +that it overflowed in its abundance to his body, and he could not +restrain himself from manifesting it.</p> +<p>It happened to that same father that, while on a <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb47" href="#pb47" name="pb47">47</a>]</span>mission +to Chincheo, some literati suddenly entered a chapel in which he was, +to make a jest of him and of the God whom he was adoring. He kneeled +down before a crucifix and said “Lord, do not abandon me among +thine enemies.” The holy crucifix answered “No, son, I +shall not abandon thee; but I am always with thee to aid thee.” +Thereupon the literati, thunderstruck and full of fear, left the +father, and went out of the chapel.</p> +<p>In one of these recent years, during a great baquio or typhoon, +eighteen Dutch ships were wrecked on the coast of Chincheo. The Chinese +beheaded some of those who escaped alive, and, having seasoned those +heads with salt, took them with the other men whom they left alive to +the court of Paquin, where they were all beheaded. For the aversion of +the Chinese to people with blue eyes is great; and the reason is that +it is said that there is an ancient prophecy that men with eyes of that +color will conquer their kingdom.</p> +<p>About two years ago, six out of seven ships that left Olanda with +reënforcements for India were sunk in the open sea, and only one +arrived.</p> +<p>The king of China is commonly regarded by his vassals as a +Christian: 1st, because he has only one wife; 2d, because he only +adores the God of heaven; 3d, because he has tried to exterminate the +bonzes. Among other plans [for the accomplishment of that], he employed +that of having six thousand bonzes enlisted for the war against the +Tartars. He sent them under the command of a great war mandarin, and +all the six thousand died in the war. The captain alone escaped, and he +was shortly after baptized; he is a very devout Christian, and is known +as <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb48" href="#pb48" name= +"pb48">48</a>]</span>Doctor Miguel. The manner in which the +king<a class="noteref" id="xd19e753src" href="#xd19e753" name= +"xd19e753src">12</a> became a Christian is said to have been that the +famous Doctor Pablo (who is now dead), having free entrance into the +palace, often conversed with the king, whom he converted and baptized. +The king has shown Ours favor by giving them a large convent of the +bonzes in Paquin, and has given them lands for their support.</p> +<p>July 6, Father Melchor de Vera passed by way of this college, en +route from Sanboanga. He gives us some particulars which it is well to +know. Cachil Moncay attacked the new village which Cachil Corralat had +built. He killed or captured about one hundred of his men, but Corralat +escaped. Afterward when Dato Siqui brought his customary tribute to +Corralat from the island of Little Sanguil, he attacked Moncay and +killed him and others, so that the number of killed and captives +reached eighty.</p> +<p>Father Vera met on his way here a champan from Terrenate, which +tells him that Corralat, seeing himself expelled [from his towns] by +Don Sebastian, sent messengers to the Moros of Terrenate, to beg for +aid; but that the latter had refused it to him, as they had enough of +their own affairs to attend to. The men of that champan also told him +that the petty king of Great Sanguil talked with them, and <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb49" href="#pb49" name="pb49">49</a>]</span>said +that he wished peace with the Spaniards, and would pay tribute to his +Majesty. For greater security he gave them the young prince his son, so +that they might give the boy to the governor as a token of peace. All +these are the results of the two victories of Mindanao and Jolo.</p> +<p>Today, July 11, a large champan, which had sailed from the port of +Macasar at the beginning of Lent, arrived at this port. They relate +many acts of affection and favor which the king has shown to the +Spaniards. Those aboard the champan assert that the king will be very +glad of whatever ill-treatment Don Sebastian accords to the Macasars of +Jolo, because they have taken arms against the vassals of his brother +the king of Castilla.</p> +<p>Today, July 18, the patache sails with the reënforcements for +the island of Hermosa, under the command of Don Pedro Fernandez del +Rio.</p> +<p>Yesterday, July 23, at dawn, a Macan patache anchored in this +roadstead. It comes from Camboja laden with rice, <i>camanguian</i> or +benzoin, and other drugs. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb50" href= +"#pb50" name="pb50">50</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e488" href="#xd19e488src" name="xd19e488">1</a></span> Spanish, +<i lang="es">buenas collas de bendabales</i>. In August the prevailing +winds at Manila are from the southwest, the vendavals. It often happens +that in the months of June and July there develop in northern +Luzón centers of minimum pressure so slowly that they appear to +remain stationary for many days, followed, as is natural, by continuous +currents and showers of rain from the third quadrant, known by the +native-born residents as “collas” (<i>Report</i> of U. S. +Philippine Commission, 1900, iv, pp. 229, 236; this chapter is +furnished by the Jesuit fathers in charge of the Manila +Observatory).</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e520" href="#xd19e520src" name="xd19e520">2</a></span> Juan +Zubelzu, a native of Biscay, and a novice in the Dominican convent at +Mexico, came to the Philippine Islands in the mission of 1615. After +his ordination, he ministered to the Indians in Bataán, and in +Cavite and Manila—where he died, December 14, 1657. He built a +stone church in Samal, for which, it is remarked, he did not harass the +Indians, although they were few in number. (<i lang="es">Reseña +biográfica</i>, i, p. 350.)</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e534" href="#xd19e534src" name="xd19e534">3</a></span> “Son +of the devil, scourge of God, and other similar things.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e539" href="#xd19e539src" name="xd19e539">4</a></span> Spanish, +<i lang="es">padres barbados</i>; also known as Barbones, from their +practice of wearing long beards; they came in 1635, with Corcuera, +headed by Collado, and formed the congregation of San Pablo (for +mission work only), by “warrants fraudulently obtained.” A +royal decree of February 21, 1637, commanded the Dominican provincial +at Manila to suppress the Barbones; it is the execution of this decree +which is described in our text. See <i lang="es">Reseña +biográfica</i>, i. pp. 338, 391, 420.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e556" href="#xd19e556src" name="xd19e556">5</a></span> This +statement about the Sangleys is printed by Barrantes as a postscript to +Lopez’s letter of July 23, 1637 (<i>q.v.</i>, <span class= +"sc">VOL. XXVII</span>). Internal evidence indicates Juan Lopez as the +author of the present document, and that it was written at Cavite, +where Lopez was in charge of the Jesuit house.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e575" href="#xd19e575src" name="xd19e575">6</a></span> Melchor de +Vera was born in Madrid about 1585, and entered the Jesuit order at the +age of nineteen. Two years later, he departed for the Philippine +mission, and after his ordination labored in the missions of Visayas +and Mindanao. He was for a time minister of Manila college, and +afterward rector of Carigara, and superior at Dapitan and Zamboanga. He +was well versed in architecture and military defense, and several forts +were built (especially that at Zamboanga) under his direction. He died +at Cebú, April 13, 1646. See Murillo Velarde’s <i>Hist. +Philipinas</i>, fol. 153 verso; and Combés’s <i>Hist. +Mindanao</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e598" href="#xd19e598src" name="xd19e598">7</a></span> Fernando de +Estrada, a native of Ecija, Spain, was a missionary among the Bisayans +and Tagáls, and at Ternate. He died at Manila in 1646, at the +age of forty-five. See Murillo Velarde’s <i>Hist. Philipinas</i>, +fol. 193 verso.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e632" href="#xd19e632src" name="xd19e632">8</a></span> Charles I +sought at various times to play Spain against France, but his Spanish +policy was, on the whole, a failure.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e644" href="#xd19e644src" name="xd19e644">9</a></span> Morabites: +the name of a Mahometan sect, founded by the son-in-law of Mahomet. The +name was also used among Mahometans to indicate a wise man or a +mystic.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e661" href="#xd19e661src" name="xd19e661">10</a></span> Antonio +Francisco Cardim was born at Viana, Portugal, in 1596, and entered the +Jesuit order in February, 1611. Seven years later he went to India, and +labored in Japan, China, and other countries until his +death—which occurred at Macao, April 30, 1659. Sommervogel +describes several missionary reports and other writings by Cardim.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e687" href="#xd19e687src" name="xd19e687">11</a></span> That is, +the small amount of their returns from Mexico prevented the Manila +merchants from making their usual large purchases from the Chinese +traders, and it was feared that the latter would not think it worth +while to bring their goods to Manila.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e753" href="#xd19e753src" name="xd19e753">12</a></span> This was +Tsongching (<span class="sc">VOL. XXII</span>, p. 197, and note 44), +the last emperor of the Ming dynasty; he was favorable to the Jesuits, +but can hardly be called a convert to the Christian faith. By +“Father Pablo” is probably meant Paul Siu (or Sin, +according to Crétineau-Joly), a Chinese official of high +standing, who was converted by Father Ricci, and served as an +evangelist among his people, besides aiding the missionaries with gifts +and his influence at court, and revising their writings in Chinese. See +Crétineau-Joly’s <i>Hist. Comp. de Jésus</i>, iii, +p. 172; and Williams’s <i>Middle Kingdom</i>, ii, pp. 302, +304.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.2" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e783" class="main">Letter from Corcuera to Felipe IV</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first salute">Sire:</p> +<p>Last year I informed your Majesty that I had appointed Don Luis +Arias de Mora as protector of the Sangleys in the Parián; he is +a lawyer well known in this royal Audiencia, a man of virtue and of +excellent abilities. On this account, with the salary of that office of +protector (which he draws from the communal treasury of the said +Sangleys), he is obliged to act as counsel for the archbishop in +affairs of justice, in order to prevent the troubles that the friars +brought upon him last year—inducing him to issue acts against the +Order of the Society, and excommunicating the royal Audiencia and the +governor of Filipinas. Since he promised that he would issue no +mandates without the signed approval of this counselor, we have lived +in peace, without there having been the least annoyance, or any +interruption of our harmony; for the said counselor will not sign any +act or document which the said archbishop causes to be drawn up if it +contravenes the patronage and jurisdiction of your Majesty, or +encroaches in any way upon your rights. For these reasons, and on +account of the said Luis Arias de Mora’s long service as advocate +in this royal Audiencia, and his excellent reputation for learning and +talent, I entreat <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb51" href="#pb51" +name="pb51">51</a>]</span>that your Majesty will be pleased to grant +him the favor of confirming him in the said office of protector of the +Sangleys, until some greater favor be bestowed upon him; any office +will be well served, if conferred upon him. May our Lord protect the +Catholic person of your Majesty, as Christendom has need. Manila, +August 21, 1638. Sire, your vassal kisses your Majesty’s +feet.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Sebastian Hurtado de +Corcuera</span></p> +<p>[<i>Endorsed</i>: “February 26, 1639; provision is made for +this.”] <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb52" href="#pb52" name= +"pb52">52</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.3" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e802" class="main">Letter to Felipe IV from the Treasurer +at Manila</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first signed">Sire:</p> +<p>If my so great obligations to your Majesty—not only since you +are my king and natural sovereign, but since you have honored me so +generously in these islands by employing my person in the post of +official judge-treasurer of your royal estate—necessarily and +strictly did not oblige me to inform your Majesty of the manner in +which the said royal estate is administered here, its condition, and +the so great ruin that it has suffered and is suffering since it was +your Majesty’s pleasure to have Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera +come to govern these islands in the year thirty-five, I should have to +arouse myself and take courage to place before the pious eyes of your +Majesty this memoir of disasters; for no other title or name can be +given to the calamities that have rushed pellmell both on the said +royal estate, and on us afflicted ministers who have it in charge, to +the so great peril and discredit of our persons. The matter, Sire, is a +very long drawn out one, and hence it is impossible to compass it in a +few lines; and I in my rashness will weary your Majesty’s ears. +But the love and zeal which move me will perhaps avail to remove from +me censure for my boldness. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb53" href= +"#pb53" name="pb53">53</a>]</span></p> +<p>Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera entered this city in the latter +part of June, 635, to assume this government. He showed apparent signs +of an endeavor to excel, in his honest and careful attitude toward your +royal estate; but we were soon undeceived by his so unexpected and +inconsiderate resolution not to despatch the ships which your Majesty +has ordered, by so many decrees and ordinances, to be sent annually to +Nueva España with the property of the inhabitants of this +city—so that the usual situado might be sent back in them to +these islands from the proceeds of your royal duties, and serve as a +help to the great and numerous expenses which your Majesty is incurring +annually in the increase and preservation of so many of the faithful as +have in these regions deserved to receive the holy water of baptism. +Yet it was a fact that Don Juan Cereço de Salamanca (who was +concluding his governorship, to which he had been appointed by the +viceroy of Nueva España), had prepared two ships, and their +cargoes were aboard—the lading-space having been allotted, in +accordance with the orders given by your Majesty, among the inhabitants +of this city. The losses and damage that have resulted, both to your +royal estate and to the property of the merchants of these islands, are +so considerable and momentous that I would not dare to name them. Your +Majesty’s ministers in Mexico, in whose charge is the management +of your royal estate, will have already reported them to you, for they +will be able to do it with more accurate knowledge and certainty; and, +consequently, I think that they will already have come to your +Majesty’s ears.</p> +<p>A few days ago the governor introduced in this <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb54" href="#pb54" name="pb54">54</a>]</span>royal +camp of Manila a cavalry company of twenty-nine men or soldiers, with +their captain, one lieutenant, one alférez, one standard-bearer, +and one corporal; each soldier was to receive 168 pesos’ pay per +annum, the captain 1,200, the lieutenant, 480, the alférez, 380, +the corporal, 216, and one trumpler, 120—the total amounting to +7,248 pesos. It was for the sole purpose of being employed nightly in +squads to close the gates of the city and to patrol it; and it was all +to spare the infantry from fatigue, although the latter had until then +been employed in that duty with much more security to the city, and +with the correction of many lawless acts which we have been +experiencing here since, and which have been committed by the very men +who are deputed to obviate them. When the said governor ordered us to +inscribe that new order in the royal books, and to furnish the papers +to the said soldiers with pay so increased, we, seeing of how little +importance and effectiveness the said company was, and that there was +no order from your Majesty for its creation, warned him of +that—besides giving him other reasons which will already have +been seen by your Council, for we enclosed a copy of both of them in +the letters that we wrote in the year 1636. Still, notwithstanding +that, the governor ordered the command to be obeyed. Accordingly we did +so, and the command has been, and is being, observed; and the governor +refuses to recede in so pernicious a decision as is the increase of +[expenses with] pay so large as this, and so unnecessary, and, +moreover, when your royal treasury in these islands has so many and so +great necessities.</p> +<p>Although there was, upon the arrival of the said <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb55" href="#pb55" name= +"pb55">55</a>]</span>governor, as much infantry in this city and these +presidios, as in the times of previous governors, and even more, +inasmuch as he had brought in those ships a very large and fine +consignment of men (for they numbered more than five hundred +men)—a considerable reënforcement, and sufficient to have +garrisoned and manned your Majesty’s forts—he raised two +companies of ninety-six Pampango Indians apiece, on his own counsel +alone, and unnecessarily, so that they might take part with the +Spaniards in the guard and watch of this city. The following pay [was +assigned]: the captain, 240 pesos per annum; two drummers, each 24 +pesos; the alférez, 120 pesos; his standard-bearer, 24 pesos; +the sergeant, 84 pesos; the four corporals, 60 pesos apiece. Hence, +both companies have an annual expense of 10,728 pesos, for those two +companies are paid monthly the amount of their pay. Not only are those +companies still kept up, but they have also been augmented since the +past year, 637, by two other companies—one for this camp, which +is here at present; and the other in the new presidios of Jolo and +Camboja—besides 72 other Pampango Indians, who are stationed in +the fort at the port of Cavite. All together mean an expense of 25,092 +pesos per year to the royal treasury. I assure your Majesty that this +matter ought to be looked at with the greatest attention, in order that +things might not be so managed; for it is a useless and needless +expense when, as I have said, your royal treasury suffers so great +losses as it does, by the so terrible and irreparable damage which the +province from which those Indians are drafted has suffered, as they are +all tillers of the soil, and tributaries of your Majesty. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb56" href="#pb56" name="pb56">56</a>]</span>Many +losses to your royal estate follow, because they and their wives are +exempted from paying the tribute during the time while they serve in +their posts as soldiers. Besides, as this province [of Pampanga] +abounds so plentifully in rice, and your Majesty needs so much of it +for the rations of so great a number of persons as are employed in the +building and repairing of the vessels in the port of Cavite, and for +the sailors and soldiers, it is obvious that the said province will be +diminished; for it is necessary to allot the vendalas and +repartimientos upon the few who remain, instead of on the many, so that +with a few exactions of this sort the poor Indians will be driven to +the wall, and will find it necessary to desert their huts and take to +the woods. That would mean the total ruin and destruction of that +district, which is the support of this colony.</p> +<p>As the governor immediately undertook to despatch the usual +reënforcement and situado to the forts of Terrenate, he appointed +a chief commander with 3,000 pesos, and an admiral with +2,000—although until then there had been no such officers as +commander-in-chief and admiral; but only one commandant, who received +60 ducados of eleven reals per month, while those who were placed in +command of the other pataches received very moderate pay. We +remonstrated, as we were bound to do, warning the governor that there +was no order from your Majesty for the creation of such salaries. He +referred the decision of this matter to the treasury meeting, where we +found two auditors and Doctor Juan Fernandez de Ledo (who was +exercising the duties of fiscal), and the factor and treasurer. All +except the said Doctor Juan Fernandez de Ledo, who was of the +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb57" href="#pb57" name= +"pb57">57</a>]</span>governor’s opinion, opposed the said pay, +giving very powerful and cogent reasons therefor. Notwithstanding that, +the governor ordered the said salaries to be made good, and said that +he would report the matter to your Majesty. Hence, Sire, he will by no +means listen to any proposition which is made for the benefit and use +of the royal treasury, if it is contrary to his opinion.</p> +<p>The same thing happened in the said meeting when they were assigning +the salaries to the chaplains whom he appointed in the said galleons of +Terrenate, and in all the others that sailed from these islands for any +place. It was an expense as avoidable as the others which he has +introduced, for it is a fact that religious are always ready to serve +those posts because of the accommodations that they receive in the +galleons, especially in those that sail to Nueva España. For +when the religious sail in them as passengers they must obtain +permission, and the accommodation of a berth, and, as this costs money +and trouble, it is found to be no little convenience to give them the +posts as chaplains; and they have not claimed or demanded any pay, and +they have been employed in this ministry in all the past. Therefore one +can understand how superfluous is that expense.</p> +<p>There are five convents of religious within the walls of this city +of Manila, and one of nuns; the church of La Misericordia, the seminary +of Santa Potenciana, the cathedral church, and the hospital for the +Spaniards or soldiers. That makes ten churches in all, and they are so +near and close to one another that the divine offices can be heard from +one to another, if one pays moderate attention. So small and narrow> +is the district of the city, and so few the <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb58" href="#pb58" name="pb58">58</a>]</span>people +in the churches, that if there was no more than one convent of +religious and the cathedral church, they could be sufficiently taken +care of and without too great fatigue [to the priests]. Although this +was the fact of the case, the governor, a very few days after his +arrival, began to build a church for his soldiers, saying at the +beginning that the expense for the building was to be taken from the +soldiers’ own pay, and that no expense would be incurred by the +royal treasury. But he did not keep his word, although the said church +was fully built, together with some barracks and quarters for the said +soldiers to live in. In the erection of it, more than eighty thousand +pesos have been already spent, while the amount charged to the infantry +is not in excess of sixteen thousand pesos. Consequently, it has been +necessary that the remaining funds should be supplied from the royal +treasury, although it would be more proper to expend that sum in +building galleons to carry the goods of this city to Nueva +España. For with galleons the royal treasury will be increased, +and thereby will the governor obey the many and urgent orders which +your Majesty has been pleased to issue in this regard; and the vassals +and inhabitants of these islands would not be so ruined, and so +hopeless of returning to their former state. It was all occasioned by +the governor’s resolution not to despatch any ships during the +year of 635 and that of 637; and even next year, 639, there is little +assurance that he will despatch them, for there is no money with which +to prepare them. If that were done, we could entertain stronger hopes; +because, as I write this, the usual succor from Mexico has not yet +arrived, as only one very small patache was <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb59" href="#pb59" name= +"pb59">59</a>]</span>despatched last year, and there is doubt that it +was able to reach port. On that account we are so perplexed and +afflicted that it is even a special providence of God that we are able +to breathe.</p> +<p>The ships which are being despatched this year are sailing without a +register; for, as yet, the inhabitants have not registered a shred of +cloth with which to lade them, as they do not know the condition of +their property in Nueva España. As they are so ruined as regards +their capital, they are, according to my way of thinking excusable. But +I have been unable to find any excuse in any way for the governor, who +has, by his so extraordinary and unadvised resolutions, placed this +city in the last straits; and has paid no attention to those who, with +foresight, have represented to him these great damages, besides those +which have followed and will follow to the royal estate of your +Majesty. For this year alone (and I do not speak of former years), more +than one hundred and fifty thousand pesos have been spent on these +ships, both for the preparation that has been necessary, and for the +pay of the commanders, pilots, and other seamen and other officials who +sail in them, and for the food. Your Majesty will never be reimbursed +for that sum, for, as no cargo goes in the ships, there can be no +duties collected; and it is from these duties that the funds for these +expenses must be obtained, as your Majesty has ordered and commanded. +Hence, Sire, it becomes necessary to say that it seems as if your +Majesty had sent the governor to these islands to ruin and destroy your +royal estate, rather than to increase and preserve it. This conclusion, +if relief does not come speedily, will be seen to be verified with the +great <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb60" href="#pb60" name= +"pb60">60</a>]</span>loss of all, and the special sorrow of us who, as +your Majesty’s faithful ministers and servants, are bound to +strive for the increase of your royal estate.</p> +<p>In the past year, 637, because these coasts were being infested by +the kings of Mindanao and Jolo, with great loss and damage to the +Christian Indians and your Majesty’s vassals, the governor left +this city with two fine large fleets—the first on February two, +and the second on December eight. Both were despatched against the +advice of all the soldiers who were experienced in this +country—both because of the risk to which the governor exposed +his person, and because of the so heavy expenses that it was necessary +to incur; and furthermore, since there are very honorable soldiers in +these islands, to whom these expeditions can be entrusted with the hope +that they will give an excellent account of them. And thus he would +have avoided a very large part of the expense, and even of the loss of +very brave soldiers who died in both expeditions; for more than four +hundred Spaniards died, among whom were many persons of high standing +[in this colony]. That is a loss which ought to be wept with many +tears, because of the lack that they will create when they will be most +necessary. In the first expedition, 9,867 pesos were spent from your +royal estate; and in the second, 47,171 pesos. He has tried and is +trying to cover the expense of both expeditions by the value of the +slaves, and other things of little account, which he took as booty in +both expeditions; and by other communications, which will be seen in +your Council, according to the relations or certifications which he has +given to us. Most of it can have but little foundation, as there is +nothing more than what the governor <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb61" +href="#pb61" name="pb61">61</a>]</span>has been pleased to give. But it +will be well to consider that although the fifth part of any booty +taken belongs to your Majesty (as is a fact), he has ordered all the +artillery, and other war supplies and ammunition to be valued and +adjudged as part compensation for the expense incurred. That is a thing +which, according to my understanding, could not be done; for he is +attempting to persuade your Majesty that he is giving you something. +Since that is clearly yours by law, there is no reason for [thus] +adjudging it, under any of the pretexts of which, [to judge] from +appearances like these, he always avails himself to accredit his own +actions.</p> +<p>Beside the building of the church, barracks, and quarters for the +soldiers, he has constructed other buildings of not inconsiderable +extent, and of the same necessity and importance as the aforesaid, at +the royal hospital of this city. He has bought some houses that are +near it for eight thousand pesos, in order that the chaplain, +apothecary, and physician may live in them. Your Majesty has assigned +them a very sufficient remuneration, and they have always been +contented with it, and have not asked for houses in which to live. The +governor has also added a room to the said hospital (where the +religious of St. Francis had their living apartments before his +arrival), without sense or reason. He has spent a great sum of pesos in +its building; and a great sum has also been and is being spent in the +support of the sick of the said hospital—although they were +supported most abundantly in past years with two thousand five hundred +or three thousand pesos at the most. Now seven thousand pesos and +upward are spent, and we cannot see in what this increase consists, +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb62" href="#pb62" name= +"pb62">62</a>]</span>although we are not ignorant that the sick are +less carefully attended and nursed than before.</p> +<p>A Portuguese nobleman, an inhabitant of Macan, by name Don Diego de +Miranda Enriquez, came from that city to this during the former year of +636, with a quantity of arquebuses, muskets, nails for the ships, and +rough iron. Having sent for us that we might bargain and pay for it, we +did so, availing ourselves for that purpose of the recent example that +we had for it in the previous year, 1635, which was accredited and +approved by the said governor. Nevertheless, after several months the +governor fined the factor and me (for we were the ones who made the +said contract and rendered payment, as the accountant was then living +in the port of Cavite) without our knowing what crime we had committed, +in the sum of two thousand one hundred and thirty-three pesos, five +tomins; for he said that we had not observed his orders in the said +contract. After he had conferred over the matter with your auditors, +and they being of the opposite opinion, nevertheless, holding his own +even to the end, he had us notified of the act imposing the said fine. +We appealed from it to your Audiencia, where we were freed from the +prosecution. The said governor was indeed very angry at that; and he +even gave your auditors to so understand, and that, in matters of +justice, he even was trying to tie their hands.</p> +<p>At the very beginning of his governorship, the said Don Sebastian +Hurtado de Corcuera tried to change the inferior employees of the +tribunal of your royal officials. Among the others whom he appointed +was the weigher of coins, notwithstanding that we opposed that. For +your Majesty has been <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb63" href="#pb63" +name="pb63">63</a>]</span>pleased to honor us with your special +decrees, in which you order that we ourselves choose our employees, so +that they may be to our satisfaction; and that your governors give +their titles to those whom we should thus propose to them. [We also +opposed it] because the said governor ordered us to admit the said +weigher to the enjoyment and exercise of his office without bonds, +although all those who had thus far exercised that office had given +bonds in the sum of four thousand pesos for the security of your royal +estate, as it is an office that requires great faithfulness because of +the many and continually-recurring opportunities that present +themselves for him to make considerable thefts without your royal +officials being able to put a stop to it. That has been proved to us by +experience, for, notwithstanding all our efforts in watching him, at +the end of a year and slightly more (for so long a time did he hold the +said office) we found that he had stolen more than three thousand five +hundred pesos from your royal treasury. We began a prosecution in your +royal Audiencia. The said governor, seeing that the weigher was proved +to be a criminal by what was enacted, and by his confession and +deposition, in order that he might not be completely exposed, had a +memorial presented [to the Audiencia] through a father of the Society +of Jesus—in which it is stated that a man had declared in +confession that he was the thief, and that the said weigher was not +guilty; and had given him a certain number of pay-warrants with which +to satisfy, by way of restitution, the [claim for] three thousand five +hundred pesos. The said governor ordered that this reparation should be +accepted; and although the pay-warrants had no <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb64" href="#pb64" name= +"pb64">64</a>]</span>justification—as their owners had been dead +for many years, and the papers contained no cessions or powers by +virtue of which receipts should be given and signed—we had to +receive them, because, as they had been examined before the auditor of +accounts, and attested by him, they were [technically] entirely +sufficient, and could and ought to be received. Thereupon, the said +weigher went scot free from prison. The said governor immediately sent +him to Macan, in order to remove him from the danger that might meet +him at any time in this city. In this manner, Sire, was so serious a +crime as the aforesaid punished; and in this wise does the governor +protect his henchmen, for there is no human strength which can oppose +his. This is a consideration that causes not a little sorrow to your +Majesty’s servants and ministers; for only that name is left us, +for we have been stripped, for the sole purpose of being able to +depreciate and even disaccredit us, of all the power and authority +which your Majesty was pleased to give us in our titles, and in the +ordinances and many other decrees. However, I think and trust, God +helping, that that will not be attained, however vigilant the governor +may be; for we are and shall be always in your Majesty’s service, +and hope that, as our pious king and sovereign, you will always examine +our causes, and that you will pity us for the calamities and miseries +that we are suffering for the sole reason of being so far from your +royal presence, and that you will take what corrective measures are +most pleasing to you. With that hope we receive new courage, although +in the midst of so many perils, to fulfil our obligations, as faithful +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb65" href="#pb65" name= +"pb65">65</a>]</span>and grateful vassals and ministers of your +Majesty, whose royal person may our Lord preserve, with the increase of +greater and more extensive empires, as is necessary to us all. Manila, +August 31, 1638.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Baltasar Ruiz de Escalona</span> +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb66" href="#pb66" name= +"pb66">66</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.4" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e862" class="main"><span class="corr" id="xd19e863" title= +"Source: Banuelos">Bañuelos</span> y Carrillo’s +Relation</h2> +<div id="xd19e866" class="div2 section"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e867" class="main">Relation of the Filipinas Islands, by +Admiral Don Hieronimo de Bañuelos y Carrillo<a class="noteref" +id="xd19e869src" href="#xd19e869" name="xd19e869src">1</a></h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The city of Manila is the chief city of the islands of +Luçon, or the Filipinas. It lies in a latitude of fourteen +degrees thirty minutes, is fortified on one side by the sea, and on its +land side has a castle called Santiago, although that castle furnishes +no great defense. The artillery of that castle points seaward, in order +to prevent the entrance of [hostile] vessels—which can, however, +enter there, without the cannon doing them any great damage. The chief +port of these islands is called Cavite, and there the ships from Nueva +España are anchored. That port of Cavite serves as a refuge for +our sailors; it is sheltered from the heavy winds, and very secure. +Manila, on the contrary, is an open bay, beaten by the north winds. The +anchorage there is very poor, and the entrance very difficult; but, on +the other hand, it is very well supplied with all that is necessary for +commerce and for war. One may say that it serves as a magazine for the +richest commerce in the world. There is abundance of bread, flesh, and +wine there; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb69" href="#pb69" name= +"pb69">69</a>]</span>and although the wine is not so good as that of +España, those of the country who are accustomed to it do not +hesitate to prefer it to that of Goa, or that of Mexico—although +those are used only for the mass, and that of España for the +tables of the richest men. The Portuguese of Goa also send abundance of +provisions there, so that they can be bought in Manila at a very good +bargain. There are one hundred and fifty fires [<i>i.e.</i>, +households] in Manila. The houses of the city are so suitable and those +of the country so charming that life in those islands is altogether +delightful. At one musket-shot from the city can be seen the +Parián, the lodging of the Sangleys or Chinese merchants. There +are about twenty thousand of them, all merchants whom business has +attracted to that place. It is a very curious place to see, because of +the fine order in which they live. Every kind of merchandise has its +own separate quarter, and those goods are so rare and curious that they +merit the admiration of the most civilized nations.<a class="noteref" +id="xd19e878src" href="#xd19e878" name="xd19e878src">2</a></p> +<div class="figure xd19e885width" id="p067"><img src="images/p067.jpg" +alt= +"View of city of Manila; photographic facsimile of engraving in Mallet’s Description de l’univers (Paris, 1683)" +width="291" height="419"> +<p class="figureHead">View of city of Manila; photographic facsimile of +engraving in Mallet’s <i lang="fr">Description de +l’univers</i> (Paris, 1683)</p> +<p class="first">[<i>From copy in Library of Congress</i>]</p> +</div> +<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb70" href="#pb70" name= +"pb70">70</a>]</span></p> +<p>Although that Parián is built only of wood, and the Chinese +who live there have no weapons, we do not fail to keep a strong guard +on that side. We even have some pieces of artillery pointed toward that +city, for the Chinese are a very spirited and bold nation. We have +experienced that heretofore, and are still threatened [with danger] in +that hour that we are not so closely on our guard. There is no Spanish +house where nine or ten of these merchants cannot be seen every +morning, who take their merchandise there; for all the traffic passes +through their hands, even all that is used for the sustenance of the +Spaniards. There are some men who say that they mix a slow poison in +our food, which works its effect chiefly on the women. It is a fact +that a woman who reaches the age of twenty-six years is seldom seen. +Those persons add that their intention in doing that is to prevent the +Spaniards from fortifying themselves more strongly in that island, and +that the Chinese would drive them out entirely. That would be very easy +for them, by employing such means, if it were not for the interest that +they have in the commerce of the silver of Nueva España. These +people have a subtle and universal intelligence. They imitate whatever +one presents to them, and they make the article as well as do those who +invented it. The riches of Manila, and the felicity of existence there, +are steadily decreasing. I shall relate here the causes for it, having +regard only to the service of God and of the king.</p> +<p>The chief cause for the ruin of these islands is the great trade +that the Sangleys carry on. The king has permitted the inhabitants of +the Manilas to export a portion of their capital to Nueva +España. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb71" href="#pb71" name= +"pb71">71</a>]</span>in the merchandise of that country. The Spanish +inhabitants daily lend their names to those Sangleys and to the +Portuguese of Macao, so that they may enjoy the freedom of that +commerce. These people do not attempt to hide the fact that they are +acting as agents for the inhabitants of Mexico; and these last years +they sent such a quantity of merchandise to Peru and to Nueva +España that no sale could be found for it. That is a hindrance +to the voyages of the trading fleet. The king of China could build a +palace with the silver bars from Peru which have been carried to his +country because of that traffic, without their having been registered, +and without the king of España having been paid his duties, as +has been well shown by Dom Pedro de Quiroga y Moya. That silver was +sent at the account of influential persons, who do not reside at the +Manilas. The two vessels which left in his time paid more duties to the +king than all the other ships put together which had made that voyage +before; that clearly shows the neglect of the other officials +commissioned to receive the duties from his Majesty. They have +attempted to conceal this truth, by saying that those ships were richer +than the others because Dom Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera had written, +in the preceding year, that he would not send the vessels that year; +and that he had even detained and caused the unlading of those that had +been on the point of sailing on the voyage to Acapulco. I do not know +his reason for so doing, but I know well that he wrote that resolution +at the Embocadero of Manila—that is to say, eighty leguas from +the city—and that without having consulted the inhabitants of the +Manilas. Those of the country are agreed <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb72" href="#pb72" name="pb72">72</a>]</span>that that delay has been +their ruin; for they all know that they cannot maintain themselves +against the Dutch or against the Mahometans except by means of the +regular succor that is sent them from Nueva España.</p> +<p>The marqués de Cadereta<a class="noteref" id="xd19e908src" +href="#xd19e908" name="xd19e908src">3</a> came at that time to act as +viceroy of Nueva España. He sent a large reënforcement to +the islands very opportunely, under command of General Don Andres +Cottigllo. The latter brought news that Don Pedro de Quiroga had +arrived at Mexico to inform against the officials of his Majesty, and +that he would go to Acapulco to inspect the ships and regulate the +Chinese commerce. The inhabitants of the Manilas and the factors of the +Portuguese tried to get back their merchandise that they had already +laded on the vessels, being fearful of that news and that name of +visitor. But having finally recovered courage, they laded the two +vessels that the governor <span class="corr" id="xd19e914" title= +"Source: had had">had</span> detained the preceding year, which were +worth about five millions in gold. Nevertheless those of the country +affirmed that they were not so richly laden as those which had sailed +before, for one of the chief merchants<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e917src" href="#xd19e917" name="xd19e917src">4</a> had not put a +single box aboard.</p> +<p>They report another reason for obscuring so apparent a truth. They +say that Don Pedro de <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb73" href="#pb73" +name="pb73">73</a>]</span>Quiroga had specified among the orders that +he had drawn up as a remedy for the disorders of the past, that for +those ships; and that it was he alone who prevented their sailing. But +he himself says that that is false, and that he had heard that those +who had encomiendas [Fr., <i lang="fr">commanderies</i>], and the +merchants of Mexico, had resorted to entreaties to Don Sebastian +Hurtado de Corcuera (for I cannot believe that they were in compact +with him); and that they had represented to him the great quantity of +Chinese merchandise then in Mexico, and declared that, if new vessels +were sent there, a market could not be found for that merchandise, and +that the merchants of Mexico and Nueva España would lose a great +amount by it.</p> +<p>Don Pedro de Quiroga adds that having learned that the governor of +the Filipinas had given his word not to have any new vessels sail, in +order to better carry out his Majesty’s service, he had employed +this expedient—namely, that if they entered the port that year, +they would enjoy the benefit of the rules which had been made during +that time; but that, if they came only the following year, they would +not enjoy these, and that they would pay the king’s duties in all +strictness. That plainly showed that he was advised of the promise +which the governor of the islands had given to the merchants of Mexico, +to detain the vessels and the merchandise that ought to have been sent +that year. The transaction was, in truth, greatly to the interest of +the inhabitants of Mexico, and of the Spaniards who have +encomiendas—although to the great prejudice of the islands, which +cannot get along without the reënforcement which they ought to +have annually from Mexico; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb74" href= +"#pb74" name="pb74">74</a>]</span>and to the decrease of his +Majesty’s duties, which are an aid in the discharge of the +expense for that succor. In fine, if the marqués de Cadereta had +not reënforced the islands as powerfully as he did, they would +have fallen into extreme need. It would be easy for me to show here +other consequences of that delay of the vessels which Don Juan +Cereço y Salamanca had prepared to sail that year, as is done +every year; and it will not be more difficult for me to demonstrate the +other damages that we suffer in that commerce. The inhabitants of the +Manilas have nothing on those vessels; their cargoes belong entirely to +the Chinese, to the Portuguese of Macao, or to the Mexican merchants. +If the king does not put a stop to it, the Chinese will absorb all the +riches of Peru, and the subjects of the king in those islands will be +forced to abandon them. I will go on to represent to your Excellency +the other disorders in the government of those islands, as far as I +have been able to learn them in the short time that I have spent +there.</p> +<p>The encomiendas are ruined. Formerly the king rewarded soldiers with +them, and now the islanders, who were formerly assigned under those +encomiendas, have become our enemies. There has been failure to +instruct those innocent people in the Catholic faith, and that is the +only title under which the king of España holds that country, +which does not belong to his patrimony. Instead of making them our +friends and brothers, we have made them our domestic enemies. We have +received the Sangleys in their place, with whom the profit of the +traffic always embroils us. Let one consider what damage has been +committed since by the inhabitants of the <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb75" href="#pb75" name="pb75">75</a>]</span>island of Mindanao. They +have overrun the shores of these islands with their caracoas or little +boats, and the governor was forced to leave the city in the hands of +the Sangleys, in order to leave the island and to go to make war on +them, where he lost more than one hundred and thirty Spaniards, without +being able to bring the war to a successful end. In this it cannot be +said that he was not greatly to blame; for one of his officers named +Nicolás Gonzales, at the first war cry, forced one of their best +positions without the loss of a single man, whence the governor had +been unable to drive them with all his forces.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e935src" href="#xd19e935" name="xd19e935src">5</a> <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb76" href="#pb76" name="pb76">76</a>]</span></p> +<p>We have also as enemies the people of Jolo and those of Terrenate, +who are also more to be feared on account of the help that they get +from the Dutch. They declare themselves neutral, but they help the +Dutch underhandedly on all occasions. The chiefs of those Indians take +the title of kings, but they are among the kings who go quite naked and +who live by their labor. True, those of Macassar, of Cochinchina, and +of Cambaya, are more powerful. But for all that, it would be enough for +us, for the little help that we can get out of them, to become the +arbitrator of their differences, and thus to keep them favorable to our +side. But since they have seen that we have made this friendship with +the Sangleys, with the inhabitants of Martavan, of Borneo, and other +neighboring islands, they have broken off all trade with us, and have +begun to take all the products of their country to the Dutch, so that +they do nothing except at their orders. If for that reason also the +king does not prevent the trade with the Sangleys, the Filipinas are +lost. I come now to the remedy that can be applied to this disorder. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb77" href="#pb77" name= +"pb77">77</a>]</span></p> +<p>Among all those one hundred and fifty families who are settled at +Manila, there are not two who are very rich. My plan would be to allow +those inhabitants to export Chinese merchandise to the value of two +hundred and fifty thousand escudos, the greater part of which should be +raw silk and cotton bolls, so that they could be manufactured in this +country [<i>i.e.</i>, Mexico]. For there is less [chance for] trickery +in that sort of merchandise than in the stuffs manufactured in China, +which ought never to be allowed to be taken to Manila. The permission +of trade to that sum would also be proportioned to the ability of the +Manila merchants; and they would get more than five hundred thousand +escudos in return for it, for the profits of that trade are exorbitant. +Today even, when there is so much of this merchandise, four hundred per +cent is gained on the poorest quality exported. By that means the +Spaniards could be employed in manufacturing that silk, the textiles +would be better, and they would secure innumerable other advantages. +Accordingly, the inhabitants of the Manilas would not charge themselves +with the commissions of Mexico, and they would get all the profit +derived from those islands, which is now quite universally in the hands +of foreigners. Further, as their affairs in the country became more +prosperous, they would become more interested in its conservation; and +they would be more careful to have the Indians, who have been assigned +to them in encomiendas, instructed and held in subjection. They would +save what they give to their agents in Mexico, who often ruin them. +They keep their merchandise two or three years, and it has a poor sale +in Mexico, because of the great quantity that is taken there; and +trading only at Acapulco, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb78" href= +"#pb78" name="pb78">78</a>]</span>and conducting their own business, +they alone would enjoy, and that every year, the profits of that +traffic.</p> +<p>Fifty thousand escudos could be employed in white mantas, unbleached +[<i lang="es">cruës</i>] and of excellent quality; that is a kind +of merchandise very largely used among the Indians, and Mexico has +great need of it. That would be the right commerce that ought to be +carried on by pilots and sailors; for some of it can always be sold, +and those people are obliged to sell it quickly. Care must be taken +that only that quantity be carried, and that any surplus be +confiscated; and the governors and other officials should be very +careful in this. In order that your Excellency may see that I am not +trying to weaken the commerce of those islands, as some might believe, +I will state here that the inhabitants of the Manilas should be allowed +to export as many shiploads as possible of the products of their +country—such as wax, gold, perfumes, ivory, and lampotes. Those +they would buy from the natives of the country, thus preventing them +from carrying those goods to the Dutch. Thus would the people become +friendly, and would supply Nueva España with that merchandise; +and the silver taken to the Manilas would not be exported thence. I may +be told that the king of China does not use that silver to make war on +us; but even if it is used only to swell his treasury, it is as lost to +us as if it were at the bottom of the sea. Your Excellency should +consider that one and one-half millions in gold are sent annually to +China. If what I have just said be closely observed, the merchandise of +the Manilas will be sold to good advantage, and the natives of the +country will become our friends; while their neighbors will leave the +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb79" href="#pb79" name= +"pb79">79</a>]</span>Dutch, who are deriving heavy profits from them; +for there is scarcely a place in those islands where the Dutch do not +possess a factory. Thus have they become the masters, and they give +arms to the natives to make war on us. Add to all these considerations +that the Spaniards inhabiting the islands will not be obliged to be +continually on their guard because of twenty thousand Sangleys or +enemies, whom they have in a corner of the world where the Spaniards +can muster scarcely eight hundred men.</p> +<p>Perhaps your Excellency will be told that, if we break with the +Sangleys, they will go to live in the island of Formosa, or in some +other place among the Dutch, and will carry to them the trade that they +have with us; and that, having enjoyed the trade of Japon as +conveniently as we have that of the Western Indias, they will still +carry their merchandise to Nangazaki, the chief port of Japon, from +which they will also obtain silver. To that I will reply that the +kingdom of China is so full of merchandise, and the Sangleys are so +shrewd in commerce, and so keen after gain, that they know what +quantity of that merchandise is needed by the English, how much by the +Dutch, and what quantity ought to be sold in all of Japon—and +that with so great exactness that a tailor, after once seeing the +figure of a person, decides how much goods is necessary to clothe him. +They do the same in regard to us, and, knowing that only two ships sail +annually to Nueva España, they generally have in the Parian the +quantity necessary to lade those ships. If the inhabitants of the +Manilas had trade with Japon, they would derive great profit from it; +but a secret judgment of God has broken the communication that we had +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb80" href="#pb80" name= +"pb80">80</a>]</span>with those islanders, and has given it into the +hands of the heretics, after having permitted them to destroy our +churches there, and their having put to fire and sword all the +Spaniards or Japanese Christians there. Hence we do not believe that a +single religious is now left in all the country; and the people are +compelled, under pain of death, to come to denounce those whom they +know to be Christians. Our religious go there no longer, for it means +certain death to them to go to Japon. The following is the manner in +which that persecution was reported.</p> +<p>A Vizcayan captain, named Sebastian,<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e983src" href="#xd19e983" name="xd19e983src">6</a> having sailed +from the port of Acapulco for an island called Ricca doro,<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e995src" href="#xd19e995" name="xd19e995src">7</a> +was blown by a heavy gale to the latitude of that island; and, not +being able to anchor, put in at Japon, and with the curiosity of a +seaman sounded the ports of that kingdom. That novel proceeding made +the Japanese suspicious. They asked an Englishman who was then allied +to them what could be the design of that Spaniard. He told them that +the Spaniards were a warlike nation, who were aiming at universal +monarchy; that they always commenced their conquest by means of the +religious; that after the religious of that nation had been permitted +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb81" href="#pb81" name= +"pb81">81</a>]</span>to preach there, and to build churches, they +considered the conquest of that kingdom as secure; that that vessel had +come to reconnoiter the country, and the entrance of the ports, and +that it would be followed by a great army, which would complete that +design. At that juncture a tono<a class="noteref" id="xd19e1009src" +href="#xd19e1009" name="xd19e1009src">8</a> or prominent lord of the +country died. The emperor had formerly tried to buy from him a house +built for recreation; but that lord, who was fond of that place, +refused to sell it. He was a Catholic, and left it at his death to the +Jesuits, whereupon the latter thought it best to pay their respects to +the emperor by offering it to him. That prince reflected that what an +emperor could not accomplish, the Jesuits his subjects had compassed. +Putting that reflection with the advice of the Englishman, he +determined to exterminate the Catholics. That resolution was so +executed that there are no Christians in Japon, except only the +Portuguese from Macao. I am too much ashamed to name the conditions to +which they submit, in order that they may be received there.</p> +<p>Since that time all the trade of that island has fallen into the +hands of the Dutch, English, Portuguese, and Sangleys, although the +king of China has forbidden the last named to have any communication +with the inhabitants of Japon, under penalty of death, because the +Japanese had formerly revolted against China, of which they had formed +a part. But for all that, their greed for silver makes them go there as +they do to the Manilas, so that Japon does not lack any of the goods +that pass through the hands <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb82" href= +"#pb82" name="pb82">82</a>]</span>of those peoples. As for the silver, +the Dutch do not carry any more to China or to Japon, because those +countries get all the amount that they can buy by means of the Sangleys +who live in the Manilas. It would be very advantageous to the +inhabitants of the Manilas and to his Majesty to break off that +commerce with the Chinese, and it is unnecessary to say that by that +means advantageous disposition may be made of the silver of Peru and +the silks of the Filipinas—for in truth the king does not find +there his account; the silks would come to Mexico with greater +advantage, and the islanders and his Majesty would get more profit from +it, and that at the admission of all informed persons. As for the +governor, he should possess the following qualities: he should be +discreet; his distance from Madrid, and his authority as governor, +should not make him presumptuous, but should serve rather as a check +than as a cause for vanity; he should be a fine seaman, and very +sedulous in despatching and making the ships sail every year. All the +exports should be registered. In order that the islands be better +reënforced, the ships should be of five hundred toneladas, and +they should have two decks, better equipped than they have as yet been; +for if they are poorly equipped they take much time in making their +voyage, and have been the cause of great expense to his Majesty. +Besides, the viceroy of Nueva España has been unable to make +them depart by the first of April, as would be necessary. Those vessels +ought only to carry seamen. The offices of the ships ought not to be +sold to merchants, but given as a reward to those who have served well +at sea. Great disorders have happened from that, which was the former +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb83" href="#pb83" name= +"pb83">83</a>]</span>custom, and because the offices of pilot, +boatswain’s mate, and steward have been sold.</p> +<p>In the year 1637, when I was about to set out as admiral of the +vessels that were to take the reënforcements to those islands, I +went to the port of Acapulco. There I found the vessel “San Juan +Bautista,” which had come that year from those islands, and which +had lost its mast on the way. I endeavored to get Don Pedro de Quiroga +to advise the marqués de Cadereta of the poor condition of the +masts and other rigging of the vessel. He refused to permit it, and +compelled me to embark, telling me that if we failed to embark by the +first day of the month of April, we would run the risk of losing our +voyage. While at sea, I asked the boatswain’s mate for an +inventory of the sails and rigging. I found that there were no spare +sails, but one single cable, and one other old cable, which was used to +make fast the pieces of artillery that were rolling about the ship. +Ordering him to bring me also the inventory of what there was when they +left the islands, I found that it had been equipped with three spare +sails, five cables, and a quantity of rigging. He answered me that the +sea had carried away the sails and that the ship had lost its cables as +they left San Bernardino. Without pressing him further, he confessed to +me that he had used the money that had been given him for that purpose +in buying merchandise, in order to discharge a debt of three thousand +escudos that he had paid for his post of boatswain, but that he had not +found his account in that merchandise. I endeavored to punish him. He +appealed to the commander-in-chief, and the latter ordered me not to +prosecute him until I should have arrived at the <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb84" href="#pb84" name="pb84">84</a>]</span>Manilas. +At the Manilas he was excused, because they said that he had paid three +thousand escudos, although he had made the king lose more than sixty +thousand. Those who furnish the provisions for the crew put in food of +poor quality. The pilots cram their room at the stern with merchandise, +thus endangering the vessel. Had I encountered a capful of wind during +that voyage, I could scarcely have finished it. I had to take a capstan +at Maribeles to lift my anchor, and to make the port of Cabite, which +is three leguas from that place. Thus for the twenty thousand escudos +that is drawn from the sale of those offices, thirty thousand are lost, +and the fleet is in danger of being lost—which means, of losing +those islands. It is not sufficient to give the offices to sailors who +deserve them; it is not at all necessary to compel them to perform the +functions of soldiers when they have no inclination for it, or to +punish them when they gamble, as is done.</p> +<p>It is of great importance to have galleys on these coasts; that is +the means of keeping away from them the Dutch, and the Indians from +Mindanao and Jolo—who do not cease to be hostile to the +Spaniards, although they have neither courage nor discipline; for one +Spaniard has been seen to put twenty of their caracoas to flight with +only one shot from his musket. The enemy most to be feared are the +Dutch, who have taken possession of that sea. It is easy to manage the +oared vessels of that country, and they have been used in several +emergencies to tow the vessels, which otherwise would have been in +danger of being wrecked. Besides, those boats are more suitable for a +sea like that, full of islands, than vessels with high freeboard. It +would also be very much to the point <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb85" href="#pb85" name="pb85">85</a>]</span>to have work done in +Camboya in the building of new vessels, as the wood of those parts, and +that of Angely, resist the seaworms and decay better than other woods, +and especially those of the Filipinas.</p> +<p>In the year 1637, when I arrived at the islands, there were no +vessels ready for Nueva España. They were obliged to send a +small vessel of one hundred toneladas to advise the marqués de +Cadereta of their wretched condition, and to entreat him to send the +usual reënforcement—notwithstanding the prohibition of the +commerce with Peru, and their knowledge that there were no vessels at +Acapulco. That showed how important it is to be continually building +vessels for the Filipinas, and for the governor to be a seaman rather +than a soldier of the Low Countries. It is also important for the +governor and the archbishop to live in harmony. The spiritual +government in these countries is the one thing of greater consequence +than the political government, because of the scandal that the Indians +receive from it. It is also important that those sent by the viceroy be +men of merit and service, and that they be well treated in the islands. +The observation of all the above points will be of use to us in keeping +off the Dutch, who are the most terrible enemy that we have; and who +will become absolute masters of the Manilas, if they can attain their +ends. España, by observing those things, will triumph over its +enemies. For my part, I will fulfil my duty as a subject by doing my +utmost for the service of my master, and for the welfare of my country; +and at the same time I shall discharge my obligation toward your +Excellency of serving you. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb86" href= +"#pb86" name="pb86">86</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e869" href="#xd19e869src" name="xd19e869">1</a></span> A marginal +note reads: “Translated from the Spanish relation printed at +Mexico in the year 1638; dedicated to Don Garcia de Haro y Abellaneda, +count of Castilla, president of the royal Council of the +Indias.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e878" href="#xd19e878src" name="xd19e878">2</a></span> Marginal +note: “The rules of this traffic, which will be found at the end +of the relations of the Filipinas, elucidate this point.” This +evidently refers to the Spanish originals.</p> +<p class="footnote">The “list of relations and voyages” at +the beginning of Thevenot’s work contains this title: +“Three relations of the Philippine Islands, with a large map of +China,” etc. To correspond with this, the text contains: the +“Relation” of Bañuelos y Carrillo; the +“Relation and memorial” by Hernando de los Rios Coronel; +and a “Memorial in behalf of the commerce of the Philipine +Islands,” by Juan Grau y Monfalcon—all with consecutive +pagination; and apparently abridged or paraphrased to suit the editor. +These are followed by (Bobadilla’s) “Relation of the +Philipine Islands,” and an “Account of the great island of +Mindanao” (which contains a letter by Mastrilli)—also with +their own and consecutive pagination; these, however, are not mentioned +in the list above referred to. We translate from Thevenot the documents +by Bañuelos and Bobadilla; but for the others we have recourse +to the Spanish originals.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e908" href="#xd19e908src" name="xd19e908">3</a></span> Lope Diaz +de Armendariz, marquis of Cadereita, the sixteenth viceroy of Mexico, +was appointed (1635) to succeed the marquis of Cerralvo (who was +removed at his own request, because of poor health). His term of office +was quiet, and only marked especially by his quarrel with the +archbishop, with whom the royal Audiencia seem to have sided. He was +removed in 1640, his successor being Diego Lopez Pacheco Cabrera y +Bobadilla, duke of Escalona and marquis de Villena. See +Bancroft’s <i>Hist. Mexico</i>, iii, pp. 93–98.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e917" href="#xd19e917src" name="xd19e917">4</a></span> Marginal +note: “Bartolome Tenorione.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e935" href="#xd19e935src" name="xd19e935">5</a></span> The +following letter from the Sevilla archives (“<span lang= +"es">Cartas y espedientes del gobernador de Filipinas vistos en el +Consejo; años 1629 á [1640]; est. 67, caj. 6, leg. +8</span>”), contains an interesting reference to +Bañuelos’s relation, and also suggests the well-known +deficiencies in Thevenot’s “translations.” It is to +be feared that he has omitted much valuable matter from +Bañuelos’s account; but no other source is available:</p> +<p class="footnote">“I return the paper which your Lordship sent +me, concerning the military exploit in Mindanao, which was written and +sent, as appears, by Father Marcelo Mastrili. Although its contents +must be true, and it is well written, yet as your Lordship knows, the +Council thought it advisable not to have it printed until they could +compare it with the letters that the governor had written about the +same exploit, and with others written by various persons, which make it +out to have been of little value and importance. They even attempt to +say that we have lost rather than gained in that +campaign—particularly in a discourse or treatise printed in +Mexico by Don Geronimo de Bañuelos y Carrillo, and addressed to +your Lordship. In it he declares that those who were conquered were not +Moros, but certain poor Indians; I do not know whether [he says this] +from zeal for the truth, or because he has little affection for the +governor. He wounds him quite to the quick in this and in other things. +I was making an abstract of them in order to report to the Council, as +I was ordered; but today, on going out, Don Juan Grao Monfalcon told me +that he is at present printing another report, to oppose that of +Bañuelos. I do not know who has given permission for it, nor +that, in the care of the relation of Father Mastrili, there is anything +that is not well understood. What the Council discussed was (as I have +said), only whether it is exact and faithful to what happened; and of +this I have not yet been able to form a sufficient judgment or idea. I +am getting new documents hourly from the secretary’s office, and +I shall detain them until the one that I am now enclosing is returned, +if convenient. May God preserve your Lordship, as we your servants +desire. Today, Tuesday, February eight, one thousand six hundred and +thirty-nine.</p> +<p class="footnote signed"><span class="sc">Don Juan de Solorzano +Pereira</span>”</p> +<p class="footnote">“The count, my master, has ordered me to send +again to your Lordship the enclosed relation of his success from the +governor of Filipinas, in order that there may be progress in the +deliberations of the Council on this question. May God preserve your +Lordship, as I desire. Buen Retiro, February 16, 639.</p> +<p class="footnote signed"><span class="sc">Antonio +Carnero</span>”</p> +<p class="footnote">“I return these papers to your Grace, so that +you may continue what you were doing. May God preserve your Grace. My +house, February 16, 1639.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e983" href="#xd19e983src" name="xd19e983">6</a></span> Referring +to Sebastian Vizcaino (<span class="sc">VOL. XIV</span>, p. 183). The +Englishman here referred to is doubtless Will Adams (<span class= +"sc">VOL. XXII</span>, p. 169, note 39), then high in favor with +Iyéyasu. Regarding the expulsion of religious at that time, see +<span class="sc">VOL. XVIII</span>, p. 81.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e995" href="#xd19e995src" name="xd19e995">7</a></span> A marginal +note reads as follows: “Ricca douro is an island which was +discovered by a vessel from Macao. They landed there in order to repair +their galley fireplace, and a week later they perceived that that earth +had been converted into plates of gold. I suffered a violent tempest in +the latitude of that island, as the maps show it; and there are few +vessels that sail in that latitude, without having trouble.”</p> +<p class="footnote">See also notes in <span class="sc">VOL. XIV</span> +of this series, p. 183; and <span class="sc">VOL. XVI</span>, p. +204.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1009" href="#xd19e1009src" name="xd19e1009">8</a></span> In the +margin is the following note: “Tono in the Japanese language +signifies a person who holds the rank that a duke of Cardone or a +marquis of Carpio would have in España.” This means a +daimio, or feudal lord (see <span class="sc">VOL. XVIII</span>, p. +216).</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.5" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e1033" class="main">Glorious Victories against the Moros of +Mindanao</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">To the master-of-camp, Don Iñigo Hurtado de +Corcuera, knight of the Order of Santiago:<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1037src" href="#xd19e1037" name="xd19e1037src">1</a></p> +<p>The despatch-boat which this year arrived from the Filippinas +Islands at Acapulco, a port of this Nueva España, was destitute +of the silks and other costly goods that the ships are accustomed to +bring each year from China, for it carried nothing of that sort. +Nevertheless, it came richly laden, with the news of the happy and +fortunate successes of the arms of Spain in that archipelago, directed +by the valor and prudence of Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, +governor and captain-general there for his Majesty, and a worthy +brother of your Grace. I received in all many different +relations—although all of them agreed, for truth is always +one—from different persons, well worthy of confidence, both +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb87" href="#pb87" name= +"pb87">87</a>]</span>ecclesiastic and secular. Every one—not only +the citizens of this great City of Mexico, the capital of this kingdom, +but those of all the other cities and towns—desired to see these +letters, and made urgent requests for them. To satisfy the desires of +so many, and give them pleasure, it was the opinion of many that they +should be printed. The truth is, that I was perplexed and in doubt as +to which one to use, because, as I have said, there were several. After +careful consideration I decided to print one by Father Marcelo +Francisco Mastrillo, a letter written to Father Juan de Salazar, +provincial of the Society of Jesus in those islands, signed by Father +Marcelo himself and sent to me. It gives a detailed account of every +event. No one could give a better account than the father himself, for +he was a witness of everything that happened, as he always accompanied +Don Sebastian with the standard of St. Francis Xavier. In the +simplicity and sincerity with which he recounts these things, the truth +shines more resplendent; so it seemed best not to alter his style. In +order that it may be better known who this servant of God is, we will +describe the miracle wrought upon him by our father St. Francis Xavier +in the city of Naples, and the occasion of his journey to the Filipinas +and his stay in Mindanao. We shall give some information about the +latter island, of the hostility which those Mahometans have displayed +for so many years to the Spaniards, and of the friendly and subject +Indians. We shall also give a description of the naval battle which +preceded the expedition to Mindanao. Then we shall insert the letter of +Father Marcelo, and conclude this document with a description of the +triumphal demonstration <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb88" href= +"#pb88" name="pb88">88</a>]</span>with which Don Sebastian Hurtado was +received in the city of Manila, the rejoicings in that city, the thanks +rendered to our Lord, and the honors paid to those who died in the war, +so that there will be a complete account of everything. Besides the +aforesaid reasons, I was impelled to this on account of the obligations +of our Society of Jesus to Don Sebastian Hurtado (and especially by my +own); for we are always sensible of these, and our hearts will always +keep them alive, with perpetual acknowledgments. Besides, it seems to +me that one could not give your Grace a richer present, a more precious +jewel, an ornament of greater worth, than the exploits and triumphs of +such a brother, in whom one finds zeal for religion and the service of +God, appearing in all he does. The prudence with which he governs his +province, the unwearied solicitude with which he orders affairs, the +disinterestedness with which he serves the king our lord—well +worthy of the favor which his Majesty has shown him (in making him a +member of his Council of War, and sending him two [appointments in] +orders for his two nephews), and of those which I expect his Majesty +will yet grant him; the valor with which he defends those islands, the +grand courage with which he exposes himself to the greatest perils, +although his person is of such importance: all these are especially +praiseworthy, to say nothing of the admirable example by which he +encourages his soldiers to great undertakings, and the compassion with +which he watches over the Indians who were so harassed by so many +enemies. In short, your Grace will see in Don Sebastian Hurtado a copy +of your own holy zeal, prudence, care, disinterestedness, valor, +magnanimity, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb89" href="#pb89" name= +"pb89">89</a>]</span>and many other virtues conspicuous in your +Grace’s own heart. In him your Grace will see a true +brother—as Tulio<a class="noteref" id="xd19e1051src" href= +"#xd19e1051" name="xd19e1051src">2</a> said (book 3, epistle 7), +<i lang="la">Frater quasi fere alter</i>, “a brother is naught +else than a counterpart of the other brother;” so that they are +hardly two, but rather one soul divided between two bodies, as +Quintilian said (<i>Declamation 321</i>),<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1066src" href="#xd19e1066" name="xd19e1066src">3</a> <i lang= +"la">Quid est aliud fraternitas quam divisus spiritus?</i> +[<i>i.e.</i>, “What else is brotherhood but a divided +soul?”] So that your Grace’s own valor, prudence, piety, +and religion and Don Sebastian Hurtado’s are one; from that which +God inspired in you, may be inferred that of Don Sebastian; and in the +virtues of this great cavalier and captain-general shine those of your +Grace, to whom I offer a thousand congratulations on the triumphs of so +glorious a brother, whose exploits I offer to your Grace, and humbly +place in your illustrious hands. May our Lord watch over your Grace as +this your humble chaplain and servant desires. Mexico, February [25, +1638].</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Diego de Bobadilla</span></p> +<p>[Folios 1–9 of Bobadilla’s work are occupied with a long +and detailed account of a miraculous cure experienced by Father +Mastrilli, and its result in sending him to labor in the foreign +missions. Its substance is as follows: In 1633–34, Mastrilli was +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb90" href="#pb90" name= +"pb90">90</a>]</span>in Naples, and assisted, as a priest, at one of +the altars erected for a solemn feast in honor of the Virgin Mary. +After the ceremonies were over, Mastrilli was accidentally wounded in +the head by a hammer dropped from a workman’s hand. His life was +despaired of; but an image of St. Francis Xavier, miraculously endowed +with speech, promised to restore his health if he would go to the +Indias. Mastrilli vowed to do this, and to renounce country, friends, +and all else that he held dear, for the sake of that employ; and the +next morning found him cured and sound. In fulfilment of his vow he +went to Spain, and set out for Japan; but (as related in previous +documents) he was obliged to land at Manila, and accompanied Corcuera +to Mindanao.]</p> +<div id="doc1638.5.1" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e1087" class="main">An account of the great island of +Mindanao, and the hostilities committed by those Mohammedans in the +Filippinas Islands.</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The great island of Mindanao is one of the largest in +the archipelago of the Filippinas Islands, which seem to be almost +innumerable; and it has even been said that there are over eleven +thousand of them.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e1091src" href="#xd19e1091" +name="xd19e1091src">4</a> I believe that if one counts islands large +and small, inhabited and desert, the above estimate is not far from the +truth. In size, Mindanao rivals the island of Manila, the chief and +head of the others, for it is almost three hundred leguas in +circumference. Esteban Rodriguez de Figueroa, one of the first leaders +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb91" href="#pb91" name= +"pb91">91</a>]</span>in the conquest of those islands, and one of the +most valorous soldiers who has been in them, made an agreement with his +Majesty to conquer this island at his own cost and charges, and subject +it to his royal crown—his Majesty awarding him as tributary +vassals, ten thousand of the first Mindanaos whom he should subdue and +choose for himself, and granting him other favors which he sought. His +Majesty accepted the agreement; and, with the title of governor and +captain-general, Don Esteban assembled at his own cost a goodly army of +Spaniards, which (as I have heard) numbered about four hundred, and +over four thousand Indians. They were all embarked in a fleet of +caracoas, which are oared vessels much used in the Filippinas, carrying +from fifty to one hundred rowers apiece. There are larger ones, which +are called juangas, and carry from one hundred and twenty to one +hundred and thirty rowers. They sailed from the island of Oton, where +the fleet was fitted out and collected. They reached Mindanao and the +army disembarked. When the enemy saw such a force, they began to flee, +and a victory was declared for España; but our satisfaction was +soon disturbed, for a wretched Mindanao audaciously resolved—it +is said, after he had taken opium, with which these people intoxicate +themselves—to assassinate our captain-general, even though he +should die in the attempt. The deed was to be done with his campilan, a +weapon something like a cutlass, with a lead weight at the hilt. The +weight makes its blows so terrible that it will cleave a man through +the middle. He hid in some bushes near the road on which our men were +marching in triumph. When General Esteban Rodriguez de <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb92" href="#pb92" name="pb92">92</a>]</span>Figueroa +reached a place abreast of the bush where the Mindanao was hidden, the +latter leaped out unexpectedly and struck the general so fierce a blow +on his head with his campilan that it cleft his skull from ear to ear. +I can account myself a witness of this, because, although I did not see +that event, and did not go to the Filippinas until many years after, +yet in 1632 I saw the skull, when they disinterred the bones of this +famous but unfortunate captain from the old church of our college at +Manila (which he founded, and where his body was brought for burial), +to transfer them to the church which we have recently built. The skull +shows very plainly the cruel blow of the campilan, so that even I said, +as I held it in my hands, with great grief, “Our founder will not +deny the blow of the campilan.” Those who accompanied our general +killed the Mindanao on the spot, without much difficulty. They sounded +the retreat, and abandoned their pursuit of the enemy. This was the +origin and the beginning of the misfortunes and calamities which for so +many years have caused us so much sorrow in the Filippinas. Our army, +having lost its leader and captain-general, did nothing further. The +Spaniards retreated, and fortified themselves in a place on that river, +where they remained in garrison; and Father Juan del Campo, a fervent +man and a great minister of the gospel, gave instruction to several +villages, until he died there. Many of the Indians along this river had +rendered obedience, and were paying tribute to his Majesty. Afterward +the garrison moved to another place, called La Caldera, where the +Spaniards remained several years. Although they made no conquest of +that country, they served as <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb93" href= +"#pb93" name="pb93">93</a>]</span>a check to the enemy, because the +latter could not sail out with their fleets on plundering expeditions. +As Don Pedro de Acuña afterward decided, when he was governor in +the Filippinas, this garrison was withdrawn from La Caldera, which +resulted in the utter ruin of the islands, because land and sea +remained in the possession of the enemy.</p> +<p>At that time the island was ruled by a Moro named Buysan who claimed +the entire seacoast as his. Another Moro, named Silongan, ruled the +well-populated district along the river. These two Moros conspired +together, and called to their aid other friends, and even in certain +ways their subjects—as those of the island of Sanguil and +Sarragan; and the Caragas, who inhabit the further [<i>i.e.</i>, from +Manila] shores of this same island of Mindanao, which from that side +faces our islands of Pintados. They gathered great fleets of caracoas +and jungas, which at times numbered over one hundred and even one +hundred and fifty vessels—arming them with several large guns, +many culverins, a large number of arquebuses and muskets and many other +arms; and manning them so heavily, that they could land six to eight +thousand soldiers. In this way masters of the land and sea, they +infested the high seas, capturing all our ships that navigated those +waters, robbing and burning towns, sacking churches, carrying off the +ornaments and consecrated vessels, committing a thousand desecrations +on the sacred images, breaking them into pieces and insulting them, and +capturing Christian Indians in so great number that it would break +one’s heart to tell of it; for one time those whom they carried +away numbered over two thousand and five hundred. The Spaniards had no +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb94" href="#pb94" name= +"pb94">94</a>]</span>better fortune; for some were killed, and others +carried away as slaves. In the year 1616, they set sail with a powerful +fleet, after effecting an alliance with the Dutch, who came with ten +galleons, and entered the bay of Manila on All Saints’ day. They +were, however, defeated and destroyed in the following April, 1617, by +our fleet under the leadership of General Don Juan Ronquillo. While the +Dutch aided the Mindanaos, the latter worked dreadful havoc, capturing, +massacring, robbing, and burning everything there was. They came as far +as Balayan, a large and rich town on the island of Manila, and not far +from the city itself. They attacked the shipyards at Pantao, where a +galleon and a patache were in process of construction, and indeed +almost finished. These they burned, and murdered almost thirty +Spaniards—among them Captain Arias Giron and Captain Don Juan +Pimentel, who were in command of the yards. Others, besides many +Indians, they made prisoners. They captured from us a large quantity of +firearms and some artillery, and inflicted on us great damage. Even the +fathers and ministers of the gospel have not been exempt; for, on the +last occasion of which I have spoken, they captured and murdered two +Franciscan fathers. Before that, on other occasions, they captured +Father Hurtado, who was kept a long time in captivity in Mindanao, and +Father Pasqual de Acuña, who was a prisoner at Caraga and still +lives. Before and since the time of his captivity, he has labored +gloriously for the space of almost forty years in the islands of +Pintados—teaching those Indians until his great age and his +failing strength obliged him to retire, and end his life in the fulness +of his years, devoting himself to <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb95" +href="#pb95" name="pb95">95</a>]</span>God alone. The other fathers and +ministers crossed the mountains to escape the cruelty of these +Mahometans, enduring great hunger, hardship, and distress.</p> +<p>To King Buysan succeeded Cachil Corralat, his son, who with great +sagacity and cunning set about making himself much more powerful. +Several times he made peace with the Spaniards, but his word was ever a +Moro’s. It was soon known that he could not be trusted, for he +made and broke treaties with equal readiness. He infested the seas with +his fleets, sending out his own as he did in the year 1633, when he +sent out a large fleet which plundered and burned several large and +wealthy cities on this very island of Manila. But where he did most +harm was in our island of Pintados; for in the town of Ogmuc alone he +slew or made prisoners more than two hundred people—children and +women, as well as men. They captured the minister there, Father Juan +del Carpio of our Society, and cut him into pieces, of which his head +was the smallest. Cachil Corralat gave orders to his followers not to +carry to him a single father alive, but to slay them, in fulfilment of +a vow which he had made to Mahomet during a serious sickness, not to +leave a father alive if his health were restored. God, in His just +judgment and to punish us, chose to grant his prayer.</p> +<p>Other Mahometans, their neighbors, joined the Mindanaos—tribes +from the island of Jolo, who at one time paid tribute and then +rebelled, killing all the Spaniards. Although that island is very +small, and there cannot be more than three thousand men able to bear +arms, yet they are very valiant, and they have very plainly proved it +to us when they have <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb96" href="#pb96" +name="pb96">96</a>]</span>sailed forth to scour the high +seas—especially one chief, called Dato Achen, who can be compared +with the most destructive African pirates. This man once attacked a +shipyard which we had established in the province of Camarines, in +which several galleons were being built. After the usual robbery and +burning, he slew or made prisoners many Spaniards and Indians. He +carried away artillery and firearms, with which he strengthened his +defenses in his own country. He overran the Pintados Islands and did a +great deal of damage there. At Cabalian he captured Father Juan Domingo +Vilancio of our Society, a native of Luca—a holy man, and known +as such by Indians and Spaniards, and even by the Moros themselves. As +such, the latter revered him and did not ill-treat him in their own +country, where they carried him. While efforts were being made for his +ransom, it was our Lord’s pleasure to give him complete liberty +by freeing him from the prison of this [earthly] body, and giving him +in heaven his reward for his faithful labors. He toiled thirty years or +more in the conversion of the pagans, to the remarkable edification of +all; and he displayed heavenly sincerity, which secured him the love of +God and men. The Moros buried him on their island of Jolo. Although we +have asked for the body, they will not give it up, saying that they +would rather keep it because it is holy (for sanctity and virtue are +pleasing even to Moros and infidels). They allege other things in proof +of his sanctity, which I shall not refer to, because they are not +thoroughly investigated. The Lord will make them clear later, to His +own glory. Returning, however, to the Joloans, they are grown insolent +with their <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb97" href="#pb97" name= +"pb97">97</a>]</span>fortunate successes, no less on land than on the +sea; for, although we have gone there three times with powerful fleets, +they have come off with credit and singing victory. In short, we have +returned without accomplishing anything. There was one time, however, +when Don Christobal de Lugo, lieutenant for the captain-general in the +Pintados Islands, went there with a fleet, and sacked and burned the +principal town, and did considerable damage; but they have always +escaped, and repaid to us their losses. They put their trust in a hill +very difficult of access, which they have well fortified with +artillery, to which they retreat whenever they are attacked.</p> +<p>The evils that are suffered at the hands of these two enemies, the +Mindanaos and the Joloans, never were avenged, because, although the +governors sent out fleets after them, they did not encounter the +pirates on account of the great multitude of islands in the +archipelago; or else, if our ships did meet them, the Moros escaped, +for their vessels are remarkably swift and so have a great advantage +over ours. Then, to remedy so grievous injuries, Don Juan Cereço +Salamanca, who was then governor of the Filippinas, in the beginning of +the year 1634, overcoming remarkable difficulties which arose, with a +holy zeal for the service of God and of the king our lord, ordered a +position to be occupied on the island of Mindanao, at a place which +they call Samboangan. There he began to raise a fort which should be a +check to the Mindanaos and the Joloans, who came past that place when +they sailed forth on plundering expeditions. Although they could pass +us by standing out to sea, or in the darkness of the night, without +being seen from our fort, they would <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb98" href="#pb98" name="pb98">98</a>]</span>not so lightly dare to +leave behind their houses and lands with the Spaniard so near a +neighbor—for the latter could do them great injury by carrying +off their children and wives, and all their possessions, if their towns +were left unprotected when the men went away in their fleets; or at +least the Spaniards could await them on their return and knock them in +the head. The Moro king, Cachil Corralat, was much disturbed at the +proximity of the Spaniards; since now he could not make raids in +safety, as before; and he called upon the Joloans, the Borneans and the +Camucones to sail from various points to plunder our island, which they +did.</p> +<p>The Camucones are a nation inhabiting some islands subject to the +king of Burney. Sometimes alone, and sometimes in company with the +Borneans, they have infested our seas with their fleets, pillaging our +islands, capturing many Indians, and killing all the Spaniards whom +they took, because they did not wish to carry these alive to their own +country; accordingly they granted no Spaniard his life. They are a base +and very cruel people. These robbers began as petty thieves, with a few +small vessels; but with the captures which they have been continually +making, they have grown so powerful that they send out great fleets +upon the sea, and do a great deal of damage. In the year 1625, while +the archbishop Don Francisco Miguel Garcia Serrano was visiting the +district of Bondoc, these Camucones attacked the town one morning, and +the archbishop had no little trouble in escaping over the mountains; +they stole whatever they could carry away, with the silver and the +pontifical vestments. That same year, they captured Father Juan de las +Missas <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb99" href="#pb99" name= +"pb99">99</a>]</span>of our Society, who had come from Tayabas to +preach and was returning to the island of Marinduque, which was in his +charge. They killed the father, and captured all who were aboard his +ship, except perhaps some one who escaped by swimming. They did much +more damage, continuing their depredations up to the year 1636, when, +as I said, they sailed with a large fleet, at the solicitation of the +king Cachil Corralat. They entered so far among the islands, that from +them they sailed out upon the high sea—an act of great daring. +They arrived at and plundered Palapag, a mission of our Society. They +rounded Cape Espiritu Santo, and captured over a hundred Christians at +Baco. There they divided into two bands. One passed over to Albay, on +the island of Manila, where they were met by the alcalde-mayor, Captain +Mena, of the Order of St. George, with several Spaniards and six +Franciscan friars. The Spaniards pressed the Camucones so hard that +seven of their caracoas went ashore on the island of Capul, where many +of their Christian captives were set free. The natives of the said +island slew some of the Camucones. Three of their caracoas they +abandoned on the sea, going aboard others to make their escape more +easily. Not one of our men was killed in this encounter, except that +one Franciscan father was wounded by a musket-bullet, and afterwards +died of his wound. The other band went out to sea again, coasting the +island of Ybabao. They entered a town called Bangahun and made +prisoners there more than one hundred other Christians. This troop +fought a battle with a caracoa full of soldiers from the city of Zebu, +who inflicted some injury upon the Moros, killing and capturing some. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb100" href="#pb100" name= +"pb100">100</a>]</span>These Camucones, returning afterward to their +own country, while they were coasting the island of Panay, were +overtaken by a sudden storm, which drove three of their caracoas +ashore. Those who escaped with their lives were captured by the +natives, and many of them are now on galleys at the port of Cavite. +Other caracoas stealthily ventured to the Calamianes Islands, where +some Spaniards came out to meet them, and captured two of their ships, +and set free twenty captives from the island of Mindoro who were among +their prisoners. Fifteen other caracoas were coasting the island of +Paragua in company; and, two days before arriving at Borney, they +encountered thirty caracoas of Joloans, who had recently quarreled with +the Borneans. The Joloans attacked the Camucones and Borneans, captured +their fifteen caracoas, and made prisoners many Camucones and more than +one hundred of the Christians carried off by the Camucones; these +latter were ransomed at Samboangan, at a moderate rate.</p> +<p>After these pirates Cachil Corralat sent his fleet, which did +considerable damage in our islands. In order to stop it and check all +these enemies, the governor, Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, decided +to go forth in person and make an expedition to Mindanao, to begin the +punishment of this enemy, because they were most powerful—as we +shall soon see, describing first the naval victory given us by our Lord +over the fleet despatched hither by Cachil Corralat.</p> +<p>[The next part of this compilation is an account of the naval +victory over Tagal’s fleet in December, 1636; it is practically +the same as that which we have already presented in our <span class= +"sc">VOL. XXVII</span>, although <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb101" +href="#pb101" name="pb101">101</a>]</span>rewritten and much abridged +for publication. Then follows Mastrilli’s letter to his +provincial (June 2, 1637) which also we have published; Bobadilla +states that he reproduces it <i>verbatim</i>, save for the correction +of “a few words which are not quite in accord with our ordinary +language, as he was a native of the city of Naples.” The document +ends with a description of Corcuera’s triumphal entry into +Manila, evidently compiled (with some additional details) from Juan +Lopez’s letter on that subject, already presented to our +readers.] <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb102" href="#pb102" name= +"pb102">102</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1037" href="#xd19e1037src" name="xd19e1037">1</a></span> +Following is a translation of the title-page of the book from which +this account is taken: “Relation of the glorious victories on +land and sea won by the arms of our invincible king and monarch, Felipe +IIII, the Great, in the Filipinas Islands against the Mahometan Moros +of the island of Mindanao and their king Cachil Corralat, under the +leadership of Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order of +Alcantara and one of his Majesty’s Council of War, and governor +and captain-general of those islands: <i>drawn from various relations +sent from Manila during this year (1638)</i>. 1638. With license. +Mexico; at the press of Pedro de Quiñones, opposite the +Professed House.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1051" href="#xd19e1051src" name="xd19e1051">2</a></span> +<i>Tulio</i> (misprinted Fulio), for Tullius (Cicero). Apparently there +is some error in the reference given in the text, for this citation +from Cicero is not found in the place indicated by it, in the standard +editions of his <i>Epistolæ</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1066" href="#xd19e1066src" name="xd19e1066">3</a></span> Attached +to the editions of Quintilian’s works are 164 +<i>Declamations</i>, which remain out of a collection consisting +originally of 388 of these compositions. It is supposed, however, that +these were written by various persons, at different periods of +time.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1091" href="#xd19e1091src" name="xd19e1091">4</a></span> +“It is believed that the number of islands exceeds 1,400, +although thus far no one has stated their number with exactness.” +(<i lang="es">Archipiélago filipino</i>, p. 6.) The latest +information (<i>Census of the Philippine Islands</i>, Washington, 1905, +i, p. 185), gives the total number of islands, however, as not less +than 3,141, although the exact number is still unknown.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.6" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e1147" class="main">Royal Orders and Decrees, 1638</h2> +<div id="doc1638.6.1" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e1150" class="main">Removal of negroes from Manila</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight +of the Order of Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the +Filipinas Islands, and president of my royal Audiencia resident +therein. In a letter which you wrote me on the last of June, 1636, you +declare that shortly after your arrival at those islands, that city +petitioned you to have the free negroes and the freedmen, who number +about four hundred or five hundred, removed from it, because of the +disorders that they were creating within the city, as well as the +thefts that they were committing in union with the slaves—the +former receiving and taking to other places to sell what these said +negroes had stolen. You declare that that city demanded that the +negroes should go to live nine leguas away from there, but that that +measure has not seemed advisable; and the fathers of the Society gave +you an islet which they possess in the middle of the river, in order +that they might settle the negroes there, with the obligation to give +them instruction—but there would be no obligation to give the +fathers any stipend for that purpose beyond what is given them from the +communal fund of the Sangleys whom they have in Santa Cruz. Those +Sangleys <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb103" href="#pb103" name= +"pb103">103</a>]</span>also render me aid by giving me six reals per +annum, besides the general license, so that they may be allowed to live +there with the fathers. They number from about eight hundred to one +thousand Chinese. The fathers minister to those who have become +Christians from this number, as well as to the negroes—the latter +being separated from the former by an arm of the river. Also the +Chinese pay all his salary to the alcalde-mayor from their communal +fund, which has been a saving to my royal treasury. You declare that, +in your desire to economize and avoid so heavy expenses, you have +deemed it best to give the commander of artillery, who receives seven +hundred pesos monthly salary for his duties, the office of +alcalde-mayor of the Parián; for during the time while he should +hold that office, there would be an annual saving of seven thousand two +hundred pesos to my royal treasury. You also ordered the +master-of-camp, Don Lorenzo de Olaso, to go to live at the port of +Cavite with his company, and to serve there as castellan, chief +justice, and governor of that port, with the same salary as at present, +as you say that the sargento-mayor would be sufficient for you in that +city. The above you reported to me, so that I might understand it; and +you say that by the aforesaid measures and your method of governing, +and provided that no one steals from my royal treasury, you will +entirely clear my royal treasury of debt, and govern those islands from +the proceeds of them. The matter having been examined in my Council, it +has been judged best to tell you that it is thought that you will have +given careful consideration to the removal of the free negroes and +freedmen from that city and their settlement on the <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb104" href="#pb104" name= +"pb104">104</a>]</span>islet which was given you by the brethren of the +Society of Jesus; and the rest that you mention in the said letter +touching the said matter is neither approved nor rejected here, for the +present. It is to be feared, however, that those negroes, having been +removed from the city, and settled with the Chinese on an uninhabited +island, may commit more serious damage. Consequently, you shall watch +carefully so that you may remedy what needs correction; and you are to +note that in the matter of government, the best is not [always] the +easiest to execute, nor its results satisfactory. Hence, for that +reason, no new thing can be entered upon suddenly; and you will, +therefore, not carry out the execution of these new measures until you +shall have first reported to me all the things that you shall see to be +for my service, so that orders as to your course of action may be +issued to you. In the meanwhile, you shall not carry out your proposed +change of the persons of the commander of artillery and of the +master-of-camp, Don Lorenzo de Olaso; and I charge and order you, that, +jointly with the session [of the Audiencia], you shall inform me, both +in this regard and in others, of what changes should be made from the +past government, so that in everything decision may be made as to what +measures may be taken.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p class="signed"></p> +<p>By order of the king our sovereign:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Gabriel de Ocaña y +Alarcon</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.6.2" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e1170" class="main">Restricting the religious orders</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight +of the Order of Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the +Filipinas Islands, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb105" href="#pb105" +name="pb105">105</a>]</span>and president of my Audiencia therein: your +letter of June 30, 636, touching ecclesiastical matters, has been +examined in my royal Council of the Yndias, and answer is [hereby] made +you.</p> +<p>You say that the religious of the Order of St. Augustine need to be +reformed, for they pay no heed to the bulls of his Holiness, or the +decrees despatched in regard to the rotation; and that it would be +advisable not to give them any more religious for eight +years—both because they have many, and because of the causes that +you mention for such measure. I have thought best to charge you to have +the rule for rotation put in force strictly, without allowing more +religious in each mission station [<i lang="es">doctrina</i>] than, in +accordance with my royal patronage, shall be necessary for it; and that +the others be occupied in missions [<i lang="es">misiones</i>] and in +preaching, for which purpose they were sent.</p> +<p>In regard to what you write me concerning the advanced age of the +archbishop of those islands (who is so aged that his hands and head +tremble), namely, that it would be best to give him an assistant; and +that you are arranging to give such assistant an income of two thousand +pesos in addition to the four thousand pesos enjoyed by the said +archbishop, without taking that sum from my royal treasury, or from my +vassals: I charge you to explain to me the method or means by which you +can get that money without damage to my royal treasury and the vassals +who serve me, so that, if it be worth while to allow it, you may +execute it.</p> +<p>So that the Order of St. Dominic, and the other orders resident in +those islands, may live with the regulation and good example that is +proper, and so <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb106" href="#pb106" name= +"pb106">106</a>]</span>that they may not increase the number of mission +stations granted them by my decrees, you shall allow no new elections +in them, which shall not be in harmony with my patronage. With the +advice of the archbishop, you shall endeavor to unite some of the +stations; and in those that shall be newly founded, you shall endeavor +likewise to have secular priests introduced, if you find them +intelligent and competent. Madrid. September 2, 1638.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p class="signed"></p> +<p>By order of the king our sovereign:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Gabriel de Ocaña y +Alarcon</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.6.3" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e1202" class="main">Appointment of secular priests to +missions</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight +of the Order of Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the +Filipinas Islands, and president of my royal Audiencia therein: in one +of the sections of a letter which that city [of Manila] wrote to me on +June 27 of 636, it is stated that there are two colleges in that +city—one that of Santo Tomas, with religious of the Order of St. +Dominic; and the other that of San Josef, with religious of the Society +of Jesus—both of which have possessed, for several years past, +authority to confer degrees in all the sciences. It is also declared +that, with this opportunity, many students have excelled in those +studies, and especially various sons of poor citizens, who have +graduated in all the degrees; but that, since they have no beneficed +curacies on which they can depend for support, their studies bring them +no advantage. It is said that this is caused by certain religious +orders, who have acquired from the archbishop, bishops, and governors +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb107" href="#pb107" name= +"pb107">107</a>]</span>the aggrandizement of their orders with many +benefices which formerly were administered by secular priests; and that +this might be remedied if I would decree that all the benefices which +have been annexed to the religious orders during the last twenty years +should be restored to the [secular] clergy, and that edicts should be +issued in the form which I have ordained. This matter having been +considered in my royal Council of the Indias, I have thought it best to +issue the present, by which I command you that in the new missions that +shall be established, you shall—except when they are in a +territory assigned to the religious—it being understood that +there are virtuous secular priests, take pains to appoint them to such +missions; for such is my will. [Madrid, October 2, 1638.]</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p class="signed"></p> +<p>By command of the king our sovereign:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Gabriel de Ocaña y +Alarcon</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.6.4" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e1220" class="main">Compensation to nuns of St. Clare</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight +of the Order of Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the +Filipinas Islands, and president of my royal Audiencia therein: in a +letter which the abbess and nuns of the convent of St. Clare in that +city wrote me on the thirtieth of June, 636, they make the following +statements: That the said convent was established so that they could +live in it, with all decorum and humility, with certain alms from the +citizens; and their house and church were built close to the wall of +the said city that lies next the river—a place that seemed most +separated from the business quarter, and so closely <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb108" href="#pb108" name="pb108">108</a>]</span>shut +in that little save the sky could be seen. That in front, on the other +side of the street, is the royal hospital for the Spaniards, which from +the time of its foundation has been administered by the religious of +St. Francis; and that in the hospital the religious who was vicar of +the said convent [of St. Clare], and administered the holy sacraments +to the nuns, had a cell, and they helped to support this religious out +of the alms bestowed upon them. That you, without any occasion or just +cause, drove out the religious from the said hospital by force and +violence, with armed soldiers—saying that the hospital should be +managed by a secular priest whom you took thither with you. That the +said vicar was thereby compelled to find shelter in the convent of St. +Francis, which is at a great distance from that of St. Clare; and +consequently, with the inconveniences of the excessive heat and the +violence of the rains in the wet season, he cannot go to hear +confessions and administer the holy sacraments at St. Clare, especially +at night. That their greatest annoyance is, that you are constructing +in the hospital a ward for convalescents, on the side that faces the +said convent; and that it is so high that it looks down upon the +convent, notwithstanding the enclosure of the latter, and from the +windows of that ward may be seen the beds of the nuns in their +infirmary and dormitory—a matter which requires thorough +reparation. They say that on the other side of their house is a space +between the houses and the wall (which was formerly a street), which is +a passage to the convent, and is useful to it; but that you have closed +this way, and are building another house, which abuts upon their own +ground-plot, for barracks and stables for <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb109" href="#pb109" name="pb109">109</a>]</span>the cavalry troops. +They entreat me that I will be pleased to command that a check be +placed upon this undertaking, and that, considering their poverty, I +order you to pay them the amount of one hundred and twenty pesos in +certified pay-warrants on the treasury there, which they hold, which +sum will be a great benefit and charity to them. The complaint of these +nuns has been considered in my royal Council of the Indias, and the +damage which they say has been caused to them by closing up the street +and by their being in sight of the ward that was built in the cells [at +the hospital], and by the stables and barracks that have been placed so +close to their house. I have therefore thought it best to ordain and +command you, as I do, that you shall not in any way cause injury or +inconvenience to the said nuns; and that the pay-warrants which they +say they hold, you shall cause to be paid—provided they are duly +certified—in their due value and at such time as the said nuns +desire; for such is my will. [Madrid, October 2, 1638.]</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p class="signed"></p> +<p>By command of the king our sovereign:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Gabriel de Ocaña y +Alarcon</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.6.5" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e1240" class="main">Regulating the seminary of Santa +Potenciana</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To the president and auditors of my royal +Audiencia resident in the city of Manila of the Filipinas Islands: it +has been reported in my royal Council of the Yndias that there is in +that city a seminary named Santa Potenciana, of which I am patron; that +it was established for orphan girls, and for the reception of married +women when their husbands are occupied in my service in various parts; +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb110" href="#pb110" name= +"pb110">110</a>]</span>and that for some years the custom has been +introduced of sheltering in the said seminary certain women who live +scandalously. [I am also told] that, since this is of so great service +to God our Lord, you, my president, have given orders to the mother +rector of the said seminary not to receive in the seminary any woman +sent by the archbishop of that church, or by his provisor; and that no +one of its inmates may leave it. It has been judged best to order you +(as I do hereby) to take what measures appear to you most advisable in +this matter, considering all ends. Given in Madrid, November eight, one +thousand six hundred and thirty-eight.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p>Countersigned by Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon, and signed +by the members of the Council.</p> +<p>[<i>Endorsed:</i> “To the royal Audiencia of Manila, in regard +to the order given by the president of the Audiencia to the mother +rector of the seminary of Sancta Potenciana of that city, that she +should not receive therein any woman sent by the archbishop or his +provisor.” “Ordering that the president take what measures +appear most fitting, considering all ends.”]</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.6.6" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e1258" class="main">Commerce of the islands with +Mexico</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To my viceroy, president, and auditors of my +royal Audiencia resident in the City of Mexico, of Nueva España: +Don Juan Grau Monfalcon, procurator-general of the Filipinas Islands, +has reported to me that the permission possessed by those islands of +two hundred and fifty thousand pesos of merchandise, and five hundred +thousand for the returns thereon, is very small, as that was conceded +thirty-four years ago, when the citizens and inhabitants <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb111" href="#pb111" name="pb111">111</a>]</span>were +fewer, the duties and expenses not so great, and the islands less +infested by their foes. Because of this latter, their needs have +increased so greatly that, if the said permission be not increased, it +will be impossible to maintain them, or for their citizens to support +themselves. He tells me that some illegal acts may have resulted from +the present narrow limit of the permission, both in the lading of the +merchandise, and in the returns of the silver. In order that those +violations may be avoided, and those islands and their inhabitants +maintained in a less straitened manner, he has petitioned me to have +the goodness to concede an increase of the two hundred and fifty +thousand pesos of the merchandise to four hundred thousand, and also of +the five hundred thousand pesos of silver to eight hundred thousand. +For, besides the above-mentioned advantages, my royal duties will thus +increase, to supply the expenses of the said islands; illegalities and +frauds will cease; and the inhabitants will increase in wealth. The +matter having been examined in my royal Council of the Indias, inasmuch +as I wish to know what permission the said islands enjoy, and that of +the count and duke of San Lucar, and whether it will be advisable to +enlarge the permission of the said islands; and considering their needs +and expenses, and other advantages: I order you to inform me very +minutely in regard to it all, so that, after examination, the advisable +measures may be taken. Given in Madrid, December eight, one thousand +six hundred and thirty-eight.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p>Countersigned by Don Gabriel de Ocaña y Alarcon, and signed +by the members of the Council.</p> +<p>[<i>Endorsed</i>: “Don Juan Grau Monfalcon. To <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb112" href="#pb112" name="pb112">112</a>]</span>the +viceroy, president, and auditors of the Audiencia of Mexico, ordering +information as to the permission [of trade] for the Filipinas Islands, +and that conceded to the count and duke; and as to the advisability of +increasing the amount permitted to the islands.”]</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.6.7" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e1278" class="main">Jurisdiction over seamen</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight +of the Order of Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the +Philipinas Islands, or to the person or persons in whose charge that +government shall be: in a letter which I wrote to you on the second of +last September, on various matters, there is a section of the following +tenor: “I have considered the arguments that you bring forward +for its being so expedient that the commander and the admiral of the +ships shall have authority and jurisdiction in the port of Acapulco, +when he is not on shore, to punish his sailors and soldiers; and that +the warder of the fort there shall not interfere with them by +undertaking to punish them on shore (regarding them as his +subordinates, as hitherto they have been) as they are persons of +ability and good qualifications—since from the time when the +ships cast anchor, during all the time while they remain in port, the +men do not respect or obey, as it is right they should, the said +commander or admiral. Desiring to avoid this difficulty, so that those +officers may punish the culprits in such cases, I have decided that +what you propose may be done, with the conditions that you mention; +and, by a decree of the same date as this letter, I am sending to the +viceroy of Nueva España advices to that effect. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb113" href="#pb113" name="pb113">113</a>]</span>[I +have told him] that as this seems to be a general complaint, to judge +from the instances [reported] here, he must give the necessary orders +for the execution of this decree, unless some difficulty shall arise +that may oblige him to defer it; for when those men commit any +disorderly acts on shore complaint can be made against them, and the +matter referred to the said commander and admiral.” And now a +report has been made to me, on the part of Don Juan Grao Monfalcon, +procurator-general of that city of Manila, that it is very advisable +that the said commander and admiral of the ships possess all necessary +jurisdiction for punishing the men aboard them—as is done at +Cartagena, Portovelo, and other places; and he entreats that I be +pleased to command that this be accordingly done. The matter having +been considered in my royal Council of the Indias, I have thought it +best to issue the present, for such is my will, that the usage which I +have mentioned be put in practice in the islands, as well as in Nueva +España, since that is advisable for my service. [Madrid, +December 8, 1638.]</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p>By command of the king our sovereign:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Gabriel de Ocaña y +Alarcon</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.6.8" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e1295" class="main">On the lading of the galleons</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. Don Juan Grau y Monfalcon, +procurator-general of the Philipinas Islands, has reported to me that +certain citizens of those islands, to whom were allotted toneladas in +the amount [of lading] permitted, have, for lack of means to ship the +goods, sold that space—which has thus been secured by the +merchants of Nueva España and <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb114" href="#pb114" name="pb114">114</a>]</span>Peru, who for that +purpose have their agents in Manila. He states that this practice is +overlooked [by the officials], although, after the first distribution +of the permitted lading space has been made, and the toneladas +allotted, the citizens who through poverty or other causes are unable +or unwilling to lade the goods which belong and are allotted to them +cannot give, sell, or transfer that space to any other person, unless +they again declare the toneladas before the bureau of allotment. The +bureau again shares the space which was thus declared among such +citizens as ask for it, or who can occupy it to better advantage; and +these must pay for it, giving for each tonelada the amount appraised, +according to the season and the circumstances, by the bureau itself. +The proceeds from the said toneladas shall be given and paid to the +owners who had declared them. Thus poor persons will obtain relief, and +the citizens [of the islands] will have the benefit of the entire +amount of trade permitted to them, while those of Nueva España +will be excluded from it. [The said procurator] entreats me to issue a +decree in accordance with these facts, including therein adequate +penalties to secure its execution. The matter having been examined in +my royal Council of the Indias, and the above statements carefully +considered, I have approved [the said procurator’s request]. I +command my governor and captain-general of the said Philipinas Islands +who now holds or shall in future hold that office, and the auditors of +my royal Audiencia therein, and other persons who shall have in charge +the allotment of the said toneladas, and the bureau for the said +allotment, that they observe and fulfil, and cause to be observed and +fulfilled, exactly <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb115" href="#pb115" +name="pb115">115</a>]</span>and inviolably, what is ordained in this my +decree, without in any way contravening or exceeding its tenor or form. +And those who disobey this decree are warned that such act will be +charged to them in the visitations and their residencias, and they will +be punished according to law; for such is my will. [Madrid, December 8, +1638.] <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb116" href="#pb116" name= +"pb116">116</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.7" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e1305" class="main">Fortunate Successes in Filipinas and +Terrenate, 1636–37</h2> +<div class="argument"> +<p class="first"><i>Fortunate successes which our Lord has given by sea +and land to the Spanish arms in the Filipinas Islands against the +Mindanaos, and in the islands of Terrenate against the Dutch, in the +latter part of the year 1636 and the beginning of 1637.</i></p> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.7.1" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e1312" class="main">Filipinas</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">These Filipinas Islands, subject to the Catholic king +our sovereign for the past thirty years, have been so harassed and +terrorized by invasions, robberies, and fires caused by the Moros +(Mindanaos, Joloans, Burneyans, and Camucones), that one could not sail +outside the bay of Manila without manifest danger. Not a single village +was now safe, nor could an evangelical or royal minister perform his +duty undisturbed. These pirates—some at one time, others at +another, and sometimes all together—set out every year from their +own lands, and at first attacked the islands which are called the +Pintados, for these were the nearest; and afterward, becoming more +impudent, they came to coast along the island of Manila itself, and +once they even came to the suburbs of this city (although without +making their presence known). The Christians captured by them on these +raids were numberless; some were Spanish <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb117" href="#pb117" name="pb117">117</a>]</span>but the majority were +natives, who, sold afterward either among the enemies themselves, or +among more distant unbelievers, either abandoned the faith, or suffered +living death in a wretched slavery. The villages which they had ravaged +were pitiful to see, being either burned to the ground or abandoned and +deserted; for those inhabitants who were able to escape from the hands +of the enemy hid themselves in the thickets of the mountains, among +wild beasts and venomous serpents, without other food than a few roots +and wild fruits. And what is impossible to relate without shedding +tears, the gospel ministers were compelled to flee in this same way, to +endure the same calamities, and suffer the inclemencies of sky and +ground, in order not to fall into the hands of Mahometan cruelty. Even +thus they were not always able to flee, for some, cut to pieces, fell +into their hands; others were captured and ransomed at great cost, or +died of ill-treatment in their captivity. Those barbarians did not +spare the churches, but rather plundered them with an infernal fury; +burned them, and trampled under foot the ornaments; broke the images +and profaned the vessels; and impiously clothed themselves with the +sacred vestments. The most unbearable thing of all was to see all those +evils unchecked, our friends disheartened, the enemy unresisted, and +the villages defenseless. For, although the governors sent fleets in +pursuit of the enemy, nothing was effected—partly because the +latter hid themselves from our men among the numerous islands, and +partly because of the great speed of their boats, in which respect they +had great advantage over us.</p> +<p>Finally, in the year 1633, the king of Mindanao, <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb118" href="#pb118" name= +"pb118">118</a>]</span>named Cachil Corralat, sent out a very large +fleet which did signal damage in the islands. To put an end to this, +Don Juan Cerezo de Salamanca, who was governor of the islands at that +time, surmounting many difficulties, commanded a certain position to be +taken and a fort to be begun in Samboangan, on the island of Mindanao, +and occupied by a Spanish garrison; for that point was well suited to +the purpose of restraining from there the Mindanaos and Joloans, as +they were forced to sight it when they went forth to pillage. Soon the +enemy Corralat felt the damage done him by the new post of the +Spaniards, and since he could no longer sally forth at his safety, he +called upon the Burneyans, Joloans, and Camucones to set out in various +directions to pillage—which they did. He himself sent out after +them, in the beginning of April, 1636, a large fleet in command of a +Moro chief named Tagal. This fleet, as our garrison was but recently +established, was able to proceed to our islands, and attacking many +places, to make many captures—among them three Recollect +religious of the Order of St. Augustine, and a Spanish corregidor of +the island of Cuyo; to pillage much property, and to plunder the +churches. They carried away the ornaments and vessels, and destroyed +the images, and especially the cloth of a sacred crucifix, from which +Corralat made himself a cape. Thereupon he became arrogant, and boasted +that he was carrying away the God of the Christians a prisoner, because +he had taken from among the sacred vessels a monstrance and a lunette +with the most holy sacrament; and he returned to his own land, where +they were already mourning him as lost, because he had been absent from +it for eight months. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb119" href="#pb119" +name="pb119">119</a>]</span></p> +<p>This last invasion, more than all the previous ones, afflicted Don +Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, who at that time had been proprietary +governor of the islands for a year. Inflamed with a zeal for the honor +of God and his king, he determined, after surmounting the numerous +difficulties and oppositions, to avenge in person the insolent acts of +those barbarians. But first of all he sent out, as governor of the +presidio at Sanboangan, Sargento-mayor Bartolome Diaz Barrera, and, +under his orders, Sargento-mayor Nicolas Gonçalez, so that they +might be making preparations and sweeping the seas of those +corsairs—a very important matter, as will be seen subsequently. +He then fitted out a good fleet of champans (sailing vessels of +moderate size, which are used by the Chinese); and, embarking in one of +them, made sail on the day of the Purification of our Lady, the second +of February, of this year 1637. At Oton (which is about half-way) he +received definite information that Tagal was returning to his own +country with eight very well laden ships. The commander of the garrison +at Sanboangan was informed of that; and, preparing in two hours a +squadron of five caracoas (which are swift craft with oar and sail, +which are used by these Indians) and placing in command thereof Nicolas +Gonçalez, the sargento-mayor of that presidio, he set out to +round a very steep cliff, in which a small mountain terminated, +projecting out into the sea, and distant about thirty leguas eastward +from our fort. It was necessary for the enemy to stop there, in order +to discharge numerous lances and arrows at the cliff (for it was their +custom to sail by that point when either outward or homeward +bound)—a superstitious custom of those <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb120" href="#pb120" name= +"pb120">120</a>]</span>barbarians. On account of this the place was +known as “the point of arrows” [<i lang="es">punta de +flechas</i>]. The result was that which our men desired for on the +morning of the day of St. Thomas, the twenty-first of December (at the +time when prayer was being offered up within the fort), the enemy was +sighted; and both then and on the following night our men made such an +attack upon the enemy that, in spite of a desperate defense, they +surrendered. Of the eight ships only one worthy of mention escaped, and +that one in such a condition that in order to escape, they cast +overboard all its merchandise and slaves. The other ships, heavily +laden with merchandise, fell into the hands of our soldiers and were +plundered. There were not many firearms, but they contained the vases +and sacred ornaments, which were declared, in order to be returned to +their rightful owners. There died Tagal, the commander of the enemy, +with more than three hundred other Moros—so obstinate and furious +that they preferred death rather than surrender, although they were +offered their lives. Better was the course of one of Tagal’s +brothers, who, when badly wounded, surrendered, protesting that he had +always regarded the faith of the Christians as the true one, and +begging for baptism, after receiving which he died. His example was +followed by fourteen other Moros, who surrendered and besought baptism. +Thus also there were recovered a hundred and twenty Christian captives +and among them a Recollect father, one of those whom the Moros were +taking away with them; but he was so badly wounded that he soon died, +although greatly consoled to have seen with his own eyes the bravery +with which our captains had punished the insolence of the barbarians, +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb121" href="#pb121" name= +"pb121">121</a>]</span>obtaining so signal a victory as that, to the +honor of Jesus Christ and of the Spaniards, without its having cost +even a single man to our side. In that we began to enjoy the benefits +of the fort of Sanboangan; for if it had not been there, we could not +have encountered the enemy—who were none the less frightened by a +miracle which occurred on the very night on which the victory was won. +For having commenced by a terrific trembling of the earth and sea, with +a great noise of groans and screams, which were heard by some, and +which terrified all, that cliff—which we have mentioned as an +infamous place, both on account of the superstitious rite of shooting +arrows at it and many other things, and because there was a tradition +among the natives that the devil had been actually seen +there—became loosened from the land and fell with a great crash +into the sea, our Lord giving to understand thereby that the impiety so +strongly intrenched in that island was to fall and give place to our +holy religion, as events are constantly demonstrating. The shore has +already been consecrated to God with the name of Point San Sebastian, +so that the superstitions by which that place was contaminated may be +transformed by His holy arrows.</p> +<p>The governor was highly elated with these tidings, and still more +when he received the ornaments, sacred vessels, and images which had +been recovered; and was moved to deep pity by the maltreated holy +crucifix, which had been made into a cape.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1334src" href="#xd19e1334" name="xd19e1334src">1</a> He ordained +the latter as thenceforth a standard for <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb122" href="#pb122" name="pb122">122</a>]</span>that expedition, as +he did also with the miraculous painting of St. Francis Xavier which +was carried by Father Marcelo Mastrillo, well known in the greater part +of the world for the so great mark of favor shown him by the Lord +through the agency of that great apostle of India. This father, while +passing from Malaca to Macan, a port of China, in fulfilment of the vow +which he made at Napoles, met with the Dutch corsairs, from whom the +Lord delivered him by a sudden wind which, while it turned him from the +course which he was pursuing, miraculously carried him, without a pilot +who knew those regions, into the bay of Manila. They anchored at the +port of Cavite, on the day of St. Ignatius of last year, for the signal +consolation and edification of all these islands, and for the good +success of this expedition (in which consisted the complete relief and +remedy of all)—especially to the benefit of the sick, of whom he +took charge during the entire course of the expedition. Our fleet +reached the port of Sanboangan on February 22, of this year; and all +the men in it having been confessed and having received communion, and +having been so encouraged (as they made evident to the father) by +seeing from the pulpit, the outraged image of the Crucified One, they +cried out that they would attack the whole world; and that the mothers +were fortunate who had employed their sons in so glorious an +undertaking. Then the soldiers returned to their vessels; they were +divided into three companies of Spaniards, and one of Panpango Indians. +Without awaiting the Spaniards and the volunteer Bisayan Indians they +began to lay their course toward Lamitan, on the fourth of March, in +order not to allow the enemies time to <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb123" href="#pb123" name="pb123">123</a>]</span>prepare themselves. +At that place Corralat had his principal village. The governor preceded +the entire fleet, with only four boats—both because the weather +was contrary, and because he had heard that there were some Moro +merchantmen on the sea from Java Major, very full of Christian slaves. +Without the loss of an instant’s time, by sailing night and day, +he came within sight of Lamitan, on March thirteen. There the same man, +in company with only six musketeers as a guard, personally +reconnoitered the coast and river, with great valor and risk. Having +fully ascertained that the beach and the low grounds were safe, he +disembarked with the men of his four boats, as well as those of two +others, that had already come up at that time—in all, about +seventy soldiers. He placed these in battle-array, and marched with +them to attack the village, without knowing that it was so well +fortified as was the case, as he understood that all their force was +about one and one-half leguas inland on a high hill. It was an especial +providence of our Lord, and a brilliant stratagem, to leave an open +road along the beach (on which, as was afterward seen, the enemy had +planted all their artillery), and to deceive the enemy by taking +another road on the opposite side. This was very difficult and +dangerous, both because of the ambuscades which the enemy had prepared +in the thickets (which were quickly cleared by our men, by means of two +field-pieces which were in the vanguard), and by the swamps and +river—which the soldiers forded twice, with the water up to their +breasts, with incredible valor. They were encouraged by the example of +their captain-general, who was the first in all these hardships, as he +was also later, when attacking two <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb124" +href="#pb124" name="pb124">124</a>]</span>large stockades, one after +the other. Those stockades, notwithstanding the fierce resistance made +by the Moros in their defense, he entered with his men, ever proving +himself not less prudent in commanding than spirited in +attacking—personally encountering several Moros, who set upon him +with extraordinary spirit. Thereupon, they caught sight of the fort +with which Corralat had defended his village. It was exceedingly well +fortified with a new ditch, with eight pieces of artillery, +twenty-seven versos, many muskets with rests, and other lighter arms, +and with more than two thousand warrior Moros. But that was of little +use, for so gallant was the assault of the Spanish, notwithstanding +their small number, that they instantly gained possession of the fort, +killing a goodly number of Moros—among whom was their castellan, +who obstinately fought to the death—while the others fled very +badly wounded. From that place a portion of our men went on ahead to a +stockade which, with one piece [of artillery], defended the house of +Corralat, and it soon fell into our power; for after the commander who +had charge of it (and who until then had kept them in good spirits by +his vain and superstitious promises) had been killed, those who +accompanied him lost heart and fled, while many of them were left there +dead. The other body [of the Spaniards] attacked the river at the same +time, and, putting the Moros to flight, captured more than three +hundred craft, great and small. Of these they sacked some large +Javanese merchantmen which were heavily laden with goods, and set free +their Christian slaves. Some boats which were suitable for our men were +kept, and the others were burned, without a single <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb125" href="#pb125" name="pb125">125</a>]</span>one +being left. Had the fleet that left Sanboangan been all together on +that day, they would have finished matters with the Moro king Corralat, +who, with as many men as possible, withdrew to the hill which he had +fortified, disguised and borne on the shoulders of slaves.</p> +<p>The governor after having given the village over to sack, having +gathered all the arms of the enemy—which, as aforesaid, consisted +of eight bronze pieces with ladles, one swivel-gun of cast iron, +twenty-seven versos, and more than one hundred muskets and arquebuses; +besides a very great number of cannon-chambers, and iron, balls, and +powder; campilans (what the Indians call by this name resemble certain +cutlasses), lances, javelins, and many other kinds of poisoned missile +weapons; and also after having repaired the fort which the enemy had +(now called San Francisco Xavier) with new and suitable fortifications, +which he planned, and himself commenced with his own hands to execute; +and having lodged his men without the loss of even one (for only two +servants deserted): he retired to a large mosque, where he established +a bodyguard. He first had the mosque blessed, and a chair and some +Arabic books of the cursed Koran burned. Quite necessary was the +garrison and watch set by the vigilant governor during the days of his +stay there, while awaiting the rest of his fleet, in order to drive +away some false and pernicious embassies, and to defend themselves from +the continual surprises which the defeated Moros sprang upon them, +especially at night. Our men did not receive much hurt from them; on +the contrary, various bodies of troops, leaving their posts, overran +the country, burning the villages, and committing <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb126" href="#pb126" name= +"pb126">126</a>]</span>other damage on the enemy. Many Christian +captives fled from the enemy on this account, and were immediately sent +to Sanboangan.</p> +<p>On the sixteenth of the same month, Sargento-mayor Nicolas +Gonçalez came to join the governor with the rest of the fleet, +which sailed from Sanboangan. The governor immediately began to prepare +his men with all temporal and spiritual equipment with which to invest +the hill on the next day. There was well seen the military prudence and +skill, and the zeal for the divine honor, of the captain-general, in +the so well arranged and efficacious address which he made to his +soldiers, and in the so definite orders that he issued. He divided his +men; and, committing about one hundred and twenty Spaniards, thirty +Pampango Indians, and some other Bisayans as carriers, to +Sargento-mayor Nicolas Gonzalez, ordered him to surprise the enemy by +the rear of the hill, first sounding his trumpets, so that he himself +might attack the front at the same instant by this means dividing the +enemy’s forces, and weakening their defense. In accordance with +these orders, the sargento-mayor began his march. The governor, with +the rest of the army (after leaving a sufficient defense of soldiers in +the fort and boats), marched toward the hill at six o’clock the +following morning. At its brow was a very fine deserted village, where +the governor fortified a good house, and had a piece of artillery +planted and a garrison of Pampangos established, to be used as a place +of refuge for his men. Commencing to ascend the hill by the road which +the Moro who was guiding them showed him, he stopped near where there +was another road; and, having asked the guide whether that road also +led to <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb127" href="#pb127" name= +"pb127">127</a>]</span>the hill, and which of the two was the better, +the Moro replied in the affirmative, and said that both were poor. +“Then if both are poor,” said the governor in reply, +“let us go by the other, and not by the one along which the Moro +is guiding us.” That was the inspiration of Heaven, and very good +military counsel, and so did the outcome declare it; for that first +road was taking them point blank into a cavalier, garrisoned with three +pieces, one of which was of bronze. It was found afterward that, +besides a double charge of powder, the piece was loaded with two plain +artillery balls, two crowbars, and more than three hundred musket +balls—with which, no doubt, at least all the vanguard would have +been swept away. Now freed from that danger, and marching with great +difficulty up the hill, the governor sent some of the vanguard with +orders to reconnoiter only the road, and to halt at some fitting place +in order to await the signal of those who were to attack the enemy in +the rear. In truth the road was so difficult that it could be ascended +in some places only with great difficulty, by clambering up and laying +hold of the shrubs with their hands. It was narrow and very steep, and +had precipices in all parts, so that they could not mount upward except +one at a time. And, above all, it was so well commanded at the top by +three forts—which were inaccessible, both by the great height of +their location, and by the defenses of ditches, very stout stockades, +and a very large supply of weapons—that very few of the enemy, +without receiving any hurt, could with the use of only stones kill a +million men who might attack them in that part. Notwithstanding this, +those who were sent to reconnoiter the road were so <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb128" href="#pb128" name= +"pb128">128</a>]</span>blinded by their overweening valor and spirit +(truly Spanish) that, thinking that they could easily gain all, they +went ahead to attack one of the three forts, without heeding the order +that the general had given them; thereby they encountered, for +themselves and the rest of the vanguard, great damage from the three +forts, without doing anything to the enemy. More than twenty [of the +Spaniards] were killed and more than eighty badly wounded. Much greater +would have been the destruction of our men—for, not considering +those who were falling, they continued to involve themselves and the +others further, with false rumors of victory—had it not been that +the governor, placing himself in the greatest danger, where the balls +were raining down, and where they wounded his squire (and others who +were very near him fell dead), and recognizing that victory was +impossible in that part, and prudently hiding the disorder which had +happened, in order not to discourage his soldiers, caused them all, +both whole and wounded, to retire. This he did with so great ease and +gallantry on one side, while on the other he confronted the enemy with +so great valor, with sword in hand; had he not done that not a single +man would have remained alive, since the enemy were numerous, the road +full of precipices, and our men badly impeded with the wounded and more +than two hours of fighting. That night the governor passed, with those +who remained unhurt, in the retreat at the brow of the hill—at +the greatest risk of perishing, if the enemy had made a sally, however +vigilant our men had been. But God delivered them from that danger; for +the enemy did not make a sally, because they made a great feast that +night over the good result of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb129" +href="#pb129" name="pb129">129</a>]</span>having, as they imagined, +killed the governor. Already by this time the sick were in the camp, in +which miraculous cures of very deadly wounds occurred. One had been +shot through the head from temple to temple; another was shot through +the mouth by a ball that passed up through the stomach; another had +several poisoned dart-points (here called <i>sompites</i>) left +sticking in his throat; and both those and all the others, excepting +two or three who did not allow themselves to be treated, are today +alive and well. They, and all, attribute their miraculous health to the +special favor with which God chose to repay the holy zeal with which +all risked their lives for His Divine Majesty.</p> +<p>On the following day, the eighteenth of the same month, while the +governor was hearing mass, the rattle and roar of artillery and +musketry was heard on the hill, which increased his anxiety. Suspecting +that Nicolas Gonzalez was fighting, he sent him, as a +reënforcement, a company of soldiers under command of Captain Don +Rodrigo de Guillestigui. And it was so that, the said sargento-mayor, +Nicolas Gonzalez, not having been able to arrive the day before at the +assigned place because of the great difficulty of the road, it was our +Lord’s pleasure that, after conquering many difficulties and +great obstacles, he gained possession of an eminence which dominated +the enemy’s forts in the rear. Thence he started to invest them, +with such intrepidity that, although the king, leading his men in +person, began to resist him furiously, he could not however withstand +our charges. Consequently, they were compelled to abandon their three +forts, one after the other, leaving an infinite number of dead Moros, +who perished <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb130" href="#pb130" name= +"pb130">130</a>]</span>partly by the balls, and partly through falling +over precipices in escaping, as the way was narrow. Among those who +escaped by flight was Corralat; he fled, badly wounded, to some small +villages that he owned, which were four leguas distant from the hill. +The queen his wife, and many others of his servants threw themselves +over the precipices of their own accord, in order to avoid falling into +our hands. Many of the enemy were captured and the Christian captives +there freed. Among the latter was found alive one of the Recollect +fathers, who, as he had been badly mangled, was judged to have lived as +by a miracle until the day following, when he died as a saint in the +camp, after receiving all the sacraments with great consolation. The +third [Recollect religious] was killed through the fury of the Moros, +and it is not known where they threw his body. The three forts, then, +with all their arms (namely, four pieces of artillery, and other +numberless weapons of other kinds), having fallen into our hands, as +well as a great quantity of food, and a quantity of wealth, and a +suitable guard having been placed, the governor was advised of +everything. He was waiting anxiously in camp; rejoicing over the good +news, and more that no one of our soldiers had been killed, he ascended +the hill. In two days’ time having taken down to the camp with +very few men the pieces which it had taken the enemy six months to take +up with more than two thousand Indians; collecting many sacred vases +and ecclesiastical ornaments which were found; giving the house of the +king over to sack, and others, very large and full of riches, by which +many Spaniards were greatly advantaged; and having burned the +buildings, and <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb131" href="#pb131" name= +"pb131">131</a>]</span>leveled the forts: as he was no longer able to +endure the stench which arose from the [dead bodies of] the enemy who +had been slain and those who had fallen over the precipices, the forces +returned to camp—leaving the Moro king entirely ruined, as a +chastisement for the many outrages which he had impiously committed on +the true God, on His priests, and other Christians. From there, after +having given thanks to our Lord with a mass, and a solemn procession +with the most holy sacrament on the day of the Incarnation, they set +sail for Sanboangan.</p> +<p>When they left, the governor sent Sargento-mayor Pedro Palomino with +one hundred Spaniards to Cachil Moncay (the legitimate king, although +he had been oppressed by the tyranny of his uncle Corralat), in order +to tell him that, if he wished to be protected by the Spanish arms of +his Majesty, he must render homage and pay tribute to the Catholic king +our sovereign, wage war by fire and sword on Corralat and his allies, +free the Christian captives, and admit gospel ministers. The king +offered in person to do all that, and afterward through his ambassador +and brother-in-law, at Samboangan, to the governor. The latter having +issued the fitting orders in that presidio, and having received the +homage offered to our sovereign by many—especially by the +inhabitants of the island of Basilan, to whom he immediately assigned +gospel ministers, as they asked for them—he entrusted one hundred +Spaniards and more than one thousand volunteer Indians (who had now +arrived, although after the battle), with orders to coast along the +island, doing all the harm possible to the enemy, and helping the +Spaniards’ friends. The said captain performed all <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb132" href="#pb132" name="pb132">132</a>]</span>the +aforesaid excellently, coasting along the island from Sanboangan to +Caraga. And although the Moros had retreated inland, being terrified by +the news of the victory, still the captain did them considerable +damage. He burned as many as sixteen villages, and many other +collections of houses, laid waste the fields and gardens, destroyed +more than one hundred ships (counting large and small), and seized +others for the use of the fleet, whose need he abundantly supplied with +many provisions which he collected. He also beheaded seventy-two +spirited Moros, who defended themselves against him, whose heads he +placed on pikes, in various places along the beach, in order to +terrorize the others. He made prisoners some others, whom he took +alive, with which the whole land became fearful. While that was being +done, as has been said, the governor set sail toward Manila. He entered +that city in triumph on the twenty-fourth of May, with his four +companies in battle-array, with the prisoners in their midst, and with +fourteen wagons heavily laden with many important arms of the enemy, +together with the banners which had been captured dragging in the dust. +There was general applause and rejoicing by the Spaniards and natives. +That was an affair well calculated to inspire fear in the numberless +infidels by whom we are surrounded.</p> +<p>Finally, his Lordship, having shown certain very splendid honors to +those who had so gloriously perished in the war, and having ordered a +great number of masses to be said for their souls, ended the +celebration most happily on the seventh of June (the Sunday of the +Trinity), by a very solemn procession of the most holy sacrament as an +expression of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb133" href="#pb133" name= +"pb133">133</a>]</span>thanks. In front marched the ransomed +Christians, very handsomely clad, carrying candles and rosaries. Four +long paces behind them were many sacred vases and ecclesiastical +ornaments, which were recovered from the possession of the barbarian. +By that sight the hearts of Catholics were moved to great compassion; +and the people gave many thanks to our Lord for the sight of that which +they had desired for so many years. They entreated Him that the work +might progress until, the enemies who remained in those regions having +received the faith of Jesus Christ, they and the other long-time +Christians might enjoy the desired peace and quiet.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.7.2" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e1375" class="main">Terrenate</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The governor’s great care and vigilance in +preparing and arranging the fleet of Mindanao did not cause him to +forget the other enemy—infested posts that his Majesty possesses +in this archipelago. At the same time, he despatched another very good +fleet, consisting of two large ships, one patache, and one galley, +under command of General Geronimo Henriquez, as a guard to a number of +champans which were taking the succor to the forts of Terrenate. Two +excellent ships of the Dutch enemy were awaiting them at the entrance. +When they saw the courage of our men the enemy retired in flight to the +shelter of their fort of Malayo, without daring to await them. The +Spaniards were so keen for fighting that, hastily leaving in safety the +aid which they were taking, they started in pursuit of the hostile +galleons, and did not stop until they met these under the enemy’s +fort, where they had gone. There they fired so many volleys, both at +the ships and at <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb134" href="#pb134" +name="pb134">134</a>]</span>the fort and village, that (as was learned +afterward from some who took refuge with our ships) very considerable +damage was done, without the Dutch daring to sail out, or being able to +do us any damage of importance. That was a very great cause for +scoffing against the enemy, and they lost as much reputation among +those Moros, as was gained by the Spaniards, especially with the king +of Tidore, our friend, who very joyfully thanked the commander +Henriquez and the admiral, Don Pedro de <span class="corr" id= +"xd19e1381" title="Source: Almontes">Almonte</span>, with presents for +that action of so great valor and gallantry.</p> +<p>One month after that fleet had returned to Manila, Don Pedro de +Mendiola, governor of Terrenate, heard that two Dutch ships were +becalmed not a great distance from there. He instantly despatched two +galleys, which together spiritedly attacked the better of the two +ships. After it had been entirely defeated, and our men were about to +board it, a strong wind which suddenly arose snatched it from their +hands, although it was badly crippled by the discharges from our +galleys. The latter received no considerable damage. Thereupon that +enemy were greatly terrified; the Moro natives received a very exalted +idea of the Spaniards, while the latter were very joyful at beholding +the arms of the king our sovereign, even in these most remote bounds of +the earth, shine with the luster and splendor that they merit.</p> +<p>With license. In Madrid. Printed by Diego Diaz de la Carrera, in the +year 1639. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb135" href="#pb135" name= +"pb135">135</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1334" href="#xd19e1334src" name="xd19e1334">1</a></span> This is +the literal translation; but it will be remembered, from previous +accounts, that the figure of Christ here referred to was painted on a +sheet of linen or cloth; it was this sheet which was used by the Moro +as a garment.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1638.8" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e1391" class="main">Value of Corcuera’s Seizures in +Jolo</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">[Under date of Manila, August 2, 1638, the city +cabildo of Manila write the king a detailed account of Corcuera’s +campaign in Joló, which was begun in December, 1637. Inasmuch as +this letter covers ground sufficiently treated in documents already +presented in this series, it is not here given. The original is +conserved in the <span lang="es">Archivo general de Indias</span> with +pressmark, “est. 68, caj. 1, leg. 32;” and it is presented +by Pastells in his edition of Colin (iii, pp. 528–532). Pastells +(iii, pp. 532, 533) follows this letter by a document showing the value +of the artillery and other things seized from the Joloans, and the +money value of the captives who were sold as slaves. This document is +conserved in the same archives and has the same pressmark as the above. +It is as follows:]</p> +<p>The relation of the expense incurred on his Majesty’s account +during the expedition made to the kingdom of Joló by Don +Sebastián Hurtado de Corcuera, in December, 1637; also the value +of what was seized and gained from the enemy; and the net gain. +Subtracting the one from the other, the result is as follows:</p> +<div class="table"> +<table> +<thead> +<tr class="label"> +<td></td> +<td>pesos</td> +<td>tomins</td> +<td>granos</td> +</tr> +</thead> +<tbody> +<tr> +<td>Gained from the enemy,</td> +<td>28,345</td> +<td>7</td> +<td>0</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Expenses of the expedition,</td> +<td>26,314</td> +<td>5</td> +<td>4</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Net remainder of gain,</td> +<td class="sum">2,031</td> +<td class="sum">1</td> +<td class="sum">6</td> +</tr> +</tbody> +</table> +</div> +<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb136" href="#pb136" name= +"pb136">136</a>]</span></p> +<p>The value of what was gained from the enemy can be analyzed in the +following form:</p> +<p>[A list, partially duplicate, of the artillery taken from the +Joloans follows, of which we present only the final summary, in order +to avoid such duplication. It appears that the artillery when taken to +Manila was appraised by one Melchor Pérez, royal chief of +artillery and artillery-founder.]</p> +<div class="table"> +<h4 class="tablecaption">Bronze artillery, useful</h4> +<table> +<thead> +<tr class="label"> +<td>Pieces</td> +<td>Make</td> +<td>Weight in quintals and libras</td> +<td>Weight of ball in libras</td> +<td>Value of one quintal in pesos</td> +<td>Total value in pesos</td> +</tr> +</thead> +<tbody> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>English</td> +<td>11</td> +<td>3</td> +<td>30</td> +<td>330</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>falcon of King Don Sebastián of Portugal</td> +<td>11</td> +<td>4</td> +<td>28</td> +<td>308</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2</td> +<td>of King Don Sebastián of Portugal</td> +<td>15</td> +<td>10</td> +<td>26</td> +<td>390</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>Manila, of the time of Tavora</td> +<td>26,80</td> +<td>10</td> +<td>26</td> +<td>670</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>21</td> +<td>cámaras<a class="noteref" id="xd19e1516src" href= +"#xd19e1516" name="xd19e1516src">1</a></td> +<td></td> +<td></td> +<td>124</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="6"><i>Bronze artillery, useless, appraised merely at the +value of the copper</i></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>English</td> +<td>11</td> +<td>3</td> +<td>12</td> +<td>132</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>Siamese</td> +<td>4</td> +<td>1</td> +<td>12½</td> +<td>54</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>10</td> +<td>versos</td> +<td>14</td> +<td></td> +<td>12</td> +<td>168 <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb137" href="#pb137" name= +"pb137">137</a>]</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td colspan="6"><i>Cast-iron artillery</i></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>English</td> +<td>7</td> +<td>35</td> +<td>3</td> +<td>12½</td> +<td>91</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>Macao</td> +<td>12½</td> +<td>4</td> +<td>12</td> +<td>156</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>English</td> +<td>11</td> +<td>4</td> +<td></td> +<td>12½</td> +<td>137</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>Dutch</td> +<td>10</td> +<td>88</td> +<td></td> +<td>12½</td> +<td>136</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>English</td> +<td>12</td> +<td>25</td> +<td>5</td> +<td>12½</td> +<td>153</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>Dutch</td> +<td>12</td> +<td>25</td> +<td>5</td> +<td>12½</td> +<td>153</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>English</td> +<td>10</td> +<td>45</td> +<td>5</td> +<td>12½</td> +<td>130</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>English</td> +<td>14</td> +<td>63</td> +<td>7</td> +<td>12½</td> +<td>182</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>Dutch</td> +<td>18</td> +<td></td> +<td>9</td> +<td>12½</td> +<td>225</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>English</td> +<td>21</td> +<td>33</td> +<td>9</td> +<td>12½</td> +<td>266</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>Dutch</td> +<td>24</td> +<td>97</td> +<td>11</td> +<td>12, and 1 tomin</td> +<td>312</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>iron base [roquero]</td> +<td></td> +<td></td> +<td></td> +<td></td> +<td>4</td> +</tr> +</tbody> +</table> +</div> +<div class="table"> +<h4 class="tablecaption">Firearms</h4> +<table> +<tr> +<td></td> +<td><i>pesos</i></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>3</td> +<td>Vizcayan arquebuses</td> +<td>12</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>10½</td> +<td>Macao muskets</td> +<td>31</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>11</td> +<td>Vizcayan field muskets</td> +<td>66</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>Dutch arquebus</td> +<td>4</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>19</td> +<td>Macao arquebuses</td> +<td>57</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>16</td> +<td>Dutch muskets</td> +<td>64</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>musket <i>de pinote</i> of Macao</td> +<td>4</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2</td> +<td>Vizcayan arquebuses</td> +<td>10</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>7</td> +<td>arquebuses from Macao</td> +<td>21</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>7</td> +<td>Japanese small guns [<i>escopetillas</i>]</td> +<td>21</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>2</td> +<td>Vizcayan field muskets</td> +<td>12</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>5</td> +<td>Dutch arquebuses</td> +<td>15</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>10</td> +<td>Dutch muskets</td> +<td>50</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>1</td> +<td>bit of a Vizcayan gun [<i>escopeta</i>]</td> +<td>1</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +<p>Besides the above, in cloth or money, 2,866 [pesos]; in small darts +and blowpipes, 50 [pesos]. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb138" href= +"#pb138" name="pb138">138</a>]</span></p> +<p>Lastly, from 192 captive Indians—men, women, and +children—sold as his Majesty’s slaves at royal auction, +20,815 pesos. Of this amount <span class="corr" id="xd19e1886" title= +"Source: 1,375">10,375</span> pesos were in cash, in coin; and the +10,440 remaining were charged to the pay due the infantry and seamen. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb139" href="#pb139" name= +"pb139">139</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1516" href="#xd19e1516src" name="xd19e1516">1</a></span> Camaras +were tubes or cylinders which received the charge and were introduced +into the breech of the cannon, sometimes fitted by pressure, at other +times by screwing (see Diego Ufano’s <i>Treatise on military</i>; +Brussels, 1617). Some of the ancient pieces of ordnance had these spare +chambers, so that, after a charge had been fired, the chamber could be +changed and operations carried on more rapidly. Thus they served as do +the cartridges of modern breech-loading guns. Some camaras were used +independently of the cannon, for firing salutes. See Stanley’s +<i>Vasco da Gama</i> (Hakluyt Society publications, London, 1869) pp. +226, 227, note.</p> +</div> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1639" class="div0 part"> +<h2 id="xd19e1891" class="main">Documents of 1639–1640</h2> +<ul> +<li><a href="#doc1639.1">Events in Philipinas, 1638–39.</a> +[Unsigned; probably Juan Lopez, 1639.]</li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.2">Letters to the Holy Misericordia.</a> +Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera; December 4, 1637, and October 26, +1639.</li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.3">The university of Santo Tomás.</a> +Felipe IV; November 9, 1639.</li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.4">Royal orders and decrees.</a> Felipe IV; +1639.</li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.1">Events in the Filipinas Islands, +1639–40.</a> [Juan Lopez?]; August, 1640.</li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2">Relation of the insurrection of the +Chinese.</a> [Unsigned and undated; probably in March, 1640.]</li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.3">Ecclesiastical and Augustinian affairs, +1630–40.</a> Casimiro Diaz; [1718?]. [From his <i lang= +"es">Conquistas</i>.]</li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.4">Relation of the Filipinas Islands.</a> [Diego +de Bobadilla, S.J.; 1640.]</li> +</ul> +<p><span class="sc">Sources</span>: The first of these documents is +obtained from a MS. in the Academia Real de la Historia, Madrid; the +second, from a MS. volume in the library of Edward E. Ayer, Chicago; +the third, and the eighth decree in the fourth, from the <span lang= +"es">Archivo general de Indias</span>, Sevilla; the fourth (except the +above-mentioned decree), from the <span lang="es">Archivo Historico +Nacional</span>, Madrid; the fifth and sixth, from the Ventura del Arco +MSS. (Ayer library); the seventh, from Diaz’s <i lang= +"es">Conquistas</i>, pp. 267–444; the eighth, from +Thevenot’s <i lang="fr">Voyages curieux,</i> t. i, part +ii—from a copy belonging to the library of Harvard +University.</p> +<p><span class="sc">Translations</span>: These are made by James A. +Robertson—except the fifth, sixth, and seventh, and two decrees +in the fourth, by Emma Helen Blair. <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb141" href="#pb141" name="pb141">141</a>]</span></p> +<div id="doc1639.1" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e1951" class="main">Events in the Philipinas</h2> +<h2 class="sub">From the Year 1638 to that of 1639</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">Today, August 14, I learned that thirteen Macasars and +Basilas, of those who had been sold as slaves, had fled in a small +boat, and that they had been furnished with arms. Some suspected that +the Lascars aided them. A few days before, six of them had fled, but +they were captured and brought to this port by the Indians of +Maragondon.</p> +<p>At the end of September Nuestra Señora del Rosario +[<i>i.e.</i>, our Lady of the Rosary] was robbed. Only three jewels +were taken from her—a diamond of the value of one thousand two +hundred pesos; a cross of smaller diamonds; and a gold rosary. The holy +image was found in a prostrate condition. It is said that there are +some indications of the robber. A portion of the robe was found in the +possession of a soldier; but he says that he found it on the ground, +and it has been impossible to prove anything else.</p> +<p>In the beginning of October came a despatch from Sanboangan, in +which it is declared that although the Spaniards tried to constrain +Cachil Moncay to make his men pay the tribute, he replied that he would +not do so, but that he would take arms and declare war. In fact, he +retired to the mountains and took captive Father Francisco Angel; but +another <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb142" href="#pb142" name= +"pb142">142</a>]</span>chief, his opponent, had the boldness to take +the father from him and deliver him to the Spaniards.</p> +<p>We are advised from Jolo that many of our men have been killed; and +that the islanders who have remained there have suffered great famine, +and consequently, an epidemic and plague is feared. It is also said +that Panguian a cachil, together with Dato Ache, has retreated with +almost all the brave men of Jolo to the island of Tabitabi,<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e1968src" href="#xd19e1968" name="xd19e1968src">1</a> +where they have fortified another hill, and are preparing ships to go +out to pillage our tributaries. The king and queen are in Jolo without +anyone paying any attention to them; and Panguian Cachil is trying to +make himself king of the Joloans.</p> +<p>Three ships left this port for Macan: the Macan patache, on the +thirteenth of October; on the fourteenth, that from Camboja; and on the +sixteenth, that which came from India. It has to return here to collect +its goods which it left here [for sale] on commission [<i>fiada</i>], +and will go hence to Goa.</p> +<p>October 26, a champan from Sanboangan arrived, in which was Father +Gregorio Belin, seeking the reformation that is especially demanded by +affairs in <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb143" href="#pb143" name= +"pb143">143</a>]</span>Jolo, whose commandant<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1980src" href="#xd19e1980" name="xd19e1980src">2</a> has +prevented many good results and been the cause of many evils, by his +bad government and scandalous conduct. Don Sebastian [Hurtado de +Corcuera] removed him, as he was already well informed of what has +taken place there. Father Pedro Gutierrez informs us about Mindanao in +a letter which he writes to the father provincial, as follows.</p> +<div id="doc1639.1.1" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e1990" class="main">Letter from Father Pedro Gutierrez</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">“These three posts of Sanboangan, Jolo, and +Mindanao, were left so destitute, for lack of the little fleet that was +here at the beginning, that I am surprised that the commandant, Don +Pedro de Almonte, has been able to attend with so great promptness to +the necessities that have arisen. The time when the [lack of the] fleet +began to be felt was when a soldier and a Pampango were brought badly +wounded from Basilan. In order to remedy the damages that might ensue +from not inflicting punishment, it was necessary to equip a caracoa +with Pampangos and servants of the Spaniards. The matter was entrusted +to Adjutant Cristoval de las Eras, who had the two evildoers shot in +Basilan. Then, seeing that the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb144" +href="#pb144" name="pb144">144</a>]</span>Spaniards who were in Basilan +were poorly accommodated, and without any defense, he advised the +commandant, Don Pedro; and, by virtue of the order sent him, he built a +fortified house in a very good position. After the people of the +mountain (some of whom had absented themselves through fear) had calmed +down, he returned to this port.</p> +<p>“During that time the commandant, Don Pedro, was already +getting ready a small fleet among the Lutaos, in order to attack the +Joloans who had gone to Tabitabi and other islands. That he might +accomplish this, he requested a good juanga which was at Dapitan, +whence it was brought with fifty Indians. With one that he procured +from those that his Majesty had here, and those which he had made by +the Lutao chiefs, he had five caracoas with four pieces of artillery, +besides three other small boats called <i>pilanes</i>, all of them +excellently equipped with infantry and ammunition.</p> +<p>“While the fleet was on the point of being despatched, news +arrived from Mindanao of various acts of treachery which Moncay, chief +of Buayen, had attempted against the Spaniards; and that he had seized +Father Angel; and that after the said father had escaped from them, +they fell upon the food and the household effects that the father left, +thus declaring themselves. But the commandant, Don Pedro, seeing the +danger in delaying help, and knowing that if Corralat and Manaquior +were to unite with Moncay much damage might be done, determined to send +the fleet that was prepared for Jolo to Mindanao. For greater +abundance, he added a champan with food and ammunition for the said +fleet, and as an aid to the fort at Buayen. He <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb145" href="#pb145" name= +"pb145">145</a>]</span>charged Adjutant Cristoval de las Eras with all +this, on account of his experience as a good soldier, and his knowledge +of wars with the Indians. In addition he charged me to go in the fleet, +so that I might see Corralat and Manaquior; and as that was my affair, +and the Spaniards were not to meddle in it, it was made certain that +those chiefs would not unite with Moncay. We came near to Lamitan, +where Corralat was living, and I found Father Carrion, who was with +Corralat, and who was coming to Sanboangan to ask for an order to make +peace with Manaquior, to make war on Moncay, to talk to Corralat, in +order that he should not unite with Moncay, and to request succor in +some things. I told him that the commandant Don Pedro had already +prepared for all that he wanted, and more; and that he was sending that +fleet, collected as if by a miracle. The father was very much surprised +by that, and even told me that if they saw what had been done, they +would not believe it in Buayen; for, as they know the limited resources +in Sanboangan, they had not dared to ask for a single soldier.</p> +<p>“I landed alone, and the fleet went to await me at La +Zabanilla. I talked to Corralat, and he promised me all that I wanted. +For greater security, he told me that he would give two caracoas to +guard me. He offered me four, but I did not desire more than two, which +he sent after me. It was diverting to hear the Mindanaos say that on no +account must they separate from my caracoa; and when I told them, as we +were returning, to stay behind and look for food, that did not avail, +for they told me that they were not to leave me until I should return, +and they kept their word. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb146" href= +"#pb146" name="pb146">146</a>]</span></p> +<p>“We arrived at the fort. I informed Adjutant Eras of the +condition of affairs. According to his orders, Manaquior was summoned; +and he made a treaty of peace with Captain Marquez. For a beginning, he +offered an iron piece that uses a ball weighing three libras, which he +handed over to the said adjutant Eras. We continued to ascend the river +to quiet the villages that the hostile Moncay had taken from Manaquior, +and which he had fortified. But when they learned that the Spaniards +were coming, they discarded their foolish ideas, and, as sensible men, +abandoned the village, which was excellently fortified. They set fire +to a part of it, but were unable to burn it all because of their haste +in escaping. They went to join those who were fortified in a village +higher up the same river, which was the village which prevented those +who could have done so from carrying refreshment to the fort of the +Spaniards. The Spaniards went up the river, and before they arrived the +natives deserted that village also, and that so hastily that they were +unable to burn more than one house. We went up as far as the village of +Manaquior, where we were well received. We took five days to reach that +place from the fort. Manaquior said that the inhabitants of the two +villages had united with a third, in order to fight, and that they were +on an arm of the river. The adjutant with his fleet, and with +Manaquior, who had always accompanied him, descended the river; and, +arriving at the entrance of the said arm, as one of the caracoas was +large, the adjutant left it there (it was the one in which I was +embarked), and ascended with the rest. Before his arrival, the enemy +also fled and said that all those who had abandoned <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb147" href="#pb147" name="pb147">147</a>]</span>the +other villages were going to fortify themselves in another position +farther up the river. Thereupon, those who accompanied Adjutant Eras +tried to persuade him not go any farther, since those Moros did not +await them, and the river was becoming narrower. The adjutant refused +to do anything else but pursue them, and did so for two days by that +arm of the sea. He reached the last site, where the enemy were +fortifying themselves with an excellent stockade. There must have been +a great force of men, since they had done so much in so few hours. They +did not hold their ground there, either, but according to the track +that they left went to the mountains in two divisions. Thereupon we +returned to Samboangan, after having reënforced the fort with food +and ammunition.</p> +<p>“Two bronze versos were found at that last site, which had +been hidden in the river. The adjutant seized them, and is sending +them, I believe, to Don Sebastian. I have been in various fleets, and +have seen in none of them what I have seen in this one—namely, +that although those people had never encountered Spaniards before, +there was not a single soldier who ill-treated any Indian, while the +latter came very willingly. Perhaps the cause for it was the speech +that Adjutant Eras made to the Spaniards—who, as they know that +he treats them with great courtesy, and that for that reason he will +stand no nonsense, did not wish to give him cause for anger. As we were +returning, I saw Corralat, and tried to ascertain from him his +intentions. He does not wish to fight with the Spaniards; but, on the +other hand, he makes impertinent demands—namely, that the country +from Sibuguei to near Catel (a <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb148" +href="#pb148" name="pb148">148</a>]</span>region about two hundred +leguas in circuit), and the lake of Malanao, be left to him. As my +intention was not to make any agreement with him, except that he should +not unite with Moncay, I told him that I was writing to Don Sebastian, +as I did, whose letter I am despatching now.</p> +<p>“All the Mindanaos fear the Castilians, especially Don +Sebastian. Corralat’s whole anxiety was lest he might come here, +and he asked why he should come, when it would be sufficient to send a +captain; and he said other things in this manner. May our Lord arrange +matters as is most fitting to His holy service; and may He preserve +your Reverence, to whose holy prayers and sacrifices I earnestly +commend myself. Sanboangan, September 30, 1638.”</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1639.1.2" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2019" class="main">Section of a letter written in +Manila</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">“Father Belin took with him about eighty +Christian captives of those who have come to our soldiers—both in +that entrance which was made in the villages, and of those who have +been escaping from the Moros since the time of the arrival of Don +Sebastian, who exceed one hundred and fifty Christians. Among them, at +times, were some Moros who requested holy baptism. The eighty who +arrived here were disembarked at the gate of Saint Dominic, where the +sargento-mayor was awaiting them with the captains and adjutants and +the company of the governor, who marched them down in their midst. When +the procession or march was ended, the alcaldes and Father Belin went +through the street which leads to [the house of] the master-of-camp and +[the convent of] St. Augustine, to the palace. Having gone round by the +parade-ground, they went <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb149" href= +"#pb149" name="pb149">149</a>]</span>up to the governor, where Father +Belin thanked his Lordship for the liberty that had been obtained +through his mediation. His Lordship ordered them to be lodged in the +city; and directed the father to bring the chiefs to the palace next +day, as he intended to clothe them as he had those whom he sent to +Basilan. Among them is a Moro who is a Christian, who is accompanied by +more than twenty persons of his relatives and household. All of them +have resolved to be baptized, and to live among Christians in +Cabuyao.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2025src" href="#xd19e2025" name= +"xd19e2025src">3</a> That was the chief who brought Father Angel to the +fort, and withdrew him from captivity when he came to our people. The +fact was that that chief captured a girl about twelve years old in that +village of Cabuya, whom he has married during this time, with the +intention of making her his chief wife until his death. She, having +seen the love that he showed her, told him that if he wished her to +live in his company willingly, not only was she to be a Christian, but +he was to become one also, in order to be her true husband and live +among Christians. In short, she won him so that he determined to come +with her to her village. He persuaded his men to do the same, and in +accordance with that they have come. In the champan, he told his Tagal +wife that she should not tell the Castilians that he had captured her, +lest they kill him or do him some harm; but that she could say that she +was bringing him and all his people to captivity, as was a fact. Don +Sebastian, influenced by reasons of expediency, orders that that family +return to live in Mindanao.” <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb150" +href="#pb150" name="pb150">150</a>]</span></p> +<p>October 31, the patache from the island of Hermosa entered this +port. It brings as news that five or six Franciscan and Dominican +friars are there, who have been exiled from China; and that they hope +to be able to reënter that country. The report that the Dutch had +occupied the post of Tanchui, which we had left, is said to be false. +On the contrary, the inhabitants of Tanchui came to beg friendship and +Spaniards, to which the only answer given was that they should come +with safety to the fort with their drugs, which would furnish them a +safe passage.</p> +<p>A champan also arrived from Terrenate at the end of October. It +brought news that the sargento-mayor, Francisco Hernandez, made an +important raid into the country of the enemies, with good result. He +found in Macasar the Spaniards who deserted from this place last year +with Captain Ramos, whom they had already killed through anger. +Francisco Hernandez begged the king for permission and aid to arrest +them; and, being given it, arrested them and placed them in the +galleys.</p> +<p>A small vessel, called a <i>cho</i>, came from Macan November 2. It +brings more authentic news of the conversion of the king of China, than +what I wrote by the ships. The fathers say of him that he is earnestly +considering becoming and living as a Christian. Word is also received +that the fathers of the province of Macan, which is the same province +as that of Japon, formed a congregation; and that, because they have +strong hopes of the opening of the door for the conversion of that +kingdom, in which the faith has been so severely persecuted, they have +elected two procurators to go to Europa by two different <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb151" href="#pb151" name= +"pb151">151</a>]</span>ways—Father Antonio Cardin, in the first +place, who goes by way of Goa; and Father Reymundo de Gouca, who is +about to come to Manila in order to go by way of Mexico.</p> +<p>At midnight on November 10, so fierce a gale of wind came from the +south that it broke five of the moorings of the flagship “San +Luis,” which was about to set sail to Terrenate, having been +already laden and with its artillery aboard. The wind carried away its +shrouds, and grounded it in the sand near Palañaque, but in such +a manner that it could be floated off after five days. The wind also +drove the second galley ashore, but without doing it any damage.</p> +<p>At dawn on the morning of the eleventh, the ship from India, which +was the last to go to Macan, anchored in the bay. It lost most of its +masts by the fierceness of the storm, and the others were disabled. +That storm struck them after they had already anchored. Had it struck +them outside, all think that no one would have escaped, to judge from +the way in which the ship is disabled.</p> +<p>News arrived on the night of November 20 that the second patache, +which was going to Octong to get a cargo of rice for Terrenate, was +driven ashore some leguas from here by the gale of wind above +mentioned, but that all the crew were saved.</p> +<p>Early on the night of November 21, the two galleons, “San +Luis” as flagship and “San Juan” as almiranta, left +for Terrenate. The commander-in-chief is Don Pedro de Almonte, and the +admiral Don Alonso de Alcoçer, although with the title of +governor of the almiranta galleon. The commander of the flagship as far +as Sanboangan is Don Pedro <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb152" href= +"#pb152" name="pb152">152</a>]</span>Fernandez del Rio, who is captain +and sargento-mayor for the voyage.</p> +<p>A despatch [-boat] arrived from Sanboangan on the last of November, +which carried some Joloan captives. It happened in this wise. The king +of Jolo, desiring to recover his hill, and to fortify himself anew with +the arms that the Spaniards had there, set a snare for them with this +bit of treachery. He caused an Indian (who was a clever leader of the +fishermen), called Cahapitan, and his men to become very friendly with +the Spaniards and to sell them fish—a thing that our men, not +knowing his intentions, valued very highly, because of the privation +that they were suffering. After some days he came with a message from +the king, to the effect that he wished to submit and to pay tribute, +and that he was sending Indians to be registered. In the meantime the +fathers<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2052src" href="#xd19e2052" name= +"xd19e2052src">4</a> were warned by a certain Capot, a Christian, who +had escaped, that the king was beyond all question plotting treason, +and they advised the commander of those forts of it. He replied that +the fathers were entertaining fears, and that no attention was to be +paid to it. He allowed Cahapitan, as well as those who were to be +registered, to enter the fort with as much security as if they were in +Old Castilla. Eight hundred Indians having registered, a day was +assigned for many more to come. The Moros chose that day for the +execution of their treachery. Cahapitan arrived, with the word that he +was bringing three hundred more, who should be allowed to enter with +him in order to be registered. By that time there were already about +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb153" href="#pb153" name= +"pb153">153</a>]</span>two thousand Moros in ambush, while others were +in ships on the sea, in order that they might, on seeing the signal, do +their part—namely, kill the Spaniards, and seize the fort. And +that would have happened just as they wished, if God in His ineffable +providence had not obstructed it; for, at the time agreed upon, the +commandant caught a high fever, and accordingly answer was sent them to +return on another day, as he would not register them [that day]. The +Moros urged strongly that they be registered, and their urging caused +suspicion. Accordingly, a resolute answer was sent that he would not +register them until next day. Seeing themselves frustrated in their +principal intent, they went to the stone-quarry, where the force of +twenty-three galley negroes and some Sangleys were getting stone, being +guarded by only five Spaniards. Alleging peace, they landed; and, +attacking them, killed two Spaniards, three negroes, and one Sangley, +and wounded two Spaniards, who, with the other one that was unhurt, +escaped; and they captured the others—to the number of +thirty-eight persons, counting dead and captured. The commandant, +having learned of the treachery through those who escaped, sent a +despatch to Sanboangan asking for help. It was God’s pleasure +(and that was another of His wonderful providences), that the commander +Don Pedro de Almonte should have determined of his own accord to visit +Jolo with a small fleet, which he had difficulty in collecting. He was +met at sea by the despatch-boat. He made haste and arrived at so +opportune a time that he met Cahapitan and all his men. Cahapitan, +hiding his treason, went to meet him with a white flag. The commander +Don Pedro <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb154" href="#pb154" name= +"pb154">154</a>]</span>received him cordially, but told him that he +should follow him to the fort, in order to be well assured that he was +free from guilt. He followed the commander very securely with +thirty-six persons; for he had so deceived the commandant at Jolo that +he was persuaded that Cahapitan was guiltless, and thus he assured the +commander Don Pedro. That deceit was brought about by his having +entrusted to Cahapitan a quantity of goods in order to trade them for +drugs of the country. Yet the commander, Don Pedro, although he freed +Cahapitan and two old men at the persuasion of the commandant, in order +that they might carry a letter to the king of Jolo (for the commandant +petitioned the commander, saying that he would advise that, and the +traitor [<i>i.e.</i>, Cahapitan] desirous of performing another act of +treachery, facilitated it), detained all the other men. Cahapitan went +straight to a place where he had three negroes and two Sangleys, who +had fallen to his share as the principal author of the deed. He ordered +them to be killed, and his men killed four more of them; but one, a +Sangley, attacked him, and killed him with his own dagger. The Sangley +came all bloody to the fort, and disclosed the whole evil plot. +Thereupon the commandant awoke as from a profound slumber, in which his +self-interest had buried him. Afterward he confessed that he had done +wrong in not believing the fathers; thereupon the commander, Don Pedro +de Almonte, sent his boats under Captain Gaspar de Morales, to overrun +the island. In that raid much harm was done to the enemy, to the profit +of their allies, who secured rich pillage. Almost all the people +escaped; but those people who were captured, together with those of +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb155" href="#pb155" name= +"pb155">155</a>]</span>Cahapitan, were made slaves. They numbered in +all fifty, besides three who were killed. That punishment made them +tremble, and many have concluded to settle quietly and to give +hostages. All the above I have taken, in summary, from a very long +letter of Father Alexandro Lopez, who took part in the whole affair; +and was in the fleet that went round the island.</p> +<p>At Christmas came news that the Chinese pirates were pillaging these +neighboring coasts. A fleet was sent to attack them, under command of +Captain Maroto, which returned on the second of January, 1639. The +report he gives is, that some Chinese of the Parián of Manila +fled in a champan. They attacked another champan on the sea beyond +Mariveles, pillaged it, and sent it to the bottom. They attacked +another anchored in a port, and pillaged and burned it. After that they +put out to sea, in order to cross over to China. Our men brought in the +Chinese who had escaped from both champans.</p> +<p>Later, at the beginning of January, news came that the same men were +pillaging, although in more remote districts where they had captured +some boats and killed many Spaniards and Indians, who were sailing +quite unsuspicious of danger. Consequently, a few champans under +command of Don Pedro Bermudez were again sent against them.</p> +<p>January 15, General Don Geronimo de Sumonte took possession of [the +post of] castellan and other offices at this port.</p> +<p>On January 18, news was received that the fleet of our champans +encountered the pirates in the entrance of Mindoro, eight in number. +They were pursuing a boat of the Augustinian fathers. The <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb156" href="#pb156" name= +"pb156">156</a>]</span>Spaniards attacked the pirate’s flagship, +a champan, which, after our men had damaged it considerably, escaped, +with one other vessel. The rest were either sunk entirely, or driven +ashore with the loss of all their men. Of those driven ashore, some +Chinese were captured alive, and they were executed by various rigorous +modes of punishment.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2075src" href= +"#xd19e2075" name="xd19e2075src">5</a> Our men did not follow the two +other champans, as it was already night. The latter returned toward the +coasts of this island of Manila, where other of our boats were sailing, +and committed some depredations.</p> +<p>January 27, a violent north wind sunk a boatload of Joloan captives +who were fleeing from Manila, six of whom were captured.</p> +<p>February 24, an advice-boat arrived from Macan with news that the +Portuguese had done a thriving business in the fairs of Japon, but that +the Japanese were very particular that no priests should go there. +Accordingly they came to request that the fathers in these islands wait +patiently, and that no priests go there until God gives a better +opportunity.</p> +<p>March 4, the father provincial arrived from the visit to Pintados. +Two days previous they had been attacked by two champans of Chinese +pirates—who were beaten off, however, because our vessel had +sufficient defense. Later however, they saw that the <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb157" href="#pb157" name= +"pb157">157</a>]</span>pirates were pursuing another champan, and that +of the father provincial hastened to aid the latter, with which aid +that vessel escaped safely—which, had he not aided it, would +infallibly have been captured.</p> +<p>March 20, came tidings that large pieces of planking, masts, and the +ribs of a vessel which had suffered shipwreck had been found on the +coast of Paracali, opposite Manila. From appearances, it is thought +that it is the almiranta “San Ambrosio,” which sailed for +Mexico from these islands last August, <i lang="la">quod Deus +avertat</i> [“which may God forbid”].</p> +<p>In the middle of March, the ship from India set out for Goa. It was +the one which had come from Goa, and after setting out for Macan had +returned disabled to put in at this port. The cho from Macan returned +to its city by November. The four fathers of the Society who belong to +that province are going. Don Pedro Bermudez sailed once more, with +three champans, to attack the Chinese pirates who were harassing the +coasts of this island, and had committed depredations. They attacked +the flagship champan, which was a large vessel; they killed sixty +Sangleys in it, and seized and sent to Manila the others. These men +have disclosed extensive treacheries that the Chinese were plotting in +order to stir up the country. The authorities have been making arrests +and investigations, and they are still doing so; and in the middle of +April they hanged six of the Sangleys. They declared that they were +building two champans on the Pangasinan coast, of the heaviest +planking, and suitable for fighting. The Spaniards went for these +vessels, and brought them to Manila with the carpenters who were +working on them. God had great pity for these islands. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb158" href="#pb158" name="pb158">158</a>]</span></p> +<p>On April 18 came the flagship and patache of the Terrenate relief +ships; they say that the almiranta was driven to leeward of them near +Macasar. The soldiers remained with the commander Don Pedro de Almonte, +in order to make an expedition in Mindanao, together with other +squadrons of ships that have sailed from Caragan and Bisayas. From Xolo +they write that the inhabitants have attempted to plan other acts of +treason like the past. The leaders have either been killed or are in +the galleys. Father Melchor de Vera writes of the Moros near Sanboangan +that some of them are being baptized, and that there are hopes of a +great conversion.</p> +<p>On May 30 arrived the almiranta from Terrenate. They have suffered +many hardships, especially of thirst, which was so great that some of +them even drank salt water. They bring as news from Mindanao that our +men are building a fort at La Zavanilla, in the country of Corralat; +and that he, as well as Moncay, has retreated. Manaquior is daily +becoming more friendly. With the ships of Terrenate came one hundred +and fifty Siaos and fifty Terrenatan Christians, to take part in this +war. They were already about to enter the lands of the enemy. The +commander, Don Pedro de Almonte, also sent a portion of a fleet to +coast about the island of Xolo; for a report was current that Dato Ache +was getting ready to go out to pillage. To Mindanao had already come +one hundred and twenty valiant Caragas, who had always accompanied +Corralat from the time when they killed the priests in their +land,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2104src" href="#xd19e2104" name= +"xd19e2104src">6</a> and to whom Don Sebastian had sent a pardon. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb159" href="#pb159" name= +"pb159">159</a>]</span></p> +<p>News of a new revolt came from Nueva Segobia. The natives killed +seventeen persons, counting soldiers and their wives. They did not wish +to kill the father who instructed them, as he was a mild-mannered man. +Don Marcos Zapata went to attack them, and killed thirty and captured +thirty others. The rest retreated to the mountains.</p> +<p>It is learned from a ship from Macan, that the second patache, in +which were two of the recently-ordained fathers, and which sailed from +here in November, has not arrived at that city. During the last few +days the report has been current that both it and the vessel from India +(which sailed again from here in March) have been pounded to pieces on +the shoals of <span class="corr" id="xd19e2113" title= +"Source: Parágua">Paragua</span>, and that great bits of +wreckage have been washed up at Calamianes, whence they write this. +These losses will be a great calamity.</p> +<p>News came on May 23 that, our men having arrived overland at the +lake of Malanao,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2118src" href="#xd19e2118" +name="xd19e2118src">7</a> in the island of Mindanao, two thousand five +hundred armed Indians were waiting for them in battle array. They could +not sustain the discharge of our firearms, and retired to the lake. Our +men had carried six boats in pieces, to fit them together and navigate +in them. When the Malanaos saw them on the water, they gave themselves +up as lost. Some five thousand of them fled, while more than one +thousand remained and offered homage and tribute to the king our +sovereign. They were all registered, and began immediately to render +allegiance. They admitted ministers <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb160" href="#pb160" name="pb160">160</a>]</span>of the gospel, and +gave hostages and security in everything. Doubtless those who fled and +hid will soon appear and submit.</p> +<p>The fathers write from Jolo that Dato Ache has been entirely unable +to do anything since the occurrence at Lami, in which he was +buried.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2128src" href="#xd19e2128" name= +"xd19e2128src">8</a> It is added that since these things are so, all +the Joloans are perishing from famine. They will never humiliate +themselves or give signs of surrendering. In some raids that have been +made, the Spaniards have killed and captured some of their chiefs. +Among them was a pirate who captured the beneficed priest Francisco +Vazquez, and refused to give him up for less than two thousand pesos. +Now he is paying it in the galleys, where he has been put at the +oar.</p> +<p>Father Alexandro Lopez writes from Jolo that the commandant of that +island [<i>i.e.</i>, Xines Ros] begged pardon in public from God and +the fathers for the insults that he had uttered, and for the injuries +that he had done them; and that he was building the church for them +with much fervor, before his successor should arrive.</p> +<p>A champan arrived here on May 30, with fifty arrobas of nails which +had been taken from the wreckage of the ship which, as I said, had run +aground on the coast of Paracali. Those whose opinion is most accurate +in that matter have examined it, and believe that it is all from the +almiranta “San Ambrosio.” On that account the profound +sadness that was general in April and May has <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb161" href="#pb161" name= +"pb161">161</a>]</span>ceased; for it had been reported that +indubitable signs were found that the flagship had been wrecked.</p> +<p>On June 17 arrived a despatch from Sanboangan. The news brought by +it will be told by a letter from Father Pedro Gutierrez. “On +setting out for Terrenate, the commander, Don Pedro de Almonte, left an +order that, when the boats of the volunteers arrived at Samboangan, +they were to skirt the coast of Jolo. Six caracoas did that, as well as +six other boats from Basilan, under command of Adjutant Cristoval de +las Heras, and manned by some Spaniards. Inside of a fortnight, they +coasted about the island of Jolo and came to another small islet near +by. They burned many boats, killed some Joloans, and brought back a +goodly number of captives, without having lost any of our men. They did +not delay longer because a fixed time had been assigned to them. The +said commander Don Pedro came back from Terrenate on the sixth of +March. As the almiranta had not arrived, he despatched Sargento-mayor +Don Pedro del Rio to La Zabanilla with most of the fleet, so that he +might fortify himself in La Sabanilla and reduce a village of Caragas +who had formerly come to Corralat, when fleeing from the Spaniards. +Thereupon, as soon as the said sargento-mayor arrived at La Zabanilla, +he began to build the fort, which was finished in good shape, and he +reduced the Caragas; and, when the general arrived, he was already +holding them in La Zabanilla. As the almiranta did not arrive, the +commander Don Pedro came with the rest of the fleet. While he was in La +Zabanilla, a despatch from Captain Don Francisco de Atensa was brought. +It gave advices that he had <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb162" href= +"#pb162" name="pb162">162</a>]</span>arrived at the lake of +Malanao,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2147src" href="#xd19e2147" name= +"xd19e2147src">9</a> having entered by the gulf of Pangi [<i>i.e.</i>, +Panguil] with the Spaniards whom he had in Caraga, as well as with +Caragas and Butuanes; and having fought with those of the lake, the +Moros fled, and immediately, on the next day, the chiefs began to come +in to submit to the Spaniards. They all did that except one, named +Mancaya. In order to accomplish that, the commander sent Sargento-mayor +Don Pedro del Rio, with his company and about five hundred Indians. +They all reached the lake where they found it unnecessary to stop, as +Captain Don Francisco de Atensa had pacified all the inhabitants of the +lake, and Mancaya; and they had given hostages and firearms, and had +registered themselves to pay tribute to the number of one thousand +tributes. They promised to receive fathers. Thus those villages of the +lake were already reduced, and had also given up some Christian +captives whom they had taken. The lake of Malanao is of a cold rather +than a warm temperature, and the people have plenty of rice and native +fruits. Between <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb163" href="#pb163" +name="pb163">163</a>]</span>the lake of Malanao and La Zabanilla there +are three chiefs who were related to Borongon; those chiefs proceeded +to some very rough mountains near the lake. It is said that they have +about three thousand warriors, who are devoted to Corralat; and as he +was not a declared friend of the Spaniards, they gave us plenty to +suffer on the return. For, as the road was in such shape that it was +necessary to go single file, some of the Indians who accompanied the +Spaniards were wounded. But although the enemy made several ambuscades, +they could not inflict more damage, because of the care with which the +march was made—until Holy Saturday, when it began to rain; when a +great number of them attacked us from ambush and killed one Spaniard, +who was without [fire: <i>crossed out in MSS</i>.] arms, as he was +sick. They also killed four Indians, and wounded four others. It was +our Lord’s pleasure that, notwithstanding the rain, the +arquebuses of the Spaniards, who were near, were not without effect. +With that, no more damage was done us; the enemy fled, dropping about +thirty shields in their flight, and they received some damage. The +troops of Sargento-mayor Don Pedro del Rio arrived at La Zavanilla, +where Captain Pedro Navarro had been left in command of the infantry, +which was in the fort. The commander, Don Pedro de Almonte, had gone to +Buayen with the rest of the fleet; and, having sent a message to +Moncay, the latter answered that he would fight. In order to seize the +posts of the enemy, the commander, Don Pedro, sent two boats to the +mouth of a creek, by which reënforcements could be taken, so that +they could not reach Moncay by that way; and also to a lake which was +up the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb164" href="#pb164" name= +"pb164">164</a>]</span>river of Buayen, which was not only an entrance +to Buayen, but also where the enemy had their retreat in an excellent +fortification. The best fortification was in a swamp. On that +undertaking, the commander, Don Pedro, sent Captain Juan Lopez +Luçero with his company, and our ally Manaquior and his men. +That was all very necessary, because of the great number of men that +the enemy had. They fought for three days, at the end of which, it was +our Lord’s pleasure to let our men dislodge the enemy with heavy +loss. Of our men only one Spaniard was wounded and one or two of +Manaquior’s men were killed, and one or two others wounded. Our +men burned all the houses and fortifications.</p> +<p>“At that same time the commander, Don Pedro de Rozas, marched +from the Spanish fort to that of Moncay, which was very strong; for, +besides being surrounded by swamps and water, and by a dike that had +been made, and besides the fort (which was built long ago) of stone, +there had been added ditches, terrepleins, and stockades with their +bulwarks. Having reached it, our men planted two bulwarks upon fascines +with which they could bombard the enemy’s fort. At the end of +three days, a white flag was displayed; and there was a cessation in +the hostilities, for the time being. Moncay, having declared that he +wished to become a friend, abandoned the fort that night, after setting +fire to some of the houses. Next day our men finished burning what was +left. Not a little wonder was caused, and thanks to our Lord, at seeing +that so strong a fort had been gained with the loss there of one +Spaniard and two wounded, one of whom died afterward; and four wounded +Indians, of whom one <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb165" href="#pb165" +name="pb165">165</a>]</span>died. Besides that, they burned many +fortified houses, and destroyed palm-trees and sago plantations. Some +days afterward, the commander sent Don Agustin de Çepada to +reconnoiter the creeks. The latter came upon a well-fortified house, +which he burned. He sent Sargento-mayor Pedro de la Mata to coast along +the shores, and do all the damage possible to the enemy. He found a +fortified hill also, and it was regarded as a miracle that it was taken +without any loss of our men. It is thought that the chief man in the +post was one who was in the bulwark; for as soon as he was laid low by +a volley from the Spaniards, all the enemy fled, and the Spaniards +burned all the fortifications and the neighboring houses.</p> +<p>“The commander, Don Pedro, also sent Captain Don Francisco del +Castillo to an islet which was situated opposite the bar of Buayen. He +captured some Lutaos, destroyed a great number of boats (and the same +was done by Adjutant Don Albaro Galindo, who destroyed some boats); but +found no people. He sent the chief Manaquior to discover whether there +were any means of finding Moncay, and returned at the end of fourteen +or fifteen days. As there was no way of being able to pursue Moncay, +and as the season was advanced, and many were falling sick, and as he +had to go to Jolo, the commander, Don Pedro Almonte, went with the rest +of his fleet to La Zabanilla, after having planned that the Spaniards +who remained in the fort of Buayen, and the men of Manaquior, should +continue to pursue Moncay—all being under the order of Captain +Juan Lopez Luçero, castellan and captain of the said post.</p> +<p>“The inhabitants of Basilan, who had gone to <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb166" href="#pb166" name="pb166">166</a>]</span>Jolo +to do all the damage possible to the Joloans—in company with six +Spaniards, under command of Alférez Juan de Ulloa—returned +with seventy-seven captives and some of our Bisayans, who had been +seized by the enemy. They destroyed about two hundred boats, counting +large and small, first selecting for themselves fifteen of the best. +They reported that a Lutao chief of Jolo, named Lohon, had taken to the +fort of Jolo fifty other captives, with which, necessarily, the [forces +of the] Joloans must be exhausted.</p> +<p>“The commander, Don Pedro de Almonte, coming from Buayen, +reached the passage of the river of Sibuguei; and Datan, the chief of +the river, registered eight hundred tributes, and handed over the arms +and Bisayan slaves that he had there.”</p> +<p>We received news here, on the twenty-fifth of June, that the sea of +Camarines is continually floating ashore more fragments of the wrecked +ship, which some think that they recognize as belonging to the +flagship. Consequently, it has begun to be rumored again as more +probable that, if only one ship has been wrecked, it is the flagship. +But others are of the opinion that the wreckage shows unmistakable +signs of the two ships, both flagship and almiranta. That casts a gloom +over all the land. If that has happened (which may God not have +permitted), it is thought that it will be impossible for these islands +to recover in many years.</p> +<p>June 27, a destructive hurricane came down upon this port from the +northwest, and veered about to almost all points of the compass. It +overturned some houses, and did great damage in all the others and in +the churches. It blew the tiles through the air as if they were bits of +paper. The galleons along <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb167" href= +"#pb167" name="pb167">167</a>]</span>the shore were a great cause for +anxiety; and the commander, Don Geronimo de Sumonte, and Captain Pedro +Muñoz hastened to them quickly, with the prominent men of this +port, all of whom worked valiantly. That was very necessary; for the +galleon “San Juan Baptista,” although held by eleven +cables, came dragging upon “<span lang="es">La +Concepcion</span>,” which was being made ready to sail to Mexico. +They would infallibly have been dashed to pieces, had they not been +attended to so carefully and diligently. Of the other smaller craft, +some have been wrecked; and some men were drowned. It was God’s +pleasure to allow the wind’s fury to last only four hours. Had it +blown with the same violence during all the twenty-four hours while it +lasted, no ship would have escaped, and not a house or church would +have been left standing. Two hundred houses were overthrown in the +village of the Indians. But what caused most fear to those natives (and +the old men say that they have never seen such a thing, or heard it +told by their ancestors), is that the hurricane carried into the air +the small boats that they use, which are called <i>bancas</i> and +resemble canoes. It is said that they were blown about like paper, and +that when they fell again they were broken to pieces. The hurricane +blew with the same violence in all the surrounding villages, and caused +the same damage; it blew down one hundred and seventy houses in +Palañaque.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e2202width" id="p169"><img src="images/p169.jpg" +alt= +"View of one of Ladrones Islands—Levinus Hulsius (Franckfurt am Mayne, M.DC.XX)" +width="375" height="276"> +<p class="figureHead">View of one of Ladrones Islands—Levinus +Hulsius (Franckfurt am Mayne, <span class="sc">M.DC.XX</span>)</p> +<p class="first">[<i>From original in Library of Harvard +University</i>]</p> +</div> +<p>Since July 7 there have been very severe storms of wind and rain. On +the nineteenth the passage boat<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2216src" +href="#xd19e2216" name="xd19e2216src">10</a> was wrecked in the bay and +it is said that eighteen persons were drowned. Many illnesses +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb168" href="#pb168" name= +"pb168">168</a>]</span>have occurred during that time, in which a great +number of people of all nations have perished. Because of this, and +because many have been persuaded that the two ships of the past year +have been wrecked—not only because of the signs that the sea has +thrown up, but because news of their arrival is so belated—there +is a universal gloom and sorrow over all the country, such as it has +never had before. May God in His mercy console the land.</p> +<p>On July 19, a letter was received from the alcalde-mayor of Nueva +Segovia, which states that two English galleons had anchored in a port +of that coast, and that they are coming to this port of Cavite to +trade; if the weather permits them to reach this place, their +intentions will be known.</p> +<p>In the afternoon of July 24, six of the men who had sailed in the +flagship of last year, which was wrecked September 20, 1638, by the +fury of a tempest in the Ladrones Islands—on an island +thirty-five leguas away from the islands where our ships generally land +on the voyage—arrived here. Besides those who were drowned, many +were killed by lance-thrusts from the natives. Those who escaped went +from island to island to those of Uan and Harpana,<a class="noteref" +id="xd19e2225src" href="#xd19e2225" name="xd19e2225src">11</a> where +they have been well treated. The reason alleged for that was, that the +Spaniards are good men, and leave them iron when they pass there. From +the island of Uan the natives despatched six Spaniards and two Indians +in two boats, furnishing them with food from what they had. They +commended themselves to God, crossed the open stretch <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb171" href="#pb171" name="pb171">171</a>]</span>of +more than three hundred leguas, which they did in but one +fortnight—a wonderful thing, if one will but consider those small +boats which are of much less burden and steadiness than pirogues and +canoes, and even smaller than they. They arrived almost dead with +hunger, thirst, and lack of sleep. Our fathers of the Society of Jesus +received them in Palapag, and cared for them for several days; after +that they recovered, and immediately set out in a champan with a good +supply of food. The Indians of Uan sent those Spaniards, so that they +could give the news and send a boat for the other twenty-two Spaniards +who are there alive, with some Indians and negroes, and carry them +iron, etc.</p> +<p>As soon as the tidings were told in this port of Cavite, the sobs +and cries were so many that all were stunned, for there is no one who +has not lost a son, a father, a brother, a brother-in-law, a +father-in-law, a son-in-law, or a husband. The loss has been one of the +greatest that has ever visited these islands, because of the loss of +men and the poverty of the islands.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2235src" +href="#xd19e2235" name="xd19e2235src">12</a></p> +<p>Good news is received of the almiranta, for they say that they saw +it but shortly before they were wrecked, sailing on a good tack; and +that it was a swift sailer, and seaworthy. Consequently it is thought +that it has arrived at Nueva España. May God grant that it has +so happened. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb172" href="#pb172" name= +"pb172">172</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1968" href="#xd19e1968src" name="xd19e1968">1</a></span> Tawi +Tawi is the largest island of a group having the same name, in the +extreme southwest of the Philippine Archipelago, nearly 700 miles +distant from Manila. It contains over 100 islands, mostly very small; +but five of these contain ten or more square miles of area. The island +Tawi Tawi contains 187 square miles; its surface is one of fertile +plains interspersed with forests, and broken by five peaks ranging from +736 to 1,941 feet in height. The islands are thinly populated +(estimated at 1,815 fighting men) by Malayan tribes supposed to have +migrated thither from Borneo—the Suluanos, Camucones, and +Tirones. Navigation among the islands is difficult and dangerous, +except for the small, light native craft; and they have been the +hiding-places of pirates from the earliest times.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1980" href="#xd19e1980src" name="xd19e1980">2</a></span> +Referring to Captain Gines Ros y Aviles, who had been left by Corcuera +as governor of Jolo. Combés gives a detailed account of all this +affair (<i lang="es">Hist. Mindanao</i>, Retana’s ed., col. +369–395). Ros applied himself, after Corcuera’s departure, +to the profits of trade, and was deceived by the Moros, who pretended +submission but planned to surprise and kill all the Spaniards. The +officer next in command, Gaspar de Morales, with the two Jesuits, +finding their warnings unheeded, sent word to the governor’s +lieutenant at Zamboanga, Pedro de Almonte—who immediately went to +Jolo, again subdued that island, and placed Morales in Ros’s post +as governor. Cf. La Concepción’s account, <i lang= +"es">Hist. Philipinas</i>, v, pp. 348–359, 412–427.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2025" href="#xd19e2025src" name="xd19e2025">3</a></span> A +village in Laguna, Luzón, on the southwest shore of Laguna de +Bay.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2052" href="#xd19e2052src" name="xd19e2052">4</a></span> The two +Jesuits who remained in Jolo as missionaries, Fathers Alejandro Lopez +and Francisco Martinez.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2075" href="#xd19e2075src" name="xd19e2075">5</a></span> +“Of these [Sangleys] several champan-crews armed themselves to +infest the seas; and, occupying the narrow passages of Marivelez, they +captured various vessels which came from Bisayas and other provinces to +trade.... Armed ships were despatched against them from Manila, and, +despite their resistance, several of their champans were seized; and +the pirates were punished with death, as their insolence +deserved—several of them being baptized, by dint of exhortations, +just before their torture.” (La Concepción, <i>Hist. +Philipinas</i>, v, pp. 429–431). One of these “rigorous +modes of punishment” is mentioned <i>post</i>, on p. +226—that of tearing away the flesh with pincers.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2104" href="#xd19e2104src" name="xd19e2104">6</a></span> Probably +referring to the revolt of the Caragas, 1629–31, and their murder +of several Recollect missionaries at Tandag.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2118" href="#xd19e2118src" name="xd19e2118">7</a></span> +Combés describes very fully this and another Spanish expedition +into the region of Lake Lanao in 1639; and “a third and last +one,” which was unsuccessful, and compelled the Spaniards to +retreat, in 1640. See his <i lang="es">Hist. Mindanao</i> +(Retana’s ed.), col. 145–177.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2128" href="#xd19e2128src" name="xd19e2128">8</a></span> +Referring to the injury sustained by this chief in the explosion of a +mine at the siege of Jolo; it is described by Lopez in his chronicle +for 1637–38 <i>ante</i>, pp. 44, 45.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2147" href="#xd19e2147src" name="xd19e2147">9</a></span> See +Combés’s description of Lake Lanao (<i>Hist. Mindanao</i>, +Retana’s ed., col. 145–147); <i>lanao</i> means simply +“lake,” and <i>malanao</i>, “people of the +lake.” Cf. A. H. S. Landor’s description—in <i>Gems +of the East</i> (New York and London, 1904), pp. 303–308—of +the lake legion and its people. In 1902 the American military +authorities constructed excellent highways from the seacoast to Lake +Lanao, from Malabang on the south to Iligan on the north. A description +of this work, with valuable observations on the character and habits of +the Malanao Moros, appears in the <i>Atlantic Monthly</i> for December, +1903, from the pen of Major R. L. Bullard, U. S. A., who directed the +building of one of these roads. The Malanaos were never conquered by +the Spaniards or any other people. The present district of Lanao +contains part of the Rangaya range of mountains, 5,000 to 8,500 feet in +height; and its eastern part is traversed by the Pulangui River (Rio +Grande). The lake is twenty-two miles long and sixteen miles wide, and +its outlet is Iligan River.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2216" href="#xd19e2216src" name="xd19e2216">10</a></span> +Apparently referring to the boat which carried passengers from Manila +to the port of Cavite.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2225" href="#xd19e2225src" name="xd19e2225">11</a></span> Also +Zarpana, the modern Rota. Uan apparently means the present Guam. The +place where the ship was wrecked was, according to Diaz (<i lang= +"es">Conquistas</i>, p. 402), the island of Seypán.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2235" href="#xd19e2235src" name="xd19e2235">12</a></span> Diaz +states (<i lang="es">Conquistas</i>, p. 402) that this galleon +(“<span lang="es">Nuestra Señora de la +Concepción</span>”) was “the largest one built up to +that time,” and that it contained the greatest wealth of the +islands. The few men who escaped to land were afterward rescued by +Spanish ships, and taken back to Manila—save one, a Chinese +blacksmith, who spent the rest of his life there and acquired great +influence over the natives.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1639.2" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e2248" class="main">Letters from Corcuera to the Holy +Misericordia</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">Gentlemen of the financial board of holy Misericordia: +Although we must always have recourse to God in our troubles, the +necessity for so doing that offers itself to me at present, in the +expedition that I shall commence on the day of our Lady of the +Conception, is very urgent; and obliges me to avail myself not only of +the regular and ecclesiastical communities, where we are all friends, +but also of that holy house.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2252src" href= +"#xd19e2252" name="xd19e2252src">1</a> Therefore, I beg your Graces, +with all the persuasion in my power, that you cause God to be +petitioned with all earnestness in your holy Confraternity of La +Misericordia and in your residence, to give me favor and good success +in this expedition; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb173" href="#pb173" +name="pb173">173</a>]</span>for, besides its being for the common +service of God and of the king our sovereign, I shall, in so far as +pertains to me, if it be the will of His Divine Majesty that I return +with life, demonstrate my thanks and favor to that holy house, as far +as may be possible to me. And in order that this petition may carry +some merit, I send to that house one hundred pesos in alms, as an aid +in the many alms that it distributes among the poor. I would be very +glad were I more wealthy, in order that my affection and good-will +might be seen. May our Lord preserve your Graces as I desire. The +palace, December 4, 637.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Sebastian Hurtado de +Corcuera</span></p> +<p>To the purveyor and deputies of the financial board of the holy +Misericordia: Of the hostages brought from Jolo by General Don Pedro +Almonte, twenty-odd Moros with their servants live here, and the others +are going [back] with the conditions for the peace that they have made +and the tribute which they are to pay. I have thought it best to +petition your Graces to be pleased to receive two of those chiefs in +the house of the holy Misericordia, in order that they may be +instructed in the Christian doctrine, and be gradually converted and +become Christians. This is a work that is befitting to that house, +until the time when all the other inhabitants of Jolo become quiet and +are reduced to obedience. Two or three will be assigned in the same +manner to the orders. If any needs arise with the lapse of time, I beg +your Graces to have me advised, so that I may have them supplied; and +also to entrust the instruction of those chiefs to a careful person. +May our <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb174" href="#pb174" name= +"pb174">174</a>]</span>Lord preserve your Graces as I desire. The +palace, October 26, 1639.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2274src" href= +"#xd19e2274" name="xd19e2274src">2</a></p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera</span> +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb175" href="#pb175" name= +"pb175">175</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2252" href="#xd19e2252src" name="xd19e2252">1</a></span> La +Concepción states (<i>Hist. Philipinas</i>, v, p. 351) that when +Corcuera returned to Manila in triumph, the Confraternity of La +Misericordia gave him 100,000 pesos from its treasury, for the expenses +of the Jolo campaign.</p> +<p class="footnote">“For Governor Corcuera to secure, even in +part, the successful result that he desired in this conquest, he was +obliged to resort, for the necessary succor, to the treasury of Santa +Misericordia; for in this emergency he found closed on all sides the +gates of resource for the accomplishment of his so laudable designs. He +found this aid, as prompt as liberal, in the sum of 104,609 pesos, two +tomins, and one grano, which the brethren carried to him at the royal +offices, as a loan, to aid his needs and enable him to push forward +this conquest, which depended on such aid.” This statement is +taken from the <i lang="es">Demostración historica</i> (MS. in +Ayer library; see following note), fol. 7 verso.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2274" href="#xd19e2274src" name="xd19e2274">2</a></span> These +two letters are obtained from a MS. volume in the library of Edward E. +Ayer, of Chicago, entitled: <i lang="es">Demostración historica +de cuantas depredaciones llevan cometidas las Moros desde que se +incorporaron estas Yslas á la Monarquia Española; +inedidas de toda especie tomadas por el Gobierno para contenerlos; y +indicasiones que se presentan para hacerles la guerra con mejor fruto +que hasta aquí, á fin de que las Visayas se vean libres +de las continuas opresiones q<sup>e</sup>. +sufren</i>—“Historical exposition of the many depredations +which the Moros have committed, from the time when these islands were +incorporated with the Spanish monarchy; the measures, of all kinds, +taken by the government for curbing them; and indications that suggest +how war may be waged upon them with better results than have hitherto +been secured, to the end that the Visayas may be freed from the +continual cruelties that they suffer.” This work (evidently +intended for publication) is undated; but the conjectural date +“1835?” appears on the fly-leaf, which is headed +“1<sup>a</sup>. Parte.” As appears by the introduction to +the book, it was written by one of the members of the <span lang= +"es">Sociedad Económica</span> of the Philippines—founded +by Basco y Vargas in 1780, and reëstablished by Folguera in 1819; +and his “only motive in writing it was to meet his obligations to +that society.” The MS. is contained in a plainly-bound volume of +291 folios (582 pages), and displays fine, round, legible, and +beautiful handwriting, from several different hands. Folios 1–11 +cover the period antecedent to 1750; the rest of the book, that from +1750 to 1806—more than two-thirds of this part being dated after +1788. The writer evidently had access to valuable original documents, +some of which, as these letters to La Misericordia, he cites directly; +and his narrative is well and carefully written.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1639.3" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e2296" class="main">The University of Santo Tomas</h2> +<div id="doc1639.3.1" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2299" class="main">Letter to the Spanish ambassador at +Roma</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To the illustrious Marqués de Castel +Rodrigo, my cousin, member of my Council, and ambassador in Roma: the +bearer, Fray Mateo de Villa, of the Order of Preachers, procurator of +the province of Santo Rosario of the Filipinas Islands in my Western +Yndias, has informed me that his province has a college called Santo +Tomas in the city of Manila, of which I am the patron, where there are +thirty secular collegiates; that for some years past that college has +been a university through royal permission; that bulls have been +conceded twice for its conservation; and that grammar, rhetoric, the +arts, and moral and scholastic theology are studied there, with +especial profit to the children of that community. He petitions me to +issue a royal decree authorizing the said college to become a +university, with the same qualifications and [right of] perpetuity as +the others of his order in the convents of Santo Tomas in Avila and +Santiago at Pamplona, in these same kingdoms. The matter having been +examined by the members of my royal Council of the Yndias, in +consideration that the city of Manila of the Filipinas Islands is more +than three thousand leguas from the nearest universities—namely, +those of Lima and Megico—and that the said university +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb176" href="#pb176" name= +"pb176">176</a>]</span>suffers some restriction, I have considered it +fitting to lend my royal consent for this case; and this concession +shall continue, for the present. Consequently, if in the future there +should be a disposition to found a separate university, it may be done, +as in the cities of Lima and Megico, so that it may be a general +university, in order that students may be graduated from it in all +branches, and that its degrees may be recognized everywhere. +Accordingly, I charge and order you in my name, and in virtue of the +letter of credit that I am writing, to supplicate his Holiness to be +pleased to concede a bull, so that the said college may be a university +with the same qualifications and [right of] perpetuity as those of +Avila, Santiago, Lima, and Megico; for there is not a university of +that rank in those islands and provinces, and this is therefore +expedient for my service and the general welfare of those regions. You +shall give the matter the care that I expect from you, so that the said +bull may be immediately drawn up; and therein you will render me a +service. Madrid, November nine, 1639.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p>By order of the king our sovereign:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Graviel de Ocaña y +Alarcon</span></p> +<p>Signed by the members of the Council.</p> +<p>[<i>Endorsed</i>: “Duplicate. College of Santo Tomas of +Manila. To the ambassador at Roma, ordering him to petition his +Holiness to concede a brief so that the college of Santo Tomas of +Manila of the Order of Preachers may become a university.”] +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb177" href="#pb177" name= +"pb177">177</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1639.3.2" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2324" class="main">Letter from Felipe IV to Urban +VIII</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first salute">Most Holy Father:</p> +<p>I am writing to my ambassador, in that court, the marqués de +Castel Rodrigo, to petition your Holiness in my name to concede a bull, +so that a college of the Order of Preachers in the city of Manila of +the Philipinas Islands, in my Western Yndias, may become a university, +with the qualifications and [right of] perpetuity of the others which +that order possesses in Avila and Pamplona in these my kingdoms, as +well as those of Lima and Megico; and so that, if there be a +disposition to found a separate university in the city of Manila, it +may be done, because there is a distance of three thousand leguas to +the other nearest universities, which are Lima and Megico. I petition +your Holiness to grant him audience, and to give entire credit to what +he shall say about this matter and propose in my name; and that you +order his affair to be despatched with all promptness and with entire +fulfilment [of the petition]. Thereby I shall receive a special favor +from your Holiness, whose very holy person may our Lord preserve, and +may He increase your life for the good and prosperous government of His +universal Church. Madrid, November nine, 1639.</p> +<p>[<i>Endorsed</i>: “College of Santo Tomas of Manila. To his +Holiness, petitioning him to concede a brief so that the college of +Santo Tomas of Manila of the Order of Preachers may become a +university. Duplicate.”] <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb178" +href="#pb178" name="pb178">178</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1639.4" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e2337" class="main">Royal Orders and Decrees, 1639</h2> +<div id="doc1639.4.1" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2340" class="main">Missions in Mindanao</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight +of the Order of Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the +Filipinas Islands, and president of my royal Audiencia therein: a +letter of August 21, 637, has been examined in my royal Council of the +Indias, in which you advise me that you have stationed ministers of the +gospel in the islands of Mindanao and Bacilan—not only for the +instruction of the infidels who are in those islands, but for +administering the holy sacraments to the Castilian soldiers whom you +leave there—and that you have assigned them such stipends as you +considered necessary. I approve what you have done in this matter. +Moreover, to provide for future increase [in the number of infidels +converted], the necessary mission stations [<i>doctrinas</i>] will have +to be established; but in this you must avoid unnecessary expense, and, +conformably to my royal patronage, confer regarding such establishments +with such persons as you should consult. I trust in you that you will +carry out my intentions. [Madrid, February 3, 1639.]</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p>By command of his Majesty:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Gabriel de Ocaña y +Alarcon</span> <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb179" href="#pb179" name= +"pb179">179</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1639.4.2" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2359" class="main">In behalf of Grau y +Monfalcón</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To the council, magistracy, and municipal +body of the city of Manila in the Philipinas Islands: Don Juan Grau y +Monfalcón has reported to me that in the past year, one thousand +six hundred and thirty, you appointed him as your procurator-general; +and that during all that time he has attended to your business affairs, +with the utmost intelligence, personal attention, friendly interest, +and promptness (as is generally known). He states that you assigned him +a salary of a thousand pesos a year, paid in that city, which was to +come here, invested, at his account and risk; but that, even when it +arrives in safety, he can realize very little from it that remains free +from the costs. He regards a thousand pesos as a very small salary for +his continual occupation [in your affairs], and on this account claims +that it be increased. Moreover, besides the many negotiations that he +has despatched, he has been occupied nearly two years in preparing and +composing the printed memorials which he has presented, and which have +been examined in my royal Council of the Indias; and has given them +much labor and solicitude, since they embrace so many, so diverse, and +so important considerations for the conservation of those islands and +their commerce, in order that they may be presented clearly and +distinctly. He has furnished from his own funds all the money that has +been spent for these books, and has never received one real on account +of that expense. This sum amounts to much more in times so straitened +as these, and should be highly esteemed. It would be a great +disappointment to him if, after he had proceeded <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb180" href="#pb180" name="pb180">180</a>]</span>in +all matters with the greatest tact and discretion possible (as is +proved by the many negotiations which he has concluded for the benefit +of that city), the powers which he has held from the city should be +revoked—as usually happens, and as has been done with others, his +predecessors, solely through interested motives and for the personal +ends of some of the governors who go to that country. They, being +well-affectioned to the correspondents whom they leave here, urge that +city to entrust its affairs to those persons—for which no +opportunity should be given, since that advice is influenced by various +motives and considerations. To obviate this, and because it is not +right that some other person should secure that for which he has toiled +and incurred expense with so much zeal and solicitude, he has entreated +me that I would be pleased to command you not to revoke, without +legitimate cause, the powers that you have given him; and that you +shall, before enforcing such revocation, state what reasons you have +for doing so. The matter has been examined in the said my Council, +where have been and are very evident the personal care, interest, and +solicitude with which he has been and is attending to your affairs +aforesaid—as also you will have understood by my decrees of the +ninth of October in the year one thousand six hundred and thirty-six, +and the twenty-first of October in six hundred and thirty-seven, to +which I refer you for all this; together with what you wrote me in +regard to this in a letter of the fourteenth of June, six hundred and +thirty-six. In that letter you express your satisfaction with the +promptness and care with which he furthers your affairs, and ask me to +confirm the salary which you <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb181" href= +"#pb181" name="pb181">181</a>]</span>assign him of the said thousand +pesos a year, from the funds belonging to that city. I have thought it +best to issue the present, by which I approve and confirm the salary +which you have assigned to the said Don Juan Grau as your +procurator-general, in order that it may be paid to him from the day +when it was voted to him. And it is my will that this salary be not +revoked, either now or at any time, while he shall attend to your +affairs at this my court, unless there be legitimate and sufficient +cause for doing so; also that the said my Council be first notified of +such cause, so that, having considered it in their sessions, they may +declare whether or not it is legitimate; and the said salary shall +always be paid to him, until some other decision be made. I also +command my governor and captain-general of those Philipinas Islands, +both him who now is and those who shall hereafter be in that office, +and the president and auditors of my royal Audiencia which resides +there, and yourselves, that you all observe and execute, and cause to +be observed and executed, exactly and inviolably, the commands +contained in this my decree, without contravening or exceeding its +tenor and form in any manner; for such is my will. [Madrid, March 29, +1639.]</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p>By command of the king our sovereign:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Gabriel de Ocaña y +Alarcon</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1639.4.3" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2378" class="main">Restraining the Augustinians</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To Don Diego Faxardo, whom I have appointed +as my governor and captain-general of the Filipinas Islands, and +president of my royal Audiencia therein. It has been reported in my +royal <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb182" href="#pb182" name= +"pb182">182</a>]</span>Council of the Yndias that the religious of the +Order of St. Augustine are trading in merchandise with whomever they +please; and that they make use of the natives of the regions and +districts wherever they are and reside, for whatever they need, without +paying the poor men who work in their service, or giving them anything +else (employing violence for this), and thus obtain great wealth for +[their houses in] these my kingdoms. This is all considered to merit +severe correction, both because of the traffic and trading that they +openly engage in, and because of the oppression that many of the said +natives receive. I have thought best to tell you to be very careful in +this, and to provide, by the most gentle and prudent measures, all that +may be necessary for the correction of those transgressions. You shall +regulate yourself by the decrees and orders that have been issued in +this regard; and you shall cause those decrees and orders to be +observed according to their tenor. Madrid, June 2, 1639.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p>By order of the king our sovereign:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Gabriel de Ocaña y +Alarcon</span></p> +<p>[From another transcript made from the copy of this decree in the +<span lang="es">Archivo general de Indias</span>—its pressmark, +“<span lang="es">Audiencia de Filipinas; registros de oficio; +reales ordenes dirigidas á las autoridades del distrito de dicha +Audiencia; años 1635 á 1672; est. 105, caj. 2, leg. 2, +libro 4, folio 122 verso</span>” we take the following +endorsement: “To Don Diego Faxardo, whom your Majesty has +appointed governor of the Filipinas Islands, advising him of certain +things touching the religious of the Order of St. Augustine, which +require a remedy; so that he may <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb183" +href="#pb183" name="pb183">183</a>]</span>know them, and take what +measures are advisable, in accordance with the orders and decrees that +have been issued regarding it.” This transcript states also that +the decree was signed by the members of the Council.]</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1639.4.4" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2405" class="main">Regarding ecclesiastical districts</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To Don Diego Faxardo, knight of the Order of +Santiago, whom I have appointed as my governor and captain-general of +the Philipinas Islands: report has been made to me, on the part of the +archbishop of that city of Manila, that Don Sebastian Hurtado de +Corcuera, your predecessor, gave the district of Quiapo (which belonged +to the seculars), and the Indians who were reserved for the service of +the cathedral and of the archiepiscopal house (which was the sustenance +of the cathedral), to the fathers of the Society of Jesus, because of +the great pressure that they exerted on him for it, on account of the +advantages that would follow to them, as they have many estates of +importance near that district. One of the conditions of their removing +the said archbishop’s exile, was that he must consent to have +that district given to the fathers of the Society. In order to relieve +himself from his distressed condition, the archbishop feigned, under +compulsion, assent to this—regarding it as certain that, as such +action was to the prejudice of my royal patronage, I would not consent +to it. He also petitioned that I would be pleased to have my royal +decree issued, ordering that the fathers of the Society be despoiled of +the said district of Quiapo, and that it be restored to the seculars, +together with the adjoining districts of San Anton and Santa +Cathalina—which the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb184" href= +"#pb184" name="pb184">184</a>]</span>bishop of Camarines separated from +the said district, in the time while he governed the archbishopric +during the exile and absence of the said archbishop; and which he gave +to the cura of Santiago, who was his creature; also the district of +Nauhang, on the island of Mindoro, which has always belonged to +seculars. By negotiations effected by the fathers of the Society, those +districts have been set aside for them, to the prejudice of so many +poor seculars. The matter having been examined by my royal Council of +the Yndias, as well as what was written to me concerning the same +matter by the said archbishop, I have considered it fitting to issue +this my decree. By it, I order you, immediately upon its receipt, to +place those districts, exactly, and without admitting any excuse or +other reason, in the same condition that they always had and have had, +notwithstanding the contract signed by the said archbishop, at the +instance and petition of the said my governor and of the auditor then +in my Audiencia. You shall advise me at the first opportunity that you +have carried out my order. Madrid, July 8, 1639.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p>By order of the king our sovereign:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Gabriel de Acaña y +Alarcon</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1639.4.5" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2422" class="main">Rebuking the bishop of Camarines</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To the reverend father in Christ, bishop of +the church of Camarines of the Filipinas Islands, and member of my +Council: I have been informed that you are not living in your +bishopric,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2426src" href="#xd19e2426" name= +"xd19e2426src">1</a> <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb185" href="#pb185" +name="pb185">185</a>]</span>and that you are residing in the city of +Manila, where your free life is giving offense; and that you have +attempted to erect a tribunal of appeals, without leave, declaring +yourself to be an apostolic judge by a brief from his Holiness. +Inasmuch as your residence outside of your church may occasion +troubles, besides your necessary obligation to live there, I have +decided to charge you (as I am doing), to leave the city of Manila or +any other place where you are residing, as soon as you receive this +decree, and to go to govern your church. If you do so, I shall consider +myself well served by you. In order that you may not offer any excuse +in this matter, I am ordering the royal officials of my royal treasury +not to pay you any of your stipend from my royal treasury so long as +you do not comply with what I here order you. I have been surprised +that you should have attempted to hold a tribunal in the said city of +Manila, under pretext or title of appeals. Madrid, July 8, 1639.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p>By order of his Majesty:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Gabriel de Ocaña y +Alarcon</span></p> +<p>The King. To the officials of my royal treasury of the Filipinas +Islands: inasmuch as it was reported in my royal Council of the Yndias +that the bishop of Camarines resides in that city of Manila, where he +attempts to hold his court under pretext of certain appeals, I charge +him, by another decree of the date of this, to go immediately to his +own church, because of the deficiency that his person may cause in its +government. In order that he may offer no excuse in this matter, I +order you to grant him nothing from my royal treasury on his salary, +unless <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb186" href="#pb186" name= +"pb186">186</a>]</span>he shall obey my orders; for so is my will. +Madrid, July 8, 1639.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p>By order of the king our sovereign:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Gabriel de Ocaña y +Alarcon</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1639.4.6" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2456" class="main">Inspection at Acapulco</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To Marqués de Cadereita, my relative, +member of my Council of War, and my viceroy, governor, and +captain-general of the provinces of Nueva España: in a letter +written to me by the royal officials of the port of Acapulco under date +of last February 24, of this year, [they stated] that you sent the +auditor [<i lang="es">contador</i>], Christoval de Medina, to that port +with a salary of twenty-three ducados which was distributed among +himself, the constable, and the notary, to investigate the merchandise +that came from Philipinas this year in the patache that was sent from +those islands; and that my royal duties scarcely amounted to four +thousand ducados. Since I have three satisfactory and trustworthy +officials in the said port, they have petitioned me to have the above +three men removed from that place. They say that by the going of such +judges they themselves serve only as witnesses of what is public, since +no other thing is permitted them; and that such an action deprives them +of the authority and exercise of their offices, and they are +disaccredited and left without respect and reputation, as all think and +believe that you did it because of some incapacity in them. The matter +having been examined in my royal Council of the Yndias, together with +what you wrote me in regard to it, I have considered it fitting to +issue the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb189" href="#pb189" name= +"pb189">189</a>]</span>present. By it I give you authority to send such +ministers to Acapulco whenever any extraordinary causes shall arise; +but that, if there are no such causes, this may be dispensed with, +because of the expenses that are incurred by my royal estate, +especially since Don Pedro de Quiroga was there so short a time ago. +Inasmuch as the commerce of those islands has been reported to be in +great distress, I charge and order you to try to encourage and aid it +by all possible means. Since some change has been made in the amount +permitted to them, you shall see what can be done for their greater +relief, until the arrival at those kingdoms of Don Juan de Palafox y +Mendoza,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2465src" href="#xd19e2465" name= +"xd19e2465src">2</a> of my royal Council of the Yndias, to whom the +settlement of those matters is committed. Madrid, September 16, +1639.</p> +<p class="signed">[<span class="sc">I the King</span>]</p> +<div class="figure xd19e2480width" id="p188"><img src="images/p188.jpg" +alt= +"View of harbor of Acapulco—Arnoldus Montanus (Amsterdam, 1671)" +width="534" height="319"> +<p class="figureHead">View of harbor of Acapulco—Arnoldus +Montanus (Amsterdam, 1671)</p> +<p class="first">[<i>From original in Library of Harvard +University</i>]</p> +<p>A. <i>Acapulco.</i> B. <i lang="es">Fuerca de San Diego tiene de +longitad 122 varas de latitad 80 varas.</i> C. <i lang="es">Boca +Grande.</i> D. <i>El Grifo.</i> E. <i lang="es">Boca chica.</i> F. +<i lang="es">Puerto del Marques.</i></p> +</div> +<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb190" href="#pb190" name= +"pb190">190</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1639.4.7" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2511" class="main">Colonists needed in the islands</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To Marqués de Cadereyta, my relative, +member of my Council of War, and my viceroy and governor and +captain-general of Nueva España, or the person or persons vested +with its government: in a letter written to me by the city of Manila, +under date of August two of the past year, six hundred and +thirty-eight, in regard to various matters, and which has been examined +in my royal Council of the Indias, there is a section of the following +tenor:</p> +<p>“This kingdom finds itself in great need of inhabitants at the +present time, as a result of the said campaign; for they are dying off, +and it is many years since people have come to live in these islands as +citizens. That has been understood to arise from the loss that the +citizens have experienced, both in the affairs of this commerce and in +the execution of the favors and rewards that his Catholic Majesty +Phelipe Second, our king and sovereign (who is in heaven), was pleased +to grant to such citizens. For at present, with those of account in +this community, the citizens do not number ninety. This is very +pitiful, and it is fitting that your Majesty please to have it +corrected by ordering the said viceroy to use all possible and +effective efforts in sending as many citizens as possible every year. +They should be persons of good standing and ability, both for the +service of your Majesty and for the greater renown and authority of +this kingdom.”</p> +<p>And inasmuch as it is proper that you attempt to relieve such +necessity, I order you to try to procure this by all possible ways and +plans, and with all the mildness and prudence that is fitting. By so +doing <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb191" href="#pb191" name= +"pb191">191</a>]</span>I shall consider myself well served by you. +Given at Madrid, October three, one thousand six hundred and +thirty-nine.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p>By order of the king our sovereign:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Gabriel de Ocaña y +Alarcon</span></p> +<p>Signed by the members of the Council.</p> +<p>[<i>Endorsed</i>: “To the viceroy of Nueva España, +ordering him to endeavor by all the means possible to send to Filipinas +every year as many citizens as possible who should be of good standing +and ability.”]</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1639.4.8" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2539" class="main">Directions to the archbishop</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To the very reverend father in Christ, +archbishop of the metropolitan church of the city of Manila: your +letter of July 31 of the past year, 1638, has been examined in my royal +Council of the Yndias, and I shall answer you in the present in regard +to some points that have been decided.</p> +<p>You state that, although the mode of the presentations for the +missions has been resolved upon and determined, the decrees are not +obeyed; that there is a very great need of seculars for those missions, +and those who are there are but youths who do not understand the +language [of the natives]; and that hence you have deemed it advisable +not to assign any mission to seculars: You state that having conferred +on this point with the Audiencia, they resolved that no innovation +should be made until the arrival of the governor, who had gone on the +Jolo expedition. It has been deemed best to tell you that when the +governor shall arrive, and shall come to a decision, you shall advise +me of the results of it. In the meanwhile <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb192" href="#pb192" name="pb192">192</a>]</span>you shall observe the +decrees, unless serious troubles result from doing the contrary.</p> +<p>The prebends that you state are vacant in that church have been +provided with incumbents, as you will have heard. My royal Council of +the Yndias will take care of the names which you present to me, for the +occasions that arise.</p> +<p>In regard to the property of Don Fray Francisco Zamudio, bishop of +Nueva Caceres, who died on the twenty-seventh of last April, you shall +cause the orders that have been issued to be observed, so that his +creditors may be heard and paid, in accordance with justice, and upon +legal proof of their claims.</p> +<p>I have read what you wrote about the great exhaustion and distress +experienced by the natives of those islands through the many +assessments that are made continually, throughout the year, on all the +products of the country. I am writing to the governor and Audiencia not +to make any innovation in these matters, so that this evil may be +corrected; and under no consideration to load any new troubles or +burdens on the Indians. Madrid, December 16, 1639.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p>By order of the king our sovereign:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Gabriel de Ocaña y +Alarcon</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1639.4.9" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2564" class="main">Oppression of the Indians</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The King. To the president and auditors of my royal +Audiencia of the city of Manila: in a letter written to me by the +archbishop of that church, July 31 of the past year, 638, he states +that the natives of those islands are greatly exhausted and burdened by +the many assessments made on them every year, in all <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb193" href="#pb193" name="pb193">193</a>]</span>the +products of the country, by my governors. The latter take the products +from them at a loss, gathering and collecting them with great trouble +to the natives, and no money is given them; while they are seized and +beaten, and thrust into prison for many days, because they do not give +what they do not possess—although the goods can be bought at a +somewhat higher price in the market-place. On account of this, and by +the hardships consequent on sending them to the forests to cut wood, +the natives are being exterminated, and are dying off. The matter +having been examined in my royal Council of the Yndias, I have +considered it fitting to issue the present. By it I order you not to +make any innovation; and you shall not, under any consideration, cause +new troubles or burdens to the Indians. Madrid, December 17, 1639.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">I the King</span></p> +<p>By order of the king our sovereign:</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Don Gabriel de Ocaña y +Alarcon</span> <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb194" href="#pb194" name= +"pb194">194</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2426" href="#xd19e2426src" name="xd19e2426">1</a></span> This was +Fray Francisco de Zamudio, who had come to Manila in 1636, and acted as +provisor-general during the temporary exile of Archbishop Guerrero.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2465" href="#xd19e2465src" name="xd19e2465">2</a></span> The +great visitor-general of New Spain and the bishop of Puebla. He had a +“special commission to take the residencias of Cerralvo and +Cadereita, and to investigate the commercial relations with Peru and +the Philippine Islands.” He was of noble family, although +illegitimate, but was legitimized by his father. He was a man of great +abilities, which won him speedy recognition and high offices until he +decided to enter the priesthood (1629); and, after serving in various +capacities in Spain, he went to Mexico in 1640. He was energetic and +impartial in the exercise of his duties, and before long this embroiled +him with the indolent and easily-influenced viceroy. Finally he was +offered the archbishopric, and at the same time ordered to assume +charge of the government. He refused the archbishopric, but accepted +the latter, and in 1642 assumed that office—which he held for +five months, during which he ruled well and impartially. After retiring +to his bishopric he had various troubles with the Jesuits, the new +viceroy, the archbishop, and others, until he was ordered to retire to +Spain in 1648, where he died bishop of Osma in 1659, much regretted by +the people of his bishopric. See Bancroft’s <i lang="es">Hist. +Mexico</i>, <i>iii</i>, pp. 98–136.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.1" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e2582" class="main">Events in the Filipinas Islands</h2> +<h2 class="Sub">From August, 1639, to August, 1640</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">On the fourth of August, 1639, orders were given that +the ship “Concepcion,” built in Camboja, should leave the +port for her voyage to Nueva España; and in the afternoon of +that day began a furious vendabal, which lasted three days. This +compelled the ship to ask for aid by firing two cannons, as its people +feared some danger; but when the storm was over, the ship began its +voyage.</p> +<p>At that very time, five large ships had sailed from Manila, on their +return to Great China; and two of these were driven ashore by the great +force of the wind, four leguas from Manila. Six hundred China-men were +drowned, although a still larger number escaped [to land]; for, on +account of the lack of succor in these two years,<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2590src" href="#xd19e2590" name="xd19e2590src">1</a> many were +returning, leaving their houses and shops deserted.</p> +<p>On the seventh came the unexpected news of the relief-ships; their +arrival was celebrated with the utmost joy, and all the bells were +rung. The people were revived by this news, all the more because these +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb195" href="#pb195" name= +"pb195">195</a>]</span>ships were the almiranta of last year, and the +patache of two years ago—which, with so great injustice and +excessive harshness, had been detained at Acapulco—the [sort of] +injury of which this country has complained to God and to the king for +many years. Wives who had put on mourning for their husbands took off +those garments, giving thanks to God and receiving from His hand their +husbands, as it were, restored to life. The Chinese, who learned the +news on board their ships, disembarked, and returned to their shops and +their trading. There was also a circumstance in this coming of the +ships, in which God displayed the providence that He exercises over +this country; for they arrived at the port of Nueva Segovia, from which +had just departed two hostile Dutch galleons, who had pretended that +they were English and friendly [to us].</p> +<p>On the eleventh of August arrived from Maluco Father Manuel +Carballo, rector [there] of the Society; he came on behalf of the +governor, Don Pedro de Mendiola, to ask for aid, because the kings of +Tidore and Terrenate had formed an alliance—a thing which we had +never expected, because those peoples were more hostile to each other +than dogs and cats. The reason which the king of Tidore gives for this +unfriendly act against the Spaniards is, that the present which the +governors [of Filipinas] were wont to send every year, in the name of +his Majesty, to the kings of Tidore his ancestors, has not been sent to +him for the last four years. The father rector of Maluco says that this +may be true, and is perhaps the ostensible reason; but that the king +has other and hidden reasons, which go deeper and give more cause for +anxiety. Now Francisco de Figueroa is <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb196" href="#pb196" name="pb196">196</a>]</span>going [there] as +proprietary governor, and he will aid in soliciting the proper +assistance for any emergency.</p> +<p>On the fifth of August, Captain Cristobal Marquez set out for +Hermosa Island; he is going as successor to Sargento-mayor Pedro +Palomino, who is governor there. The warder of this port of Cavite is +Sargento-mayor Alonso Garcia Romero, of the Order of Santiago; [he +fills that office] to the great satisfaction of all.</p> +<p>On the twenty-first of August, at daybreak, a Spaniard arrived here +from Nueva Segovia; he says that the two relief ships from Mejico were +wrecked at that port, and one hundred and fifty persons were drowned, +which has been a severe punishment from God upon the past;<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e2605src" href="#xd19e2605" name="xd19e2605src">2</a> +and with this news the people have returned to their former sadness. +The ships were lost on the fifth of August. It was afterward learned +that the succor despatched by the king had been taken out of the ships +before they were wrecked; but that the property of the citizens that +has been lost will amount, in luxuries<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2608src" href="#xd19e2608" name="xd19e2608src">3</a> and money, +to five hundred and fifty thousand pesos.</p> +<p>At the end of September, General Don Pedro de Almonte arrived from +Joló, where our affairs have been steadily improving. The +natives of the island remain subdued; almost all their chiefs who would +undertake to defend themselves are dead; and even those who never paid +tribute to the king of Joló are now registered and are our +subjects. All the pirates <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb197" href= +"#pb197" name="pb197">197</a>]</span>have fled, and the king is hiding +in the mountains; and our men have taken more than three hundred +captives during the last three months.</p> +<p>On the sixth of October, the cho (craft) which came last year +arrived here from Macasar. It came loaded with slaves, and pepper, and +various kinds of cotton cloth. Its people say that the king was sorry +that he had not put to death those of his vassals who fought against +the Spaniards in Jolo; and that if any of them should go there, the +king would take his life. Knowing that Malaca was expecting to be +blockaded by the Achenese and the Dutch, and that the city had not +sufficient provisions, the king had ordered his people to collect a +quantity of rice—two hundred coyos, each coyo containing +thirty-two fanegas—and had sent it [to Malaca] in his galleys; it +is not yet known what success they had. Those people say, moreover, +that in Macasar they have heard the English and the Dutch themselves +say that in the independence and strength of Holanda there are solid +foundations for believing that that state will make strong efforts to +extend its power from the year 1640 on.</p> +<p>They also relate, as news, that the Dutch were at the entrance to +Goa, with fourteen ships; and the Portuguese came out in staunch +galleons to fight them, sending eleven of the Dutch vessels to the +bottom; while two of their own were sunk. It is also stated that the +patache which was purchased at Macao from the English, and despatched +from here for Yndia, was seized by the Dutch in the strait of +Sincapura; its captain, one Carballo, remained in Macasar, and it was +he who related this misfortune.</p> +<p><i>Ytem</i>: [it is said] that a man named Caldeira <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb198" href="#pb198" name="pb198">198</a>]</span>went +from Malaca as an envoy to the king of Achen, regarding himself as +quite safe; but that the king gave orders that his men should arrest +the envoy as soon as he should enter the palace. When they tried to +carry out this command, this man and the other Portuguese placed +themselves on the defensive; all the men on the ship hastened to their +aid with fire-balls,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2629src" href= +"#xd19e2629" name="xd19e2629src">4</a> and with these they killed many +Achenese; and the palace was set on fire, being entirely consumed. They +estimate the losses of the king at five millions. All the Portuguese +there were killed.</p> +<p>On the last day [of October], a ship from Terrenate arrived at +Manila. Its people say that the Tidorans and Terrenatans, aided by the +Dutch, had put to death Cachil Naro, the former king of Tidore—a +very regrettable event. He was deposed by the master-of-camp Pedro de +Heredia; and recently had come an order from his Majesty that our +people should restore Naro to power, because he had given more evidence +of friendship to us than had the present king. Indeed, the authorities +were endeavoring to accomplish that change, even if this order had not +arrived. Extensive revolts are feared there; and on this account +reënforcements are being sent, together with galleys, which are +very effective in those islands. It is also said that the Dutch will +lie in wait for these reënforcements; so, in order to circumvent +them, we shall endeavor to send the relief earlier than ever +before.</p> +<p>By this ship comes some news from Mindanao: that Moncay had captured +a brigantine from our <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb199" href= +"#pb199" name="pb199">199</a>]</span>then and slain all the Spaniards +(who defended themselves bravely)—except their commander, who was +soon laid low by them, and remains a captive. <i>Ytem</i>: they say +that Moncay is making great efforts to form an alliance with Corralat; +who has answered Moncay that he must try to gain over Manaquior, and +that, if the latter shall declare himself against the Spaniards, he +[<i>i.e.</i>, Corralat] will garrison his forts against them. Those +chiefs have assailed Manaquior with their entreaties, urging him to +desist from aiding the Spaniards; and it is reported that he already +shows himself lukewarm in his friendship to us.</p> +<p>From Joló we are informed that the islanders are in such +haste to be enrolled for paying tribute that now very few of them are +missing from the list. The rest of the news will be told by extracts +from the following letters.</p> +<p>In one from Father Alejandro Lopez, of the Society of Jesus, dated +at Joló on August 9, 1639, sent to Father Luis de Pedraza of the +same Society: “On the second of August, I baptized two +women—one a Lutao, the other the slave of another Lutao,” +etc.</p> +<p>In one from Father Andres de Zamora, of the Society of Jesus, in +Mindanao, at La Sabanilla, August 13, 1639, to the same father Pedraza: +“In Buhayen, thanks to our Lord, our affairs are prospering. On +the occasion of an expedition which Lucero made to Taulan, the +Spaniards obtained by a clever plan and stratagem a crowd of captives, +both men and women. Part of them are going in this champan, and the +rest will go with the brigantine—which Captain Lucero sent, in +order that some reparation might be made to them; I baptized them +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb200" href="#pb200" name= +"pb200">200</a>]</span>all. The Spaniards who were with Manaquior went +down to the lake with the dato; and Balatamay was there with five +hundred Moros, waiting for the Spaniards, to fight against them. But +they did not remain there, recognizing that our troops were stronger +than they. Our men killed twenty-five of the Moros, and carried five to +the fort. One man, who came mortally wounded, asked for baptism, and +died within twenty-four hours. On the eighth of October, Captain Don +Pedro Bermudez set out with fifty Spaniards, in two champans, to be +stationed in the presidio at the lake of Malanao in Mindanao; Father +Gregorio Belin goes with him. At the same time, Don Pedro will pursue +the Camucones, who have appeared on a piratical expedition with sixty +boats. It is known that they have captured some vessels and the +licentiate Raymundo de Quiñones.”</p> +<p>In this month of October came from Hermosa Island Sargento-mayor +Pedro Palomino, who was governor there and goes with the same office to +Samboangan. Of the two champans that went with Captain Cristobal +Marquez, one foundered in mid-ocean, with its men and the money. On the +return voyage of those who came with Palomino, one was separated from +the rest by a storm, and up to this time has not arrived at Manila.</p> +<p>The patache “San Nicolas” is going with the relief for +Terrenate; its chief pilot is Captain Machado, a pilot of long standing +and great experience. This vessel has orders to go, on the return +voyage from Terrenate to the Ladrones Islands, in order to carry away +the Spaniards and other people from the wrecked ship who are there. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb201" href="#pb201" name= +"pb201">201</a>]</span></p> +<p>On the fifth of November the relief for Terrenate left this port; it +carries an abundant supply of men and provisions, and is under the +command of Captain Andres de Urbina. On the same day we learned of the +depredations committed by the Camucones; and it is believed that Dato +Ache is coming, who was in Borney, urging the king to send a large +armed fleet against these islands.</p> +<p>On the twenty-first of November, in the morning, confused reports +reached us that the Sangleys had revolted at Calamba; and all the rest +of the day they spent in strengthening their forces. They killed the +alcalde-mayor and two priests, and burned the church; and destroyed +other churches in neighboring villages. Don Sebastian received the news +on the twentieth, at night; he had the gates of Manila opened, although +keeping them under close watch, in order that the people living outside +the walls might take refuge within, with their goods. That very night, +he despatched by land Captain Pedro Martin de Aduna with his company of +horsemen, in order to find out how the matter stood, and punish the +insurgents. On the morning of the twenty-first, they encountered the +Sangleys, who, they said, amounted to three thousand men, while the +Spanish cavalry numbered only thirty. The captain and three others +carelessly advanced into a marshy place, where they could neither +extricate themselves nor be aided, and were slain. The rest, after +killing some Chinese, retreated, as they were so few and their horses +were tired out, to Parañaque, to await the orders of the +governor; and this was the condition in which affairs remained +yesterday. It is said that <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb202" href= +"#pb202" name="pb202">202</a>]</span>the Sangleys attack like mad dogs, +and that the weapons that they carry are the sickles with which they +cut their rice, fastened to poles, and some lances.</p> +<p>At this port of Cavite the Chinese have remained peaceable, and with +the Indians and Japanese they very willingly dragged out some pieces of +artillery, with which Sargento-mayor Alonso Garcia Romero, who is in +command of the port, armed two small forts, which are at the end of the +village. With these and other precautions of an excellent soldier, we +all consider ourselves very safe. The natives, although they have not +forsaken their village, have sought shelter, as far as possible, with +the religious orders. The Japanese, blacks, and Indians are full of +courage, whatever be the outcome; I believe that they will rejoice, if +the opportunity arise, to satiate themselves for once with killing +Chinese.</p> +<p>In order that the origin of this disturbance may be understood, it +must be noted that Don Sebastian, desirous of augmenting the estate of +his Majesty, set a great number of Chinese at work in some large +meadows which are watered and rendered fertile by certain rivers, and +are called Calamba. Many of these men were levied by force, and +entirely against their will; many of them fell sick during the past +months, and it is said that more than three hundred of them died. +Accordingly, they became desperate; and it is well known that the +season is an unwholesome one. The time came for the Chinese to pay +their license money and rent, which in all was more than twenty-five +pesos for each one. The officials harassed them for the pay, and they +had not the means to pay what was due; accordingly they have broken +loose in this revolt. The rents from the lands, <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb203" href="#pb203" name="pb203">203</a>]</span>too, +have proved to be unprofitable, from the manner in which they have been +let; while, if they belonged to individuals, they would be a source of +gain.</p> +<p>Since the twenty-second of November, when I wrote the above, I have +purposely omitted to write an account of current events, for along with +the facts were reported a thousand lies; but today, the twenty-eighth +of the same month, everything is now known and manifest.</p> +<p>After the Chinese killed Captain Martin de Aduna, they came close to +Manila, rousing to revolt all the Sangleys whom they encountered. They +arrived at San Pedro de Macati, the novitiate’s residence of the +Society of Jesus. As the church there was strongly built, and vaulted, +Father Francisco Vicente and the brothers Esteban de Oliver and +Raimundo Alberto, who were the only inmates of the house at that time, +went up into it. Some mulattoes and house-servants had also taken +refuge there, as well as over one hundred persons from the native +village. These made some resistance to the enemy, but, as they had no +other weapons than tiles and bricks, finally the multitude of the +Sangleys (who numbered more than three thousand) broke down the doors +of the church and the house, and set fire to the buildings. Those who +were in the church, tormented by the smoke and flames, within +twenty-four hours came to an agreement with the insurgents, who assured +them of their lives and kind treatment. Some of the mulattoes and +natives came out with the father and the brethren; the Chinese treated +the father well, and manacled the brethren, but they killed all the +rest (fifteen in number), on the spot. At this sight, those who had not +come out of the church held back, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb204" +href="#pb204" name="pb204">204</a>]</span>and refused to leave it; and +this saved their lives, for at that time the sargento-mayor, Don Juan +de Arceo, arrived, with two hundred Spanish infantry and eighty +horsemen. He also had a hundred Pampango and four hundred Tagal +Indians, all carrying firearms; and two field-pieces. These began to do +damage to the enemy, but only for a short time; for the Sangleys asked +for a truce, which was granted them. The Sangleys sent Father Francisco +Vicente to negotiate a peace for them with the Spaniards. By a special +providence of Heaven, at that very time arrived, by way of the river, +Adjutant Benavides with twenty-five men. He dashed upon them like a +lion, and with his men made so fierce an attack upon the crowded +Sangleys that many of the enemy were slain. The Sangleys who were +engaged in discussing a peace sent Brother Alberto to tell the +Spaniards who had come from the river not to do them any harm, because +they were already making an agreement for peace. Arriving, he saw that +some of the enemy were beginning to make some resistance, and he called +aloud, “Spaniards, at those who are fleeing!” But they had +no need to do so, for the enemy were already in flight; the Spaniards +followed them and dislodged them from the church, and all the Sangleys, +in confusion, began to disperse. In this confusion, Brother Esteban was +able to make his escape, and those who were in the church could now +leave it. The troops of Don Juan de Arceo seized their weapons, and +also fell on the conquered ones; and the latter were quickly dispersed +through the fields, leaving some three hundred Sangleys dead. The +mulattoes and Indians from Manila killed many, and captured more than +three hundred; most <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb205" href="#pb205" +name="pb205">205</a>]</span>of these are here in the galleys. More than +a thousand Sangleys must have been killed in these encounters.</p> +<p>Don Juan de Arceo, thinking that most of the enemy would go back +toward Calamba, went after them. At this time Don Fernando Galindo, who +was then at Los Baños, assembled five hundred Indians, to fall +on the Sangleys. But the sargento-mayor arrived, and learned that +fifteen hundred Sangleys had fortified themselves on a lofty +hill<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2680src" href="#xd19e2680" name= +"xd19e2680src">5</a> that is above Calamba; and they agreed that their +men should ascend this hill, the Indians on one side, and the Spaniards +on the other. This was accordingly done; the Spaniards reached the top +first, and overcame the enemy, killing more than thirteen hundred +Sangleys. The rest broke away on the side where the Indians were, and +have been driven into the mountains; a company of Spaniards and some +Indians have gone in pursuit of them. With this encounter, which was on +Saturday, the whole affair has come to an end; and therefore on +yesterday, which was Sunday, the <i lang="la">Te Deum laudamus</i> was +sung in Manila.</p> +<p>Among those who distinguished themselves in this last combat were +Juan de Montoya, Lezcano, and Ugalde. This last one came here this +year; although he had received three lance-thrusts, he pursued the +enemy, fighting valiantly. Don Fernando Galindo, moreover, did valuable +service in urging forward the men to the attack.</p> +<p>Among those whom we mentioned above as being killed with Aduna in +the marshes of Viñan was <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb206" +href="#pb206" name="pb206">206</a>]</span>Alférez Don Antonio +Tornamira, who fell senseless when they attacked him with clubs, and +they left him for dead. Later, he came to himself, and while he was +looking for some place where he could hid himself he came upon a +Sangley, who also had hidden in a thicket; he did not wish to go with +the insurgents. They agreed together to seek for some way of escape, +and the Sangley advised the Spaniard to dress himself in Chinese garb; +he did so, and finally the two reached Manila. The governor, Don +Sebastian, gave Alférez Tornamira a suit of his own garments; +and to the Sangley he granted an exemption [from tributes?] for several +years. The latter declared that he wished to be baptized.</p> +<p>Yesterday and day before yesterday, the entire revolt was regarded +as suppressed and ended, without there having been any disturbance on +the other side of the river. This morning, the twenty-ninth of this +month, we saw many large fires toward Manila; we knew not what to +think, until we received a letter in which we were informed that from +the other side of the river from the river San Mateo, many new +insurgents had come, who were burning everything; and the fires that we +saw were Meyhaligue<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2697src" href= +"#xd19e2697" name="xd19e2697src">6</a> and Santa Cruz, on opposite +sides of the river. From the Parián alone different troops of +soldiers, both foot and horse, have sallied out against them; we are +hoping for their entire success. We are informed that people are +talking very earnestly of taking steps to prevent such things from ever +happening again; for this purpose there was held <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb207" href="#pb207" name= +"pb207">207</a>]</span>yesterday a general conference of all the civil, +military, and religious.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2705src" href= +"#xd19e2705" name="xd19e2705src">7</a> <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb208" href="#pb208" name="pb208">208</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2590" href="#xd19e2590src" name="xd19e2590">1</a></span> Meaning +that the failure to receive the usual supplies of money from Mexico had +rendered the Manila merchants unable to buy the goods brought by the +Chinese traders—the latter being thus unable to maintain their +shops in Manila, and obliged to return to their own country.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2605" href="#xd19e2605src" name="xd19e2605">2</a></span> +Apparently some words have been omitted in Ventura del Arco’s +transcription; probably it should read, “upon us for our past +sins”—or possibly, “for the past two +years.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2608" href="#xd19e2608src" name="xd19e2608">3</a></span> Spanish, +<i lang="es">regalos</i>; referring to the articles (mainly those of +luxury) imported from Mexico by citizens of the islands.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2629" href="#xd19e2629src" name="xd19e2629">4</a></span> Shells +or hollow balls, sometimes of clay, sometimes of heavy canvas, which +were filled with combustible substances; when kindled, they were shot +or hurled against the enemy, either to cause injury by their explosion, +or to set his works on fire.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2680" href="#xd19e2680src" name="xd19e2680">5</a></span> “A +mountain called Socol, distant from Calamba a short league” +(Diaz, <i lang="es">Conquistas</i>, p. 406).</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2697" href="#xd19e2697src" name="xd19e2697">6</a></span> This was +an estate belonging to the Jesuits (Diaz, <i lang="es">Conquistas</i>, +p. 408).</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2705" href="#xd19e2705src" name="xd19e2705">7</a></span> +<span class="corr" id="xd19e2707" title= +"Source: Pastells’s">Pastells’</span> transcript of this +document (Colin’s <i>Labor evangélica</i>, iii, p. 129) +contains a few lines of additional matter, as follows:</p> +<p class="footnote">“Of the whole affair a full relation will, I +think, be printed; so I leave it here, entreating our Lord to look with +pity on these islands, which are so full of misery and +poverty.”</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e2718" class="main">Relation of the Insurrection of the +Chinese</h2> +<div id="doc1640.2.1" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2721" class="main">Its causes and beginning</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">Desires for the increase of the royal revenues, which +Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, governor of those islands, always +tried to carry out, with greater exactitude in intention than success +in the outcome, gave occasion to the Chinese of the city of Manila and +its environs to attempt an insurrection, the destruction of that +country, and the complete extermination of the Spaniards there. I do +not mention other causes,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2725src" href= +"#xd19e2725" name="xd19e2725src">1</a> in order to reduce them to those +that have existed and those which the Sangleys have tried to assign as +a pretext for their insurrection. That which surpassed the others, as +being the greatest in their estimation, was that many laborers saw that +they were obliged to live in a new village which the governor built in +the lands of Calamba,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2731src" href= +"#xd19e2731" name="xd19e2731src">2</a> for <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb209" href="#pb209" name= +"pb209">209</a>]</span>certain advantages to the royal service; the +object was, to produce there the rice sufficient for the presidios of +these islands, by which his Majesty would be spared a great expense, +and the government employees the neglect and difficulty [usual] in its +provision. The good intention of the one who made this arrangement was +recognized, if it had also been so on the part of those on whom its +fulfilment depended. Its execution was not without hardships, which +occasioned all the more resentment the more the comforts experienced in +their old villages, attracted them. The exemptions promised by the +government, with the desire of keeping the Chinese contented, because +of the advantage that accrued to his Majesty in obtaining the necessary +food from those lands—by which the Chinese could gain greater +profits, and the Indians, being exempted from such burdens, could make +extraordinary gains—were sufficient to overcome those +difficulties. Attention was given to both of those peoples in the +change. But as it caused many of them to fall sick in a short time, and +more than three hundred died because of the unhealthful climate, a +great disturbance was caused in their minds—which was greater +because they were oppressed by the alcalde-mayor with continual +extortions and punishment. Consequently, desirous of lifting so heavy a +yoke from their necks, they rushed on to the last risk, whether to +themselves or to others; and determined to kill him who ruled them +there, and to go ahead, committing <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb210" +href="#pb210" name="pb210">210</a>]</span>all the damage possible in +all the Indian villages, and on the possessions of the Spaniards, until +they came in sight of Manila, where they would call out the other +Chinese from the Parián and the villages round about—if +they did not rise before, of which it has not been possible to gain +certain information; for, the cause being their own, they all would +force the governor, who had but few infantrymen, to pardon their deed; +and, if they did not succeed in this, confident in their multitude, +they would go forward to besiege the city. Then, in conformity with the +resolution adopted, they assaulted the house of the +alcalde-mayor<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2746src" href="#xd19e2746" +name="xd19e2746src">3</a> on November 19. He was entirely unguarded, +the more for [having no] fears of so fatal an outcome. They +treacherously killed him, manifesting their cruelty against him, as in +revenge for the cruelties that they were shortly before lamenting as +caused by him on themselves. They burned the village, ordering their +wives to hide in the mountains, while they went to try their +fortune—saying that, if they found a good one, and gained the +victory over the Spaniards, they would return for them; or, in case of +adverse fortune and their own defeat, their families would remain alive +and safe in their place of retirement.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.2" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2750" class="main">Advice is given in Manila. First +assault of the enemy, and its result</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">News of the insurrection reached this city on the +night of November 20; and warning was given to <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb211" href="#pb211" name="pb211">211</a>]</span>the +entire city and its environs by two cannon that were fired. The gates +were opened, although with care and caution, so that those outside +could seek shelter, and those who wished could guard their property. +Inasmuch as the importance of the matter did not admit of any delay, +the governor despatched Captain Martin de Aduna that same night +overland, so that with his company of cavalry, he might go to see what +was being done, and mete out the suitable punishment to the enemy, +since people here were on the outlook because of the news with warning. +The governor also sent advices to the castellan and chief magistrate of +the port of Cavite, namely, Sargento-mayor Alonso Garcia Romero, so +that he might be on the watch. Captain Aduna left Manila immediately, +and taking thirty horsemen with him, he came within sight of the enemy +on the morning of the following day, to the number of more than three +thousand. All were armed with spears, or with bamboos hardened in fire, +and on these were fastened the blades with which they harvest their +rice. They defied the Spaniards to come on and fight. Their own guilt, +the number of men, and the fortified position that they were +occupying—which was certain swamps in the lands of Viñan, +whose houses and churches they had burned—caused them to be bold. +Our captain attacked them with greater valor than prudence, for, not +heeding the danger,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2756src" href= +"#xd19e2756" name="xd19e2756src">4</a> he advanced into the swamp, +where, finding it impossible to manage his horse, he and three others +who followed him in the same enterprise were killed. The others having +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb212" href="#pb212" name= +"pb212">212</a>]</span>killed more than two hundred Chinese, and being +but few in number, retreated (since the horses were tired, and they +were in a position where they could not be aided) to the village of +Parañaque, to await the governor’s orders to whom a father +of the Society, who had accompanied the captain to confess and +encourage our men, went to give advices.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.3" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2762" class="main">The enemy advance to San Pedro. They +are pursued, and are defeated in Calamba</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The news of the death of Captain Martin de Aduna +caused disquiet and sadness in the city, for he was well liked there. +Greater damages were feared if they did not immediately summon all +their forces, in order to deprive the enemy of their strength and +hobble their feet. In order to do that the governor sent out his +sargento-mayor, Don Juan de Arceo, with two hundred infantrymen, eighty +cavalrymen, one hundred Pampangos, and four hundred Tagal Indians, all +with firearms, and two pieces of cannon. They were being prepared with +all possible rapidity in Manila, when the enemy began to march toward +San Pedro, the house of the novitiate of the Society of Jesus, doing +all the harm possible along the way. They had about four thousand men, +and were joined, either through force or willingly, by those of Calamba +and the farm-lands round about. That same day, November 21, they +reached San Pedro, where a father and two brothers were then living. +The father confessed all the people of Pasay, a village whose people +had, in order to escape the danger, taken refuge in that house. The +brothers, with some of the more courageous Indians, tried to put +themselves in a state of defense; and, although <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb213" href="#pb213" name="pb213">213</a>]</span>with +only tiles and bricks, they wounded many Sangleys, and killed some. +However, the fury of the multitude was greater than that of the +resistance; and accordingly, the doors of the church having been +battered down, the Sangleys entered it, whence they penetrated into the +house, to which they set fire. Thereupon those above, in sore straits, +surrendered after twenty-four hours with assurance of their lives and +of good treatment—although, not trusting to the promises of the +enemy, many remained upon the vaulted roof of the church. On account of +the fire, in a short time these could not descend, nor could the +insurgents climb to the roof; consequently the former escaped with +their lives, which [otherwise] they would have lost through the +barbarous cruelty of the infidels. This was further displayed [by the +Chinese] in breaking the promise that they had given; for they put to +death those who had descended with the father and the brothers, who +numbered some fifteen persons. They bound the father securely, carrying +him to their own camp, and manacled the brothers—the chief +leaders of the Sangleys not daring to treat them more severely, as +others claim, in order not to provoke further the anger of the governor +and the Spaniards against themselves. By this time the Spanish forces, +not only troops of infantry but horsemen, had reached the enemy’s +camp, and began to skirmish with them; the Chinese lost some men on +their side, but we none. An entire stop was put to this presently, by +the arrival of a great number of Sangleys from Manila to treat for +peace. In order to settle the terms of peace, the insurgents sent to +the governor the father of the Society. The suspension of hostilities +lasted <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb214" href="#pb214" name= +"pb214">214</a>]</span>but a short time; for the adjutant Benavides +(now captain), having no knowledge of it, or of the discussion that was +going on, arrived at San Pedro by way of the river, with twenty-five +Spaniards. These attacked with such fury that, suddenly falling upon +the Chinese where they least expected it, the latter immediately fled; +the Spaniards went in pursuit of them, and the enemy left three hundred +dead [scattered] through the fields, while as many more were captured +by the Indians who were scouring the country, and were taken to the +galleys at the port of Cavite. On account of the Chinese being +surprised by this unexpected attack, the brothers of the Society who +were their prisoners had an opportunity to regain their liberty; they +took refuge among the twenty-five Spaniards, and coming with them +reached that same night their college at Manila, both wounded, although +not dangerously. When the governor knew that the enemy were marching +back to Calamba, he ordered the sargento-mayor to go there with his men +in pursuit of them. By this time Admiral Don Fernando Galindo, who was +at Los Baños, seeing how the country was disturbed, collected +five hundred Indians to attack the Sangleys. But when the +sargento-mayor arrived, and learned that two thousand of the latter had +fortified themselves on a hill, in the ruggedness of which they placed +their main hope of defense, [the two Spanish leaders] determined to +attack them in various places [at once]—sending by some paths +troops of Indians, by others Spanish infantry and Pampangos, and +horsemen with both these parties. As soon as our men came in sight of +the enemy, they saw how difficult was the task; but Spanish valor +conquered it. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb215" href="#pb215" name= +"pb215">215</a>]</span>The Spaniards arriving first, with the +Pampangos, began to climb the hill so courageously that the Chinese, +although at first they thought to beat back our men with stones and +lances from the ascent, finally, losing courage and judgment, rushed +down from the hill, those who escaped from our infantry encountering +our horsemen. Thus some one thousand five hundred of them were killed +in a short time; and those who remained alive tried to escape into the +most hidden ravines and passes of the mountains, but even there they +did not find themselves safe from the Spaniards and the courage of the +Indians. This was the first victory that was obtained over that enemy; +and it was generally understood that it had put an end to the +insurrection, and taken away the courage of those who had caused these +first disturbances. It was proposed to sing the <i lang="la">Te +Deum</i> at Manila, by way of thanksgiving that a fire which threatened +so great destruction had been so easily extinguished, by means of the +company and soldiers of Sargento-mayor Don Juan de Arceo, to whom the +Lord had given so brilliant a victory without any cost. This result was +greatly aided by the experience and courage of Don Fernando Galindo and +of the captains who took part in the combat—Don Rodrigo de +Guillestegui, Juan de Montoya, [Francisco] Lezcano, +[Estéban]<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2775src" href="#xd19e2775" +name="xd19e2775src">5</a> Ugalde, and Don Martin de Ocadiz. The +Pampangos behaved nobly and courageously.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2779src" href="#xd19e2779" name="xd19e2779src">6</a> <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb216" href="#pb216" name="pb216">216</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.4" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2784" class="main">The Chinese of Sagar and Santa Cruz +rebel</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">In proportion to the satisfaction which the news of +this victory caused in Manila was the resentment of the Sangleys when +they heard of the death of their comrades. Eager for revenge, those on +the lands of Sagar<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2788src" href= +"#xd19e2788" name="xd19e2788src">7</a> rose in arms, and hurried that +establishment; and then they summoned [to join them] the Chinese who +were scattered among the other estates, as far as Manila. A large +number of them arrived at daybreak on Tuesday, November 29, at the +residence of Meyhaligue, to which they set fire. At the same time when +we heard of this new enemy, we learned of the arrival of Sargento-mayor +Don Juan de Arceo, victorious, with all his men; and orders were +immediately given to him that, without entering Manila, he should +proceed to Santa Cruz, to occupy that post and check any commotions +among the Sangleys who were there or those of the +Parián—preventing them from joining and uniting their +forces by way of the river.</p> +<p>In order to be ready for everything, the governor also went to Santa +Cruz with Master-of-camp Don Lorenzo de Olaso, on the possibility that +the enemy (who were running, not marching) would attempt an entrance by +way of Santa Cruz—as they actually did, not having had warning of +the arrival of our troops, or knowing how ready the city was to resist +them without the soldiers. The Chinese at Santa Cruz who were friendly +were told that they might go down the river, with their vessels, to the +shelter and protection of the fort; and those who were not were told to +do as they pleased, so that they might be <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb217" href="#pb217" name="pb217">217</a>]</span>thoroughly aware how +little importance was attached to their revolt. Many others went on +board their boats, to the number of some two hundred; professing to be +loyal, they asked permission to go out and fight their own countrymen, +in order to drive them back. Those who had charge of them had strong +suspicions of their undertaking and intentions, but the governor gave +his consent; and in his very sight those Chinese approached and joined +the traitors, and began with them to take possession of Santa +Cruz—now declared enemies to us, although they had a little while +before been pretended friends. Half the street they held as their own, +the careful arrangements of the governor giving them all this space so +that our men might manage their guns more safely. The Spaniards began +to fire these so skilfully, and to oppose the enemy so valiantly that, +many of the Chinese being killed, they found themselves compelled by +the force of our resistance to turn and run, displaying no little +swiftness in their flight. The governor left their punishment to +General Don Juan de Esquerra and his brother, Admiral Don +Francisco—the first with some horsemen, the second with his +infantry company and some other footmen, who intercepted the enemy on +the rear—at the same time ordering the master-of-camp to fortify +himself in the church of Santa Cruz, planting in it some strong +artillery, so that he might be well prepared for resisting the +insurgents, and for checking the designs, suspected although not +manifest, of the Chinese in the Parián. Immediately all that +company [of infantry] fell apart, so as to give room for the free +handling of the cannon; and, the village of Santa Cruz being set afire, +the Spaniards and Indians <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb218" href= +"#pb218" name="pb218">218</a>]</span>pillaged it.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2797src" href="#xd19e2797" name="xd19e2797src">8</a> In it were +the troops from Manila; and when they reached the lands of Meyhaligue +the horsemen, infantry, and Japanese attacked the Sangleys; the latter +fighting with barbarous desperation, were aided by the great number of +their men in stations and ambuscades. They killed some of our men, +among these Captain Agustin Tenorio, Captain Juan Martin[ez] de +Avendaño, Adjutant Cristobal de Saldado, and Alférez +Pedro de Soria; and others were wounded. Thirteen<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2800src" href="#xd19e2800" name="xd19e2800src">9</a> Japanese +were killed, who could not be relieved [in time] by the valor of our +horsemen—which, although great on all occasions, in this one even +surpassed itself. Those who died sold their lives dearly, and those who +survived risked their lives nobly. The danger was alike for all, and +their courage equal; but their fate was not the same. Finally, those +who remained alive thought themselves fortunate that they could +retreat, considering the great number of those who attacked them, the +exhausted condition of their horses, little used to such raids, and the +advantage of position which the insurgents had over them. The latter, +although they saw many of their men stretched on the field, held that +loss as gain—since they were so numerous, and constantly saw more +men joining them—on account of the decrease of the <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb219" href="#pb219" name= +"pb219">219</a>]</span>Spaniards’ number by death, of which they +made haughty boasts, cherishing hopes of greater successes. The +governor commanded that the troops and artillery that were in Santa +Cruz should that night be withdrawn to the city, in order not to leave +Manila in danger from a sudden insurrection in the Parián, which +was momently feared; also to leave the enemy in perplexity—having +seen that fortification by day, and not being aware of the [Spanish] +retreat so that they might not dare to approach the river, or attempt +to pass it, in the night. He commanded that the bridge over it should +be removed, and the boats that were there broken up, so that the +Chinese [of Santa Cruz and the Parián] might not cross to each +other; at the same time he gave orders that, if there should be any +tumult in the Parián, it should be demolished by the artillery +on the city walls. The whole city remained in suspense and uncertainty, +which was greatly increased by seeing how numerous grew the forces of +the insurgents. These, made arrogant by their recent exploit, roamed +through all the [surrounding] districts, nothing escaping their +cruelty. Several times they attacked the church and convent of +Tondo,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2806src" href="#xd19e2806" name= +"xd19e2806src">10</a> which was fortified; but our people in it were +prepared for them, so that, having lost many men, they saw themselves +obliged to desist for the time from their intention. They undertook to +make themselves masters of the church at Binondo,<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2809src" href="#xd19e2809" name="xd19e2809src">11</a> but with +the same result; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb220" href="#pb220" +name="pb220">220</a>]</span>for the Sangley mestizos who were in the +church, desirous of giving proof of their loyalty, resisted the enemy, +who accordingly regarded their attempt as impracticable, or [at least] +exceedingly difficult.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.5" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2817" class="main">The Sangleys of the Parián +revolt</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">From the twenty-sixth of November to the second of the +following month the insurgent Sangleys continued to be so elated that +every day we saw them from Manila, on the other side of the river, with +many little banners which they proudly waved, daring the bolder of our +men to fight; for they thought that even if every Spaniard cost them +fifty of their own men, they would finally remain conquerors, and +masters of the country, on account of the smallness of our numbers, the +many men in their camp, and the accession of those who were continually +joining them. Our artillery quickly made them disperse and retreat; but +the decision was reached that it was not expedient to sally out against +the enemy, on account of the little confidence that was felt in the +Sangleys of the Parián, and because our army could not hold +these in check [<i lang="es">no les cogiesen por las espaldas</i>] if +it were engaged in a campaign. But on the second of December, the day +of the great apostle of India, St. Francis Javier, between ten and +eleven o’clock in the forenoon, the suspense came to an end, and +our uncertainty regarding the fidelity of the Parián was cleared +up. For those Sangleys, seeing that the insurgents had more troops than +on former occasions, and that they were more daringly undertaking to +make an attack at one side, also raised the banner of <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb221" href="#pb221" name= +"pb221">221</a>]</span>revolt, and sallied out from the shops in which +they were; and they killed some negroes and Indians, and a few soldiers +who were stationed near the church of the Parián itself. They +raised an outcry, “For the bridge!” and “To arms +against the Spaniards!” desiring to join their countrymen by way +of the bridge, which for this purpose had been replaced. The +sargento-mayor went out against them with the infantry which were in +garrison on that side, and made them turn back, retreating toward the +church of the Parián; and because the greatest danger was at the +bridge, the master-of-camp, Don Lorenzo de Olaso, went to defend that +passage. Although his men were few, with gallant defiance he repulsed +the main body of the enemy; but he saw that he was in great danger, and +his very courage extricated him. Immediately they began to demolish the +Parián, and to throw down their houses on the land side. The +governor went to the walls, to give orders as to what must be done in +view of the present necessity; and, since there was so great need of +men, all the ecclesiastics and religious were obliged to go with arms +to guard the walls, as it was suspected that the enemy might attempt to +scale them. At that time the city was full of confusion and tumult; for +as there were even in the [Spanish] houses so great a number of +Sangleys, the people within these saw that they were in danger if the +Sangleys escaped outside. To free themselves from this, the cry was +made, I know not by whose order, that, under penalty of treason all +should kill the Sangleys whom they kept,<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2826src" href="#xd19e2826" name="xd19e2826src">12</a> which +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb222" href="#pb222" name= +"pb222">222</a>]</span>immediately rendered active the indignation or +the hatred against them. Through all the streets the Sangleys were seen +lying dead; and everywhere were heard their outcries or their weeping, +causing in all natural compassion, [even] in the midst of the general +danger. In the fort were many Sangleys who had been seized in various +sallies, who, seeing death so near, tried to escape it, defending +themselves even in the place where they were imprisoned; but they all +died there, slain by arquebus-balls. The artillery continued its fire +from the walls, killing thus a great number of the Sangleys. Others +flung themselves into the river, but immediately fell into the hands of +some of our men who were guarding it in boats, and perished miserably. +Fire was set to the Parián; it immediately began to burn, and a +great quantity of wealth was reduced to ashes by the flames.<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e2831src" href="#xd19e2831" name= +"xd19e2831src">13</a> Many persons who had concealed themselves were +burned to death; others, who thought it a less evil to be the object of +our men’s harshness than to become the prey of the flames, +rushing from the buildings, threw themselves upon the sharp swords. +Thus in a few hours the costly structure of the Parián +[perished], and its beautiful church alone was left<a class="noteref" +id="xd19e2835src" href="#xd19e2835" name="xd19e2835src">14</a> as a +memento of what had been there—the pillars of stone which +remained standing being monuments, as it <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb223" href="#pb223" name="pb223">223</a>]</span>were, which +proclaimed, “Here stood Troya.” The number of those who +died that day in the city and fort, in the Parián, and in the +river, amounted to three thousand, according to the statement of those +who make the most moderate estimates. On the morning of the following +day, some two hundred traders came out from some marshes and miry +places that were behind the Parián; they had buried themselves +in the mud there, in order to preserve their lives in the general +misfortune of their countrymen. All came with crosses in their hands, +entreating mercy; this could not be denied to them by Christian +charity, all the more when it was known that these men were not +accomplices in the insurrection. Command was therefore given that they +be conveyed to the fort, where they were kept under guard; and they +were aided with their support in a time of so great need, in which they +were utterly destitute. Many of those who died had time [allowed them] +to become Christians first, and those who already were such, to make +their confessions; others were deprived of this by their own obstinacy, +or by the sudden anger of our people.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.6" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2841" class="main">Events at the port of Cavite and other +places at this time</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">There was anxiety at the port of Cavite when they +heard the cannon from Manila, and saw the clouds of smoke from the +Parián; then news of the result arrived, with an order to the +warden of the fort, Sargento-mayor Alonso García Romero, to put +to the sword all the Sangleys who were in that port.<a class="noteref" +id="xd19e2845src" href="#xd19e2845" name="xd19e2845src">15</a> +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb224" href="#pb224" name= +"pb224">224</a>]</span>Hardly was this information guessed at when all +the people—Spaniards, Indians, Japanese, Sangleys, and mulattoes +ran in dismay through the streets; all suspected one another, and all +tried to secure their own safety. The women and the more valuable +articles of property were collected in the churches; and there prayers +were offered aloud, entreating God for mercy. In the present tumult, +the prudence with which the warden acted was of great value; for he +restored tranquillity among all, especially the Sangleys, who were most +disturbed. Within half an hour he gathered about a thousand of them in +the royal buildings, making it known that this was for the purpose of +securing them from the public fury. They were satisfied with this, +closed their houses, and proceeded to take refuge in the buildings +assigned to them. While the Ave Maria was ringing, the warden went to +all the religious orders, requesting that priests should go to baptize +the infidels and hear the confessions of the Christians, since all of +them must die. They went immediately; and the warden commanded that the +Chinese should be taken out by tens, on the pretext that the governor +had summoned them to Manila. In this way, they cut off the heads of as +many as three hundred Sangleys, many of them receiving the sacrament of +baptism, and many who were Christians that of penance. At this time a +Spaniard made the mistake of cutting off the purses which the Sangleys +always carry with them; this was seen by some, who immediately called +out that they were taking the Chinese away to kill them, and that the +rest would better put themselves on the defensive, and either save +their lives or sell them dearly. The Spaniards who were inside at +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb225" href="#pb225" name= +"pb225">225</a>]</span>once tried to escape, and did so, although with +some wounds from stones, taking the precaution to close the gate of +exit—a prudent act of great importance, because the rest of the +Spaniards, running up to that place, began to fire their arquebuses +wherever they could. The Sangleys then set fire to the royal building, +close to the gate, in order to make an opening by which they could +escape; others, climbing above, began to throw stones and tiles at the +Spaniards, and broke in pieces an ivory image of the blessed Christ, +with which they wounded some of our men. Many Indian women had been +sheltered in these buildings the day before, thinking that they would +there be safe, and seeing themselves suddenly in extreme danger. Only +three of these, with one child, died on this occasion, at the hands of +the Sangleys; another woman and another child flung themselves down +from the windows, but, falling upon some dead Sangleys, they received +no injury of importance. Nor did the rest of these women, who, seeing +their danger, did the same; they threw themselves down and remained +safe, although bruised by the fall. The fire was now seizing on the +entire building;<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2852src" href="#xd19e2852" +name="xd19e2852src">16</a> and those within, with death so near and in +their sight, broke down the wall on two sides, and as many as four +hundred flung themselves through this opening, the rest remaining among +the flames. Here they were opposed by the Spaniards and Japanese, whom +the Sangleys confronted with such mad fury that, although armed only +with stones and clubs, they strove to make way for themselves, wounding +some <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb226" href="#pb226" name= +"pb226">226</a>]</span>of our men (among these the warden), and killing +two Japanese. Finally they took the road to the beach, and, being +pursued thither, many of them continued to fall until, being hindered +by a fishing corral in which they were crowded together, they were a +mark for the bullets of our soldiers, and for the balls from a +blunderbuss which was fired from the fort of La Magdalena, and thus +thirty of them died. Those who remained alive went out into the +country, continually pursued by our soldiers at short range, so that +few escaped; and most of those were caught next day by the ranchmen. +Others hanged themselves from the trees; and, according to the best +information that can be obtained, only twenty three were left who could +carry the news to those in Manila. The slaughter continued on the +following day, since there were many who were hidden in the houses. +This success was a great mercy of God; for it was afterward known that +the Sangleys of the port had agreed upon an uprising for that very +night; they had planned to set fire to the village in all parts of it, +which they could have executed all the more easily because their houses +were very near to those of the Spaniards. In the house of a rich +Chinese Christian was found the banner to which they were to rally. +Many kept hidden in the fireplaces pincers with which they intended to +torture certain Spaniards by tearing away their flesh piecemeal, in +revenge for the Sangley pirates who were punished by that torture in +Manila in the past year.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2858src" href= +"#xd19e2858" name="xd19e2858src">17</a> The number of those who died in +the port of Cavite reached one thousand three hundred. Immediately +afterward all the Sangley laborers on the lands in that <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb227" href="#pb227" name= +"pb227">227</a>]</span>district revolted, of whom some five hundred +perished at the hands of the Indians and ranchmen—not to speak of +others who were scattered in Maragondon and Silan, probably four +hundred and fifty. Many were also killed in the neighboring +jurisdictions: in Bulacan, three hundred; in Pampanga, six hundred; in +Pangasinan, two hundred; in Taal and Balayan, five hundred. Besides +this, the corpses of more than six hundred Sangleys have been +encountered in the villages and coasts of Zambales, the coasts of +Maderas, and other places.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2866src" href= +"#xd19e2866" name="xd19e2866src">18</a></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.7" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2870" class="main">Encampment of the insurgents; damages +which they inflict; levies of men to oppose them</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The damages which the Sangleys continued to +commit—which were especially seen among the <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb228" href="#pb228" name= +"pb228">228</a>]</span>recent arrivals in the Parián—have +been very heavy. They set fire to many houses of Spaniards and of +religious; and they burned the villages, with the churches, profaning +all that was sacred<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2876src" href= +"#xd19e2876" name="xd19e2876src">19</a>—hacking the images with +knives, wearing the chasubles, and making from the altar-coverings +garments to cover themselves, and flags. Some of these articles were +taken from them, in encounters which the Spaniards had with them. The +villages which, with their churches, were burned were: Santa Cruz +(although they did not entirely destroy it), Quiapo, Meyhaligue, +Sampaloc, San Sebastian, San Francisco del Monte, and part of San Juan +de la Penitencia. They also burned the ranches of Santiago Castelu (or +Gastelu), General Asaldegui, Admiral Ezquerra, and others; and a large +part of the villages of Tondo and Binondo.</p> +<p>They arrogantly continued these forays, and they were further +confirmed in their notion that they were masters of the field by having +therein more than twenty-six thousand fighting men, and knowing that +the Spaniards who could be assembled hardly amounted to three hundred. +Accordingly they formed their encampment opposite Manila, with +fortifications at intervals, where they remained about twenty days, +without our men crossing the river to attack them—the Spaniards +contenting themselves with depriving the Sangleys of boats, so that the +latter might not cross from the other side; and they waged war on us in +two directions. It was our prudent decision, and its importance was +recognized by <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb229" href="#pb229" name= +"pb229">229</a>]</span>the insurgents, not to let our force of soldiers +be weakened; and they exerted all their strength to overcome it, +sparing no effort in order to carry out their intention, and in one +case almost succeeding. Only by their great [number was it]<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e2886src" href="#xd19e2886" name= +"xd19e2886src">20</a> possible, and their natural ingenuity; they +undertook to intercept the river, although it was so broad and deep, +with a causeway of stone—a work which they were able to complete +in a short time, by each Sangley carrying only one stone. With this +they were masters of the river as regards its passage, which they +prevented to the boats which were coming down with provisions from +Laguna de Bay; but they were checked in this by the diligence of those +who had in charge the safety of those supplies. These were General +Asaldegui and Captain Ugalde, who had various skirmishes with the +Sangleys to keep them back from the passage of the river, killing many +of them without serious loss of our men. By that time, recognizing the +dangerous character of the war, and that it would apparently be a long +one, the governor continued to make provision of all sorts of munitions +and food; and raised levies of men from Pampanga<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2889src" href="#xd19e2889" name="xd19e2889src">21</a> and other +jurisdictions—not only arquebusiers, but Indians armed with +arrows, lances, and shields. At this summons, all showed their fidelity +to the king, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb230" href="#pb230" name= +"pb230">230</a>]</span>their affection for the Spaniards, their hatred +to the Chinese, and their promptness in obedience. The Pampango Indians +quickly rallied, constrained not only by their ancient loyalty but by +the present need; in this they were not a little encouraged by seeing +the spirited conduct of their women whom they left behind, who offered +to come with them to fight. As it was impracticable to accept this +offer, they were ready, even at the cost of their lives, to defend +their homes and villages, in case the insurgents should undertake to +enter these.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.8" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2895" class="main">The enemy are dislodged, and pursued as +far as Bocaue</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The new soldiers who had come to the succor of Manila, +desirous of encountering the enemy—for which there was not yet +opportunity, according to the arrangements of the governor—made +forays through the open country, in small bands, always with good +success.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2899src" href="#xd19e2899" name= +"xd19e2899src">22</a> They were encouraged to these sallies by the +reward which the governor offered to any one who should bring in the +head of an enemy; as a result, many heads came in to the city every +day. A large number of men having been collected, the governor resolved +to post troops close to the very camp of the insurgents, in order to +surround them; and although they tried to prevent this, they were +unable to do so. Instead, they found themselves, in all the attacks +that they made, compelled to retire with losses always of many +men—although on one occasion, when the governor with the +master-of-camp and some Spaniards undertook to reconnoiter <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb231" href="#pb231" name="pb231">231</a>]</span>a +position, the Sangleys came about them, placing them in such evident +danger that they were very fortunate in being able to escape. This was +secured by the coming, with succor, of Captain Sebastian de Gastelu, +who was stationed at a neighboring post, with his men. Some took the +governor for the master-of-camp. The sargento-mayor, Don Pedro de Jara, +and Captain Gastelu peppered them well with the artillery, which caused +them so great loss that even within their very camp they were not safe. +Preparations were now made [on our side] for attacking them on a set +day; but it seems that the enemy, guessing this plan, and the +disastrous result which they might expect from it, since they were +surrounded on all sides by towers and redoubts, concluded to take +flight. This they did on Thursday, December 29, at night, with so much +silence (since the [<i>word in MS. missing</i>] was so great) that +there was no indication or suspicion of their resolve until, on the +morning of the next day, certain knowledge of their departure was +furnished by our noticing that they did not sally out into the open +country. The governor, who was in our camp, immediately commanded that +the enemy’s camp be delivered over to pillage; in it they found +more than ten thousand fanegas of rice, by which not only the Spaniards +but the negroes and Indians of the surrounding villages profited. The +governor went in pursuit of them with his men, and got sight of them +between the villages of Pasig and San Mateo, to which they had gone +with the intention of crossing the river on rafts, for which purpose +they had cut there twenty thousand bamboos. They were prevented from +this, and our people prepared to give them battle on Saturday, +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb232" href="#pb232" name= +"pb232">232</a>]</span>December 31; but the Chinese did not wait for +them, but took to flight that night also. Our troops continued to +pursue them,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2909src" href="#xd19e2909" +name="xd19e2909src">23</a> and reached them at nightfall, finding them +encamped in the village of San Jose, a visita of Bocaue, which is a +mission village of the fathers of St. Francis. When the governor was +asked there where our men were to be lodged, he replied, “Where +the enemy are.” Our soldiers were so honorably obedient that, +crossing a stream that separated the two forces, they dislodged the +Sangleys from their camp, compelling them to flee; the enemy left +behind the supper that they had prepared, as spoils [for our men, +disregarding] the opportunity, and its importance for the hungry and +needy condition in which they were.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2916src" +href="#xd19e2916" name="xd19e2916src">24</a></p> +<p>On the first of January, 1640, in the morning, the Sangleys were +attacked by our men, and forced to do as they had done the night +before—although with greater loss, since many in their flight +rushed head-long into the river, where they perished. The rest took the +road to Pampanga, intending to secure through that province a passage +to that of Pangasinan; but, after fighting their way, and receiving +damage on all sides, they fell back to Bocaue. This move caused anxiety +among our people, who feared that the Sangleys did this with the +intention of again <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb233" href="#pb233" +name="pb233">233</a>]</span>crossing the river of Manila, in which case +they would destroy, as they had already done on the side opposite +[Manila], the churches and villages on the other side. Seeing, then, +the danger at this time of need, and considering that the soldiers were +with the governor and the citizens acting as garrison, and that in no +place could the forces be divided, since everywhere they were so small, +father Fray Juan Ramirez, the Augustinian provincial, offered to keep +guard over the river with his religious, and asked the other religious +orders to help him in this with such men as they could spare. All +willingly gave their aid, and the governor also sent the commander of +the galleys, Andres Lopez de Asaldegui, for the same purpose; and, +aided by so many religious, he kept the river safe for our trade, and +prevented the enemy from crossing it. At Bocaue the governor was +confronting the enemy, and having various skirmishes with them, being +sometimes the attacker, sometimes the attacked; and although usually +these occasioned loss to the enemy, sometimes also our people +lost—especially one day when a large troop of Indians, with a +number of Spaniards, sallied out against the Sangleys. The latter +resorted to the artifice of setting fire in all directions to the +patches of sedge (or rather the fields of cogon<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2923src" href="#xd19e2923" name="xd19e2923src">25</a>), which +were a great cause for fear; and the Indians, unexpectedly surrounded +by fire, took to disorderly flight. This was <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb234" href="#pb234" name="pb234">234</a>]</span>the +cause of some few Spaniards being left there dead; their firearms were +seized by the Sangleys, who with these did considerable damage to our +men. On this occasion the governor was in notable danger; for he, +considering that the enemy’s encampment was in an advantageous +location, convenient to food-supplies, and having plenty of water +(which our camp lacked), determined to dislodge them from it. For this +purpose, on the night of January 9 he erected a tower near the +enemy’s camp, defended by ditches, spikes driven into the ground +[<i lang="es">empuyados</i>], and a stockade, and well furnished with +artillery. He appointed as its commander the chief captain of the +artillery, Juan Bautista de Molina, with Captain Gastelu [as second]; +and placed in it two artillerists, twenty soldiers, and a hundred +Indians armed with arrows and arquebuses. When the Sangleys, in the +morning, saw the new fort, so unexpected to them, they rushed with +great fury to carry it by assault; but those within defended it +valiantly, making great havoc among the enemy. Hearing the report of +the cannon, the governor and the master-of-camp hastened to give them +aid. Before they could arrive, the enemy turned their backs and fled to +their camp; the governor and those who accompanied him therefore +returned to their quarters. At one o’clock the Sangleys again +endeavored to seize the fort; they found the same resistance and valor +among our men as in the morning, and many of their people were killed, +without any loss to us, except that a bullet wounded Captain Gastelu in +the knee. At the time, this injury was not considered dangerous or +likely to last long; but finally, at the end of five months it caused +his death, to the sorrow of every one that his <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb235" href="#pb235" name= +"pb235">235</a>]</span>Majesty should lose in him a valiant and +energetic officer. The governor and the master-of-camp came, as in the +morning, to the aid of the fort; but the enemy were now retreating, +and, the governor sending four men on horseback to reconnoiter their +course, God inspired such fear in those who were retreating that they +began to flee in a disorderly crowd, leaving in their camp their +weapons (lances and arquebuses) and a large quantity of provisions. +Some of our men followed them for the distance of half a legua, and in +that space killed more than one thousand five hundred of them; and when +the soldiers of our force were called together, the affair could be +considered by them all as concluded. It was regarded as a great +victory, on account of the great fear which had filled the minds of the +Sangleys, the utter disorder and confusion with which they fled, and +our having gained from them an encampment so convenient, with the death +of so many and the booty of so many weapons; and the news of it was +sent to Manila at ten o’clock that night. It was received with +general satisfaction and the ringing of bells; and on the following day +in all the churches solemn masses were said before the most holy +sacrament, by way of thanksgiving for so fortunate a success, and in +supplication to that same Lord that He would continue that favor to our +forces.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.9" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2946" class="main">The enemy return to Sagar and San +Mateo</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The governor had no information of the road that the +enemy took in their flight; accordingly, while he was waiting for this, +he endeavored to have his army take some rest in the village of Bocaue. +But little rest did the insurgents have; for, seeing the misfortunes +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb236" href="#pb236" name= +"pb236">236</a>]</span>that pursued them, and so many of their men (in +whose numbers they were trusting to make themselves masters of the +country) dead, or wounded, or disheartened, they resolved to remove +from [the vicinity of] our camp. Returning to their familiar haunts of +Sagar and San Mateo—which is a visita of the village of Pasig, +belonging to the fathers of St. Augustine—desirous of avenging +their defeats and the loss of their dead, and feeling safe on account +of our troops being so far away, they sent some bands of their people +to burn the church and village of Pasig, which they did. Other +Sangleys, roaming through the hills, found among them some tiny hamlets +of the natives, where they had concealed their valuables, and their +children and wives, to save them from the common danger; and these were +in very great danger of falling into the hands of these enemies. Our +Lord delivered these people, although the Sangleys took possession of +what they found in the huts. Then their scattered bands being reunited +with those whom they had sent to hunt for provisions, they formed their +camp on a hill, and the various bands built shelters for +themselves.</p> +<p>As soon as the governor knew where the enemy were now encamped, he +went in pursuit of them, and on the twelfth [of January] he halted on +the river San Mateo. The next day he went in person, with some few +horsemen, to reconnoiter, and on the way encountered a troop of about a +hundred Sangleys; fifty of them were armed, and the rest were laden +with rice and other provisions. Our men attacked them and killed twenty +or more of the Sangleys, without any loss on our side—although +Captain Juan Fiallo found himself in great danger. On this <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb237" href="#pb237" name="pb237">237</a>]</span>as +on other occasions he displayed honorable proofs of his valor; for, +having wounded a Sangley in the forehead with a lance-thrust, and +felled him to the ground, the latter, suddenly raising himself from +between the horse’s feet, slashed at him with a Japanese catana, +with which at one thrust he wounded both the captain and the horse. The +captain quickly turned his horse about, and securing room for using his +lance, ran it entirely through the Sangley’s body, at one side; +it pierced so deeply that it was impossible to pull out the weapon, so +he had to leave it sticking in the body. But the Sangley, with the +anguish or the desperation of death, eager to avenge it rather than +endure it, with his own hands drew out the lance, and, bracing himself +with it on the ground, attempted to attack the man who had wounded him. +But at this moment he was himself attacked by a lay religious belonging +to the Society of Jesus, who rendered good service in the war +throughout its active period—and at this time with especial good +fortune, since he freed the captain from danger by completing the +killing of the Sangley. All the rest of the Sangleys fled, and the +governor returned to his camp, to give orders for the attack on the +enemy, who during all the time while they remained in the hills never +ceased from inflicting damages. They burned the church of San Mateo, +and that of Taytay, a house and church of the Society of Jesus, and a +visita of Antipolo; also Santa Cruz and Mahayhay. According to what +many of them said, their chief incentive to setting these fires was +what happened to a certain Sangley. Desiring to become a Christian, he +buried an idol which he had, of which they relate fables very similar +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb238" href="#pb238" name= +"pb238">238</a>]</span>to those about Mars, calling it “the god +of battles.” This Christian Sangley was one of the insurgents, +and, desiring to appease this god, managed with others to disinter it, +entreating its protection on the present occasion. They say that the +idol spoke to them, saying that it considered itself appeased and +satisfied for the previous injury done to it; and promising them, +besides this, its favor, provided that they would burn all the +churches, profane all that was sacred, and inflict on the Christians +all the harm that they possibly could.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.10" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2959" class="main">Success of our troops, and defeat of +the enemy in Antipolo</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The enemy, not regarding themselves as safe in the +mountains where they had hidden, managed to retreat to those of +Antipolo, as being more suitable for the fortified post which they +built there. On account of the extent of the place, the greater part of +their people had gone into it, after burning the village and the +residence of the Society of Jesus; they attempted to do the same with +the church, but could not accomplish this, as it was built of stone. +Some remained behind, and, desirous of reconnoitering the place, and +doing the enemy some damage, Captain Juan Fiallo went out with as many +as thirty horsemen, and a large number of Indians with lances and bows. +The roads were exceedingly rugged, and both footmen and horsemen had to +trust to their own exertions for success. They commenced to make their +way through the mountains, with more spirit than reflection, for at the +middle of their journey they found themselves unable to go on. The +enemy were on their rear, and at either side were precipices +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb239" href="#pb239" name= +"pb239">239</a>]</span>and deep ravines—all the fault of ignorant +guides. It was impossible either to advance or to retreat; and so they +fell in death, one after another, their courage ineffectual, and +without room in which to make resistance. Accordingly, they rushed to +fling themselves down the precipices, abandoning some their horses and +some their weapons, and all in this danger losing their presence of +mind. The enemy had the opportunity to put an end to all of our men, if +God had not blinded their eyes. Five or six Spaniards, with their arms +and horses, returned to the camp and gave news of this disaster; and +within a few days some others returned, unarmed and on foot; as for the +rest, the Sangleys disposed of them as we shall see later.</p> +<p>The governor, grieved at this result, collected more horses from the +neighboring ranches, and, sending to Manila for saddles, equipped his +men anew, all eager for vengeance. This consumed much time, which gave +the enemy leisure to fortify themselves in four places, in the village +of Antipolo and in the mountain region thereabout; but it deprived our +troops of [the opportunity of] marching against the enemy until they +arrived in sight of the new fortifications. The difficulty of the +attack was very evident, for the enemy held the heights, and had stones +with which they had built their enclosures, by hand-work, very strong +and well-arranged, as was remarked by our men. In this work, the great +number of their men, and their strenuous efforts, had made up for the +lack of time. No less active were our men in making ready [for the +attack]; and the more difficult the undertaking, the more their courage +rose. The Indians displayed great gallantry, <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb240" href="#pb240" name="pb240">240</a>]</span>with +a few Spaniards making themselves masters of the first two strongholds +or intrenchments—from which the enemy retreated with the loss of +some of their men; the rest, a crowd of armed men, taking refuge in the +other two defences, at the highest part of the fortification, regarded +these as impregnable, and accordingly kept in them provisions of all +kinds, enough to last a long time. There they awaited our men, who +marched in good order, and attacked the first intrenchment on three +sides. They were everywhere preceded by Indian shield-bearers, in order +that these might with their shields stop the stones and other missiles +that the Sangleys were throwing; the Indians did this valiantly, being +thus very helpful to the rest of the army; for the Spaniards, being +able to use their firearms without hindrance, with them everywhere +drove back the enemy. The latter, discouraged at the death of so many +of their number, and seeing our soldiers ascending the hill, took to +flight. This gave new energy to our victorious men, who in order to +complete their conquest at once continued their march, with the same +good order and precaution, to the innermost fortification, the +strongest and most difficult of all, and the most skilfully built and +best provided with supplies. Nothing withstood the perseverance of our +men, flushed by their recent success, and stimulated by the sight of +their governor, who was present throughout the action; they eagerly +attacked the enemy, who valiantly resisted, replying with their +firearms to the volleys from our arquebuses, and with stones to the +javelins and arrows [of our Indians]—relying on these weapons +alone, as they had the advantage in position. But their courage alone +could not equal <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb241" href="#pb241" +name="pb241">241</a>]</span>that of our men; and, seeing that ours were +now pressing them hard, and, almost on their hands and knees, steadily +gaining possession of their last height, the Sangleys, having little +strength to defend it, turned their backs and began to flee. Our men +kept up the pursuit of the enemy for more than a legua, until they +drove out the fugitives from their hiding-places, and many of the +latter flung themselves over the cliffs in those mountains—where +the enemy, although at the outset he had been well defended, was on +this occasion thoroughly defeated.</p> +<p>Those [of the Spaniards] who were killed in this combat and assault +were about twenty; and as the victory had been so glorious, not only by +the strength of the enemy but by the valor of our soldiers, all the +bells were rung in Manila, and on the following day, at the +governor’s request, solemn mass was said in all the churches, and +the most holy sacrament was exposed, in thanksgiving for so fortunate a +success.</p> +<p>In the enemy’s camps were found large quantities of supplies +and arms; and on the ground were many books which they had taken from +the religious houses that they burned; from these they made +breastplates and other defensive armor. In the cemetery of Antipolo, +which was the quarters of their leaders, were found several of their +proclamations, in Chinese characters; these were fastened to the trees, +to serve for the proper government of their forces. There were twenty +dead horses who had fallen into the ravines, with their saddles broken; +and three Spaniards were found whose heads had been cut off. These were +part of those who had flung themselves from the precipices; among them +was a lay religious of the Augustinians, who had accompanied the +soldiers <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb242" href="#pb242" name= +"pb242">242</a>]</span>on that expedition. These bodies, although they +were putrid, were so tightly bound that the cords had cut into the +flesh, all indicating the cruelty of the Sangleys. Although this moved +our men to deserved compassion and just indignation, they felt much +more keenly the discovery of many fragments of holy images that lay on +the ground. In especial, there was found a carved figure of the holy +Christ, three palmos in height, among the embers and ashes of a house +which the Sangleys had undertaken to burn; the fire had been content to +blacken the image a little, in order that it might testify to the +miracle—since all regarded it as such, that the image should +remain unhurt in the midst of so hot a fire. The soldier who found the +image presented it to the governor, who at sight of it was deeply +moved, as were the army also when it was raised on high, [made] by him +who had abased it more glorious than before; and all entertained hopes +that the army which should fight under such a banner would annihilate +the enemy by a signal victory.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.11" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2979" class="main">Injuries which the enemy committed +during their flight</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">It is characteristic of cowards to affect courage when +they meet no opposition or do not fear resistance; the enemy did not +encounter this in the ranch of Antipolo, whither he went when he +emerged from the mountains and hollows in which he had taken refuge +from our attacks and the slaughter which he could not make among our +troops. For the latter were marching accompanied by the governor, who +was desirous of catching the enemy in the flat country that he might +offer them battle there, when they <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb243" +href="#pb243" name="pb243">243</a>]</span>would not be able to avail +themselves of the ruggedness of the mountains or the depth of the +ravines; the armies faced each other, now ready to come to blows, and +the enemy were almost surrounded by our troops on all sides. Although +without realizing how little they could depend upon their hands, they +trusted to their feet; they now placed their main defense in flight, +burning the village and church of Baras—valiant for only such +acts of cowardice. Our men kept at the heels of the enemy, although it +was one of the greatest hardships of this war to have to march so long +through very rough roads amid the inclemencies of heat and rain. The +insurgents pursued the route toward the village of Tamar, whither also +our army proceeded, in order to compel them to give battle, or else to +harass and disturb them by never allowing them opportunity to have any +rest. Our men reached the flat top of a hill, and halted on the summit, +without having any knowledge of the enemy—who were so near that +even their voices could soon be heard. When our men perceived the +enemy, and saw how few they were (for at that time they did not number +two thousand), they began to surround the Sangleys in order to attack +them; and the battle began with such fury that the enemy, in +desperation, came close to the mouths of the Spanish arquebuses. Our +men defended themselves valiantly, at little cost to themselves but +with much loss to the enemy; since, although the battle began with +great risk [to us] on account of their multitude, our weapons were well +plied on both sides [of them]. When the enemy had attacked our position +and would have gained the advantage, Don Rodrigo de Guillestegui +arrived, whom the governor had sent <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb244" href="#pb244" name="pb244">244</a>]</span>with a company of +horsemen and five hundred Indians, sounding the alarm to them through +the rearguard. At the sound of the drums, and when the enemy saw +themselves attacked on both sides, and knew that the rest of our army +(which had been absent) was there, they already used their weapons with +less spirit; and, their hopes of gaining the victory being dashed, they +began to retreat, so as not to give it to our men—but with much +loss of their own—and as they were in a place where the cavalry +could range freely. The damage that they received was much greater +[than what they inflicted], and was sufficient to enable those of their +number who had more prudence to urge more strenuously, from that time +on, negotiations for peace—of which they had begun to talk a few +days before, but with little, if any, effect.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.12" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e2988" class="main">Garrisons are placed in the churches, +and peace is discussed</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">When the governor saw the destruction that the enemy +had wrought in the churches, and that he could not check it because the +army that was fleeing always had the start of the other, he determined +to put the churches in a condition of defense, and accordingly assigned +to each one a number of soldiers who should confront the +Sangleys—so that, since the people of the villages could not +deliver themselves from the enemy’s fury, the temples and the +dwellings of the religious, which were most important, might be saved. +The governor also sent them word, threatening that he would put all the +Sangleys that were left in the country to the sword, if they did any +more damage to the villages or the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb245" +href="#pb245" name="pb245">245</a>]</span>churches, since it was a +token of cowardice to wreak vengeance on him who was not to blame, or +who made no resistance. They replied that they did no harm where they +were not harmed, and that they would leave the villages in peace if the +roads were left free to themselves by which they were intending to pass +to Los Limbones, in order to build champans there to make ready for +[their return to] China. This reply was less haughty than the tone of +their earlier bravado. From that time they did not burn any church, +although they burned the village of Santa Maria and that of Siniloan, +with a visita of Pangil, because the Indians had been stationed there +and many of the Sangleys slain. After this, they continued their march +to Cainta, and the governor in pursuit of them to the post of +Mahayhay—a place through which the enemy must necessarily pass if +they would go to Los Limbones—in order to fight there with the +enemy the battle which was impossible in the mountains which the enemy +had selected for their encampment. Many from the enemy’s camp +came every day to ours asking for mercy, alleging [that they had been +coerced by] violent measures on the part of their leaders in the +revolt. They readily found mercy, and with this and kind treatment they +were sent back to Manila. The opinions of the rest were as vacillating +as their courage, many of them lacking confidence in the governor. +Thinking that they did not deserve pardon for their offences, they +preferred to persist in these obstinately, rather than to yield to the +governor’s mercy and surrender; and although there were embassies +from one side to the other, this intercourse was carried on with little +confidence on either side. On <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb246" +href="#pb246" name="pb246">246</a>]</span>ours, negotiations for peace +were carried on by a father of the Society of Jesus,<a class="noteref" +id="xd19e2996src" href="#xd19e2996" name="xd19e2996src">26</a> who was +a minister to the Sangleys, and General Geronimo Enrriquez, their +alcalde-mayor of the Parián, for whom they had the utmost +affection; on their side, by some of their leaders, with the +mandarin—although not with so much privilege,<a class="noteref" +id="xd19e3002src" href="#xd19e3002" name="xd19e3002src">27</a> on +account of having been created for their purpose—the +lieutenant-commander of the Sangley forces. He was a boastful and +audacious man, who resisted the negotiations for peace, and had with +his own hand killed several men because he was suspicious of their +being concerned therein. But the father of the Society, anxious that +peace should be secured, in order that the shedding of so much blood +might be stopped—especially for the sake of the many Sangleys who +were there more because they trusted others than to carry out their own +purpose—laying aside any consideration of his <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb247" href="#pb247" name="pb247">247</a>]</span>own +life, went many times, at the evident risk of death, to confer with the +mandarin and the leaders, assuring them, on the part of the governor, +of pardon and kind treatment to those who laid down their arms and +surrendered themselves to him. He answered their complaints, the chief +of these being that the governor had commanded that their comrades who +were scattered through the provinces should be slain, when they had +committed no offence. The answer was that the very people in their own +camp who had been caught by our men had revealed that those others were +accomplices in their guilt, and cognizant of the revolt; for they had +confessed that it was general throughout the provinces. He said that +there was therefore no wisdom in leaving some of the Sangleys free +while we were fighting others in the field, since the former would take +up arms against us at the first opportunity; and finally that they +should avail themselves of the present opportunity, as being invited to +make peace, and should not constrain the governor to an extreme +demonstration of his anger, as that would result in the entire +destruction of them all—as they themselves could see by the few +who had been killed on our side, and the thousands that had fallen on +theirs. Persuaded by these arguments, they undertook to hold another +council and give an answer on the following day.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.13" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e3023" class="main">Peace is concluded, and both armies +return to Manila</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">After thorough reflection, while those of our camp +were waiting for the enemy to submit and give up their arms, the latter +saw that the conditions demanded for making peace did not depend on him +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb248" href="#pb248" name= +"pb248">248</a>]</span>whose strength had been broken, but on him who +was able to boast of his advantage and superiority; and how, if the +negotiations for peace arose more from the needs of the case and from +our strength than from mercy and compassion, the governor would have +closed, as it were, the gates of mercy with the determination to +destroy them, if he had not checked his anger, and given to the +religious in whose hands was this affair time for endeavoring to +convert them to a more prudent decision. Finally, they agreed that all +should surrender themselves and give up their weapons. A place was +appointed at a little distance from our camp, between which and theirs +was a river; at its crossing stood our men in two ranks, before whom +the Sangleys passed, laying down the weapons that they carried. As soon +as all of them, some eight thousand in number, had reached their +station, arrangements were made for their return to Manila, the +governor charging the master-of-camp to set out with the two armies. +This was done, and they marched until they arrived in the parade-ground +at Bagumbayan, opposite the city, on the evening of Friday, March. 15. +The governor arrived that same evening, and the two armies encamped +there for the night. At dawn of the following day, the drums sounded +for the march, which was conducted in this order. In the vanguard went +Captain Juan Fiallo with the cavalry, to the sound of trumpets; next +some companies of Pampango infantry, those of the Cagayan Indians, the +Zambal archers, and the Indians who carried javelins and shields in the +battalion. Next came all the Sangley forces, and in the rearguard the +Spanish infantry, with the master-of-camp. The halberdiers of the +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb249" href="#pb249" name= +"pb249">249</a>]</span>governor followed, and in their midst was one on +horseback, who carried as a standard the image of the blessed Christ +from Antipolo, mounted on a staff. Last of all came the governor, +accompanied by his suite, and by many volunteer horsemen who had gone +to the war. In this order they proceeded along the causeway to the +bridge over the river, and across it to Tondo; and there our troops +left the Sangleys inside a stockade which they had built as a +precaution, with soldiers guarding them on all sides. The governor went +thence to his palace by water, and the master-of-camp marched with his +soldiers to the city. The people received them with great joy at seeing +the war ended, as it had caused them so much anxiety and lasted so long +a time—for it began on November 20, 1639, and came to an end on +March 15, 1640.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.14" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e3032" class="main">The slain in both armies; the +enemy’s weapons and mode of warfare; and the damage committed by +them.</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">Those who make the most careful estimate of the deaths +on both sides state that the number of Spaniards who died in the war, +from its beginning to its end, were about forty or forty-five, and of +Indians three hundred; and it was always the main care of the governor +to watch over his men. On the side of the enemy, they make the number +of deaths approximate twenty-two thousand to twenty-four +thousand—including therein those who died in the +provinces.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3036src" href="#xd19e3036" name= +"xd19e3036src">28</a> Thus is made very evident, by the unequal and +disproportionate number [of deaths] on both sides, the <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb250" href="#pb250" name= +"pb250">250</a>]</span>special protection of our Lord over our +army—a fact acknowledged even by the very infidels.</p> +<p>The weapons that the Sangleys collected, besides some few firearms, +were: javelins and Japanese catanas, fastened to poles (and some were +made in Manila), some of these weighing more than an arroba, which will +indicate the force with which they could be used; sickles and +pruning-hooks, also fastened to poles; iron tridents; and bamboos with +sharp points hardened in fire, four or five brazas in length. They also +carried away the iron from the houses and churches that they burned, +and whenever they were left undisturbed in any encampment, they set up +their forges and made weapons, in order that no one might he unprovided +with them. The men were divided into tens, like [the Roman] decurias, +so that the exact number of their men was known; and, of each ten, six +fought, and four were responsible for their food, in order that the +fighting men might be entirely relieved from that work.<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e3046src" href="#xd19e3046" name= +"xd19e3046src">29</a> They did not fight all at one time, but only +three from each decuria, in order that while these were fighting the +others might rest, and thus always they could have men who could enter +the battle in fresh condition. They employed stratagems in +fighting—in the beginning, when they had not so many arms, they +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb251" href="#pb251" name= +"pb251">251</a>]</span>made sham weapons, covering these with cloth, so +that they looked like steel. In their camp near Sanpaloc,<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e3051src" href="#xd19e3051" name= +"xd19e3051src">30</a> in some towers that they built they placed straw +figures of Sangleys, so that our infantry might fire at these and use +up their bullets, and then the Sangleys could, without risk of being +hit, rush to attack our men.</p> +<p>The damages which they committed throughout the period of the +insurrection are very great. They made havoc among the sacred images +and utensils, besides which they burned the village of Calamba and its +church; the village of Taluco,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3056src" +href="#xd19e3056" name="xd19e3056src">31</a> in charge of secular +priests, with a wooden church and a stone clergy-house; houses and +property in Viñan; the house of San Pedro, belonging to the +Society of Jesus; the house and church at Meyhaligue and Santa Cruz; +the village and church of Quiapo, belonging to the Society of Jesus; +many houses in the villages of Tondo and Binondoc; the village of +Sanpaloc, with a house and church of stone belonging to the fathers of +St. Francis; the village of Taytay, with house and church of stone +belonging to the Society of Jesus; the villages of Mahayhay, Santa +Cruz, Antipolo, and Baras, belonging to the Society of Jesus; the +villages and churches of San Mateo and Pasig, belonging to the fathers +of St. Augustine; the villages of Santa Maria and Siniloan, and some +visitas, belonging to the fathers of St. Francis. They also burned +ranches and country houses belonging to [the fathers of] St. Augustine, +the Society of Jesus, Captain Gastelu, General Don Juan Claudio, +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb252" href="#pb252" name= +"pb252">252</a>]</span>Alférez Medrano, General Azaldegui, +Admiral Ezquerra, and Admiral Juan Alonso; besides other stone houses +and property belonging to private persons.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.15" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e3062" class="main">The persons who most distinguished +themselves in our army</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">From the very outset of the war the governor was +active in it, not sparing himself from any of its dangers, which were +very great. If any proof were needed of his energy, valor, executive +ability, and military circumspection, the present emergency would have +furnished it. Distinction was honorably gained by the master-of-camp, +Don Lorenzo de Olaso; he was always the first in dangers—none of +which he shunned, although he experienced several attacks of illness, +and even lay stretched at the foot of a papaw tree—escaping from +them, or being drawn out of them by his brave heart and valiant spirit. +Many personages of Manila in private life displayed their courage, +adding merits to their former ones by their service in the army, and +causing the enemy to recognize their bravery in the skirmishes and +assaults, that they might relate how they had conducted themselves in +these; it is sufficient to mention who they are. The commanding officer +of the artillery, Juan Bautista de Molina, was present in some of the +engagements, and the rest of the time he was directing his artillery in +the city. General Geronimo Enrriquez, lieutenant of the master-of-camp, +and general in the army, having been appointed on New Year’s day +alcalde-in-ordinary, preferred to fight in the campaign rather than to +remain in Manila in the quiet and repose of his house, although +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb253" href="#pb253" name= +"pb253">253</a>]</span>opportunity to do so was given him by so +honorable a title. General Don Juan Claudio de Verastegui, who +fulfilled the obligations that he had inherited by birth and acquired +by military service. Admiral Don Francisco Ezquerra, who, sometimes +accompanying his brother, General Ezquerra, and sometimes following the +army, everywhere gave proof of his valor. Captain Don Rodrigo de +Guillestegui, his deeds making him appear like a veteran soldier, +although he was so young. All the encomenderos and citizens of Manila +also played the part of veterans, either guarding the city by day and +by night, or serving in the camp, being present in various notable +encounters, wherein the cavalry distinguished themselves. The company +of Captain Juan Fiallo, who with his men was the terror of the enemy; +Captain Juan de Montoya, and Alférez Alfonso Gomez. The ranchmen +and mulattoes, as being accustomed to the management of horses and +skilful in hurling javelins, caused the greatest losses to the enemy on +all occasions. The Spanish infantry, with their captains Don Manuel de +Rivera and N. [sic] de Ugalde (who are worthy of the highest praise), +always fulfilled their duties with good results. The Pampango infantry +was not without glory—the archers and shield-bearers from +Pampanga, whose leader besides their captains was father Fray Juan de +Sosa, prior of the convent of Betis, always as thorough a religious as +he was, on occasion, valiant and courageous; they never returned to our +camp without leaving tokens of their presence in that of the enemy. The +Zambal archers, who went under the orders of Fray Antonio de las +Misas—a Recollect religious, and a person who was in all respects +such <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb254" href="#pb254" name= +"pb254">254</a>]</span>as the emergency required—always +endeavored to win a reputation; and if they were previously known by +report, they were now by their deeds. The companies of Cagayans and +Terrenatans, as war was not a new thing to them since they were born +and trained in it, did not hesitate to risk their lives, at the cost of +a great number of enemies whom they left dead behind them. The Tagal +Indians of all this province accompanied their valor with their +loyalty, which was so great that, although their losses had been so +considerable in villages, houses, and possessions, forgetful of all +these, and remembering only the treason plotted, the sacrilege +committed, and the design of the Sangleys to make themselves masters of +the country,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3070src" href="#xd19e3070" +name="xd19e3070src">32</a> these Indians took up arms against them most +of the villages serving in their companies, and by so honorable an act +giving proof of their fidelity toward God, and of their affection for +the Spaniards, tokens also of their loyalty, subjection, and obedience +to the king our lord and his officials.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.2.16" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e3074" class="main">The activities in Manila during the +time of the war, not only in defense of the city, but in prayers</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">In proportion to the anxiety which the war occasioned +was the solicitude that was felt in the city for its protection; no +citizen shunned the performance of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb255" +href="#pb255" name="pb255">255</a>]</span>the duty that was allotted to +him, and all were [in turn] continually serving on the walls. The +direction of the fort<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3080src" href= +"#xd19e3080" name="xd19e3080src">33</a> was in charge of the commander +and castellan, Don Fernando de Ayala; the cavalier [<i>i.e.</i>, tower] +of San Gabriel was in the keeping of General Don Juan de Ezquerra; and +the gate of the Parián, in that of Sargento-mayor Don Pedro +Jara, until he had to take his station and plant artillery against the +enemy at Sanpaloc. At the new gate, Captain Don Gregorio Mujica +commanded; at that of Dilao, Sargento-mayor Palomino—and +afterward Captain Mena of the cavalier, whom they call De Carranza; in +charge of San Pedro, Captain Lorenzo Lopez. Admiral Luis Alonso de Roa +attended to the foundry [for artillery]; and Captain Aumada, to +emergencies [<i lang="es">del inmediato</i>]. Alférez Orgaz was +in charge of the gate of Santa Lucia; and Alférez Bernave +Martinez and Sargento-mayor Don Marcos Zapata of that of Santo Domingo. +But, as the Spaniards were few in number, it was necessary that they +should be aided by the ecclesiastics and the students. The clerics were +placed in charge of a cavalier; the students or collegians of Santo +Tomas were under the orders of the fathers of St. Dominic; those of the +other, San Jose, under the [fathers of the] Society of Jesus. They wore +the clerical garb all the time while the war lasted, with that of the +military. The religious hastened to take arms and defend the walls on +the day of the attack; and, every night when there was cause to suspect +another, they were found at the posts assigned them. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb256" href="#pb256" name="pb256">256</a>]</span></p> +<p>The city was provided with a new moat, which continuing with the old +one by the side of the foundry, extended almost to the sea—a +celebrated work which was completed in a very short time, all due to +the assiduity and personal attention of the master-of-camp of the +artillery. Its commander, General Don Juan Zapata de Molina, gave much +attention to this work; it was greatly aided, and new inventions and +devices for [the use of] fire were furnished, by the solicitude and +experience of Captain Geronimo de Fuentes [Cortes]. There was no one +who did not, on occasion, render all kinds of service. A company of +free negroes<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3098src" href="#xd19e3098" +name="xd19e3098src">34</a> was formed, who were very useful within the +city, being distributed through the cavaliers for the effective +management of the artillery. Duties were assigned to the slaves, but +with discreet caution, on account of rumors which had been current +(although without foundation) that they were making great plans when +they saw the Sangleys in revolt; this was done partly [to give them] +occupation, and to deprive them of any notions of undertaking another +insurrection to the injury of the colony. But as its citizens +recognized that its main defense must come from the Supreme Power, they +did not neglect to raise their hands toward heaven, everywhere offering +continual petitions to our Lord for the fortunate result of the war, +and for the repose and pacification of these islands. In the cathedral +was begun a novenary [<i>i.e.</i>, nine days’ prayer] to the +glorious St. Joseph, all the [religious] communities repairing thither, +each on its own day, to recite solemn <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb257" href="#pb257" name="pb257">257</a>]</span>mass to him. The +fathers of St. Dominic, at the request of the city, celebrated another +mass to our Lady of the Rosary, all the religious orders also going +thither to say mass before her image. On the last day, [the image of] +the glorious patriarch St. Francis, who so loved this city, was carried +in procession to the cathedral, with supplication for favors through +his agency—which have been received heretofore, as is +acknowledged, in the first insurrection; and finally a procession was +made in honor of the immaculate conception of the Virgin, and other +prayers were offered.</p> +<p>[The following additional points regarding the Chinese insurrection +are taken from a pamphlet entitled <i lang="es">Relacion verdadera del +levantamiento de los Sangleyes</i> (<i>i.e.</i>, <i>True relation of +the Sangley insurrection</i>), which was printed in Madrid, by Catalina +de Barrio y Angulo, in 1642 (our transcript of the same having been +made from the original existing in <span lang="es">Biblioteca y Museo +de Ultramar</span>, Madrid): “Calamba is twelve leguas from +Manila. The Chinese corresponded with a Chinese pirate named Yquan +Sanglus; it was arranged that he should come to aid them on Christmas +Eve, 1639 (the day set for the treason), and to capture the galleons +from New Spain. There were 35,000 licensed Sangleys in Manila and its +vicinity, besides 10,000 more in remote provinces. In Manila at this +time there were thirty foot-soldiers, thirty horsemen, fifty Japanese, +and seventy Siyaos. The value of the goods destroyed in the +Parián was 5,000,000 pesos; and the houses (built of molave +wood), with the church and the stone houses, all together were worth +2,000,000. Twenty champans brought to Mariveles the Sangleys from +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb258" href="#pb258" name= +"pb258">258</a>]</span>neighboring provinces, to join the Manila +insurgents; but a Spanish and Pampango force went out against than, who +sank eleven of the champans and killed six hundred and fifty men. Among +the troops levied by the governor were a company of Japanese, and two +of Sangley mestizos. Chinese prisoners confessed that their general had +offered, to each Sangley who should bring in a Spanish head, a large +reward, including a Spanish woman to be his wife. A body of religious +from all the orders, aided by some Indians and ten soldiers, undertook +to defend the passage across the river, and killed many of the enemy. +On February 24, 1640, the starving Sangleys surrendered, to the number +of 7,793.”] <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb259" href="#pb259" +name="pb259">259</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2725" href="#xd19e2725src" name="xd19e2725">1</a></span> In +passing through Mexico Señor Corcuera found so much cloth from +this [Chinese] commerce stored in the warehouses that, in consideration +for the interests of the merchants, he thought it best not to send a +ship [to Acapulco] that year; as a result, in this year of 1638 the +Chinese found less silver [in the Philippines] than their business +required. It also contributed [to their discontent] that, since the +royal treasury was unable to meet the great expenses of so many armed +fleets and wars, the contributions [levied] on the Chinese were greater +and more exacting—not only in actual money, but in other +necessary supplies.” (La Concepción, <i lang="es">Hist. +Philipinas</i>, v, p. 429).</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2731" href="#xd19e2731src" name="xd19e2731">2</a></span> Diaz +states (<i lang="es">Conquistas</i>, p. 403) that besides the Chinese +of the Parián, who were chiefly traders, there were at the time +of this revolt more than 20,000 others scattered through the islands, +who were occupied in tilling the soil, and that of these more than +6,000 were at work on the rich lands of Calamba. La Concepción +says (<i lang="la">ut supra</i>) that there were 33,000 Chinese living +in the islands—too large a number for safety, after the warning +furnished by the insurrection of 1604.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2746" href="#xd19e2746src" name="xd19e2746">3</a></span> This was +Luis Arias de Mora, an advocate belonging to the Manila Audiencia; +according to Diaz (p. 404) he was even more avaricious and extortionate +than his predecessors in the alcaldía of La Lacuna, and so +oppressed those Chinese that in desperation they decided, to kill +him—which they did with much and barbarous cruelty.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2756" href="#xd19e2756src" name="xd19e2756">4</a></span> Diaz +says (p. 404) that the Jesuit Villamayor, who accompanied the +Spaniards, tried to persuade Aduna not to pursue the Chinese; but the +captain refused to listen to him, and went on to his death.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2775" href="#xd19e2775src" name="xd19e2775">5</a></span> The +names in brackets are obtained from Diaz (p. 406); and some names +occurring later in this document are similarly filled out, from the +same source.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2779" href="#xd19e2779src" name="xd19e2779">6</a></span> Diaz +states (p. 406) that the Augustinian friars of Comintan (the ancient +name of Batangas province) after this battle assembled a large troop of +Indians, and with them scoured the surrounding country, killing the +scattered Sangley fugitives.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2788" href="#xd19e2788src" name="xd19e2788">7</a></span> A visita +of the Augustinian mission station at Pásig.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2797" href="#xd19e2797src" name="xd19e2797">8</a></span> +According to Diaz’s account (p. 408), the Sangleys of Santa Cruz +attempted to seize Corcuera’s person; but he escaped their hands, +ordered the village to be set afire, and then attacked the Chinese, who +numbered some 6,000 men. To check their advance, a detachment of +Spaniards was sent to a certain spot with a troop of Moros, +“aimed with campilans, who had come with the ambassador from +Sanguyl.” Olaso was soon recalled to Manila, leaving Santa Cruz +defenseless—an imprudent step, which resulted in loss, +“since that post was most necessary and convenient for guarding +the river and the Parián.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2800" href="#xd19e2800src" name="xd19e2800">9</a></span> Diaz (p. +409) makes this twenty-three, besides a Japanese priest who accompanied +and encouraged his countrymen.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2806" href="#xd19e2806src" name="xd19e2806">10</a></span> Diaz +(p. 408) says that the friars at Tondo gathered the natives within the +convent, “which, as it was very strong and spacious, was capable +of being a sufficient fortification for 6,000 Indians.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2809" href="#xd19e2809src" name="xd19e2809">11</a></span> +“In Binondoc father Fray Francisco de Herrera was fortified, with +the Sangley mestizos, and kept within the walls more than 160 Christian +Sangleys; the governor commanded that these should be taken from that +place, because they were continually making signs and writing notes [to +their countrymen?], and they were conveyed to Manila, to the public +prison, in order to make sure of them.” (Diaz, p. 413.)</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2826" href="#xd19e2826src" name="xd19e2826">12</a></span> Diaz +states (p. 412) that the governor issued this command, which was +executed by one of the auditors of the Audiencia and the two alcaldes +of the city; “they killed a great many Chinese, although there +were many whom the religious and the citizens concealed.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2831" href="#xd19e2831src" name="xd19e2831">13</a></span> +“By the fire were destroyed more than 3,000 pesos of rents from +the municipal property of the city, and more than 80,000 pesos of those +belonging to private persons, for the houses in which the Sangleys +lived; the riches lost in the property of the Sangleys were immense, +because the looting of these could not be enjoyed on account of the +fire, and because the [military] authorities would not allow the +Spaniards to be diverted from their attention to the defense of the +city.” (Diaz, p. 412).</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2835" href="#xd19e2835src" name="xd19e2835">14</a></span> Diaz +says that the church was burned; but this probably refers to its +woodwork only.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2845" href="#xd19e2845src" name="xd19e2845">15</a></span> +“On December 5 orders were despatched to the provinces to put to +death all the Sangleys in them—although the opinions of the +jurists [regarding this step] differed.” (Diaz, p. 412).</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2852" href="#xd19e2852src" name="xd19e2852">16</a></span> +“They burned the magazines, where there were large quantities of +the supplies necessary for the equipment of the galleons” (Diaz, +p. 413).</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2858" href="#xd19e2858src" name="xd19e2858">17</a></span> See p. +156 and note 31, <i>ante</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2866" href="#xd19e2866src" name="xd19e2866">18</a></span> +Diaz’s figures are somewhat different, and more extensive (p. +413). “In Cavite as many as 1,100 were slain, and more than 600 +were seized. In Pampanga, where Santiago Gastelu was alcalde-mayor, few +escaped; for the said alcalde exercised such care and so vigilant guard +that as soon as the order arrived he caused it to be executed in all +places at the same time, so unexpectedly that he gave them no +opportunity to take the defensive; accordingly he beheaded them all, +1,800 in number, including infidels and those baptised. In the province +of Bulacan, where there were more Sangleys, the slain did not exceed +500; for as they were farm laborers, and were scattered, they went +away, deserting their houses, and joined the rebels, without Captain +Juan Diaz, the alcalde-mayor of that province, being able to hinder +them.... In the province of Tondo, as many as 300 were beheaded, +because, as the insurrection was going on therein, only those were put +to death who could not easily join the rebels. In the province of Bay +were beheaded 200, of those who had been sheltered in the convents, and +of those who were seized as accomplices of the uprising in Calamba. In +the province of Taal they slew others.... In Pangasinan they beheaded +500 Sangleys, through the energy of the alcalde-mayor, Captain Don +Fernando Suarez Deza; and in that of Ilocos, which was governed by +Sargento-mayor Pedro de Tursis, as many as 100 were slain. The same was +done in the other provinces, by which the forces of the enemy were +diminished, and the revolution checked.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2876" href="#xd19e2876src" name="xd19e2876">19</a></span> +“The leaders in these sacrilegious acts were the Christian +Sangleys, who showed that they were renegades from the faith which they +had pretended to profess<span class="corr" id="xd19e2878" title= +"Not in source">.</span>” (Diaz, p. 412).</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2886" href="#xd19e2886src" name="xd19e2886">20</a></span> The +bracketed words are conjectural, to replace some that are illegible or +worn in the original MS.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2889" href="#xd19e2889src" name="xd19e2889">21</a></span> +“On December 7 Captain Santiago Gastelu arrived from Pampanga +with a large reënforcement of men, and in his company was father +Fray Juan de Sosa, a religious of our father St. Augustine, and +minister of the village of Porac, who came with 800 Zambal archers +whose leader he was in all the fights that occurred, ... urging on the +Pampangos, who were a terror to the enemy; a thousand of them were +arquebusiers, and the [above] 800 were archers.” (Diaz, p. +415.)</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2899" href="#xd19e2899src" name="xd19e2899">22</a></span> Some of +these are described by Diaz, whose account throughout is more full and +detailed.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2909" href="#xd19e2909src" name="xd19e2909">23</a></span> +“On the way, our people heard how the Aetas from the hills had +gone out to lie in ambush against the Sangleys, and had done them much +damage; for in one place seven Aetas, naked and armed with some bamboo +darts, had rushed in among more than 6,000 Sangleys—of whom they +slew seventy, the Aeta band losing only one of their seven +men<span class="corr" id="xd19e2911" title= +"Not in source">.</span>” (Diaz, p. 418).</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2916" href="#xd19e2916src" name="xd19e2916">24</a></span> Diaz +(p. 418) gives the main credit for this achievement to the Augustinian +friar Juan de Sosa, who offered to dislodge the Chinese from their camp +with his Indian archers—the Spanish troops seconding the attack +of the Indians.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2923" href="#xd19e2923src" name="xd19e2923">25</a></span> +“Cogon (<i>Saccharum koenigii</i>): a rapidly growing plant +reaching three meters (about 10 ft.) in height, and forming a tangled +mass only penetrable by fire or knife. The areas are burned over during +the dry season, the young shoots being cut for cattle fodder when 18 +inches high. Where nipa does not grow cogon is used for +thatching.” (<i>U. S. Gazetteer of Philippines</i>, p. 71.) E. D. +Merrill’s <i>Dictionary of Plant Names</i> (Manila, 1903), p. 52, +gives the botanical name as <i>Imperata arundinacea</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2996" href="#xd19e2996src" name="xd19e2996">26</a></span> This +was Onofre Esbry (Esvri—incorrectly made Esbín by +Diaz’s editor); he was a native of Tortosa, and entered the +Jesuit order at the age of fifteen. At the time of this insurrection, +Esbry was but twenty eight years old. In 1647, while sailing to Macao, +he was slain by Chinese pirates, near Sanchon Island. See Murillo +Velarde’s <i>Hist. Philipinas</i>, fol. 108 verso, and 154 +verso.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3002" href="#xd19e3002src" name="xd19e3002">27</a></span> The +statement in this sentence is not very clearly expressed; but the +apparent meaning is that the Chinese commander was not officially +entitled to the designation of “mandarin,” which had been +conferred upon him by the insurgents without due right to make such +appointment. S. Wells Williams says (<i>Middle Kingdom</i>, i, p. 326): +“The word <i>mandarin</i>, derived from the Portuguese +<i>mandar</i>, to command, and indiscriminately applied by foreigners +to every grade from a premier to a tide-waiter; it is not needed in +English as a general term for officers, and ought to be disused, +moreover, from its tendency to convey the impression that they are in +some way unlike their compeers elsewhere.” See his account of the +Chinese government, general, provincial, and local, and the classes of +the Chinese people (pp. 322–352); also Winterbotham’s +description of the “mandarins of arms,” or military +officers, in his <i>Chinese Empire</i>, ii, pp. 8–10. Cf. note on +civil mandarins, in <span class="sc">VOL. XIX</span> of this series, p. +44.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3036" href="#xd19e3036src" name="xd19e3036">28</a></span> +“For more than six months, it was impossible to drink the water +in the rivers, they were so corrupted by the dead bodies; nor did the +people eat fish in a circuit of many leguas, since all these were +fattened on human flesh<span class="corr" id="xd19e3038" title= +"Not in source">.</span>” (Diaz, p. 427).</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3046" href="#xd19e3046src" name="xd19e3046">29</a></span> +“Every day those people knew what their losses were, through the +regular plan that they followed. This was as follows: every ten men +formed a mess; of these, two went out to procure food, six to fight, +and two to guard and attend to their lodging. Every ten troops of these +were under a captain; and a field officer commanded ten captains, with +a thousand men each. Each soldier had a chapa (a bronze coin that is +current among them), and at night each one handed this to his captain; +then all these were counted, and the soldiers knew, by the number of +coins that were lacking, how many men they lost each day.” (Diaz, +p. 423.)</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3051" href="#xd19e3051src" name="xd19e3051">30</a></span> In the +MS. here and elsewhere, “S. Paloc”—evidently supposed +by the transcriber to be the name of some saint.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3056" href="#xd19e3056src" name="xd19e3056">31</a></span> In +Diaz, “Tabuco, a visita of Quingua.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3070" href="#xd19e3070src" name="xd19e3070">32</a></span> Diaz +relates (p. 414) the plots concocted by the Sangleys for this +insurrection, which was set for Christmas; they were to carry gifts of +fowls on that day, as was their custom, to the Spaniards of their +acquaintance; and were to perform a comedy near one of the gates, to +divert the attention of the citizens from any suspicion of their +designs. Then at an appointed hour they were to kill all the Spaniards, +and take possession of the city. This was frustrated by the premature +rising at Calamba; sixty of those concerned therein were slain by their +own countrymen, because they had not waited till the appointed day.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3080" href="#xd19e3080src" name="xd19e3080">33</a></span> In the +MS., <i lang="es">guerra</i>; probably a transcriber’s conjecture +for a word poorly written, since the context requires <i lang= +"es">fuerza</i>—referring to the fort of Santiago at the mouth of +Pásig River.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3098" href="#xd19e3098src" name="xd19e3098">34</a></span> +According to Diaz (p. 414), two negroes (slaves), who under torture +confessed that they had aided the insurgents, were hanged.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.3" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e3125" class="main">Ecclesiastical and Augustinian Affairs, +1630–40</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">[In <span class="sc">VOLS. XXIII</span> and +<span class="sc">XXIV</span> of this series was presented the history +of the Augustinian order to the year 1630, as written by Fray Juan de +Medina. Continuing that history to 1640, we give (mainly in synopsis) +the most important matter on this subject in the <i lang= +"es">Conquistas</i> of Fray Casimiro Diaz (Valladolid, 1890), book ii, +pp. 267–444. As usual, the parts synopsized or merely referred to +are printed within brackets; these will be readily distinguished from +words or phrases supplied in translation, which are printed in the same +manner.]</p> +<div id="doc1640.3.vi" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e3139" class="main">Chapter VI</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">After the death of the lord archbishop Don Fray Miguel +García Serrano, the ecclesiastical cabildo of Manila attempted +to interfere in the government of the vacant see—alleging for +this purpose that the brief of Paul V, and the royal decree, had been +obtained by underhand means and misrepresentations. The bishop of +Cagayán, Don Fray Hernando Guerrero, also brought forward his +claim to the vacant post; accordingly, both parties presented the +arguments in behalf of their respective claims. The decision thereon +was deferred for some time, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb260" href= +"#pb260" name="pb260">260</a>]</span>the cabildo always resisting Don +Fray Hernando Guerrero’s efforts to take possession of the see, +and denying not only the claim which he preferred, but also the right +which the bishop of Cebú, Don Fray Pedro de Arce, +had—which he, moreover, had yielded to Señor Guerrero. +This contest lasted two years in the royal Audiencia; then, the +auditors having declared that the government of the archbishopric +belonged to Don Fray Pedro de Arce, the cabildo appealed to the Council +of the Indias. Nevertheless, the royal Audiencia and the governor sent +for the bishop of Cebú, who reached Manila on the twenty-second +of January, 1630. The cabildo having been commanded, by a royal decree, +to hold a session, Don Fray Pedro de Arce presented himself at that +meeting, and made the following proposition: “Sirs, it is well +understood, as you will satisfy yourselves, that my coming to this +city, and just now to this cabildo, is quite contrary to my own +inclinations; for I desire and love a quiet life, and I hold very dear +the sheep of my bishopric. The example [of this that I have given] is +very evident; for Fray Hernando Guerrero having gone to my diocese so +that I might confer upon him the orders for which he had been +consecrated, I also transferred to him the right to the government of +this archbishopric that I hold in virtue of a brief from his Holiness +Paul V, issued by him on January 7, 1612. But the claim of the said +bishop of Nueva Segovia was not allowed, for reasons which you know. +After that, Don Juan Niño de Tavora, governor and +captain-general of these islands, wrote to me so urgently in the name +of the gentlemen of the royal Audiencia, sending me his Majesty’s +royal decree, and laying a <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb261" href= +"#pb261" name="pb261">261</a>]</span>burden upon my conscience if I did +not accept this duty, that I could not refuse it; accordingly, I come +to this city, certainly against my own wishes, and to the injury of my +health in my advanced years. But, sirs, it has seemed to me expedient +to come, as a measure of peace and love, to expostulate with you, and +ask that you carefully consider all these motives and reasons. I ask +that, without delay or opposition, you at once admit me to the +government of this archbishopric, to which his Holiness and his Majesty +call me, considering that my earnest desire and intention is to strive +to labor in the service of both Majesties, and to promote, for +yourselves and all this commonwealth, the welfare and harmony which +should prevail, and which are right.” Thus spoke Don Fray Pedro +de Arce; and answer was made to him by the dean, Don Miguel Garcetas, +in behalf of the cabildo. He said that they all fully appreciated the +bishop’s kindness, and that all were entirely satisfied of his +good intentions in this matter, and of his great virtue, prudence, and +learning; but that, in order that they might proceed in this matter +with all harmony, certainty, and deliberation, it was necessary that +all the members of the cabildo should assemble (for some were not +present at this meeting). The dean added that in all their acts they +would follow the rulings of the sacred canons and the constitutions of +the cathedral church, and that his Lordship might be certain that all +of them confessed themselves to be his affectionate children, and +desired to render him service; and that they entreated him to show them +the bulls and other documents that he possessed, in order that all +these might be duly fulfilled. To this the bishop replied that the +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb262" href="#pb262" name= +"pb262">262</a>]</span>bulls were already before the cabildo, and by +virtue of them he had been admitted to the government of the +archbishopric by the death of Don Diego Vazquez Mercado; accordingly, +they must settle the matter without delay because, if they did this +amicably, they would find in him a father and protector; but if not, he +would enforce his claims by the severe measures which he could by law +employ.</p> +<p>The cabildo met on the twenty-ninth of January, and decided that, +after having consulted learned persons, they were of opinion that the +cabildo ought not to surrender the government; but that, on account of +the many and serious difficulties [that might arise from this], they +would yield under protest. Accordingly, they received Don Fray Pedro de +Arce on the same day as ruler of the vacant see, although the cabildo +took much umbrage at it; and from this affair originated continual +strife and dissensions. At the outset, they denied to Don Fray Pedro +the seat in the choir, the cabildo asserting that the bishop was not +competent to possess it because he was not a proprietary bishop; and +that, although he had been consecrated, it was in another diocese, and +one suffragan to that of Manila. The prudent bishop felt this slight +keenly, for they had given him this seat when he first administered the +vacant see; but finally they gave him the seat (to which he was legally +entitled), as they had done before. Don Fray Pedro de Arce ruled with +the prudence and uprightness which in him were so eminent, which +together with his virtue and piety, made him a most accomplished +prelate, and truly a father to all. In the course of his government he +made enactments very important for the conduct of the church; in +especial, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb263" href="#pb263" name= +"pb263">263</a>]</span>he imposed the cuadrante<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3153src" href="#xd19e3153" name="xd19e3153src">1</a> for the +choir in the cathedral of Manila with great exactness—aiding the +prebends with great readiness in their choir, the subsidy that they +receive being still so small that some of them have hardly enough for +their support.</p> +<p>[The rest of this chapter is mainly occupied with secular +occurrences, which we omit here because they have already been fully +related in other documents for that time—the fruitless expedition +against Jolo under Lorenzo de Olaso, shipbuilding in Cambodia +attempted, the despatch of an envoy to India to secure Portuguese +coöperation against the Dutch, the coming of the royal visitor Don +Francisco de Rojas, and the death of the governor Niño de +Tavora—and the relation of various miraculous cures and +deliverances performed through the Santo Niño (or image of +Christ) in the church of Cebú. The following paragraph states +the proceedings at the meeting of the Augustinian provincial chapter of +1632:]</p> +<p>The year 1632 having arrived, the provincial chapter was convened in +the convent at Manila, on the first day of May; the president at this +session was father Fray Juan de Tapia, and the election [for +provincial] resulted, with the general consent of the entire province, +in the choice of father Fray Gerónimo de Medrano—a very +courteous and discreet religious, who governed this province well. As +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb264" href="#pb264" name= +"pb264">264</a>]</span>definitors were chosen the fathers Fray Juan de +Montemayor, Fray Francisco de Mercado, Fray Luis Ronquillo, and Fray +Juan Ramirez; and as visitors, the fathers Fray Alonso Carbajal and +Fray Antonio de Porras. They made regulations very useful for the +proper government of the province; and as its procurator for +España was appointed father Fray Diego de Ordás, at that +time prior of the convent of Santo Niño at Cebú. He made +the journey that year, and, having performed it very successfully, +returned [to the islands] in the year 1635.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.3.vii" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e3166" class="main">Chapters VII–XIV</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">[These chapters are occupied with accounts of the +persecutions in Japan, and the biographies of Augustinian priests who +were martyred therein.]</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.3.xv" class="div2 section"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h3 id="xd19e3171" class="main">Chapters XV–XXXIV</h3> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">[These chapters relate the coming of Corcuera as +governor, his controversies with the bishop, and the exile of the +latter; biographical accounts of various noted Augustinian +missionaries, some of whom were martyrs in Japan; and the final +incidents of the persecution in that country, so far as Diaz could +learn of them, up to about 1715. Nearly all of this matter is either a +repetition of what we have already presented in previous volumes, or +irrelevant to our purpose; but we select occasional passages which +properly belong to the history of the islands, especially its +ecclesiastical aspects. In our <span class="sc">VOL. XXV</span> may be +found extracts from Diaz’s work regarding the contest between +Corcuera and Guerrero (chapters xv–xviii). Chapter xix is devoted +to the opinion of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb265" href="#pb265" +name="pb265">265</a>]</span>“a learned auditor of Manila” +on the banishment of the archbishop; the editor of Diaz, Father Tirso +López, prints this opinion, in order to reproduce all of +Diaz’s history, which is his only reason for not suppressing +“this conceited, most tedious, and ill-digested document.” +Chapters xx and xxi are devoted to the biographies of two Augustinian +missionaries, Fray Alonso de Mentrida and Fray Juan de Medina +respectively. The former excelled as a linguist.]</p> +<p>[Pp. 353–355:] He composed a curious and ingenious grammar +[<i lang="es">arte</i>], by which the main difficulty in [learning] +those languages was surmounted in a short time. He also composed a +copious vocabulary of the languages of the two islands, Panay and +Cebú, which are quite distinct. In the mountain region of +Ogtón a very harsh language is spoken, which they call Halaya; +and along the coast another, more polished and elegant, which is called +Hileygueina. This work [<i>i.e.</i>, the vocabulary] cost him much +labor, and is very useful to the ministers. He left it complete, and +after his death it was published by father Fray Martín +Claver.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3188src" href="#xd19e3188" name= +"xd19e3188src">2</a> He [Fray Alonso] composed a brief catechism, +accurately written, in the Bisayan language, which is very useful for +instructing those natives in the mysteries of our holy faith; this was +printed twice, in order that there <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb266" +href="#pb266" name="pb266">266</a>]</span>might be an abundant supply +of a work so important for the welfare of souls. He also published the +ritual by which the holy sacraments are usually administered in these +islands; and this work is deserving of esteem, since one finds therein +a compilation of what is strictly necessary for the more safe +administration [of the sacraments]. It is so highly regarded by the +other religious orders that, although two large editions of the work +have been printed, it is now necessary to issue a third, since all are +trying to obtain this book.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3202src" href= +"#xd19e3202" name="xd19e3202src">3</a></p> +<p>Father Fray Alonso de Mentrida spent many years in the provinces of +Ogtón and Panay,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3219src" href= +"#xd19e3219" name="xd19e3219src">4</a> where he <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb267" href="#pb267" name= +"pb267">267</a>]</span>gathered much fruit in the conversion of those +souls, especially in the district of Ogtón—which in those +times was, in the greater part of its mountain region, shrouded in the +darkness of error. There the devil was well entrenched in those rugged +mountains, having solidly established his kingdom and worship among +those simple natives—who, influenced more by fear than by any +other consideration, prostrated themselves before that demon, and gave +him their worship and adoration. His crafty designs were successful +among them through the agency of many priests and priestesses (in the +Bisayan idiom called <i>babaylanes</i>), who, being especially assisted +by that infernal spirit, concoct certain frauds and delusions, with +which they deceive the simple Bisayans. These priests, moreover, secure +much advantage from this mode of life, since by it they make their +living, and are feared and looked up to; for most of them have a +compact with the devil, by means of which they wreak such evil as they +can on those persons on whom they try to be revenged, or whom they wish +to injure because some one else has done them harm. Against this +infernal horde father Fray Alonso de Mentrida waged continual battle, +roaming through those mountains on foot, and accompanied only by one +servant, a very good Christian, who aided him much in his work. This +man died at a great age (more than one hundred and ten years); he lived +in the village of Guimbal, of which he was a native, and his name was +Vilango. They journeyed so destitute of human aid that they carried in +their pouches only some roots, cooked, which in that country are very +common, called camotes, with a little rice, eaten cold and half-cooked. +This sort of abstinence was so <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb268" +href="#pb268" name="pb268">268</a>]</span>continual in Father Mentrida +that he ate nothing else than the vegetables and pottages of the +country, with a little fish when he wished to appease his more pressing +hunger; and it is not known that he ate meat until, in his old age and +in several attacks of illness that he suffered, the duty of obedience +compelled him to moderate so austere a diet. In such a mode of life +this apostolic man wandered through those mountains, preaching to the +infidels the word of God, and persuading them to leave their straggling +hamlets [<i>rancherías</i>] and settle in some small villages, +that he might more advantageously call them together and instruct them, +separating them from their errors and blindness. With great benefit to +their souls the simple mountaineers of Ogtón received the gospel +preaching, as they all are gentle and well-inclined people; the +father’s only opponents were those ministers of Satan and +children of perdition, the babaylanes, who with their lies sowed their +diabolical tares upon the grain of heaven, and easily smothered the +seed that took root in piously-inclined hearts. Those priests artfully +suggested to the natives the anger which their divatas (thus they name +the spirits to whom they give adoration) felt against them, and on +their own part uttered threats against them, menacing either their +lives or their poor property—which is a scanty grain-field of +rice; and by these shameless acts they terrorized the people, and +caused some of them to lose their solicitude for attending church. +Father Fray Alonso de Mentrida spared neither hardship nor effort to +bring back to the fold of the Church those whom these malicious +ministers had, through their crafty methods, caused to backslide; and +he held with those priests extraordinary <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb269" href="#pb269" name="pb269">269</a>]</span>discussions, from +which, in place of gaining good results, he obtained only their plots. +With these they tried, on several occasions, to deprive him of life by +their arts and witchcraft; but the Lord, who watched over His servant, +did not permit them to succeed in their damnable attempts, and, for the +greater humiliation of the common enemy [<i>i.e.</i>, the devil], held +back the father from the greatest dangers.</p> +<p>During the time when this apostolic minister was preaching in the +mountains of Ogtón, there were visible apparitions of the devil, +standing upon a rock and teaching superstitions and giving laws to a +great multitude of Indians, who, deceived by him, followed him. +Moreover, in those mountains are many demons, who appear to the natives +in horrible forms—as hideous savages, covered with bristles, +having very long claws, with terrifying eyes and features, who attack +and maltreat those whom they encounter. These being are called by the +Indians <i>Banuanhon</i>, who are equivalent to the satyrs and fauns of +ancient times. Even at this day these hideous monsters are wont to +appear to the Indians, some of whom remain in a demented condition for +months from the mere sight of them; others go away with these demons, +and are lost for a long time, and then will return in a terrified and +fainting condition, few of them failing to die soon afterward. I would +have much to tell and relate if I should stop to mention what has +occurred with such monsters, who have been seen not only in the +mountains of Ogtón and Panay, but very frequently in the +province of Taal. They are called in the Tagal language +<i>Tigbalang</i>; and many persons who have seen them have described to +me, in the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb270" href="#pb270" name= +"pb270">270</a>]</span>same terms, the aspect of the monster. They say +that he has a face like a cat’s, with a head that is flattened +above, not round, with thick beard, and covered with long hair; his +legs are so long that, when he squats on his buttocks, his knees stand +a vara above his head; and he is so swift in running that there is no +quadruped that can be compared with him.</p> +<p>[Diaz proceeds to relate several incidents connected with these +demons, and the difficulties encountered by Mentrida, caused by the +hostility of the native priests—who much resembled the +“medicine-men” of the North American Indians; and adds (p. +356): “In these holy occupations he passed much time in that +mountain wilderness, as his companion Vilango has told me; and +gradually those hearts, hard as diamonds, were softened, and they were +converted to our holy faith. He proceeded to gather those people into +villages, founding those of Agra (with the advocacy of St. Nicholas), +Baong, Santiago, Limao, San Pedro, Taytay, and Catingpan—which +remain to this very day, and in my time preserve the memory of this +apostolic man, to whom, as they recognize, they owe the knowledge of +the truth.” Mentrida remained in the missions until 1618, when he +was summoned to Manila, to become prior of the Augustinian convent +there; and in 1623, he was elected provincial. The rest of his life he +was afflicted by age and broken health; and he died at Manila, March +22, 1637.]</p> +<p>[Diaz sketches the life and labors of Juan de Medina (whose history +of his order in Filipinas we publish in <span class="sc">VOLS. +XXIII</span> and <span class="sc">XXIV</span> of this series), giving +the following summary of his achievements: “It is not easy to +relate in full the great labors of this <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb271" href="#pb271" name="pb271">271</a>]</span>religious in the +conversion of the Indians in the province of Ogtón, when they +all, on account of the coming of the Dutch the first time to the point +of Iloilo, took refuge in the mountains, forsaking their villages, so +that it was difficult for several years to bring them back to a +sedentary life. During that time, this religious traveled, carrying +little more than his staff, through all the mountains of Ogtón, +preaching to the people that they might be converted, and maintaining a +continual battle with the devil—who had, through the agency of +his ministers the babaylanes, persuaded the people that the Spaniards +could not deliver them from the Dutch. During that time he suffered +many dangers through the plots of those infernal ministers, who at +various times tried to take his life—divine Providence delivering +him from them all, for the greater gain of those Christian communities. +Amid those dangers did this religious convert most of the peoples in +Ogtón, Xaro, Baong, and Pasig. In all places where this minister +went, he left an especial reputation for his virtue and apostolic +teaching. He visited some nine times the entire province of Bisayas, +and usually held the office of vicar-provincial—obedience +obliging him to accept it, on account of the great importance of his +direction for the greater glory of the order.” After twenty years +spent in these labors, he obtained permission (1631) to go to Spain, +and miraculously escaped from the wreck of his ship in the very port of +Cavite. He then returned to the Visayan missions, but again set out for +Spain in 1635; while crossing the Pacific, he was carried away by +disease. Chapters xxii–xxv are devoted to the persecutions and +martyrdoms of Christians in Japan; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb272" +href="#pb272" name="pb272">272</a>]</span>chapter xxvi treats mainly of +the controversy within the Augustinian order regarding the +“alternation” of offices between the friars sent from Spain +and those who had taken the habit in the Indias (already related in our +<span class="sc">VOL. XXVIII</span>). The following paragraphs are of +interest here.]</p> +<p>[Pp. 386–388:] After the father provincial Fray Juan Ramirez +(who was one of the best superiors of that time) had governed this +province very successfully and judiciously, the time arrived for the +provincial chapter; it was held at the convent of San Pablo in Manila, +on the twenty-fourth of the month of April, 1638. Father Fray +Jerónimo Cornuetano, the general of the entire order, presided +over the meeting; and it resulted in the election, by unanimous +consent, of father Fray Martín Errasti, a religious who was much +endeared to all the rest by his many fine qualities. The definitors +elected were fathers Fray Juan de Trexo, Fray Jerónimo Venasque, +Fray Francisco de Madrid, and Fray Francisco de Villalón; and +the visitors, father Fray Juan de Boan and Fray Jerónimo de +Paredes—all being religious of recognized abilities, and men to +whose care the interests of this province could be confided. It was +decided to send to España a procurator to conduct a party of +religious to this province, although the choice of one was not effected +until the following year; this fell upon father Fray Pedro de Quesada, +prior of the convent of Bulacán, who had recently arrived, +driven back by stress of weather, from [a voyage to] the kingdom of +Japón—whither he went with some religious of St. Dominic; +but stormy head-winds obliged them to return to Manila, <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb273" href="#pb273" name= +"pb273">273</a>]</span>divine Providence keeping them in reserve for +another ministry.</p> +<p>The Moro pirates of Mindanao and Joló did not cease to infest +the Pintados Islands every year with their armed fleets—capturing +the natives, burning the villages, plundering the churches of the +consecrated vessels, and then destroying those temples by fire. So far +had gone the boldness of Corralat—who came to those islands, +subjected to his anger, without the Spaniards displaying any purpose to +defend them, or going out to hinder those injuries—that he soon +attributed this negligence to cowardice, and to the fear of him which +the Spaniards felt. This so increased his boldness that his little +fleets were daring enough to approach even the bay of Manila. They +experienced no resistance, save only in the province of +Caraga—[whose natives are] a warlike people—and this was +due to the valor of its alcalde-mayor, Captain Don Francisco de Atienza +y Bañes, a native of Toledo; and to the great courage of a +discalced Augustinian religious named Fray Agustín de San Pedro, +who was very celebrated in those times, and feared by the pirates, [who +was known] by the name of “Father Captain” [<i lang= +"es">Padre Capitán</i>].<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3280src" +href="#xd19e3280" name="xd19e3280src">5</a> The exploits of this +religious in defending <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb274" href= +"#pb274" name="pb274">274</a>]</span>the villages where he was a +minister of religious instruction, and in going out to find the enemy +in their own country, would be material for many chapters of history. +He was a religious of great virtue, and of zeal for the welfare of +souls; and, besides this, God had given him extraordinary courage, and +a genius worthy of Scipio and Hannibal. Accordingly, seeing that those +who ought to conduct military operations remained with folded hands, +without going out to the defense of those harassed peoples, he +determined to do so himself. On one occasion he went out from Butuan, +where he was prior, with some Spanish soldiers, and men whom he +gathered in Caraga; and with them he faced and put to flight an armed +fleet of Corralat. When Don Francisco de Atienza saw what aid he had in +the valor and experience of father Fray Agustín, the two laid +their plans to perform an exploit that should do them credit; and, +manning some caracoas with the best soldiers from the presidio of +Tanda, both Spaniards and Caragas, and providing two boats which could +be taken to pieces and carried overland in sections, and afterward be +again put together and framed, Don Francisco, accompanied by father +Fray Agustín, took the route to the lake of <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb275" href="#pb275" name= +"pb275">275</a>]</span>Malanao,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3298src" +href="#xd19e3298" name="xd19e3298src">6</a> which was under the +jurisdiction of Corralat. This lake is in the island of Mindanao, +opposite the island of Bohol; from north to south it is eight leguas +long, and it is four leguas wide. Its shores are thickly settled by +several tribes, some Mahometan and others heathen (although all of them +are vassals of Corralat); but they are people who are very poor in all +except foodstuffs, of which they have a great abundance. Don Francisco +de Atienza and father Fray Agustín de San Pedro arrived at this +lake; and, as the water at its entrance was very low and there were +many miry places, they took the four [<i>sic</i>] vessels to pieces and +placed them on the lake, where they again [put them together and] +manned them. By this means the Spaniards went through that region, +carrying on hostilities among those tribes, and leaving them subjected +to the crown of España—although this submission did not +last long, for Corralat again reduced them, because the Spaniards had +not left behind a fortified post. This conquest was not one of much +profit; but it was enough to leave the Moros warned for some time by +this punishment.</p> +<p>[Chapters xxvii and xxviii are occupied with the <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb276" href="#pb276" name= +"pb276">276</a>]</span>expedition of Corcuera against Joló, +already described in our <span class="sc">VOL. XXVIII</span>. Chapters +xxix–xxxiv are devoted almost entirely to the Chinese +insurrection in Manila and its environs in 1639, and to an historical +account of former disturbances caused by them in the islands, from the +time of the pirate Limahon down. A brief paragraph mentions the death +of the provincial of the Augustinians, and his temporary successor: +“In the middle of the year 1639 occurred the death of the father +provincial Fray Martín de Herrasti, a loss which was keenly felt +by all the province on account of his many endowments and lovable +qualities. He was a native of Guipúzcoa, and a son of the +convent at Burgos. Having come to this province in the year 1617, he +was assigned, by his obedience, to the ministry in Pampanga, where he +remained, an excellent missionary, for a period of twenty +years—until the province, satisfied as to his virtue and +discretion, chose to employ so worthy a minister to govern it, and +elected him provincial, although it enjoyed but little of the direction +of so excellent a superior. The government of the province was assumed +by father Fray Juan Ramírez, as the most recent past provincial; +and thus was somewhat lessened the general grief caused by the loss of +the deceased provincial.”] <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb277" +href="#pb277" name="pb277">277</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3153" href="#xd19e3153src" name="xd19e3153">1</a></span> The name +of the smallest coin current in former times, the word meaning +literally “one-fourth.” Apparently, the bishop imposed a +slight tax on all who attended mass, for the benefit of the poor +prebendaries. It will be noticed that the word <i>coro</i> has several +different meanings. In this sentence, it means the body of clergy in +the church who chant the sacred offices; above, referring to the +bishop’s seat, it meant the place which the clergy occupied +during the church services.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3188" href="#xd19e3188src" name="xd19e3188">2</a></span> The +title-page of the <i lang="es">Bocabulario</i> states that additions +were made to it by Claver before sending the work to the press. This +friar came to the Philippines in 1624, and was assigned to the Visayan +missions, where he labored until 1639, when he was sent as procurator +to Madrid and Rome; he died at Madrid, in 1646. Claver wrote several +books, the most important being a history of the Augustinian province +of Philipinas, which has been lost. See Pérez’s <i lang= +"es">Catálogo</i>, p. 105, and T. H. Pardo de Tavera’s +<i lang="es">Biblioteca Filipina</i>, pp. 262, 263.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3202" href="#xd19e3202src" name="xd19e3202">3</a></span> For +bibliographical account of Mentrida’s works, see Pardo de +Tavera’s <i lang="es">Biblioteca Filipina</i> (Washington, 1903), +pp. 262, 263. They are as follows: <i lang="es">Bocabulario de la +lengva Bisaia Hiligvoyna y Haraia</i> (Manila, 1637), and another +edition (Manila, 1841); <i lang="es">Arte de la lengua Bisaya +Hiliguayna</i> (Manila, 1818), possibly this was a second edition; and +<i lang="es">Ritual para administrar los Santos Sacramentos</i> +(Manila, 1630), reprinted in 1669. Pardo de Tavera says: “He died +in 1637, leaving various works which have since been lost, not having +been printed; Father Agustín María says that he had an +opportunity to see these in Panay, about 1770 to 1780.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3219" href="#xd19e3219src" name="xd19e3219">4</a></span> Colin +says (<i lang="es">Labor evangélica</i>, <span class="corr" id= +"xd19e3224" title="Source: Pastells’s">Pastells’</span> +ed., i, p. 31): “For greater convenience in governing it, this +island of Panay is divided into two jurisdictions: the territory +belonging to that of Panay is all of the northern coast, from the point +of Potol to Bulacabi; the rest of the island belongs to the +jurisdiction of Otón, the principal [Spanish] post in which, at +this time, is at Iloílo—a point which projects into the +sea on the southern coast, between the two rivers of Tigbauan and Jaro; +and makes, with the island of Imaras, a strait half a legua wide and an +open harbor.” This would make the jurisdiction of Fanay +correspond to the present province of Cápiz; and that of +Otón to the provinces of Antique and Iloílo. The +boundaries between these present divisions are the rugged mountain +chains which fill a great part of the interior of the island, their +peaks ranging in height from 3,500 to 7,200 feet; they render traffic +between the provinces almost impossible, except as it is carried on by +way of the sea. The island of Guimarás is 26½ miles long +by 12 miles wide, and has important fishing and agricultural +industries.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3280" href="#xd19e3280src" name="xd19e3280">5</a></span> One of +the most notable names in Philippine missionary annals is that of +Agustín de San Pedro (his family name Rodriguez), born in +Portugal in 1599. He was a student in the university of Salamanca, but, +desiring to enter the religious life, he assumed the habit of a +Recollect Augustinian at Valladolid, and made his profession at the age +of twenty. Three years later, he set out for the Philippine mission, +and soon after reaching Manila was sent to Mindanao. There he labored +with the Indians in the districts of Butuan, Habongan, Linao, Cagayan, +Tandag, and Romblon; and accompanied the expedition of Atienza +Ibáñez (1639) to Lake Malanao. Retana and Pastells (in +their edition of Combés’s <i lang="es">Hist. Mindanao</i>, +col. 725) state that this missionary converted some 10,000 natives to +Catholicism. More than that, he aided in the defense of his converts, +several times fighting at their head against their heathen and +piratical enemies; and, having been as a student proficient in +mathematics and military science, he constructed forts in the Christian +villages which enabled them to repel their invaders, and taught the +natives the art of fortification. Fray Agustín died in Romblon, +in 1653. See accounts of his life and exploits in <i>Prov. S. Nicolas +de Tolentino</i>, pp. 290–292; and La Concepción’s +<i>Hist. Philipinas</i>, v, pp. 362–391 (which will appear in a +later volume of this series).</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3298" href="#xd19e3298src" name="xd19e3298">6</a></span> This +expedition, departing from Tandag (on the north-eastern coast of +Surigao, the easternmost province of Mindanao), sailed northwest to the +point near the town of Surigao, then, passing through the strait of +that name, southwest into Iligan Bay on the north shore of the island. +Ascending the Iligan River (which is the outlet of Lake Lanao), they +reached the lake, after a journey of sixteen and one-half miles. Now, +as then, the valley of the river and the vicinity of the lake are +thickly settled, and the Moro inhabitants carry on extensive industries +in agriculture and commerce. On the Jesuit <i>Atlas de Filipinas</i> +(Washington, 1900), map no. 27, appears a village named P. +Capitan—evidently in memory of the soldier-missionary Fray +Agustín; but no such name is given in the <i>U. S. Gazetteer</i> +of the islands.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="doc1640.4" class="div1 preface"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e3321" class="main">Relation of the Filipinas Islands</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">By a religious who lived there for eighteen +years<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3325src" href="#xd19e3325" name= +"xd19e3325src">1</a></p> +<div class="figure xd19e3338width" id="p279"><img src="images/p279.jpg" +alt= +"Archipelagus orientalis, sive Asiaticus (Eastern or Asiatic archipelago); photographic facsimile of map by Joannis Blaeu (Amsterdam, 1659)" +width="335" height="399"> +<p class="figureHead"><span lang="la">Archipelagus orientalis, sive +Asiaticus</span> (Eastern or Asiatic archipelago); photographic +facsimile of map by Joannis Blaeu (Amsterdam, 1659)</p> +<p class="first">[<i>From original map in <span lang= +"fr">Bibliothèque Nationale</span>, Paris</i>]</p> +</div> +<p>The islands called Filipinas, because of having been conquered +during the reign of Felipe II, were discovered in the year 1521, by +Hernando Magallanes, a famous Portuguese, who gave his name to the +strait. That great pilot, after having forever perpetuated his name by +a navigation so new and so difficult, landed on one of the Filipinas +Islands—a very small one, named Matan—where he was +treacherously killed by the Indians. Ruy Lopez de Villalobos sighted +the islands again after him in the year 1539.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3354src" href="#xd19e3354" name="xd19e3354src">2</a> Finally they +were pacified in the year 1571 by the adelantado Miguel Lopez de +Legaspi. It is a cause for surprise that the Portuguese, who had +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb278" href="#pb278" name= +"pb278">278</a>]</span>discovered the Malucas, China, and Japon, some +years before, and had made their homes there, did not know anything +about those islands until long afterward, although they are, as it +were, the very center and middle part of their other discoveries. They +knew well the island of Borneo, which is the last of those islands +toward the south, but they had never stopped there while en route to +the Malucas—urged, perhaps, by their too great greed for the +spices and drugs which are produced so abundantly in those islands.</p> +<p>The geographies say that there are eleven thousand islands in that +great archipelago of which the Filipinas are a part, and that they are +adjacent to Asia as are the Canaries and the Terceras to Africa. They +cross into the torrid zone and extend along the coasts of China and +India. South of them lie the Malucas, and on their northern coast, +Japon. More than forty of them are subject to the king of +España, the largest and most important being Manila and +Mindanao. Manila is the capital of all the others, the residence of the +governor and the archbishop, and the seat of the royal Audiencia. Those +two islands are each six hundred miles in circuit; they are full of +mountains, have rivers and dense forests, and lie in thirteen and +one-half degrees north latitude. The other islands are not so large, +some being one hundred miles in circuit, some fifty, and some even +less. Almost all of them are inhabited by Indians, and those which are +not are used by the Indians for their crops, and for the chase of deer +and wild boars, and for the gathering of wax, with which the islands +most abound.</p> +<p>The islands not yet under the dominion of the <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb281" href="#pb281" name="pb281">281</a>]</span>king +of España have their own kings, who are Mahometans. The island +of Borneo, three times greater than the whole of Italia, is the largest +of all the islands. Those subject to the king of España are +Manila, Zebu, Oton, Mindanao, Bohol, Leite, Samar, Mindoro, Marinduque, +the island of Negros, the island of Fuegos, Calamianes, Masbat, Jolo, +Taquima, Capul, La Paragua, the island of Tablas, Verde Island, Burias, +Tiago, Maripipe, Panama, Panaon, Sibuian, Luban, Bantajan, Panglao, +Siquior, Catanduan, Imaras, Tagapolo, Banton, Romblon, Similara, Cuio, +Cagaianes, Marivelez, Poro, Babuianes, the island of Cabras (which is +distant from the others), and other smaller ones.</p> +<p>In the islands subject to the king of España, every married +man pays ten reals of tribute, and he who is unmarried five. Nearly all +of them have received the gospel, and hence there are few heathen. +However, in the islands of Mindanao, Taquima, and Jolo, conquered but +recently, most of the people are Moros or heathen; but it is hoped that +the zeal of the missionaries will convert them very soon to Jesus +Christ.</p> +<p>Before the conquest of those islands by the Spaniards, the natives +of the country were subject to the chiefs among them, who were +recognized as nobles, and all the others obeyed them. Those chiefs +possessed a great amount of gold, and slaves in proportion to their +nobility. I knew two chiefs, one in Bohol, and the other at Dapitan, a +village of Mindanao, who had more than one hundred slaves apiece. They +are not foreign slaves, as those of Angola who are in Europa, but of +the same nation. It was a lamentable thing to see with what violence +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb282" href="#pb282" name= +"pb282">282</a>]</span>and for how little a thing, these chiefs made +slaves. For, however small a sum one owed to another, the interest, for +lack of payment, amounted to so great a sum that it was impossible to +pay it; and consequently, the person of the debtor being pledged for +the debt, he became the slave of his creditor, together with all his +posterity. They also made slaves, with unusual tyranny and cruelty, for +crimes of slight importance, such as not keeping silent at the graves +of the dead, and for passing in front of the chief’s wife when +she was in her bath. Those captured in war were also all made slaves. +Now with baptism, all those acts of violence and tyranny have been +suppressed—although there still remains one very peculiar custom +among them, which does not follow that general rule, namely, <i lang= +"la">Partus sequitur ventrem</i>;<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3380src" +href="#xd19e3380" name="xd19e3380src">3</a> for there are some who are +wholly slaves, and others who are only half slaves. The former are +those born of a slave father and mother; the others who are born of a +slave father and a free mother, or <i>vice versa</i>. In some villages +it is the custom that, if the father is slave and the mother free, one +of the children is free and the other slave. The privilege of those +half slaves is that if they pay a certain sum of money to their master, +they may oblige him to grant them their liberty—an advantage that +is not possessed by those who are wholly slaves.</p> +<p>All the religion of those Indians is founded on tradition, and on a +custom introduced by the devil himself, who formerly spoke to them by +the mouth of their idols and of their priests. That tradition is +preserved by the songs that they learn by heart in their childhood, by +hearing them sung in their sailing, <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb283" href="#pb283" name="pb283">283</a>]</span>in their work, in +their amusements, and in their festivals, and, better yet, when they +bewail their dead. In those barbarous songs, they recount the fabulous +genealogies and deeds of their gods, of whom they have one who is chief +and head of all the others. The Tagáls call that god <i>Bathala +mei Capal</i>, which signifies “God the Creator.” The +Bisayans call him <i>Laon</i>, which signifies “Time.” They +are not far from our belief on the point of the creation of the world. +They believe in a first man, the flood, and paradise, and the +punishments of the future life.</p> +<p>They say that the first man and the first woman came out of a reed +stalk which burst in Sumatra, and that there were some quarrels between +them at their marriage. They believed that when the soul left the body, +it went to an island, where the trees, birds, waters, and all other +things were black; that it passed thence to another island, where all +things were of different colors; and finally that it arrived at one, +where everything was white. They recognized invisible spirits, another +life, and devils hostile to men, of whom they had great fear. Their +chief idolatry was in adoring and regarding as gods those of their +ancestors who were most remarkable for their courage, or for their +intelligence. Such they called <i>humalagar</i>, or, as is said in +Latin, <i>manes</i>. Each one, as far as possible, ascribed divinity to +his father at death. The old men even died with that conceit, and that +is why they chose a remarkable place—as did one in the island of +Leite, who had himself placed on the seashore, so that those who went +sailing should recognize him as a god, and commend themselves to him. +They also worshiped animals and birds. They regarded the rainbow as +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb284" href="#pb284" name= +"pb284">284</a>]</span>a sort of divinity. The Tagáls worshiped +a totally blue bird, of the size of a thrush, which they called +<i>bathala</i>, which was a name of the divinity. They worshiped the +raven, which they called <i>meilupa</i>, meaning “the master of +the earth.” They had a great veneration for the crocodile. [When] +they saw it in the water, they called it <i>nono</i>, or +“grandfather.” They offered to it prayers regularly, with +great devotion, and offerings of what they carried in their boats, in +order that it might not harm them. There was no old tree of which they +did not make a god, and it was a sacrilege to cut it. I have seen a +very large one called <i>nonog</i>,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3419src" +href="#xd19e3419" name="xd19e3419src">4</a> in the island of Samar, +which a religious ordered to be felled, in order to destroy all those +superstitions. He was unable to find an Indian who would undertake it +for him; and it was necessary for some Spaniards to go to fell it. They +also worshiped the stones, rocks, reefs, and promontories of land which +jut into the sea; and made offerings to these of rice, fish, and other +like things, or fired their arrows at them in passing.</p> +<p>Between La Caldera and the river in the island of Mindanao, a great +point of land runs into the sea, which makes the coast dangerous and +very high. The sea beats violently against that cape, which is very +difficult to double. The Indians in passing offered it their arrows as +a sacrifice, praying it to allow them to pass. They shot them with so +great force that they made them enter the rock, and hence it is called +the Punta de Flechas. One day the Spaniards burned a number of those +arrows to show their hatred of so vain a superstition; and in less than +one year more than four thousand were found there. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb285" href="#pb285" name="pb285">285</a>]</span>When +Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera conquered the island of Mindanao +three years ago,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3429src" href="#xd19e3429" +name="xd19e3429src">5</a> he ordered that that point be called no more +Punta de Flechas, but San Sebastian. They had innumerable other +superstitions. If they saw a snake or a lizard, or if they heard a bird +that they called <i>corocoro</i><a class="noteref" id="xd19e3434src" +href="#xd19e3434" name="xd19e3434src">6</a> sneeze or sing, they took +it as a bad sign, and did not go farther. They had no remarkable +temples, and no festivals of days of public sacrifices; but each one +made his offerings to the <i>humalagar</i> or <i>divata</i> (which was +the name of their god) in private, according to their purpose or need. +Although they had no temples, they had men and women who acted as +priests, who were called <i>catolonan</i> by some and <i>babailan</i> +by others. Those priests were most inclined to allow themselves to be +deceived by the devil, and to deceive the people afterward by a +thousand tricks and inventions—chiefly at the time of their +sicknesses, when they are depressed, lose courage, and crave a prompt +remedy; and give all their possessions to him who promises it to +them.</p> +<p>There are some priests who have special communication with the +devil. He speaks to them through the mouths of their little idols, and +makes them believe that these are the voices of their ancestors, whom +they worship. Sometimes the devil passes into the bodies of their +sacrificers, and, during the short time of the sacrifice, he makes them +say <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb286" href="#pb286" name= +"pb286">286</a>]</span>and do things that fill the bystanders with +fear. They take that order of sacrificers from among their friends or +their relatives, who wish to learn the mystery of it from them. Their +blindness causes them to esteem that rank greatly, for besides the +reputation and respect that that employment brings them, they also +receive large offerings. All who have been present at the sacrifice +make them gifts, one cotton, one gold, and one a fowl. The sacrifice +takes place in their houses. The victim is now a hog, now a fowl, now +some fish or rice; and the sacrifice is differently named according to +the various victims. It is performed by the sacrificer stabbing the +victim amid certain ceremonies, which he performs to a cadence marked +by a drum or a bell. That is the time in which the devil takes +possession of them. He causes them to make innumerable contortions and +grimaces, after the end of which they tell what they believe they have +seen or heard.</p> +<p>As for their persons, those people are well built, have handsome +features, and are light-complexioned. They are clad in a garment that +falls to the ankles, which is made of striped cotton of various colors. +When in mourning, they wear white; however, that mode of dress is not +so general. Those called Pintados, and those of the island of Mindanao, +wear short white, yellow, or red tunics, which hang to the knees, bound +in by a girdle one vara wide and two and one-half brazas long; this is, +as a general rule, white or red, and always falls to the knees. They +wear neither stockings nor shoes; and instead of a hat they use a bit +of cloth, which they wind twice or thrice around the head. Their whole +adornment consists in having very rich and beautiful necklaces, +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb287" href="#pb287" name= +"pb287">287</a>]</span>earrings, and gold rings or bracelets. They wear +those bracelets above the ankle; some wear these of ivory, and others +of brass. They also have little round plates three fingers in diameter, +which they pass through a hole that they make in the ear. In some of +those islands, the men formerly marked all the body with figures, +whence comes the Spanish name “Pintados” +[“pictured,” <i>i.e.</i>, tattooed]. That operation was +performed in the flower of their age, and at the period when they had +most strength to suffer that torture. They had themselves adorned in +that way after they had performed some illustrious deed. The masters of +that art first trace on their bodies the design of the picture, which +they next follow up with pricks from very sharp points, and throw on +the blood which comes out a powder which never fades away. The whole of +the body is not pricked at once, but bit by bit; and formerly, in order +that one might have the right of making it for each part, it was +necessary to perform an illustrious deed, and to show new prowess. +Those pictures are pretty, and well proportioned to the portions of the +body on which they are made; and, although they are of an ashen color, +they are nevertheless agreeable to the sight. The children are not +tattooed at all. The women do not bear the marks of that adornment +except on one hand and on some part of the other. In regard to their +teeth, they imitate the men in everything. They file them from their +earliest childhood; some making them even in this way, others filing +them into points, thus giving them the appearance of a saw. They cover +the teeth with a black, glossy polish, or one that is flame-colored; +and thus their teeth become black, or as red as vermilion. In +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb288" href="#pb288" name= +"pb288">288</a>]</span>the upper row, they make a little covering which +they fill with gold, which shows off to advantage on the black or red +background of that polish.</p> +<p>The women as well as the men are continually in the water, and they +also swim like fish. They need no bridge to get over rivers. They bathe +at all times of the day, as much for pleasure as for cleanliness. Women +who have but recently given birth cannot be prevented from bathing, and +bathe in the waters of the coldest springs. As soon as the child has +issued from its mother’s womb, it is placed in the water; and on +taking it from the bath its head is rubbed with ajonjoli [<i>i.e.</i>, +sesame] oil mixed with civet. They do that also on other occasions, and +to show politeness, especially the women and little boys. They bathe +also during their sicknesses, and have for that purpose springs of hot +water, especially at the shore of Laguna de Bay, which is in the island +of Manila.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3478src" href="#xd19e3478" name= +"xd19e3478src">7</a></p> +<p>There is no one language that is general for all the islands, but +each district has a special one. True, they have some relation between +one another, such as exists between the Lombard, Sicilian, and Tuscan. +There are six dialects in the island of Manila, and two in the island +of Oton; while there are some languages which are spoken in several +islands. The most general are the Tagál and Bisayan. The latter +is very rude, but the former is very polished, and most remarkable. +Thus a religious, who was well versed in those islands, was in the +habit of saying that the Tagál language had the advantages of +the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb289" href="#pb289" name= +"pb289">289</a>]</span>four chief languages of the world: that it was +mysterious, like Hebrew; that it had the articles of the Greek, both +for appellatives and for proper names; that it had elegance and +abundance, like the Latin; and that it was not less suitable than the +Italian for compliments and business.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3497src" href="#xd19e3497" name="xd19e3497src">8</a> They have +only three vowels, but these serve as five. They have only a dozen +consonants, which they express differently by placing a little dot +above or below, as can be seen in the following figure.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e3504width"><img src="images/p289.gif" alt="" +width="583" height="192"> +<p class="first"><i>Marginal note</i>: “The consonants not marked +with any point are pronounced with ‘a;’ if they have a +point above, they are pronounced with ‘e,’ or +‘i;’ if the point is below, they are pronounced with +‘o’ or ‘u.’”</p> +</div> +<p>They have learned to write from us<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3512src" href="#xd19e3512" name="xd19e3512src">9</a> by making +their lines from left to right, instead of their former way of writing +from top to bottom. Reeds or palm-leaves serve them as paper, and the +point of an iron style is used instead of a pen. They use their writing +only to letters from one to another, for they have no histories or +books of any learning. Our religious have printed books in the +languages of the islands, concerning the matters of our religion. In +the Malucas, they have a very pretty method of writing <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb290" href="#pb290" name="pb290">290</a>]</span>to +their friends. They collect flowers of various colors, and make a +bouquet of them; and he who receives the bouquet understands, on +beholding the varieties of flowers and their colors, as if they were so +many different characters, the thoughts of his friend. They have not +sufficient capacity to apply themselves to learning, and they content +themselves with being good carpenters, and with working gold and iron +well. They have been employed during these last few years in making +silk and cotton stockings; in writing and reading our characters; in +singing and dancing; and in playing the flute, the guitar, and the +harp. The strings used for those last instruments are made from twisted +silk, and produce as agreeable a sound as ours, although quite +different in quality. They formerly had an instrument called +<i>cutiape</i>, which some of them still use. It bears a close +resemblance to a hurdy-gurdy, and has four copper cords. They play it +so cleverly, that they make it express whatever they wish; and it is +asserted as a truth that they speak, and tell one another whatever they +wish, by means of that instrument, a special skill in those of that +nation.</p> +<p>Most of those islanders have only one wife, but it is not true that +there are not some places in the country where they have several, +especially in the island of Mindanao. It may be said that the husbands +buy their wives there, since they generally make some present to their +parents according to their rank: that of <i>dato</i>, for instance, +which signifies “a man of rank;” of <i>tinaua</i>, which +signifies “free;” or <i>oripuen</i>, which signifies +“a slave.” The women in the islands of the Pintados are +called <i>binocot</i>, or “woman who is in the room;” for +<i>bocot</i> signifies <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb291" href= +"#pb291" name="pb291">291</a>]</span>“a room,” and the +women go outside but rarely, and even are carried then on the shoulders +of their slaves. I have seen one woman of Dapitan, a settlement of the +island of Mindanao, so delicate and so fine, that she always had +herself carried to church on the shoulders of her slaves whom she best +liked. It is a mark of politeness among those women always to keep the +right hand in front of the mouth when they talk to a man.<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e3543src" href="#xd19e3543" name= +"xd19e3543src">10</a></p> +<p>Those people live in houses thatched with straw, with the leaves of +trees, or with large reeds which, divided into two, serve them as a +tiling. There is but little furniture to be seen in their houses. But +rarely are chairs seen there, for they always sit on the ground, or on +carpets made from reeds. They have neither beds nor mattresses, as +their reed mats serve as both. They eat on the ground or on very small +low tables, but the tables are used only among the chiefs. Banana +leaves, which are one braza long and one-half braza wide, serve them as +napkins. Their employment consists of agriculture, the very abundant +fishing along their coasts and in their rivers, and hunting wild boars +and deer with dog and spear—an employment to which their agility +and their skill renders them very suitable. They also go to gather +honey and wax in the mountains or in the trees, where nature has taught +the bees to make both those substances.</p> +<p>The arms of some are spears, of others arrows; the campilan, which +is a large cutlass; the kris, or poniard; the <i>zompites</i> or +blow-guns, through which they blow little poisoned arrows; and +<i>bacacaies</i>, or little reeds hardened by fire at the end. To +defend <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb292" href="#pb292" name= +"pb292">292</a>]</span>their grain from animals and from men who could +harm it, they scatter caltrops, which the old men call +<i>tribulos</i>,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3564src" href="#xd19e3564" +name="xd19e3564src">11</a> made so that one of the four points of which +they are composed is always up, and those who pass there get caught +without perceiving the traps. But now the Spaniards have taught them +how to use firearms, and they get along very well—especially a +nation called the Pampangos, many of whom are enrolled in the Spanish +troops. These men serve with great fidelity, and well second the +courage of which the Spaniards set them an example in their combats by +sea and land.</p> +<p>They are very fertile, and I have seen but few married people +without children. When these are born, they name them according to the +incidents that happen at the time of their birth. One will be called +Maglente, because of the thunder that sounded at the time of his birth; +for <i>lente</i> signifies a clap of thunder. Another will be named +Gubaton, because the foes appeared on the coast at that same time; for +<i>gubat</i> signifies enemy. They esteem nobility; and I have known a +woman called Vray—that is to say, “fine +gold”—who had been given that name because of the nobility +of her lineage. In some of the islands they were accustomed to put the +head of a new-born child between two boards, and thus pressed it so +that it would not be round, but long; and they also flattened the +forehead, in their belief that it was a mark <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb293" href="#pb293" name="pb293">293</a>]</span>of +beauty to have it thus.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3583src" href= +"#xd19e3583" name="xd19e3583src">12</a> At the birth of a child to one +among them who is of the highest rank, they hold a festival of a week, +during which very joyful songs are sung by the women.</p> +<p>They lose courage when they are sick. They do not use either +bleeding or other remedies, except certain medicinal herbs, of which +there is abundance in these islands. They use the cupping-glass; but it +is not made of glass, for there is no glass in that country, but of +small shells or the small horns of deer. They drink the liquor of +cocoanuts after it has been kept some time in the evening damp; and +that liquor is so healthful that their continual use of it keeps them +from gravel, a disease of which the name is unknown among those +peoples.</p> +<p>When anyone dies, the music of the mourning and lamentation begins +immediately. Some weep because they are truly touched by their loss; +others are hired by the day to weep. Women are usually chosen, as they +are most apt for that music. They wash the body of the deceased to that +sad cadence, and perfume it with storax, and other perfumes which are +used among them. After bewailing the body for three days, they bury it. +They do not place it in the earth, but in coffins of very hard and +incorruptible wood, which they kept in their houses. The boards of the +coffins are so well joined that the air cannot enter. They placed a +piece of gold in the mouths of some, and adorned their coffins with +precious gems. Moreover they were careful to carry <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb294" href="#pb294" name="pb294">294</a>]</span>all +sorts of food to their grave, and to leave it there as if it were to be +used by the deceased. Some they would not allow to go alone, and it was +necessary to give them some male and female slaves to keep them +company. They killed the latter after having given them a fine repast, +so that they might go with the deceased. With one of their chiefs of +the country they once encased a galley equipped with rowers, so that +they could serve him in the other world. The most usual place of burial +was the house of the deceased, in the lowest story, where they dug a +hole to place the coffin. Sometimes the burial was in the open field; +and in such case great fires were made below the house, and sentinels +were posted there, for fear lest the deceased should come to take away +those who were yet alive. The tears and lamentations were finished with +the burial; but the feasts and orgies lasted a greater or less time, +according to the station of the deceased. The Tagáls wore black +as a sign of mourning; the Bisayans wore white, and shaved the head and +eyebrows. When a person of rank happened to die, silence was observed +throughout the village, until that the interdict should have been +removed—which lasted a greater or less time, according to the +quality of the deceased. During that time not the least noise could be +made. But the mourning of those who had been killed in war or by +treachery lasted a longer time, and did not end until their children +and relations had killed many others—not only those who were +known as enemies, but even strangers or unknown men; for their fury +having thus been assuaged, they thought that they could put an end to +their mourning, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb295" href="#pb295" +name="pb295">295</a>]</span>and solemnize it by great festivities and +prolonged feasting.</p> +<p>They are for the most part good sailors—I mean for the +navigation among the islands; for, as they do not use the compass, they +do not get along so well on the open sea. They use various kinds of +craft, which are propelled by sail and oar. The largest craft of the +second class are called caracoas. Although these are not very large, +they do not hesitate to put one hundred Indians in them; for there are +three banks of rowers on each side. They make use of those craft for +trading among those islands; and they lade them with dried fish, wine, +salt, wax, cotton, cocoanuts, and other like merchandise.</p> +<p>They are cowards naturally, and more apt to make an ambuscade than +to face their enemies. Upon that is chiefly founded their submission to +the Spaniards, for they do not serve them out of affection.</p> +<p>They readily received our religion. Their meager intelligence does +not permit them to sound the depths of its mysteries. They also have +little care in the fulfilment of their duties to the Christianity which +they have adopted; and it is necessary to constrain them by fear of +punishment, and to govern them like schoolchildren. Intoxication and +usury are the two vices to which they are most addicted. The piety and +care of our religious have not as yet been able to make them lose those +habits altogether.</p> +<p>The climate of Manila and most of the other Filipinas Islands is +very warm. The difference between the seasons is not perceived, for the +heat is equally great all the year. The rains commence at the end of +the month of May and last for three or four <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb296" href="#pb296" name= +"pb296">296</a>]</span>months without interruption; but beyond that +time it rains but rarely. In the months of October, November, and +December, the country is subject to hurricanes, which the natives of +the country call <i>vaguios</i>. They are furious winds which make the +entire round of the compass in twenty-four hours, commencing at the +north. They break the palm-trees, uproot the largest trees, overthrow +the houses, and sometimes carry persons into the air; and some have +been seen which have hurled vessels a musket-shot inland.</p> +<p>At the extremity of the island of Manila, near the Embocadero, where +the vessels en route from Nueva España enter, there is a volcano +or mountain whence often issue flames, and always smoke.<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e3613src" href="#xd19e3613" name= +"xd19e3613src">13</a> In those islands there is neither grain, wine, +nor olive-oil, nor one of the fruits which we have in Europa, except +the oranges, of which I shall speak later. Rice grows there in great +abundance, and serves instead of bread. They have two kinds of it. One +kind is sown in places always under water, and the other on the +mountains, where it is moistened only by the water from the sky. Their +drink also is made from rice, by soaking it in water; or it is taken +from palm-trees, or cocoanuts, or from another variety of small palm +called nipa. They keep those liquors in large crocks, and draw from +them only on holidays and days of rejoicing. Those liquors mount to the +head and intoxicate, as much as does the wine of Europa.</p> +<p>The horses and cows in those islands have been carried thither from +Mexico and China, for there <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb297" href= +"#pb297" name="pb297">297</a>]</span>were none there formerly. The +flesh of swine is their most usual food, and there is a great abundance +of it; it is very healthful and savory. There are also innumerable +fowl, deer, wild boars, goats, and civet-cats; also plenty of beans, +cotton, strawberries, and even cinnamon—which is found only in +the island of Mindanao, and which does not begin to be as good as that +of Ceilan. They have no silver mines in those islands, and the little +silver seen there has been carried from Mexico, in return for the +merchandise exported there annually. There are gold mines in the island +of Manila, and on the river of Butuan in the island of Mindanao. There +is truly not sufficient to satisfy the desires of the Spaniards; but +the little that there is of it sufficed the Indians, who value it only +for the little use that they make of it, since it does not enter at all +into trade. There is a quantity of honey and wax in their mountains; +and since the Spanish have lived there they have built many sugar +mills; and sugar is so common there that one may buy twenty-five libras +of sixteen onzas apiece for one teston. They have three varieties of +fruit that are most common: bananas, santors, and +<i>birinbines</i>.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3626src" href= +"#xd19e3626" name="xd19e3626src">14</a> There are fifteen or sixteen +kinds of bananas, some of them are sweet, but that sweetness has an +admixture of bitter in others. Some of them smell good, but all of +those varieties are very agreeable to the taste. I know of no fruit in +Europa to which to compare them, unless it be the <i>musas</i> which +grow in Sicilia. The birinbines and santors are <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb298" href="#pb298" name= +"pb298">298</a>]</span>eaten preserved more often than in any other +way, because of their tartness; when prepared in preserves, they taste +like plums. If they are allowed to ripen on the tree, they smell like +quinces, although they have no other resemblance to quinces at all. +Those islands have many other trees which grow wild. Their mountains +furnish them with roots, from which they draw their most usual +nourishment; these are called <i>pugaian</i> and <i>corot</i>.<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e3663src" href="#xd19e3663" name= +"xd19e3663src">15</a> They have other roots which they cultivate, such +as the <i>apari</i>, the <i>ubi</i>, the <i>laquei</i>, and others +which they call <i>camotes</i>, which are the potatoes<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e3714src" href="#xd19e3714" name= +"xd19e3714src">16</a> of España. The Spaniards use the last +named, as also do the Indians.</p> +<p>But the most useful tree of all is the palm—not that which +bears the date, for they do not have that <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb299" href="#pb299" name="pb299">299</a>]</span>species, but those +which bear cocoanuts, of the size of an orange. Those nuts are filled +with a very sweet liquor, which is very good to drink. They make wine, +vinegar, and honey of it; and when that fruit becomes dry as it ripens, +that liquor changes into white meat harder than an almond. It is from +that meat that oil is extracted and a milk resembling that extracted +from almonds. The cocoanut has two coverings. The first, which is less +hard, is used for tinder when dried; also for the rigging and smaller +cordage of the ships, or as tow for calking them. The other covering is +harder, and is used for drinking vessels, or as dishes in which to +prepare their food. The palm-leaves are the tiles with which their +houses are thatched. The trunks of the same trees are used to support +the houses, and in making the pillars. They have one other tree which +is no less useful to them, for it serves them as a perpetual spring, +and furnishes water to an entire village—which, being located on +a very high and dry site, has no other water than what they get from +that tree by making incisions in its trunk, and in its largest +branches; for a clear sweet water flows out of it. The trees of those +islands are always green, and there are only two species that shed +their leaves, one called <i>batelan</i>,<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3739src" href="#xd19e3739" name="xd19e3739src">17</a> and the +other <i>dabdas</i>.</p> +<p>The reeds [<i>i.e.</i>, bamboos] of those islands have the following +peculiarity, namely, that they are as much as three palmos in +circumference and eight brazas in length. They are used as the +materials out of which to build a whole house. The pillars, the +lintels, the stairs, the floors, and the walls are <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb300" href="#pb300" name="pb300">300</a>]</span>made +from them. They are used as rafters for the roof, and split into +several parts, as tiles for covering the roof. They have no other +saucepans in which to cook their food than those reeds, and no other +wood to burn; for the trees serve them as material with which to build +their little boats—or rather, rafts—with which they carry +for traffic their rice, cocoanuts, and abacá, the hemp of that +country.</p> +<p>Those islands have a great abundance of various kinds of oranges, +peculiar to those countries for their good taste. I have seen them so +large that they were four palmos in circumference. Some were red as +scarlet inside, and very sweet. There are some which contain another +little orange in the place of the seeds; and these are called on that +account “oranges which have children.”<a class="noteref" +id="xd19e3766src" href="#xd19e3766" name="xd19e3766src">18</a></p> +<p>I will place in the list of vegetables a sort of leaf which serves +them for nourishment, or rather for refreshment. It is used very +commonly among the Indians, both Christians and Mahometans, and even +among the Spaniards. A mixture is made of it which is called +<i>mamuen</i>, into which three things enter: one is this leaf, which +is called <i>buio</i>, which is smooth, and resembles in color and size +a large ivy leaf, but it is not so thick. It smells very good, and is +aromatic. It is planted under some dry tree, on which it climbs. The +other fruit that enters into that mixture is called <i>bonga</i>, and +it is as large as an olive. Lastly, they mix in a small quantity of +quicklime. A little cornucopia is made of the leaf, the bonga and lime +are placed inside, and it is all chewed together. That mixture colors +the saliva as red as <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb301" href="#pb301" +name="pb301">301</a>]</span>blood, and the lips the most beautiful +vermilion ever seen. It preserves the teeth, strengthens the stomach, +and produces a very good breath. Eighty of those leaves can be bought +at Manila for one real. Nevertheless, so great a quantity is consumed +that it has been ascertained that it was sold in one year to the amount +of ninety thousand reals, of seven and one-half sols apiece.</p> +<p>There are many snakes in those islands, which are very dangerous; +some of them, when they have young, attack people.<a class="noteref" +id="xd19e3785src" href="#xd19e3785" name="xd19e3785src">19</a> The bite +of those called <i>omodro</i> is very dangerous, and those who are +bitten by it do not live one-half day. It is from that effect that it +derives its name, for <i>odro</i> signifies one-half day. There is +another very large snake called <i>saua</i>. I have killed one of that +species which was two and one-half brazas long. The skin of another, +which measured thirty-two [Spanish] feet in length, was brought to our +residence at Manila. The sauas hang to the branches of trees along the +roads, whence they dart down upon people, or deer, or on any other +prey. They wind themselves three or four times around the body, and +after having broken the creature’s bones devour it. But God has +provided a number of herbs in those islands which are used as antidotes +to all kinds of poisons. Roots and herbs are found in the mountains, +which are so many specific remedies against snake-bites; the chief ones +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb302" href="#pb302" name= +"pb302">302</a>]</span>are <i>manongal, manambo, logab, boroctongon, +maglingab, ordag, balucas, bonas, bahay, igluhat, dalogdogan, +mantala</i>.</p> +<p>There are also animals in those islands of which I ought to give a +description. The civet-cat is found in the mountains. Its skin +resembles that of a tiger, and it is no less savage than the tiger, +although much smaller. It is captured and bound, and, after its civet +is obtained, which is contained in a little pouch under its tail, it is +set at liberty to be caught once more. The crocodiles, of which their +rivers are full, are so huge that when their jaws are open, a man of +the largest size could stand upright between the two jaws. The +crocodile is quite covered with scales; has scarcely any tongue; and +its teeth are set closely together, and are very sharp, and arranged in +several rows. The teeth of the middle lower row fit into holes or +breaks in the others which correspond to them in the upper jaw; and +consequently, when it seizes its prey, there is no force that can make +it let go. It lays a great number of eggs. In the water it is furious, +and attacks boats. It is not so greatly feared when ashore—where +it goes sometimes to seize some prey, or to sun itself.</p> +<p>The woman-fish<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3822src" href="#xd19e3822" +name="xd19e3822src">20</a> is so called because its face and breast are +quite like those of women, whom it also resembles in its manner of +copulation with the male. That fish is as large as a calf, and its +flesh, of which <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb303" href="#pb303" +name="pb303">303</a>]</span>I have eaten, tastes like beef. It is +caught with lines as thick around as the finger, and when the line +becomes fast within [its mouth] it is killed by javelin-thrusts. Its +bones and teeth have great virtue against all sorts of dysentery, +especially against bloody discharges. Some have tried to assert that +those fish were the sirens of the sea, so celebrated among the poets; +but they have nothing of the beauty of face and of the voice that is +attributed to sirens.</p> +<p>I will end [this account], finally by a description of the +<i>tabon</i>, an ashen-colored bird as large as a hen, which lays eggs +three times as large as those of hens, but which lays them in a +peculiar manner. It chooses desert islands and those full of sand, +where it first makes a hole one or one and one-half brazas deep; and +after having laid its eggs, it covers them over with sand. The chicks +break the shell, and gradually turn up the sand that covers them with +their feet. If any of those chicks is so unfortunate as to break the +egg at the lower end, it does not succeed so well, and dies for lack of +strength to overturn the sand. Sometimes one hundred and fifty of the +eggs are found in the same hole. I have eaten those eggs often when I +have had occasion to stop at those islands during my voyages.</p> +<p>There is cinnamon in the island of Mindanao; and pepper at Patani, +and at Champan, a country lying on the mainland of China.</p> +<p>The political government of those islands is the same as that of +other provinces subject to the crown of Castilla. The governor resides +at Manila, and is president of the Audiencia; while, as +captain-general, he has charge of all the posts of peace and war, as +well as of the encomiendas of one or two <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb304" href="#pb304" name="pb304">304</a>]</span>thousand Indians +[each], who pay their encomendero the tribute that the other Indians +pay to the king. But the encomendero who has been appointed by the +captain-general is obliged to get the confirmation of his grant from +Madrid within three years.</p> +<p>The governor establishes the corregidors and alcaldes-mayor, or +governors of the provinces into which these islands are divided. He +appoints the captains and the admirals of the fleets which sail to +Acapulco and Terrenate annually. He takes cognizance of civil affairs, +on which the royal Audiencia pronounces the decisions or decrees. That +Audiencia is composed of a president (who is always the governor), four +oidores or auditors, and one procurator-fiscal. There are four cities +in the Filipinas—Manila, Zebu, [Nueva] Caçares, and Nueba +Segovia; and one town, called Arevalo. There is a garrison at Manila +and at Cabite, which is the port where the warships enter, six miles +from Manila. There are also garrisons at Zebu, Otong, Carouga, +Lanbuangang [<i>sc.</i> Zamboanga], Jolo, Nueva Segobia, the island of +Hermosa, and the Malucas. All those ports are fortified, and have their +redoubts mounted with artillery. Whatever is necessary for those +garrisons is sent from Manila. It would be a very difficult task to +mention the names of all the different peoples among the Indians, and +in those islands, who are subject to the king of España. There +are fully three hundred thousand families, who might count one million +souls.</p> +<p>The archbishop of Manila has three suffragans, those of Zebu, +[Nueva] Caçares, and Nueva Segovia. They have no other income +than what the king gives them; that of the archbishop is three +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb305" href="#pb305" name= +"pb305">305</a>]</span>thousand ducados, while each of his suffragans +receives one thousand five hundred. The city of Manila is small, but it +is beautiful and well fortified. Its houses are all built of stone, and +are spacious, and very airy. Its streets are long and straight, and one +may walk in the shade all hours of the day. The churches are beautiful. +There are five convents: that of the Augustinians (which is the +oldest); that of the Franciscans, that of the Dominicans,<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e3856src" href="#xd19e3856" name= +"xd19e3856src">21</a> and that of the discalced Augustinians. There are +two universities, one in charge of the fathers of St. Dominic, and the +other in that of the Society. Those religious are also distributed +among the islands, where they have charge of the instruction of the +Indians. The city is enclosed by a fine wall and moat; and its redoubt +and its ramparts are well garrisoned with artillery. At the foot of its +wall flows a river, which is navigable; over this is a wooden bridge, +with stone pillars. There are two thousand Spaniards in Manila +(counting soldiers and inhabitants), and twice as many Indians. There +are also twenty thousand Sangleys or Chinese, who practice all the arts +needed in a community; and every year they pay nine escudos and six +reals of tribute. Galleons much larger than those which sail the +Mediterranean <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb306" href="#pb306" name= +"pb306">306</a>]</span>are built at Manila; for there is a great +abundance of wood, pitch, and abacá—which resembles +European hemp, and of which good rigging is made for the ships. The +anchors are imported from Goa; and the iron for the nails comes from +China in little bars, and is very serviceable.</p> +<p>The Spaniards of the Manilas trade throughout the islands of that +archipelago, at Borney and Camboa, whence they carry wax, butter, +<i>camanguien</i> or storax, ivory, and bezoar. They formerly traded in +Japon, before the persecution of the Christians was begun. Thence were +carried iron, flour, all sorts of fruit, and little boxes, and +cabinets, varnished [<i>i.e.</i>, lacquered] and very well made. +Nangoza [<i>sc.</i> Nagasaki], which was the port where that trading +took place—and for which it was very suitable, because it is not +distant from Manila—is now closed to us; for the emperor of Japon +believes that people are entering his country, under pretext of that +trade, to preach the gospel, the thing that he fears most of all. We +trade also with the Portuguese of Macao, who come to the Manilas every +year with two or three ships, and bring here silks, musk, precious +stones, and eagle and calambac wood—which is a sweet-scented wood +that is very valuable. The inhabitants of the Manilas also go to Macao +sometimes, to carry their merchandise there; but their chief trade is +with the Chinese, who come annually, at the end of the month of +December and the beginning of January, with twenty or thirty vessels, +laden with products and valuable merchandise. They sail usually from +Ocho and Chincheo, ports of Anay, a province of China which faces the +Filipinas. They carry small oranges, nuts, chestnuts, plums, raisins, +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb307" href="#pb307" name= +"pb307">307</a>]</span>and <i>chicuei</i>—a fruit resembling an +apple, very round, transparent, and, when it is ripe, having the color +of yellow amber; its peel is very loose, and its flesh very sweet and +very pleasant to the taste.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3906src" href= +"#xd19e3906" name="xd19e3906src">22</a> They also bring all sorts of +cloth stuffs, and some of these are as fine as those which come from +France and the Low Countries; and many black stuffs of which the +Indians make their clothes. They bring silk, plain and twisted, of all +colors; damasks, velvets, tabbies, and double taffetas; cloths of gold +and silver, galoons, and laces; coverlets, and cushions; and +porcelain—although not the finest variety, as the trade in that +is prohibited. They bring pearls and gold; iron, in little bars; +thread, musk, and fine parasols; paste gems, but very beautiful to look +at; saltpetre, and flour; white and various-colored paper; and many +little fancy articles, covered with varnish, and gold in relief, made +in an inimitable manner. Among all the silk stuffs brought by the +Chinese, none is more esteemed than the white—the snow is not +whiter; and there is no silk stuff in Europa that can approach it.</p> +<p>The Chinese return in the month of March, and carry to China silver +in return for their merchandise. They also take a wood called +sibueno<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3914src" href="#xd19e3914" name= +"xd19e3914src">23</a>—that is, brazil-wood, which is used in +making their ink. Those Chinese merchants are so keen after gain that +if one sort of merchandise has succeeded well one year, they take a +great deal of it the following year. A Spaniard who had lost his nose +through a certain illness, sent for a Chinese to make him one of wood, +in order to hide the deformity. The workman made <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb308" href="#pb308" name="pb308">308</a>]</span>him +so good a nose that the Spaniard, in great delight, paid him +munificently, giving him twenty escudos. The Chinese, attracted by the +ease with which he had made that gain, laded a fine boatload of wooden +noses the following year, and returned to Manila. But he found himself +very far from his hopes, and quite left out in the cold;<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e3925src" href="#xd19e3925" name= +"xd19e3925src">24</a> for in order to have a sale for that new +merchandise, he found that he would have to cut off the noses of all +the Spaniards in the country.</p> +<p>Besides the Chinese merchandise that is brought into the islands, +there is wax, cinnamon, civet, and a sort of very strong cotton cloth +which is called <i>campotes</i> [misprint for <i>lampotes</i>]. All +those goods are exported to Mexico, where they are sold at great +profit, and on the spot. I do not believe there is a richer traffic in +the world than that. The duties that the king gets out of it are large, +and, with what he gets from the islands, amount to fully five hundred +thousand escudos. But he spends eight hundred thousand in the +maintenance of his governor, the counselors, the archbishop, the +bishops, the canons, those who possess the prebends, and the other +ecclesiastics. The greater part of that sum is employed in the +equipment of the galleons that are sent to Mexico and to the Malucas, +and of those which are kept in those seas to resist the Dutch. A +considerable sum is spent on the maintenance of alliance with the kings +of those districts—especially with the king of one of +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb309" href="#pb309" name= +"pb309">309</a>]</span>the Malucas, called Tidore. Consequently, the +king of España rather holds those islands for the conservation +there of the faith, as was stated by Felipe the Second in a certain +council-meeting, than for the profit that is derived from them to this +hour. The Dutch have been unable to get a footing on those islands, +although they have attacked them many times. They have a considerable +city [<i>i.e.</i>, Batavia] on the island of Java Major, whence they +send what their garrisons at the island of Hermosa, Amboina, and +Terrenate need. They have made an alliance with the inhabitants of that +island, and they secure the greater part of the cloves of the Malucas. +They trade in Japon, in a port called Firando. The Chinese have refused +to have trade with them, because of a tradition current in China, that +blue-eyed men will some day conquer them.</p> +<p>The voyage from Manila to Mexico lasts four, five, six, or seven +months. Manila, which lies in thirteen and one-half degrees, is left in +the month of July, during the vendavals. The course is taken to the +north, until the ship reaches thirty-eight or forty degrees. The pilots +take that course because they are more certain of finding winds; for +otherwise they would run the risk of encountering calms, which are more +to be dreaded in long voyages than are the most furious gales. From the +time that the Filipinas are left until almost the coast of Nueva +España is reached, no land is seen, except a chain of islands +called the Ladrones, or La Sapana,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3959src" +href="#xd19e3959" name="xd19e3959src">25</a> which lie three hundred +leguas from the Embocadero of the Filipinas. The people who +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb310" href="#pb310" name= +"pb310">310</a>]</span>inhabit those islands are barbarians, who go +quite naked. When our vessels pass there, those people carry to them +fish, rice, and fresh water, which they exchange for neither gold nor +silver, but only for iron, which they value much more, because of the +use to which they put it in the manufacture of their tools, and for the +building of their little boats. The first land sighted after that is +the island of Cedros, quite near the Mexican coast. The open expanse +between that island and those of the Ladrones is subject to great +storms, which are to be feared especially near the Japanese +Islands—which are passed, however, without being sighted. During +the whole course of so long a voyage, scarcely a day passes without +seeing a bird. There are usually some birds that live in the sea, and +many large whales and porpoises are seen.</p> +<p>As the [American] coast is neared, at a distance of sixty, eighty, +or one hundred leguas signs are to be seen in the sea by which it is +recognized that the ship is within that distance. Those signs consist +of long reeds, brought down by the rivers of Nueva España, which +being massed together resemble a kind of raft; and on those reeds are +to be seen monkeys—another sign that they are approaching the +coast. When the pilot discovers those signs, he immediately changes his +course, and instead of continuing east he puts the nose of the ship +south, in order to avoid getting caught in the land, or in some gulf +whence he would have a hard time to get out; but, when he has sighted +the coast of Nueva España, he follows it to the port of +Acapulco, which lies in eighteen degrees.</p> +<p>Acapulco is a fine port, well sheltered from all the winds, and +defended by a celebrated redoubt. There the passengers and goods are +disembarked, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb311" href="#pb311" name= +"pb311">311</a>]</span>and are afterward carried by mules to the City +of Mexico, which is eighty leguas distant thence. The way is desert and +bestrewn with mountains; and the pest of mosquitoes is suffered, as +well as the extreme heat. In order to go to España from Mexico +one goes to the port of Vera Cruz, a journey of eighty-five leguas; en +route is passed the city of Los Angeles, which has about six thousand +inhabitants, and whose bishop gets a salary of sixty thousand escudos. +The reefs and rocks at the mouth of the port of Vera Cruz defend the +entrance better than the fortress that commands it, although that fort +is an excellent one. At that port anchor the trading fleets that come +from España, laden with wine, olive-oil, cloths, wax, cinnamon, +paper, and other European merchandise. Those trading fleets formerly +passed the winter there, as they arrived [formerly] in the month of +June, and remained there until the same month of the following year. +Now they reach that port in the month of May, and leave about the month +of August. They take as a rule three months to go to España. For +my part, I took one hundred days in making that voyage. The port of +Havana in Cuba, which is the best port of the Western Indias—and +which is very safe, and defended by three redoubts—is touched at. +There the two trading fleets—that of Mexico and that of +Tierrafirme—are united with the galleons. Thence, after having +coasted along the shores of Florida, and of Nueva Francia, they make +the cape of Fineterre [Finisterre] or San Vincent, in order to lay +their course toward Cadiz, which is the end of their voyage. That will +also be the end of this relation, which I have written in order to be +obedient to a person to whom I earnestly desire that it may prove +agreeable. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb313" href="#pb313" name= +"pb313">313</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3325" href="#xd19e3325src" name="xd19e3325">1</a></span> Marginal +note: “This relation has been translated from a Spanish +manuscript existing in the library of Don Carlo del Pezzo.”</p> +<p class="footnote">This relation is unsigned, and undated, but Rev. +Pablo Pastells, S.J., said during the course of a conversation with one +of the Editors, in 1903, that the author was undoubtedly Father Diego +de Bobadilla; and in his edition of Colin’s <i lang="es">Labor +evangélica</i> (Barcelona, 1904), he says (iii, p. 798, note): +“This father [<i>i.e.</i>, Father Bobadilla] was the author in +1640 of the famous relation which was translated by Melquisedec +Thévenot.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3354" href="#xd19e3354src" name="xd19e3354">2</a></span> See our +<span class="sc">VOLS. I</span> and <span class="sc">II</span> for the +history of these early expeditions. It will be noticed that the author +of the present relation is inaccurate in regard to the date of the +voyage of Villalobos, and that he omits mention of some of the early +voyages.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3380" href="#xd19e3380src" name="xd19e3380">3</a></span> That is +“Birth follows the womb.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3419" href="#xd19e3419src" name="xd19e3419">4</a></span> See +<span class="sc">VOL. XXII</span>, p. 300, note 61.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3429" href="#xd19e3429src" name="xd19e3429">5</a></span> For this +expedition to Mindanao by Hurtado de Corcuera, see previous documents. +This reference proves the present relation to have been written in +1640, as the expedition above mentioned occurred in 1637.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3434" href="#xd19e3434src" name="xd19e3434">6</a></span> Visayan +name (also <i>colocolo</i>, elsewhere) of the fishing gannet (<i>Sula +piscatrix</i>). Delgado says (<i lang="es">Historia</i>, p. 820) that +he had a tame one in his house, which would bring home fish that it had +caught, and carry them to the kitchen.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3478" href="#xd19e3478src" name="xd19e3478">7</a></span> French, +<i lang="fr">Estang du Roy</i> (“the King’s Pool”); +evidently referring to the hot springs near Laguna de Bay (see +<span class="sc">VOL. XIV</span>, p. 211), and the word <i>Roy</i> is +probably a misprint for <i>Bay</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3497" href="#xd19e3497src" name="xd19e3497">8</a></span> It is +Chirino who is here (although inexactly) cited; see <span class= +"sc">VOL. XII</span>, p. 236.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3512" href="#xd19e3512src" name="xd19e3512">9</a></span> See +Chirino’s account, in <span class="sc">VOL. XII</span>, p. 241; +he says that the art of writing was imparted to the Visayans by the +Tagals.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3543" href="#xd19e3543src" name="xd19e3543">10</a></span> +Marginal note: “Prudish” (<i lang="es">melindrosa</i>).</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3564" href="#xd19e3564src" name="xd19e3564">11</a></span> That +is, “star-thistles”—the common name of a genus +(<i>Tribulus</i>) of plants, which bears prickly fruits, very injurious +to the feet of animals or men. The military instrument called +“caltrop” resembles that fruit, from which it may have been +evolved; and the appellation <i>tribolo</i> is one of the etymological +elements in “caltrop.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3583" href="#xd19e3583src" name="xd19e3583">12</a></span> See the +Cleveland reissue of the <i>Jesuit Relations</i>, lxv, p. 131, for a +description of head-compression by the North American Indians.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3613" href="#xd19e3613src" name="xd19e3613">13</a></span> Mt. +Bulusan, near the center of the province of Sorsogón, +Luzón; at present “almost extinct, but at times emits an +abundance of watery vapor and sulphurous fumes” (<i>Report</i> of +U. S. Philippine Commission, 1900, iii, p. 149).</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3626" href="#xd19e3626src" name="xd19e3626">14</a></span> Also +called <i>balimbín</i>; the fruit of <i>Averrhoa carambola</i>; +used for food and sweetmeats, and also has medicinal qualities. See +Blanco’s description, <i>Flora</i>, p. 274; and Delgado’s +<i>Historia</i>, pp. 505, 506. For note on santor, see <span class= +"sc">VOL. XVI</span>, p. 87; on banana (<i>Musa</i>), <span class= +"sc">VOL. V</span>, p. 169.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3663" href="#xd19e3663src" name="xd19e3663">15</a></span> The +<i>corot</i> (<i>Dioscorea triphylla</i>) is very common, with leaves +one palmo long, and very small flowers. Its sap is yellow and very +poisonous, and has cleansing power which is utilized to whiten +abacá. The root is very large and is eaten cooked by the +Indians, after having soaked it in the water for three or four +days.</p> +<p class="footnote">The <i>ubi</i> is the <i>Dioscorea alata</i>, and +the plant grows rather high and is widely disseminated. The root is +violet in color, and often attains a great size; it is eaten cooked. +The best variety is that known as the Cebú ubi or ube, which +comes from Bohol, and which makes a delicious jelly. The ubi and +analogous roots must be carefully prepared, or else they prove +poisonous. See Blanco’s <i>Flora</i>, and <i>U. S. Gazetteer of +the Philippine Islands</i>. Delgado (p. 763) enumerates eight varieties +of this root.</p> +<p class="footnote">The <i>apari</i> is perhaps the <i>apalia</i> or +<i>paria</i> (<i>Montordica balsamina</i>), a climbing plant, which +bears a fruit which is rather bitter to the taste, and eaten in salads. +The juice of its leaves is used instead of soap. The ripe fruit soaked +in olive, cocoa, or beneseed oil makes an excellent balsam that is used +for medicinal purposes.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3714" href="#xd19e3714src" name="xd19e3714">16</a></span> French, +<i>patanes</i>, apparently a misprint for <i>patatas</i>. The camote or +sweet potato (<i>Convolvulus batatas</i>, Linn.; now named <i>Batatas +edulis</i>) is extensively cultivated in the islands. Blanco +(<i>Flora</i>, p. 69) cites Mozo as saying that this plant was carried +to the islands from Nueva España; but Blanco regards it as +indigenous in the Philippines. Delgado (pp. 766–768) enumerates +twenty-nine varieties of camote.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3739" href="#xd19e3739src" name="xd19e3739">17</a></span> The +<i>Batelan</i> is perhaps the <i>balete</i>; see <span class="sc">VOL. +XII</span>, p. 214, note 56. For note on dabdab, see <i>ibid.</i>, p. +215, note 57.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3766" href="#xd19e3766src" name="xd19e3766">18</a></span> +Apparently a reference to the variety of orange known at the present +day as navel oranges.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3785" href="#xd19e3785src" name="xd19e3785">19</a></span> For a +treatise on the snakes and poisonous animals of the Philippines, see +Delgado’s <i lang="es">Historia</i>, pp. 889–907. He +describes the <i>omodro</i> as the <i>odto</i> (<i>Hemibungarus +collaris</i>)—from the word meaning “half-day” or +“noon,” and given to it because the bite proves fatal if +given at noon, but at no other time. It is of various colors and very +furious at the hour of noon. The saua (<i>Python reticulatus</i>) is +the largest snake of the islands and is often domesticated, and is not +poisonous to man.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3822" href="#xd19e3822src" name="xd19e3822">20</a></span> The +dugong (a word corrupted from the Malay name <i>duyong</i>); not a +fish, but a marine mammal (<i>Helicore australis</i>). Crawfurd says +(<i>Dict. Indian Islands</i>, p. 125) that it is found in the shallow +seas of the Malayan archipelago, but is not often captured; and that +its flesh is greatly superior to that of the green turtle. This +creature is one of those from which originated the fable of the +mermaids.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3856" href="#xd19e3856src" name="xd19e3856">21</a></span> +Thevenot has translated the Spanish term for Franciscans (<i lang= +"es">padres de San Francisco</i> or <i lang="es">padres +franciscanos</i>) into the popular French term <i lang= +"fr">cordeliers</i>, so called because of their girdle. Similarly he +has translated the term for Dominicans (<i lang="es">padres de San +Domingo</i> or <i lang="es">padres dominicanos</i>) as <i lang= +"fr">Jacobins</i>, also the popular French appellation, so called from +the name of the church of St. Jacques, which was given them in Paris. +See Addis and Arnold’s <i>Cath. Dict.</i>, article +“Franciscans,” p. 356; and Chevin’s <i lang= +"fr">Dict. Latin-Français</i>, p. 353.</p> +<p class="footnote">Either Thevenot the translator, or the author, +omits mention of the convent of the Society of Jesus, only the four +above mentioned being given.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3906" href="#xd19e3906src" name="xd19e3906">22</a></span> The +persimmon; see <span class="sc">VOL. XVI</span>, p. 180.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3914" href="#xd19e3914src" name="xd19e3914">23</a></span> A +misprint for sibucao (<span class="sc">VOL. III</span>, p. 196; +<span class="sc">XV</span>, p. 256).</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3925" href="#xd19e3925src" name="xd19e3925">24</a></span> There +is evidently a play of words in this passage. The French reads <i lang= +"fr">Mais il se trouua bie loing de ses esperances, & auec vn pied +de nez</i>. <i>Pied de nez</i> (literally “a foot of nose”) +is an exact equivalent of the Spanish phrase <i lang="es">palmo de +narices</i>, and the French expression <i lang="fr">demeurer avec un +pied de nez</i> is equivalent to the Spanish idiom <i lang="es">quedar +con un palmo de narices</i>, which signifies “the frustration of +one’s hopes,” or “to be left out in the +cold.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3959" href="#xd19e3959src" name="xd19e3959">25</a></span> +Apparently a corruption of Zarpana, the name given by its inhabitants +to the island of Rota, one of the Mariannes or Ladrones Islands.</p> +</div> +</div> +</div> +</div> +<div class="back"> +<div id="bibl" class="div1 bibliography"><span class= +"pagenum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 id="xd19e3973" class="main">Bibliographical Data</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">The following documents are obtained from MSS. in the +Academia Real de la Historia, Madrid—in the collection +“<span lang="es">Papeles de los Jesuitas</span>:”</p> +<p>1. <i>Events in Filipinas, 1637–38.</i>—In tomo 84, no. +35.</p> +<p>2. <i>Fortunate successes, 1636–37.</i>—In tomo 32, no. +17.</p> +<p>3. <i>Events in Filipinas, 1638–39.</i>—In tomo 4, no. +34, fol. 268.</p> +<p>The following documents are obtained from the <span lang= +"es">Archivo general de Indias</span>, Sevilla:</p> +<p>4. <i>Letter from Corcuera.</i>—”<span lang= +"es">Simancas—Secular; Audiencia de Filipinas; cartas y +espedientes del gobernador de Filipinas vistos en el Consejo; +años 1629 á 1640; est. 67, caj. 6, leg. +8.</span>”</p> +<p>5. <i>Letter from treasurer.</i>—The same as No. 4.</p> +<p>6. <i>The university of Santo +Tomás.</i>—”<span lang="es">Audiencia de Filipinas; +registro de oficio; reales ordenes dirigidas á las autoridades y +particulares del distrito de la Audiencia; años 1605 á +1645; est. 105, caj. 2, leg. 12.</span>” (In this same legajo may +be found two of the decrees of 1638, those of November 8 and December +8; and that of October 3, 1639, has the same pressmark, save +“leg. 2, lib. 4.”) <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb314" +href="#pb314" name="pb314">314</a>]</span></p> +<p>The following documents are obtained from the “<span lang= +"es">Cedulario Indico</span>,” in the <span lang="es">Archivo +Historico Nacional</span>, Madrid:</p> +<p>7. <i>Decrees, 1638.</i>—The first four, in “tomo 39, +fol. 235b, 225b, 262, and 267,” respectively; (the fifth and +sixth, see No. 6, <i>ante</i>;) the seventh, in “tomo xxxi, fol. +144b;” the eighth, in “tomo 7, fol. 352b.”</p> +<p>8. <i>Decrees, 1639.</i>—In the same order as printed, these +are found as follows: In “tomo 39, fol. 276b; tomo xviii, fol. +55; tomo 39, fol. 281; tomo 31, fol. 142b; tomo 39, fol. 285b and 285; +tomo 2, fol. 315b;” (for October 3, see No. 6, <i>ante</i>;) +“tomo 39, fol. 290b and 290.”</p> +<p>The following documents are obtained from the Ventura del Arco MSS. +(Ayer library), vol. ii:</p> +<p>9. <i>Events in the Filipinas, 1639–40.</i>—Pp. +167–184.</p> +<p>10. <i>Relation of the Chinese insurrection.</i>—Pp. +185–250.</p> +<p>The following document is obtained from a rare printed pamphlet in +the <span lang="es">Museo-Biblioteca de Ultramar</span>, Madrid:</p> +<p>11. <i>Glorious victories against Moros.</i>—Part of this is +synopsized in translation. The pamphlet is designated in the +<span lang="es">Museo-Biblioteca</span> by the number “111, +21-2a.”</p> +<p>The following document is obtained from a MS. volume in the +possession of Edward E. Ayer, Chicago; the volume is undated, but is +supposed to be written in 1835, and is entitled, <i lang= +"es">Demostración historica de cuantas depredaciones llevan +cometidas las Moros</i>, etc.: <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb315" +href="#pb315" name="pb315">315</a>]</span></p> +<p>12. <i>Letters to Misericordia.</i>—In fol. 6b, 7, and 8.</p> +<p>The following documents are taken from printed works:</p> +<p>13. <i>Relation by Bañuelos y Carrillo.</i>—From +Thevenot’s <i lang="fr">Relations de divers voyages curieux</i> +(Paris, <span class="sc">M.DC.XCVI</span>), tomo i, part ii; from a +copy belonging to the Prescott Collection in the library of Harvard +University. (The original printed pamphlet by Bañuelos y +Carrillo is supposed to be no longer extant.)</p> +<p>14. <i>Value of Corcuera’s seizures.</i>—From +<span class="corr" id="xd19e4101" title= +"Source: Pastells’s">Pastells’</span> edition of +Colin’s <i lang="es">Labor evangélica</i>, iii, pp. +528–533.</p> +<p>15. <i>Ecclesiastical and Augustinian affairs.</i>—From +Casimiro Diaz’s <i lang="es">Conquistas</i>, pp. +267–444.</p> +<p>16. <i>Relation of the Filipinas Islands, by a +religious.</i>—The same as No. 13.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div class="div1"> +<h2 class="main">Table of Contents</h2> +<ul> +<li><a href="#toc">Contents of Volume XXIX</a> +<span class="tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href= +"#xd19e155">5</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#loi">Illustrations</a> +<span class="tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href= +"#xd19e285">7</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#preface">Preface</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e339">9</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1638">Documents of 1638</a> +<span class="tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href= +"#xd19e420">21</a></span> +<ul> +<li><a href="#doc1638.1">Events in the Filipinas, +1637–38</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e484">23</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.2">Letter from Corcuera to Felipe +IV</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e783">50</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.3">Letter to Felipe IV from the Treasurer at +Manila</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e802">52</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.4">Bañuelos y Carrillo’s +Relation</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e862">66</a></span> +<ul> +<li><a href="#xd19e866">Relation of the Filipinas Islands, by Admiral +Don Hieronimo de Bañuelos y Carrillo</a> +<span class="tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href= +"#xd19e867">66</a></span></li> +</ul> +</li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.5">Glorious Victories against the Moros of +Mindanao</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e1033">86</a></span> +<ul> +<li><a href="#doc1638.5.1">An account of the great island of Mindanao, +and the hostilities committed by those Mohammedans in the Filippinas +Islands.</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e1087">90</a></span></li> +</ul> +</li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.6">Royal Orders and Decrees, +1638</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e1147">102</a></span> +<ul> +<li><a href="#doc1638.6.1">Removal of negroes from +Manila</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e1150">102</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.6.2">Restricting the religious +orders</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e1170">104</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.6.3">Appointment of secular priests to +missions</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e1202">106</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.6.4">Compensation to nuns of St. +Clare</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e1220">107</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.6.5">Regulating the seminary of Santa +Potenciana</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e1240">109</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.6.6">Commerce of the islands with +Mexico</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e1258">110</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.6.7">Jurisdiction over +seamen</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e1278">112</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.6.8">On the lading of the +galleons</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e1295">113</a></span></li> +</ul> +</li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.7">Fortunate Successes in Filipinas and +Terrenate, 1636–37</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e1305">116</a></span> +<ul> +<li><a href="#doc1638.7.1">Filipinas</a> +<span class="tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href= +"#xd19e1312">116</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.7.2">Terrenate</a> +<span class="tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href= +"#xd19e1375">133</a></span></li> +</ul> +</li> +<li><a href="#doc1638.8">Value of Corcuera’s Seizures in +Jolo</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e1391">135</a></span></li> +</ul> +</li> +<li><a href="#doc1639">Documents of +1639–1640</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e1891">139</a></span> +<ul> +<li><a href="#doc1639.1">Events in the Philipinas: From the Year 1638 +to that of 1639</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e1951">141</a></span> +<ul> +<li><a href="#doc1639.1.1">Letter from Father Pedro +Gutierrez</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e1990">143</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.1.2">Section of a letter written in +Manila</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e2019">148</a></span></li> +</ul> +</li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.2">Letters from Corcuera to the Holy +Misericordia</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2248">172</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.3">The University of Santo +Tomas</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e2296">175</a></span> +<ul> +<li><a href="#doc1639.3.1">Letter to the Spanish ambassador at +Roma</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e2299">175</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.3.2">Letter from Felipe IV to Urban +VIII</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e2324">177</a></span></li> +</ul> +</li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.4">Royal Orders and Decrees, +1639</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e2337">178</a></span> +<ul> +<li><a href="#doc1639.4.1">Missions in +Mindanao</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e2340">178</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.4.2">In behalf of Grau y +Monfalcón</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2359">179</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.4.3">Restraining the +Augustinians</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2378">181</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.4.4">Regarding ecclesiastical +districts</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2405">183</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.4.5">Rebuking the bishop of +Camarines</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2422">184</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.4.6">Inspection at +Acapulco</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e2456">186</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.4.7">Colonists needed in the +islands</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e2511">190</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.4.8">Directions to the +archbishop</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2539">191</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1639.4.9">Oppression of the +Indians</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e2564">192</a></span></li> +</ul> +</li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.1">Events in the Filipinas Islands: From August, +1639, to August, 1640</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2582">194</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2">Relation of the Insurrection of the +Chinese</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e2718">208</a></span> +<ul> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.1">Its causes and +beginning</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2721">208</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.2">Advice is given in Manila. First assault of +the enemy, and its result</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2750">210</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.3">The enemy advance to San Pedro. They are +pursued, and are defeated in Calamba</a> +<span class="tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href= +"#xd19e2762">212</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.4">The Chinese of Sagar and Santa Cruz +rebel</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e2784">216</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.5">The Sangleys of the Parián +revolt</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e2817">220</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.6">Events at the port of Cavite and other +places at this time</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2841">223</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.7">Encampment of the insurgents; damages which +they inflict; levies of men to oppose them</a> +<span class="tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href= +"#xd19e2870">227</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.8">The enemy are dislodged, and pursued as far +as Bocaue</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2895">230</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.9">The enemy return to Sagar and San +Mateo</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e2946">235</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.10">Success of our troops, and defeat of the +enemy in Antipolo</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2959">238</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.11">Injuries which the enemy committed during +their flight</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2979">242</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.12">Garrisons are placed in the churches, and +peace is discussed</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2988">244</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.13">Peace is concluded, and both armies return +to Manila</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3023">247</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.14">The slain in both armies; the enemy’s +weapons and mode of warfare; and the damage committed by +them.</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e3032">249</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.15">The persons who most distinguished +themselves in our army</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3062">252</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.2.16">The activities in Manila during the time of +the war, not only in defense of the city, but in +prayers</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e3074">254</a></span></li> +</ul> +</li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.3">Ecclesiastical and Augustinian Affairs, +1630–40</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3125">259</a></span> +<ul> +<li><a href="#doc1640.3.vi">Chapter VI</a> +<span class="tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href= +"#xd19e3139">259</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.3.vii">Chapters +VII–XIV</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3166">264</a></span></li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.3.xv">Chapters +XV–XXXIV</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3171">264</a></span></li> +</ul> +</li> +<li><a href="#doc1640.4">Relation of the Filipinas +Islands</a> <span class="tocPagenum"><a class= +"pageref" href="#xd19e3321">277</a></span></li> +</ul> +</li> +<li><a href="#bibl">Bibliographical Data</a> +<span class="tocPagenum"><a class="pageref" href= +"#xd19e3973">313</a></span></li> +</ul> +</div> +<div class="transcribernote"> +<h2 class="main">Colophon</h2> +<h3 class="main">Availability</h3> +<p class="first">This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no +cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. 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These +links may not work for you.</p> +<h3 class="main">Corrections</h3> +<p>The following corrections have been applied to the text:</p> +<table class="correctiontable" summary= +"Overview of corrections applied to the text."> +<tr> +<th>Page</th> +<th>Source</th> +<th>Correction</th> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e304">7</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">uund</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">und</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e384">16</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Espana</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">España</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e471">21</a>, +<a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2707">207</a>, <a class="pageref" href= +"#xd19e3224">266</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4101">315</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Pastells’s</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Pastells’</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e863">66</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Banuelos</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Bañuelos</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e914">72</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">had had</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">had</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e1381">134</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Almontes</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Almonte</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e1886">138</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">1,375</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">10,375</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2113">159</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Parágua</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Paragua</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2878">228</a>, +<a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2911">232</a>, <a class="pageref" href= +"#xd19e3038">249</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">[<i>Not in source</i>]</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">.</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +</div> + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898, +Volume 29 of 55, by Various + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PHILIPPINE IS., 1493-1898, VOL 29 *** + +***** This file should be named 38748-h.htm or 38748-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/7/4/38748/ + +Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project +Gutenberg. + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898, Volume 29 of 55 + Explorations by Early Navigators, Descriptions of the + Islands and Their Peoples, Their History and Records of + the Catholic Missions, as Related in Contemporaneous Books + and Manuscripts, Showing the Political, Economic, Commercial + and Religious Conditions of Those Islands from Their + Earliest Relations with European Nations to the Close of + the Nineteenth Century + +Author: Various + +Editor: Emma Helen Blair + James Alexander Robertson + +Release Date: February 1, 2012 [EBook #38748] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PHILIPPINE IS., 1493-1898, VOL 29 *** + + + + +Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project +Gutenberg. + + + + + + + + + The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 + + Explorations by early navigators, descriptions of the islands and + their peoples, their history and records of the catholic missions, + as related in contemporaneous books and manuscripts, showing the + political, economic, commercial and religious conditions of those + islands from their earliest relations with European nations to the + close of the nineteenth century, + + Volume XXIX, 1638-40 + + + + Edited and annotated by Emma Helen Blair and James Alexander Robertson + with historical introduction and additional notes by Edward Gaylord + Bourne. + + + The Arthur H. Clark Company + Cleveland, Ohio + MCMV + + + + + + + +CONTENTS OF VOLUME XXIX + + + Preface 9 + + Documents of 1638 + + Events in the Filipinas, 1637-38. [Unsigned; probably + written by Juan Lopez, S.J., at Cavite, in July, 1638.] 23 + + Letter to Felipe IV. Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera; + Manila, August 21. 50 + + Letter to Felipe IV, from the treasurer at + Manila. Baltasar Ruiz de Escalona; Manila, August 31. 52 + + Relation of the Filipinas Islands. Hieronimo + de Banuelos y Carrillo; Mexico, 1638. 66 + + Glorious victories against the Moros of Mindanao. Diego + de Bobadilla, S.J., and others; Mexico, 1638. 86 + + Royal orders and decrees, 1638. Felipe IV; Madrid, March + 15, and September-December. 102 + + Fortunate successes in Filipinas and Terrenate, + 1636-37. [Unsigned; published in Madrid, 1639.] 116 + + Value of Corcuera's seizures in Jolo. [Unsigned and + undated; probably 1638.] 135 + + Documents of 1639-1640 + + Events in the Philipinas from the year 1638 to that of + 1639. [Unsigned; probably Juan Lopez, at Cavite, 1639.] 141 + + Letters to the Holy Misericordia. Sebastian Hurtado de + Corcuera; Manila, December 4, 1637, and October 26, 1639. 172 + + The university of Santo Tomas. Felipe IV; Madrid, + November 9, 1639. 175 + + Royal orders and decrees. Felipe IV; Madrid, 1639. 178 + + Events in the Filipinas Islands from August, 1639, + to August, 1640. [Juan Lopez?]; Cavite, August, 1640. 194 + + Relation of the insurrection of the Chinese. [Unsigned + and undated; probably in March, 1640.] 208 + + Ecclesiastical and Augustinian affairs, 1630-40. Casimiro + Diaz; Manila [1718?]. [From his Conquistas.] 259 + + Relation of the Filipinas Islands. [Diego de Bobadilla, + S.J.; 1640.] 277 + + Bibliographical Data. 313 + + + + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + + View of city of Manila; photographic facsimile of engraving in + Mallet's Description de l'univers (Paris, 1683), ii, p. 127; + from copy in the Library of Congress. 67 + + View of one of Ladrones Islands; photographic facsimile of + engraving in Hulsius's Eigentliche und wahrhaftige Beschreibung + (Franckfurt am Mayne, M.DC.XX), p. 66; from copy in library of + Harvard University. 169 + + Portus Acapulco (view of harbor of Acapulco, Mexico); + photographic facsimile of engraving in Arnoldus Montanus's + Nieuwe en onbekende Weereld (Amsterdam, 1671), p. 246; from + copy in library of Harvard University. 188 + + Archipelagus orientalis, sive Asiaticus (Eastern or Asiatic + archipelago); photographic facsimile of map by Joannis Blaeu + (Amsterdam, 1659); from original map in Bibliotheque Nationale, + Paris. 279 + + + + + + + +PREFACE + + +The present volume (1638-40) is largely occupied with the annals +of those years, and the hostilities of the Moro pirates. This +period is a troublous one; "wars and rumors of wars," conspiracies +(among both Chinese and natives), storms, shipwrecks, and disease, +disquiet the colony. The Chinese revolt of 1639 is described at +length. Corcuera administers the government with a high hand, and +arouses many enmities. Two interesting descriptions of the islands +are furnished, by a Spanish officer and by a Jesuit. + +The Jesuit annalist at Manila contributes (1638) the news of the past +year--apparently the contents of his note-book or diary, as written +therein at each occurrence or arrival, and free from the "improvements" +of any official editor, in which fact lies its especial value. This +document strongly resembles in this respect, and in its scope, the +famous Journal des Jesuites of Quebec. To some extent, the same remarks +are true of all the annals written, actually or presumably, by Juan +Lopez; but the present document is unusually fresh and primitive in +style. He relates the depredations committed by the Dutch on Spanish +and Portuguese commerce, especially about the strait of Malaca. The +Dominican faction of "Barbones" has been suppressed. The Chinese +at Manila present a large sum of money to Corcuera, with which +a gift for the king is purchased. Information is given regarding +several priests and other persons. The settlement at Formosa is +being abandoned, and the missionaries there are going to China. The +Camucones have attempted to raid the Visayas, but are repulsed by +the Indians and Spaniards. The Jesuit Mastrilli has been martyred in +Japan, and funeral honors are paid to him in Manila. Corcuera has +gone to punish the Joloans. The Jesuit church at Cavite, and that +of the Dominicans at Manila, have been entered by thieves. There +are a few slight encounters with the Dutch. In China, persecutions +of the Christians have begun, due largely to the imprudence of the +friars. The missions in Siam and adjoining countries are endangered +by the machinations of the Dutch. The Joloan stronghold is captured +by Corcuera; two of his best officers are sent home to regain their +health, but are slain by their Chinese crew. Jesuits are conducting a +successful mission in the island of Hainan. The Japanese are growing +weary of their persecutions against the Christians; only three +Jesuits are left there of all the missionaries and nothing certain +is known of these. Corcuera arrives at Manila on May 23; he brings +back many captives, of whom a considerable number died en route, but +"it is a cause of great consolation that no Moro has died without +baptism." A triumphant entry is made into Manila by the victorious +army. In Mindanao Moncay is killed, and Corralat is no longer aided +by the Ternatans; the Moros generally are in wholesome fear of the +Spanish power. The missions in China are doing well, and are aided +by the emperor. Lopez notes many little items of news, of all sorts, +about matters civil, ecclesiastical, and foreign, with various gossip, +some of the cloister, some of his seaport. + +A short letter from Corcuera to the king (August 21, 1638) states that +he has appointed Luis Arias de Mora "protector of the Sangleys;" +this man (a lawyer) also acts as counselor for the archbishop, +exercising a wholesome restraint upon that prelate. + +A letter from the royal treasurer at Manila to the king (August 31, +1638) laments the injuries and losses caused to the royal estate +by Corcuera's reckless and extravagant management. He is blamed for +refusing to send the trading ships to Mexico, for establishing a force +for the nightly patrol of the city, for forming several companies of +Indian soldiers, for paying certain salaries which are claimed to be +needless, and for building a church for the soldiers. Escalona declares +that the trade of the islands with Mexico is neglected and unregulated, +and thus the colonists are being financially ruined. He asserts that +the expeditions against Mindanao and Jolo had cost much unnecessary +expenditure of both money and lives; and that Corcuera has attempted +to cover up these expenses under specious pretexts. The treasurer +complains that the governor has spent too much on the royal hospital, +and has interfered with the duties and rights of the royal officials; +and entreats the king to see that he is restrained within due bounds. + +An interesting description of the Philippine Islands is furnished +(Mexico, 1638) by a Spanish admiral, Hieronimo de Banuelos y Carrillo; +it is addressed to the president of the Council of the Indias; the +original is, so far as known, no longer extant, and it is found only +in the French version by Thevenot. Banuelos finds life in Manila +"altogether delightful," as it has abundance of all supplies and +comforts. He describes the Parian, and praises the ability of the +Chinese; but he asserts that they are injuring the islands by their +illicit connection with the Mexican trade. The condition and character +of that trade are here presented, in a description very different +from that furnished by Grau y Monfalcon. This writer objects to the +silk trade between Filipinas and Nueva Espana, which only benefits +the Chinese, the Portuguese of Macao, and the Mexicans. Moreover, +"the encomiendas are ruined," while the natives are not instructed in +religion, and are hostile to the Spaniards. The Malays of Ternate and +other outlying islands are in league with the Dutch, and the trade +with them is going to ruin. Banuelos proposes a new plan for the +Filipinas commerce; he would (still limiting its amount) restrict +it mainly to raw silk and cotton, which could be manufactured in +Mexico; he enumerates the advantages that would result from this +course. The Japanese trade need not be considered in this question, +as it is closed to the Spaniards on account of religious persecution; +of this last and its effects Banuelos gives some account. He again +urges that the trade in Chinese stuffs be suppressed; and makes +recommendations as to the manner in which it should be conducted, +describing various abuses and scandals which he has discovered therein. + +The Jesuit Bobadilla published (Mexico, 1638) a "Relation of the +glorious victories ... against the Mahometan Moros;" it contains +Mastrilli's letter of June 2, 1637 (published in VOL. XXVII of this +series), and other matter obtained from letters which the editor had +received from Manila; we present here such part as is new. Bobadilla +prefaced this compilation by a short address to Governor Corcuera's +brother Inigo (a military officer in Mexico), in which he takes +occasion to eulogize the virtues of both in glowing terms. The first +section of the book is occupied by a relation (here only briefly +outlined) of the miraculous cure wrought upon Father Mastrilli, and his +entrance into missionary work; then follows "an account of the great +island of Mindanao," partly descriptive and partly historical. The +piratical raids of the Mindanaos upon the Spanish settlements and the +Visayan coasts are briefly recounted, with mention of the establishment +of Spanish missions and forts in Mindanao; also the raids made by the +Camucones, Joloans, and Borneans. Then follow a description of the +naval battle at Punta de Flechas, Mastrilli's letter describing the +Mindanao campaign, and Lopez's account of Corcuera's triumph--all of +which we have previously published. + +Various royal orders and decrees issued in 1638 are here +presented. Corcuera is warned (March 15) to proceed cautiously in +regard to the free negroes whom he has removed from the city, and to +obtain royal permission henceforth for any important measures that +he may contemplate. A decree of September 2 imposes restrictions +on the religious orders in the islands, and permits the governor to +use secular priests as missionaries. The king orders him (October 2) +to appoint to new missions native secular priests instead of friars; +also to treat the nuns of St. Clare with more consideration, and +to pay them for certain inconveniences that he has caused them. He +is authorized (November 8) to take such measures as are necessary to +maintain the seclusion of the inmates of Santa Potenciana. The viceroy +and Audiencia of Mexico are ordered (December 8) to report whether it +will be best to increase the amount of trade allowed to the citizens +of Filipinas with Nueva Espana; and other decrees of the same date +give the officers of the galleons authority to punish any infractions +of law committed by their men while in port, and require stricter +enforcement of the regulations in regard to lading those vessels. + +A printed pamphlet, "Fortunate successes in Filipinas and Terrenate" +(Madrid, 1639), gives a brief outline of the Moro raids into the +Philippines during several years, and Corcuera's successful campaign +against those pirates; it is evidently written by a Jesuit, or largely +compiled from Mastrilli's letter. At the end is a description of the +encounter between Spanish and English ships at Malayo. We append a +short document enumerating the spoils seized in the Jolo campaign by +the Spanish forces, with the value assigned to each item; the expenses +of the expedition are covered thereby mainly by the proceeds from +the sale of Moro captives. + +"Events in the Philipinas during the year 1638-39" are recorded, as +before, by a Jesuit, presumably Juan Lopez. The news from Mindanao +and Jolo is not encouraging; the Moros are revolting, and in Jolo a +plague and epidemic is feared; besides, the commandant there has proved +unfit. A letter from the Jesuit Gutierrez relates events in Mindanao; +these relate mainly to the measures taken by the Spanish commandant +to control and pacify the disaffected Moros. Spanish friars exiled +from China have arrived in Formosa, but hope to reenter China. The +Jesuits of Macao also indulge the hope of gaining foothold anew in +Japan. The writer gives various interesting news items about the +arrival and departure of the ships at the port of Cavite; and the +escape, on several occasions, of Moro captives held at Manila, and +the recapture of many of them. A letter from Father Alejandro Lopez +describes the attempt of the men of Jolo to recapture by treachery +their stronghold from the Spaniards, and the severe punishment +inflicted by Pedro de Almonte upon the rebels. Chinese pirates commit +depredations on the Luzon coasts; and plots of the resident Chinese +against the Spaniards are discovered and punished. A revolt by the +Indians of Nueva Segovia is also quelled. Recent news from Mindanao +and Jolo tells of increasing Spanish ascendency, but at a fearful +cost to the Moro natives--slaughtered people, devastated lands, and +consequent deaths by famine. One of the trading ships to Mexico has +been wrecked, which is a great blow to the colony. A fierce hurricane +causes great damage at Cavite and in its vicinity; and there have been +epidemics of disease in Luzon, in which many persons have died. It +is feared that both of the Acapulco galleons have been lost at sea; +and all these things fill the people with sadness. The small remnant +of the crew of a Spanish galleon wrecked the preceding year among +the Ladrones Islands arrive at Manila. + +Letters from Corcuera to the confraternity of Santa Misericordia +ask (December 4, 1637) their prayers for the success of his Jolo +expedition; and (October 26, 1639) that they will take into their house +two Moro hostages, to train them in the Christian doctrine. Letters +from Felipe IV to Rome (November 9, 1639) ask that the college of +Santo Tomas at Manila be erected into a university. + +A group of royal decrees issued during 1639 is presented. The +governor's action in stationing religious ministers in Mindanao +is approved. The municipal authorities of Manila are ordered to +retain Grau y Monfalcon as their agent at the royal court. The +newly-appointed governor of the islands, Diego Fajardo, is ordered to +correct (but with mildness and prudence) the Augustinians in trading +and in oppressing the Indians; and to restore to the secular priests +Quiapo and other districts assigned to the Jesuits by Corcuera. The +bishop of Camarines is ordered to return to his diocese, and the royal +officials to withhold his salary until he shall do so. Directions +are given to the viceroy of Nueva Espana regarding the inspection +of Philippine vessels at Acapulco, and the necessity of sending more +colonists to the islands. Answer is made to various points in a former +letter from the archbishop; and the Audiencia are commanded to treat +the Indians more justly. + +Events in the Filipinas Islands from August to November, 1639, are +recorded by the Jesuit annalist of former years (presumably Juan +Lopez). The arrivals and departures of ships form the chief of these +events, and the writer furnishes much interesting news in connection +with them. A fierce storm delays the galleon to Nueva Espana, and +wrecks two Chinese junks, drowning many of their men. The two Acapulco +galleons arrive, about this time, at Nueva Segovia, and are wrecked in +that port, with much loss of life. The recent conquest of Jolo is being +completed. The king of Macasar is friendly, and has sent provisions +to the Portuguese colony at Malaca. A Dutch squadron sent against +the city of Goa has been almost destroyed by the Portuguese. The +people of Tidore and Ternate are leagued together, which causes the +Spaniards to fear a revolt against their control. The Moro chiefs +in Mindanao are plotting together against the Spaniards. Nearly +half of this document is occupied with an account of the Chinese +insurrection late in November, 1639; it is soon quelled, with the +slaughter of many Sangleys. A detailed account of this episode, +presumably the one mentioned in the last note on Lopez's record, is +here presented; it is a valuable if not altogether edifying document, +especially for its revelations of human nature. Lopez's statement that +the revolt was soon over was premature; it lasted nearly four months, +and caused great loss of property to the Spaniards, and of lives to the +insurgents. Most of the Chinese population in Luzon was exterminated, +thanks to their lack of cannon and firearms and "the special protection +of our Lord over our army," which lost not even fifty men. It is a +sickening record of slaughter--not only in so-called battle, but in +the cold-blooded, deliberate, and systematic butchery of unarmed men, +taken by surprise or lured by treacherous promises. The most striking +instance of this is the cruel slaughter, caused by a blind and panic +fear, of the house-servants and other Chinese in Manila; another is the +burning of the Parian, with all the rich merchandise stored therein; +while in Cavite several hundred Chinese are deliberately taken out +by tens and beheaded. In both cases, however, opportunity is kindly +provided for the wretched victims to receive baptisms, if they were +infidels, or to make their confessions, if Christians. Peace is finally +made with the small remnant of the insurgent force, who are taken to +Manila and carefully guarded within a stockade. The writer describes +their method of warfare; and enumerates the villages burned by them, +and other damages committed, during the revolt. + +The history of the Augustinian order in the Philippines, presented in +VOLS. XXIII and XXIV of this series from Medina's Historia, is here +continued for the decade 1630-40 by an extract from Diaz's Conquistas +(written about 1718), partly in synopsis and partly in translation. He +relates the contest over the vacant see of Manila, finally settled +(1630) in favor of Fray Pedro de Arce; the election of Geronimo de +Medrano as provincial in 1632; the persecutions in Japan, the lives +of martyrs there, the controversy between Corcuera and the bishop, +biographies of noted Augustinians, and various secular matters (all +of which we omit). There is an interesting relation of the life and +labors of a useful missionary, Alonso de Mentrida, among the Indians +in Panay Island; he wages unceasing war against the devil and his +agents, the native priests of idols--the former often appearing in +visible and hideous form. A similar account is given of the life +of Juan de Medina (above cited). In 1638 Fray Martin Errasti is +elected provincial. The Visayas Islands have been, of late years, +harassed by the Moro pirates; but a notable expedition is undertaken +(1639) against those of the Lake Lanao region, in which the Recollect +missionary known as "Padre Capitan" is a prominent figure. For the +time, those Moros are awed and warned. Diaz recounts the main events +of that time--Corcuera's expedition to Jolo and the insurrection of +the Chinese. Errasti dies in 1639, and his vacant office is assumed +by Fray Juan Ramirez, the past provincial. + +In 1640 the Jesuit Bobadilla writes a description of the Philippines +and their people. The former is but a brief outline; most of the +document is devoted to the Indian natives, and the natural products of +the islands. The father writes of the custom of slavery among them; +their religious beliefs, customs, and superstitions; the practices +of their priests; their physical appearance, and dress; their customs +of tattooing, filing the teeth, and bathing; their language, writing, +and music. He describes their marriages, houses, occupations, boats, +and weapons; and their medical practice and mortuary customs. Then he +considers the climate of the islands, the culture and uses of rice, +and the natural products--animals, minerals, and fruits, especially +the palm and bamboo. He describes the buyo, so commonly used there; +also various peculiar animals. Bobadilla then mentions the manner in +which the Spanish colony is governed; their garrisons in the islands; +and the bishoprics therein. He describes briefly the city of Manila, +the trade of Filipinas, the relations of the Spaniards with the +Chinese and other peoples, and the voyage between Manila and Acapulco. + + + The Editors + July, 1905. + + + + + + + +DOCUMENTS OF 1638 + + + Events in the Filipinas, 1637-38. [Unsigned; probably written by + Juan Lopez, S.J., in July, 1638.] + Letter to Felipe IV. Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera; August 21. + Letter to Felipe IV, from the treasurer at Manila. Baltasar Ruiz + de Escalona; August 31. + Relation of the Filipinas Islands. Hieronimo de Banuelos y + Carrillo; 1638. + Glorious victories against the Moros of Mindanao. Diego de + Bobadilla, S.J., and others; 1638. + Royal orders and decrees, 1638. Felipe IV; March 15, and + September-December. + Fortunate successes in Filipinas and Terrenate, 1636-37. + [Unsigned; published in 1639.] + Value of Corcuera's seizures in Jolo. [Unsigned and undated; + probably 1638.] + + + +Sources: The first and seventh of these documents are obtained from +MSS. in the Academia Real de la Historia, Madrid; the second and third, +and two of the decrees in the sixth, from MSS. in the Archivo general +de Indias, Sevilla; the rest of the sixth, from the Archivo Historico +Nacional, Madrid; the fourth, from Thevenot's Voyages curieux, t. i, +part ii--from a copy belonging to the library of Harvard University; +the fifth, from a book in the Museo-Biblioteca de Ultramar, Madrid; +the eighth, from Pastells' edition of Colin's Labor evangelica, iii, +pp. 528-533. + +Translations: These are made by James A. Robertson--except the second +and part of the sixth, by Emma Helen Blair; and the fifth, by Arthur +B. Myrick. + + + + + + + +EVENTS IN THE FILIPINAS, 1637-38 + + +The patache for Espana left here August 24. It had a propitious season +[for departure], and therefore it has apparently enjoyed favoring +vendaval blasts. [1] A short time before that, the patache had left +for the island of Hermosa; its commander was Don Alonso de Alcocer, +and the governor of that island, Sargento-mayor Pedro Palomino, +sailed in it. On the fifth of September, a xalea arrived from Yndia +on its way to Macan, which had been obliged to put in here on account +of the weather. It left Malaca August 16, in order to advise the +inhabitants of Macan to be on the lookout, for there were many Dutch +in the strait. Now they are going in the galleon "San Juan Baptista" +under command of Juan Lopez de Ariduin, to buy materials of importance +for his Majesty's fleets. The xalea remains here to be used for the +expedition to Xolo, for which it seems well fitted. They report as +news that Goa was almost surrounded by Dutch vessels. Six galleons +went out to attack them and sank three of the Dutch vessels. The +latter retired after three days of fighting, with the intention of +returning to Jacatra and getting a larger force. On the way they met +eleven Portuguese fustas, which took shelter in a river. The Dutch +employed strategy in fighting them, and captured seven of the fustas, +while four escaped. One of the latter was an excuse for a galley. In +consequence [of that victory], the enemy are now committing great +depredations in the strait. + +It is also reported that the Malabars with seventeen paroos [i.e., +praus] attacked last year a ship from Macan with a crew of thirty +Portuguese, and carrying great wealth, a thing never before seen. It +is reported that the Dutch there have shown great anger at what +the relief galleons did this year with their ships and the fort of +Malayo; and that, for the coming year, they are intending to send +out a squadron to punish the jest that was played on them. + +It is reported that a Portuguese, named Antonio Carnero, has taken +up arms together with others, and that they have adopted the calling +of pirates, and are committing depredations on Moros and Christians. + +When the king of Achen was about to go to attack Malaca with a fleet, +he died. The kingdom was inherited by the king of Paon, an old-time +friend of the Portuguese. He has renewed friendship with them--a +great piece of news. + +Fray Antonio del Rosario, the ancient of Macan, of [the Order of] +St. Dominic, bishop-elect of Malaca, died on the way [to that city] +before being consecrated. + +The fathers who accompanied Father Marcelo, who were captured last +year by the Dutch, together with that famous Polish father, are now +at liberty. Father Antonio Magallanes, procurator of the province of +Goa, whom I saw at Roma and Madrid, was to conduct Father Marcelo and +his companions; but he remained in Espana to finish some business, +has been elected bishop of Japon, and they are awaiting him in Yndia. + +Among the Portuguese of that xalea is one who is a lay-brother of +St. Francis. He came last year from Lisboa as companion of a bishop, +the friar Francisco Froan de Benavides, who was once in the mission +of Nuevo Mexico. He died on his arrival at Goa, and this religious is +trying to pass to Espana by way of these islands, with papers left him +by the bishop. This is the principal news brought by the Portuguese. + +On the morning of the seventh of this month, Fray Juan de Subelco [2] +came here from the province of the Rosario, to ask assistance by virtue +of an order that he brought from the governor. This was given to him +[by the authorities], and he entered the convent, took possession of it +for his province, and sent to Manila the father rector, Fray Francisco +Pinelo, who surrendered the house peaceably and quietly. The day +before, with the same aid, they had taken possession at the same time +of Minondo, the hospital, and the Parian, and conveyed Father Collado +and the other fathers to their convent. The community received them +at the door of their church, amid the chiming of bells, the playing +of organs, and with candles lighted on their altars; thence they took +the fathers to their cells. As a thank-offering they began a novena, +on November 7, of masses and Salves, accompanied by fine music, the +chiming of the bells, and a goodly crowd. All the people rejoiced +because they were at peace. Your Reverence will be pleased to know +how this happened. Collado wrote bits of satire against the governor, +calling him filius diaboli flagellum dei et alia hujus modi. [3] +His original letters were returned to hands that placed them in +those of Don Sebastian. Finally the governor allowed the claims of +the province of the Rosario to stand. That province had made Fray +Andres del Santisimo judge-conservator, who summoned Collado to show +his despatches that had been passed by the Council [of the Indias], +but he did not answer. The judge-conservator cited him for the second +time, but there was no answer. The judge-conservator proclaimed the +cause at an end, and sentenced his province to be suppressed. Aid +was asked for the execution of the order and was given, etc. + +On Saturday, the twelfth of this month, excommunications were read +here in four churches against those who had or knew of moneys, +clothing, books, or other things of the bearded fathers, [4] unless +they gave them up to those of the Rosario. Almost two thousand pesos +were declared here belonging to Pinelo, who had deposited them with +a friend. He came to Manila instantly, and begged protection from Don +Sebastian, saying that they were his--five hundred pesos received from +a berth on ship, given him by his Lordship for Mexico, and which, with +his Lordship's permission, he sold when he remained; one hundred and +seventy pesos from a pay-warrant which his Lordship had ordered to be +paid to him; and he had been given one thousand or more pesos, which +his nephew the reader Ochoa (whom he brought with him as a witness) had +given him. All this did he state, for even as he left here, he tried +to go to Espana in this galleon by way of Macan, which was conceded to +him. The governor wrote to Fray Juan de Subelco to let him have that +money, which was proved to belong to Pinelo. He gave him another and +very stringent letter for his provincial in Manila that declared the +same thing. Father Fray Juan, who narrated the matter to me, went to +talk with him, and told him that the books showed that the expense was +more than eight hundred pesos ahead of the receipts; and that, besides +this, he had just received two hundred pesos belonging to a deceased +man, and one hundred and seventy pesos belonging to another, and that +he will have to give account of this--besides which, in any event, +it all belonged to the order, and nothing was his. He answered that +they should have it there, and that he would write to his provincial; +and that, notwithstanding his letter, Fray Juan should do his duty, +in conformity to the rules of his order. I have now learned that they +gave up all the money to Pinelo, which he carried away. The galleon +sailed September 19. + +Of their own accord the Sangleys offered the governor [5] a gift of +six thousand pesos, giving the following reasons for so doing: first, +because he had redeemed thirty-one of their people from the captivity +of Corralat; second, because he had made the seas free and secure +for their ordinary trade; and third, because he maintained them in +peace and justice. Consequently, the expense of the war of Mindanao, +taking into account the artillery, and the pillage which pertained +to his Majesty, and the above-mentioned six thousand pesos, was not +only covered, but there were also one thousand five hundred pesos +left over, as I was told by his Majesty's accountant. The latter +also adds that the golden water-jug and plate that had belonged to +Auditor Alcaraz were bought for the king our lord with those one +thousand five hundred pesos; and the governor Don Sebastian added to +that sum more than two hundred pesos as a gift from his own purse, +in order to make up the cost of the said water-jug and plate. Dated +at Cavite, September 15, 1637. + +September 27, sentence was declared in favor of the Augustinian +fathers of Castilla, and that sentence makes a complete end to the +alternative. A sentence was also given in which the will of Espinosa +el Tuerto [i.e., "the one-eyed"] was declared null and void. The +property has been delivered to the fund belonging to deceased persons, +and those who have any right to it are to demand their justice. + +I had a letter from Father Melchor de Vera, [6] in which he says that +the people who escaped alive from the six large Javanese ships which +were at Lamitan were accommodated in one caracoa, and passing before +Basilan, full of fear of the Spaniards in the fort of Sanboangan, +talked with the chief men [of Basilan], and told them that they were +those who had been driven from the hill, and that many more than they +had thought had been killed; and that there was no one in Mindanao +who did not mourn a person of very near kin--the father for his son, +the son for his father, etc. + +I shall add here what occurred last year in the month of September, +and which I did not learn until the same month of this year 1637. The +captain and commandant of Caragan was then Juan Nicolas Godino. He +went with a fleet to commit depredations on the tributaries of +Cachil Corralat. He met six caracoas at sea, which he attacked and +conquered--although most of the enemy escaped to land, as they were +near the shore. However he killed some of them and captured others. He +also did much damage in a village that he attacked. He returned +to his fort laden with plunder and with one hundred and twenty +captives. Among the dead was one Dumplac, who had formerly killed +Alferez Blas Gonzalez, and had done great damage to the Christians +of our missions and those of Caragan. Among the captives was a very +famous chief, who was regarded as a brave man, and who killed Captain +Pedro Baptista in the insurrection of Caragan. + +October 24, the patache from the island of Hermosa entered the port, +and it brought back most of the people in those forts. They say +that the Franciscan friars are all going to China, as are all the +Dominicans, except one who remained there. It is reported that they +are suffering famine, and that no ships from China go there. + +The day before, the twenty-third, Sargento-mayor Don Pedro de Corquera, +the governor's nephew, died at Manila. The governor had reared him from +childhood in Flandes. He was well liked and respected in these islands, +for his affable manners had obtained for him much popularity. Three +or four days before, a galley-captain, named N. Ramos, and some +other discontented Spaniards had deserted in a boat with a topmast, +for their provision robbing two Sangley champans. + +The master-of-camp, Pedro de Heredia, died at Manila November 5. He +left all his property to charity. But the Audiencia sequestered it +all immediately, until the end of his residencia. Captain Don Diego +de Miranda also died from an accident, which carried him off in +thirty hours. + +News was received on November 15 that the enemy were passing the +Mindoro coast. That same day, Don Sebastian despatched some vessels +to attack them. Alferez Arexica went from this place to attack +them with fifty firearms in the xalea and two brigantines. He also +despatched his company from Manila in champans, to pursue and punish +them. Shortly after, Father Hernando de Estrada [7] arrived here +from Marinduque. He states that he met some champans which had been +pursued by the enemy, whom they thought to have been Camucones. The +two brigantines returned on the night of November 24. On account of +the wind and rain they had lost the xalea, which was the flagship, +the night that they had left. They went to Balayan, where they learned +that the Camucones had attacked Lobo, but that they had done no damage, +for the Indians resisted them; whereupon the pirates had taken their +course toward their own country by way of the sea side of Mindoro. The +xalea returned November 29, without having met the enemy. Then came +news that one night the flagship and one other of the champans that +had sailed from Manila had collided. The shock was more severe on +the flagship, which sprang a leak and went down. Only one Spaniard +and one Sangley were drowned. + +The champan that carried Father Marcelo Mastril did not go to China, +but to the Lequios, which are subject to the king of Saxuma. Some +Japanese accompanied the father. Accordingly they made use of the +following stratagem. Those of the champan talked with the Lequians, +whom they told that those Japanese had been wrecked on an island, +and that they had rescued them; and that, if the Lequians would give +them some provisions, they would leave the Japanese there; but, if +not, that the latter would return [to Manila]. The Lequians gave them +some food, and immediately despatched the father and the Japanese, +as they wished, in a funea, while the champan returned here. They +learned there that the Dominican fathers who had tried to go to Japon +last year by way of the Lequios had been seized, and sent to the king +of Saxuma by the tono of that land. + +Yesterday, December 9, Don Sebastian set out from Manila for Xolo. He +sailed in the galley flagship. With him went the xalea, brigantines, +champans, and the two galleons for Terrenate, under the command of +Geronimo Enriquez; and as admiral Don Pedro de Almonte, the same as +last year. The second galley was launched yesterday, and the commander +of the galleys, Nicolas Gonzalez, will leave here in it in a week, +in order to follow Don Sebastian. Admiral Andres Lopez de [word partly +illegible; Nozadigui?] will govern this port in his absence. + +A patache arrived at Manila on December 27 from Macan, laden with +five thousand arrobas of iron for Captain Juan Lopez de Ariduin. It +was bought from some English, who were near Macan with three galleons +and this patache. It brought news of the remarkable martyrdom of Father +Francisco Marcelo Mastril, who reached Japon September 19. Having left +Manila on July 10, he landed at the kingdom of Saxuma with only one +companion. He immediately went inland to go to the emperor's court. But +he was seized October 4, and, having suffered most cruel tortures, +he was beheaded October 17 with his aforesaid companion. Since I +translated the relation from Portuguese into Castilian, and enclose +it herewith, I shall only add that the bells in our church and others +were rung as soon as the news arrived. In the afternoon a notable Te +Deum laudamus was sung. The dean again put on his clerical robes. The +archbishop came, as did the royal Audiencia, and a great crowd of +people, and the orders, as well as the master-of-camp, Don Lorenco +de Olaso, and the flower of the soldiery. From our house they went +to [the church of] St. Dominic to sing another Te Deum for three +martyrs of that order. At night there was also a chiming of bells +and an illumination. The entire city celebrated the glory and virtues +of the holy father Marcelo, with tender tears; for he was generally +loved and regarded as a saint. + +Among the Dominican fathers died a mestizo of Binondo, son of a Chinese +and a Tagal woman. He was prosecuted by justice, in order to hang him +for his crimes; and he embarked with the fathers, in order to escape +with his life. Arriving at the Lequios, and his other companions +remaining in the boat, he refused to return, but wished to continue +with the fathers. They tell and do not finish telling of the valor, +fervor, and courage of that holy mestizo, who suffered cruel tortures +with a rare constancy, ever preaching the Divine law of God. + +It was learned, at the coming of that patache, that those fathers +who had accompanied the holy father Marcelo who went with the +captain-general of Macan had arrived safely; and that the champan +which had fled hence with eighteen sailors had made port at that +city. It was also reported that the Portuguese have not been well +received in Japon either this year or last, and all that is because +of the preachers who go. It is learned also that Father Alberto de +Polonia was brought to Cochinchina, and that he is now in Macan, +where for some time he suffered from a most severe illness. + +A champan, which had sailed from the island of Hermosa some years +ago with a load of people, and had been given up as lost, made port +at Sian because of the violence of the wind. That king treated them +well, and gave them the means with which to return. Afterward they +were driven upon the coast of the kingdom of Patani by other fierce +tempests--where, having been supplied and sailing near the strait of +Sincapura, the Dutch followed them. They landed, and at length made +port at Macan, whence some of the men have come, while the others will +come in the galleon "San Juan Baptista." It is said by those who come +in this patache, who had gone in the galleon "San Juan Baptista," that, +on discovering the English ships, lanchas came from them to reconnoiter +them; and the English, having heard that it was a galleon belonging +to the king of Espana, threw up their caps into the air joyfully, +and eagerly cried out, "Hurrah for the king of Espana!" Then they took +the news to their own ships, which fired many salutes, and by way of +toasting the health of the king our sovereign, fired a hundred pieces +of artillery. They told our men that the daughter of their king [8] +was in Espana for all her lifetime. + +Father Fray Francisco de Pinelo and other religious who went from +here to pass to Espana embarked in these English ships, on condition +that there should be no disputes on matters of religion. + +News came through the fathers of St. Augustine at Panhay on January +15, 1638, that one of the champans which left Manila to attack +the Camucones became separated from the others. It fell in with +the Camucones, and did them great damage, sinking their flagship +and almiranta. Twelve Borneans were captured, and six Christians +were freed. The enemy's loss was a hundred counting drowned and +killed. Sargento-mayor Pedro de Fuercios was commander of that champan. + +Almost all the month of January and that of February was taken +up with prayers in various churches, for the fortunate success of +Don Sebastian. Now we are not the only ones to offer them, as we +were last year; but all make them, both the secular clergy and the +friars. The Sangleys have said very solemn prayers in their Parian +church, of their own accord, as an expression of thanks for the peace +and justice in which the governor maintains them. + +Don Sebastian had sent those Borneans and Camucones from Otong to +Manila, ordering them to serve the various orders and hospitals, +so that they might be carefully catechized and made Christians. When +they reached Maribeles, an old Morabite [9] persuaded the others, and +they rose against the Spaniards who were bringing them. There were two +Spaniards in the champan who were wounded, but they killed the Morabite +and wounded some of the others. Some of them were thrown into the sea, +where they were drowned, and with this fortune they reached Manila. + +On the night of February 10, robbers entered the church of this +residence at Cavite, and stole two silver lamps. They set a trap in +the stairway, so that the first one who should descend, if the robbers +were perceived, would undoubtedly be killed. It has been impossible to +find any trace of the robbers. A week later, about two thousand pesos' +worth of jewels were stolen in Manila in [the church of] St. Dominic, +Nuestra Senora del Rosario. But the thief (who was a Spaniard) was +discovered, and most of it has been recovered. + +Letters were received March 19, announcing the governor's arrival at +Sanboangan and Jolo. The news therein contained is in a separate paper. + +A despatch was received from the governor in the middle of April from +Jolo, from which it was learned that he was pressing as closely as +possible the siege of the stronghold, which the Macasars and Joloans +were defending with great obstinacy. There are things worthy of +history, which will go [in a letter] by themselves. + +It was learned from the same despatch that the Terrenate galleons +had already returned to Sanboangan, and that they had arrived safely +with their reenforcements, without the Dutch enemy having shown them +any resistance, although the latter had vessels of great burden. Six +Dutchmen deserted to our men; the three who were aboard the flagship, +where Father Pedro Hernando de Estrada was, were converted to our +holy Catholic faith by his efforts. One of them is a fine student, +and very talented. He knows Latin and Greek, and had studied the +whole course of arts, and some years in law, in Flandes. + +A patache which left Macan some days after our galleon "San Juan +Baptista," arrived from that city on May 4, and they expected to find +the galleon here; however, experienced persons say that it is not +late. There are six brothers in the galleon--students who are to be +ordained--and Father Bartolome is coming with them as superior. That +patache brings two Franciscan friars, Castilians, who have been driven +from China. They say that the Chinese have driven them away through +love of us, saying that Ours preach Christ risen, and those fathers +Christ crucified--a reason that I do not understand. The statement of +the pilot of the patache is that they have been driven out because they +proceeded in the preaching with but little caution, and I regard that +as true. Some nine months ago, I heard a prudent and experienced man +say that a great persecution was feared in China, because of the little +caution of the preachers. One week after the arrival of the patache, +I received a letter from Father Antonio Cardin, [10] commissary of +the Holy Office for Macan and China, who gives me the following news: + + + "Section of a letter from Father Antonio Cardin, dated Macan, + April 15, 1638 + + "I shall relate here the news of the missions that your Reverence + desires to know. Japon is a thing of the past if God do not, in + His mercy, aid it. China was increasing greatly in Christianity + during these years, but with the entrance of the friars, it is + being thrown into confusion; for all the religious have been exiled + in Chincheo, and the churches destroyed, where they and we were + [laboring] in a flourishing Christian church. For as the friars + treat of conquests, saying openly that China can be conquered + with four thousand Spaniards, such talk can have no good effect + on the natives, who immediately tell it to their mandarins, + and we are all lost. + + "The fathers have been restored to their former liberty in + Cochinchina. The old king died, but his son has given the Dutch a + factory, and they are doing as much harm as possible. In Tumquin + that Christian church is increasing greatly; but the Dutch are now + there, and, although the king has not conceded them a factory, + they say that they will do us as much harm as possible in order + that we may be exiled. Father Raymundo de Govea is arranging + matters in Tumquin, in order that he may go to the Laos. There + is no news from Siam. They killed Father Julio Cesar there, and + until now they have been at war with Malaca. They now send to + ask for peace, and they also tell me that they will ask it from + Manila. It is said that they are doing this through fear of the + Dutch, who they fear are going to seize their kingdom. Father Lope + de Andrada was ordered to retire from Camboja, on account of ill + health, and Father Antonio Capechi was sent there. The sending + of a large ship directly to Lisboa is being discussed here, but + this is so great a blessing that I doubt whether it will be done." + + +At the closing of the hour of prayer on May 13, the day of the +glorious ascension of our Lord, news arrived of the capture of the +[fortified] hill of Jolo. It is a matter of the greatest consolation +for all nations; at least, all joined in the festival with great +appearances of rejoicing. The bells of all the churches were rung, +and the Te Deum laudamus, so due to God, was sung in some of them as +a thank-offering. There was a great illumination at night, and more +ringing of bells. I refer to the history for particular. + +The above news was received on the occasion of the arrival of five +or six ships from Great China, laden with merchandise, which was +needed in the islands. They give as news that eleven other and more +powerful ships have been given chapas. That has been of the greatest +consolation, for in the last two years those ships have had so little +custom, because of the small amount of silver that had been sent +from Mexico, that it was feared that the Chinese would not come this +year. [11] + +The commander of the galleys, Nicolas Goncalez, and Captain Carranca, +who was general of the artillery, having fallen very sick at Jolo +almost at the beginning of the siege, were sent away by Don Sebastian +so that they might recuperate. They arrived at Octong safely more +than two months ago, and this their delay was already causing +anxiety. Today, May 17, I have been told that the Chinese of the +champan in which they were coming [to Manila] killed them through +greed, in order to rob them, and five other Spaniards with them. One +they cast into the sea badly wounded, where some Indian fishermen +rescued him, to whom he related what had happened. Scarcely had they +reached land before he died. + +Some influential men were killed in the assaults on Xolo, among whom +were Sargento-mayor Melon, Captain Juan Nicolas, Alferez Aregita, etc. + +Yesterday, May 16, while talking with the commandant of Macan, +a very honorable Portuguese, of the Order of Santiago, I asked him +some questions, the replies to which I shall state here, as they have +some interest. He says that the kingdom of Tumquin is a part of Great +China, but has a different king; and it differs in language from China, +as does Galicia from Castilla. He asserts the same of Cochinchina, +although there is a greater difference in language. Tumquin is ninety +leguas from Macan, and is reached by traveling between the island +of Ainao [i.e., Hainan] and the mainland of China. Cochinchina is +one hundred and twenty leguas [from Macan], and is reached by going +outside that island. One of four ships that sailed recently from Macan +to various kingdoms, which was en route to Macasar with two hundred and +fifty persons, was wrecked on this island of Ainao, but only fourteen +persons were drowned. The commandant added that the Society of Jesus +is now preaching in that island, and that the people are rapidly +embracing Christianity. The fathers had brought six boys, sons of +the most influential men, to Macau to be educated better, and they +show signs of great ability. When I asked him about the exile of the +preachers from Chincheo, he only replied that the Castilians, as they +are prepared to hold subject all the Indians of their conquests--as +Mexico, Peru, and these islands--enter into other kingdoms with great +bragging and boasts, which is the occasion of their ruin. + +I have learned from some fathers of St. Dominic and the cura of Nueva +Segobia (which is, one hundred and thirty leguas away from here) that +Fray Diego Collado wrote a paper to Don Sebastian, after the reunion +of the fathers of St. Dominic, which was entitled "Deceits, tricks, +and plots of Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera," in which he made +disgraceful remarks to him. His Lordship sent it to his provincial, +and the latter retired the father to the house of Nueva Segobia. He +remained some months in prison, where he could neither hear nor say +mass; and he is now locked up where he can hear it through a church +gallery. + +Today, May 20, at two o'clock, quite without our expecting it, +and without the fires in Maribelez having announced it, the galleon +"San Juan Baptista"--which had taken fifty days to come from Macan, +a voyage which the patache made in nine--arrived. God delivered them +from a great danger on some shoals, to which the currents were taking +them swiftly during a calm. The fathers assert that they invoked the +holy father Marcelo, the martyr of Jesus Christ, with great faith +in the greatest danger. Thanks to the Lord, who has allowed them +all to arrive safe and happy! Father Bartolome Roboredo has told +us glorious things of the Christendom of Tumquin--where, this year +alone, nine thousand have been baptized. He says that there are some +fathers and a bishop even in Etiopa; and that the rulers do not molest +the Catholics. The fathers of Jentafee, Tibet, and the kingdoms of +Potente and Siranagar, have suffered various fortunes. In the court +of the Megor [i.e., Mogul], the church was destroyed, and the fathers +seized by those Moros, because they were confirming in the faith those +Christians who had been taken captive from Bengala. But now affairs +have begun to brighten; they have been granted liberty, and are aiding +the Christians. By that means it is to be hoped that there will be at +some other time a gateway into Tibet and Siranagar, the way to which +must necessarily lie through [the country of] the Megor. It has been +learned from Japon, from the very ones who are in power, that they +are now tired and weary of killing Christians; and that they are not +well satisfied with the Dutch and their trade. He adds that, because of +what the holy father Marcelo declared to them in his martyrdom--namely, +that they were rendering their nation infamous and obscuring their fame +by the tortures that they were inflicting upon the private parts of +Christians--the Japanese are generally angry, and do not wish that to +be done. All the priests in Japon at present are three of the Society +of Jesus, all Japanese. It is not known where they are wandering, +and no letters have been received from them, because of the severity +of the persecution. There is one other father, a European, named Juan +Baptista Porro. They do not say that he is alive, for, although his +death is not known, it is presumed that he is dead; for he was very +old and worn out with labors, and it is several years since letters +have been received from him. It is also said that there are hopes that +that persecution will soon cease. Would to God that it might be so! + +Yesterday, May 23, the day of the Holy Ghost, Don Sebastian arrived +at this port, having left Tanaguan that morning--a distance of ten +mortal leguas. He came in the Terrenate galleons, which, as the +weather was bad, he left at the landing at Mindoro. He, as well as +Father Juan de Barrios, was fatigued, which we could see was from the +hardships that they have suffered; but, thanks to God, these have +been well recompensed in service to God and to the general welfare +of these islands. The chaplain Don Pedro de Francia died of fever in +the ship, and, six days later, Captain Don Lope de Barahona, of the +same sickness. Upon the arrival of Don Sebastian, the bells in our +house were rung for a long time, as a mark of rejoicing. Later the +bells were rung in the cathedral church, and that night there were +illuminations in all the houses and convents. + +Yesterday, May 27, the galleons of the Terrenate relief expedition +anchored at this port. Father Hernando de Estrada says that twenty +persons of various nations (for the galleons carried Joloans, Basilans, +and the Bisayans who were freed from the captivity of Xolo) have +died in the flagship since their departure from Sanboangan, and that +sickness was caused by their close quarters; and that a goodly number +have died in the almiranta and the patache; but it is a cause for great +consolation that no Moro, male or female, has died without baptism. + +Yesterday, May 31, Don Sebastian made his triumphant entrance into +Manila, in the same manner as he had done, the year preceding, upon +his arrival from Mindanao. I wrote concerning it, by the patache; +and will only state here the number of pieces--namely, eleven of cast +iron and one bronze culverin, these being large pieces. Among the +medium-sized pieces and falcons there were fifteen. The best falcon +had the arms and name of King Don Sebastian [of Portugal]. There were +eleven smaller versos. The crowd of people in the windows and streets, +the illuminations of the night, and the masquerades of the city, +were the same as I wrote last year. + +June 3, Corpus Christi day, the procession of thanks for the victory +was united with that of the most holy sacrament, as I wrote last +year. That same day the xalea which had been left in Xolo arrived. It +brings news that the king and queen, who had fled from the stronghold +with the other Joloans, have sent to say that they desire to settle +in whatever place may be assigned to them, and to pay tribute to +his Majesty. They promise to obey the conditions imposed on them by +Don Sebastian. + +Monday, June 7, the honors for those killed in war were performed in +the soldiers' church with the same solemnity as those of the past +year. The father rector, Francisco Colin, preached to a generally +appreciative audience. + +Friday, June eleven, the flagship galley entered this port with a +round sail, but no bastard; for a flash of lightning, which struck it, +had torn it from top to bottom and killed two men. It brought some +bronze artillery of the pieces captured at Jolo, in addition to what +I mentioned in the triumph--as was told me by a man who comes from +there, and who is well versed regarding artillery. The pieces with +ladles mounted in the stronghold numbered in all eleven of cast iron, +and eleven of bronze; also eleven other large falcons, besides the +ordinary versos. + +He says of Dato Ache, who is the greatest pirate, and the one who +has done most damage to the Christians of all those of Jolo--and +who is the one who persuaded the king and the others to fortify +themselves, and to refuse to surrender to the Spaniards--that a +mine which exploded and killed fifty Joloans, also caught him, so +that he was completely buried. With only power to move one hand, he +beckoned imploringly for help; his men hurried to his assistance, +and got him out, much hurt. He recovered afterward, and when the +others descended from the stronghold, he, with some other Malays, +who were steadfastly of the opinion that they should not surrender, +escaped, and left the island in great dudgeon at the king. + +Sunday, June 20, when we celebrated the feast of the most holy +sacrament, Father Francisco Rangel chanted his first mass in this +college. He was one of the six who came from Macan to be ordained, +and since his residence here has told us some remarkable things that +happened four or five years ago, and, as I believe that very few +there have any knowledge regarding them, I shall relate them here. + +First, he says that the island of Ainao is as large as the island of +Cicilia; and that it has its own natives, who are white-complexioned, +and have a different aspect from that of the Chinese. The latter +conquered the seacoast many years ago, and the natives retired to +the mountains, whence it is their custom to descend to harry the +Chinese--who are scattered, and have never subjected the natives to the +payment of tribute. While Father Bento de Matos was in that island, +two remarkable things occurred to him. In a city of the Chinese, +where no means have yet been found whereby to make an entrance to +instruct the natives--both because the language is special, and +because they are always at war--it happened that the father, having +no lodging, learned that there was a good unoccupied house, for, +because of fear at I know not what noises that had been heard in it, +no one would live in it. The father determined to enter and to live +in that house, although his friends dissuaded him and told him their +fears. He lived there quite a number of days, at the end of which, +in the darkness of the night, a dead man appeared to him in the habit +of a mandarin. The dead man told the father to look well at him, +and note well his marks, and to go to the mandarin So-and-so, who +was his brother, and tell him to disinter his body, which was buried +in such and such a place near the altar; for it was the will of God +that there should not be the body of a condemned heathen in a place +where the holy body of His son Jesus Christ was offered to Him in +acceptable sacrifice. The father gave the marks to the mandarin, who +recognized that it was his brother. They dug in the place noted, and +found the body entire in a casket and preserved with precious spices, +with which it had been embalmed, and carried it to a separate place. + +The other circumstance is, that every day when the said father said +mass there, it was heard by a devout Christian, who, after rising +suddenly, appeared so joyful and happy that the other Christians +came to consider and even to believe him as mad. They resolved to +censure him, and to advise him to have more moderation and modesty in +the presence of so great a Lord. He answered them that he could not +do otherwise than he had; for, on rising from the eucharist, he saw +two most beautiful youths kneeling before the most holy sacrament, +amid such lights and splendors that they bathed his soul in joy so +great that it overflowed in its abundance to his body, and he could +not restrain himself from manifesting it. + +It happened to that same father that, while on a mission to Chincheo, +some literati suddenly entered a chapel in which he was, to make a jest +of him and of the God whom he was adoring. He kneeled down before a +crucifix and said "Lord, do not abandon me among thine enemies." The +holy crucifix answered "No, son, I shall not abandon thee; but I am +always with thee to aid thee." Thereupon the literati, thunderstruck +and full of fear, left the father, and went out of the chapel. + +In one of these recent years, during a great baquio or typhoon, +eighteen Dutch ships were wrecked on the coast of Chincheo. The Chinese +beheaded some of those who escaped alive, and, having seasoned those +heads with salt, took them with the other men whom they left alive to +the court of Paquin, where they were all beheaded. For the aversion +of the Chinese to people with blue eyes is great; and the reason is +that it is said that there is an ancient prophecy that men with eyes +of that color will conquer their kingdom. + +About two years ago, six out of seven ships that left Olanda with +reenforcements for India were sunk in the open sea, and only one +arrived. + +The king of China is commonly regarded by his vassals as a Christian: +1st, because he has only one wife; 2d, because he only adores the God +of heaven; 3d, because he has tried to exterminate the bonzes. Among +other plans [for the accomplishment of that], he employed that +of having six thousand bonzes enlisted for the war against the +Tartars. He sent them under the command of a great war mandarin, +and all the six thousand died in the war. The captain alone escaped, +and he was shortly after baptized; he is a very devout Christian, and +is known as Doctor Miguel. The manner in which the king [12] became +a Christian is said to have been that the famous Doctor Pablo (who +is now dead), having free entrance into the palace, often conversed +with the king, whom he converted and baptized. The king has shown +Ours favor by giving them a large convent of the bonzes in Paquin, +and has given them lands for their support. + +July 6, Father Melchor de Vera passed by way of this college, en +route from Sanboanga. He gives us some particulars which it is well +to know. Cachil Moncay attacked the new village which Cachil Corralat +had built. He killed or captured about one hundred of his men, but +Corralat escaped. Afterward when Dato Siqui brought his customary +tribute to Corralat from the island of Little Sanguil, he attacked +Moncay and killed him and others, so that the number of killed and +captives reached eighty. + +Father Vera met on his way here a champan from Terrenate, which +tells him that Corralat, seeing himself expelled [from his towns] +by Don Sebastian, sent messengers to the Moros of Terrenate, to beg +for aid; but that the latter had refused it to him, as they had enough +of their own affairs to attend to. The men of that champan also told +him that the petty king of Great Sanguil talked with them, and said +that he wished peace with the Spaniards, and would pay tribute to his +Majesty. For greater security he gave them the young prince his son, so +that they might give the boy to the governor as a token of peace. All +these are the results of the two victories of Mindanao and Jolo. + +Today, July 11, a large champan, which had sailed from the port of +Macasar at the beginning of Lent, arrived at this port. They relate +many acts of affection and favor which the king has shown to the +Spaniards. Those aboard the champan assert that the king will be +very glad of whatever ill-treatment Don Sebastian accords to the +Macasars of Jolo, because they have taken arms against the vassals +of his brother the king of Castilla. + +Today, July 18, the patache sails with the reenforcements for the +island of Hermosa, under the command of Don Pedro Fernandez del Rio. + +Yesterday, July 23, at dawn, a Macan patache anchored in this +roadstead. It comes from Camboja laden with rice, camanguian or +benzoin, and other drugs. + + + + + + + +LETTER FROM CORCUERA TO FELIPE IV + + +Sire: + +Last year I informed your Majesty that I had appointed Don Luis +Arias de Mora as protector of the Sangleys in the Parian; he is a +lawyer well known in this royal Audiencia, a man of virtue and of +excellent abilities. On this account, with the salary of that office +of protector (which he draws from the communal treasury of the said +Sangleys), he is obliged to act as counsel for the archbishop in +affairs of justice, in order to prevent the troubles that the friars +brought upon him last year--inducing him to issue acts against the +Order of the Society, and excommunicating the royal Audiencia and +the governor of Filipinas. Since he promised that he would issue +no mandates without the signed approval of this counselor, we have +lived in peace, without there having been the least annoyance, or +any interruption of our harmony; for the said counselor will not sign +any act or document which the said archbishop causes to be drawn up +if it contravenes the patronage and jurisdiction of your Majesty, +or encroaches in any way upon your rights. For these reasons, and on +account of the said Luis Arias de Mora's long service as advocate +in this royal Audiencia, and his excellent reputation for learning +and talent, I entreat that your Majesty will be pleased to grant him +the favor of confirming him in the said office of protector of the +Sangleys, until some greater favor be bestowed upon him; any office +will be well served, if conferred upon him. May our Lord protect the +Catholic person of your Majesty, as Christendom has need. Manila, +August 21, 1638. Sire, your vassal kisses your Majesty's feet. + + +Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera + + +[Endorsed: "February 26, 1639; provision is made for this."] + + + + + + + +LETTER TO FELIPE IV FROM THE TREASURER AT MANILA + + +Sire: + +If my so great obligations to your Majesty--not only since you +are my king and natural sovereign, but since you have honored me +so generously in these islands by employing my person in the post +of official judge-treasurer of your royal estate--necessarily and +strictly did not oblige me to inform your Majesty of the manner in +which the said royal estate is administered here, its condition, +and the so great ruin that it has suffered and is suffering since it +was your Majesty's pleasure to have Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera +come to govern these islands in the year thirty-five, I should have +to arouse myself and take courage to place before the pious eyes of +your Majesty this memoir of disasters; for no other title or name can +be given to the calamities that have rushed pellmell both on the said +royal estate, and on us afflicted ministers who have it in charge, +to the so great peril and discredit of our persons. The matter, Sire, +is a very long drawn out one, and hence it is impossible to compass +it in a few lines; and I in my rashness will weary your Majesty's +ears. But the love and zeal which move me will perhaps avail to remove +from me censure for my boldness. + +Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera entered this city in the latter part +of June, 635, to assume this government. He showed apparent signs of +an endeavor to excel, in his honest and careful attitude toward your +royal estate; but we were soon undeceived by his so unexpected and +inconsiderate resolution not to despatch the ships which your Majesty +has ordered, by so many decrees and ordinances, to be sent annually +to Nueva Espana with the property of the inhabitants of this city--so +that the usual situado might be sent back in them to these islands +from the proceeds of your royal duties, and serve as a help to the +great and numerous expenses which your Majesty is incurring annually +in the increase and preservation of so many of the faithful as have in +these regions deserved to receive the holy water of baptism. Yet it +was a fact that Don Juan Cereco de Salamanca (who was concluding his +governorship, to which he had been appointed by the viceroy of Nueva +Espana), had prepared two ships, and their cargoes were aboard--the +lading-space having been allotted, in accordance with the orders +given by your Majesty, among the inhabitants of this city. The losses +and damage that have resulted, both to your royal estate and to the +property of the merchants of these islands, are so considerable and +momentous that I would not dare to name them. Your Majesty's ministers +in Mexico, in whose charge is the management of your royal estate, +will have already reported them to you, for they will be able to do +it with more accurate knowledge and certainty; and, consequently, +I think that they will already have come to your Majesty's ears. + +A few days ago the governor introduced in this royal camp of Manila a +cavalry company of twenty-nine men or soldiers, with their captain, +one lieutenant, one alferez, one standard-bearer, and one corporal; +each soldier was to receive 168 pesos' pay per annum, the captain +1,200, the lieutenant, 480, the alferez, 380, the corporal, 216, and +one trumpler, 120--the total amounting to 7,248 pesos. It was for the +sole purpose of being employed nightly in squads to close the gates of +the city and to patrol it; and it was all to spare the infantry from +fatigue, although the latter had until then been employed in that +duty with much more security to the city, and with the correction +of many lawless acts which we have been experiencing here since, +and which have been committed by the very men who are deputed to +obviate them. When the said governor ordered us to inscribe that +new order in the royal books, and to furnish the papers to the said +soldiers with pay so increased, we, seeing of how little importance +and effectiveness the said company was, and that there was no order +from your Majesty for its creation, warned him of that--besides giving +him other reasons which will already have been seen by your Council, +for we enclosed a copy of both of them in the letters that we wrote +in the year 1636. Still, notwithstanding that, the governor ordered +the command to be obeyed. Accordingly we did so, and the command has +been, and is being, observed; and the governor refuses to recede +in so pernicious a decision as is the increase of [expenses with] +pay so large as this, and so unnecessary, and, moreover, when your +royal treasury in these islands has so many and so great necessities. + +Although there was, upon the arrival of the said governor, as much +infantry in this city and these presidios, as in the times of previous +governors, and even more, inasmuch as he had brought in those ships +a very large and fine consignment of men (for they numbered more than +five hundred men)--a considerable reenforcement, and sufficient to have +garrisoned and manned your Majesty's forts--he raised two companies +of ninety-six Pampango Indians apiece, on his own counsel alone, +and unnecessarily, so that they might take part with the Spaniards in +the guard and watch of this city. The following pay [was assigned]: +the captain, 240 pesos per annum; two drummers, each 24 pesos; the +alferez, 120 pesos; his standard-bearer, 24 pesos; the sergeant, 84 +pesos; the four corporals, 60 pesos apiece. Hence, both companies have +an annual expense of 10,728 pesos, for those two companies are paid +monthly the amount of their pay. Not only are those companies still +kept up, but they have also been augmented since the past year, 637, +by two other companies--one for this camp, which is here at present; +and the other in the new presidios of Jolo and Camboja--besides 72 +other Pampango Indians, who are stationed in the fort at the port of +Cavite. All together mean an expense of 25,092 pesos per year to the +royal treasury. I assure your Majesty that this matter ought to be +looked at with the greatest attention, in order that things might +not be so managed; for it is a useless and needless expense when, +as I have said, your royal treasury suffers so great losses as it +does, by the so terrible and irreparable damage which the province +from which those Indians are drafted has suffered, as they are all +tillers of the soil, and tributaries of your Majesty. Many losses to +your royal estate follow, because they and their wives are exempted +from paying the tribute during the time while they serve in their +posts as soldiers. Besides, as this province [of Pampanga] abounds +so plentifully in rice, and your Majesty needs so much of it for the +rations of so great a number of persons as are employed in the building +and repairing of the vessels in the port of Cavite, and for the sailors +and soldiers, it is obvious that the said province will be diminished; +for it is necessary to allot the vendalas and repartimientos upon the +few who remain, instead of on the many, so that with a few exactions +of this sort the poor Indians will be driven to the wall, and will +find it necessary to desert their huts and take to the woods. That +would mean the total ruin and destruction of that district, which is +the support of this colony. + +As the governor immediately undertook to despatch the usual +reenforcement and situado to the forts of Terrenate, he appointed a +chief commander with 3,000 pesos, and an admiral with 2,000--although +until then there had been no such officers as commander-in-chief and +admiral; but only one commandant, who received 60 ducados of eleven +reals per month, while those who were placed in command of the other +pataches received very moderate pay. We remonstrated, as we were bound +to do, warning the governor that there was no order from your Majesty +for the creation of such salaries. He referred the decision of this +matter to the treasury meeting, where we found two auditors and Doctor +Juan Fernandez de Ledo (who was exercising the duties of fiscal), and +the factor and treasurer. All except the said Doctor Juan Fernandez +de Ledo, who was of the governor's opinion, opposed the said pay, +giving very powerful and cogent reasons therefor. Notwithstanding that, +the governor ordered the said salaries to be made good, and said that +he would report the matter to your Majesty. Hence, Sire, he will by +no means listen to any proposition which is made for the benefit and +use of the royal treasury, if it is contrary to his opinion. + +The same thing happened in the said meeting when they were assigning +the salaries to the chaplains whom he appointed in the said galleons +of Terrenate, and in all the others that sailed from these islands +for any place. It was an expense as avoidable as the others which he +has introduced, for it is a fact that religious are always ready to +serve those posts because of the accommodations that they receive in +the galleons, especially in those that sail to Nueva Espana. For when +the religious sail in them as passengers they must obtain permission, +and the accommodation of a berth, and, as this costs money and trouble, +it is found to be no little convenience to give them the posts as +chaplains; and they have not claimed or demanded any pay, and they +have been employed in this ministry in all the past. Therefore one +can understand how superfluous is that expense. + +There are five convents of religious within the walls of this city of +Manila, and one of nuns; the church of La Misericordia, the seminary +of Santa Potenciana, the cathedral church, and the hospital for +the Spaniards or soldiers. That makes ten churches in all, and they +are so near and close to one another that the divine offices can be +heard from one to another, if one pays moderate attention. So small +and narrow> is the district of the city, and so few the people in the +churches, that if there was no more than one convent of religious and +the cathedral church, they could be sufficiently taken care of and +without too great fatigue [to the priests]. Although this was the fact +of the case, the governor, a very few days after his arrival, began +to build a church for his soldiers, saying at the beginning that the +expense for the building was to be taken from the soldiers' own pay, +and that no expense would be incurred by the royal treasury. But he +did not keep his word, although the said church was fully built, +together with some barracks and quarters for the said soldiers to +live in. In the erection of it, more than eighty thousand pesos have +been already spent, while the amount charged to the infantry is not in +excess of sixteen thousand pesos. Consequently, it has been necessary +that the remaining funds should be supplied from the royal treasury, +although it would be more proper to expend that sum in building +galleons to carry the goods of this city to Nueva Espana. For with +galleons the royal treasury will be increased, and thereby will the +governor obey the many and urgent orders which your Majesty has been +pleased to issue in this regard; and the vassals and inhabitants of +these islands would not be so ruined, and so hopeless of returning to +their former state. It was all occasioned by the governor's resolution +not to despatch any ships during the year of 635 and that of 637; and +even next year, 639, there is little assurance that he will despatch +them, for there is no money with which to prepare them. If that were +done, we could entertain stronger hopes; because, as I write this, the +usual succor from Mexico has not yet arrived, as only one very small +patache was despatched last year, and there is doubt that it was able +to reach port. On that account we are so perplexed and afflicted that +it is even a special providence of God that we are able to breathe. + +The ships which are being despatched this year are sailing without a +register; for, as yet, the inhabitants have not registered a shred of +cloth with which to lade them, as they do not know the condition of +their property in Nueva Espana. As they are so ruined as regards their +capital, they are, according to my way of thinking excusable. But +I have been unable to find any excuse in any way for the governor, +who has, by his so extraordinary and unadvised resolutions, placed +this city in the last straits; and has paid no attention to those who, +with foresight, have represented to him these great damages, besides +those which have followed and will follow to the royal estate of your +Majesty. For this year alone (and I do not speak of former years), +more than one hundred and fifty thousand pesos have been spent on +these ships, both for the preparation that has been necessary, and +for the pay of the commanders, pilots, and other seamen and other +officials who sail in them, and for the food. Your Majesty will +never be reimbursed for that sum, for, as no cargo goes in the ships, +there can be no duties collected; and it is from these duties that +the funds for these expenses must be obtained, as your Majesty has +ordered and commanded. Hence, Sire, it becomes necessary to say that +it seems as if your Majesty had sent the governor to these islands +to ruin and destroy your royal estate, rather than to increase and +preserve it. This conclusion, if relief does not come speedily, will +be seen to be verified with the great loss of all, and the special +sorrow of us who, as your Majesty's faithful ministers and servants, +are bound to strive for the increase of your royal estate. + +In the past year, 637, because these coasts were being infested by +the kings of Mindanao and Jolo, with great loss and damage to the +Christian Indians and your Majesty's vassals, the governor left this +city with two fine large fleets--the first on February two, and the +second on December eight. Both were despatched against the advice of +all the soldiers who were experienced in this country--both because of +the risk to which the governor exposed his person, and because of the +so heavy expenses that it was necessary to incur; and furthermore, +since there are very honorable soldiers in these islands, to whom +these expeditions can be entrusted with the hope that they will give an +excellent account of them. And thus he would have avoided a very large +part of the expense, and even of the loss of very brave soldiers who +died in both expeditions; for more than four hundred Spaniards died, +among whom were many persons of high standing [in this colony]. That +is a loss which ought to be wept with many tears, because of the lack +that they will create when they will be most necessary. In the first +expedition, 9,867 pesos were spent from your royal estate; and in the +second, 47,171 pesos. He has tried and is trying to cover the expense +of both expeditions by the value of the slaves, and other things of +little account, which he took as booty in both expeditions; and by +other communications, which will be seen in your Council, according +to the relations or certifications which he has given to us. Most +of it can have but little foundation, as there is nothing more than +what the governor has been pleased to give. But it will be well to +consider that although the fifth part of any booty taken belongs +to your Majesty (as is a fact), he has ordered all the artillery, +and other war supplies and ammunition to be valued and adjudged as +part compensation for the expense incurred. That is a thing which, +according to my understanding, could not be done; for he is attempting +to persuade your Majesty that he is giving you something. Since that +is clearly yours by law, there is no reason for [thus] adjudging it, +under any of the pretexts of which, [to judge] from appearances like +these, he always avails himself to accredit his own actions. + +Beside the building of the church, barracks, and quarters for the +soldiers, he has constructed other buildings of not inconsiderable +extent, and of the same necessity and importance as the aforesaid, +at the royal hospital of this city. He has bought some houses that +are near it for eight thousand pesos, in order that the chaplain, +apothecary, and physician may live in them. Your Majesty has +assigned them a very sufficient remuneration, and they have always +been contented with it, and have not asked for houses in which to +live. The governor has also added a room to the said hospital (where +the religious of St. Francis had their living apartments before his +arrival), without sense or reason. He has spent a great sum of pesos +in its building; and a great sum has also been and is being spent +in the support of the sick of the said hospital--although they were +supported most abundantly in past years with two thousand five hundred +or three thousand pesos at the most. Now seven thousand pesos and +upward are spent, and we cannot see in what this increase consists, +although we are not ignorant that the sick are less carefully attended +and nursed than before. + +A Portuguese nobleman, an inhabitant of Macan, by name Don Diego de +Miranda Enriquez, came from that city to this during the former year of +636, with a quantity of arquebuses, muskets, nails for the ships, and +rough iron. Having sent for us that we might bargain and pay for it, +we did so, availing ourselves for that purpose of the recent example +that we had for it in the previous year, 1635, which was accredited +and approved by the said governor. Nevertheless, after several months +the governor fined the factor and me (for we were the ones who made +the said contract and rendered payment, as the accountant was then +living in the port of Cavite) without our knowing what crime we had +committed, in the sum of two thousand one hundred and thirty-three +pesos, five tomins; for he said that we had not observed his orders +in the said contract. After he had conferred over the matter with +your auditors, and they being of the opposite opinion, nevertheless, +holding his own even to the end, he had us notified of the act imposing +the said fine. We appealed from it to your Audiencia, where we were +freed from the prosecution. The said governor was indeed very angry +at that; and he even gave your auditors to so understand, and that, +in matters of justice, he even was trying to tie their hands. + +At the very beginning of his governorship, the said Don Sebastian +Hurtado de Corcuera tried to change the inferior employees of the +tribunal of your royal officials. Among the others whom he appointed +was the weigher of coins, notwithstanding that we opposed that. For +your Majesty has been pleased to honor us with your special decrees, +in which you order that we ourselves choose our employees, so that +they may be to our satisfaction; and that your governors give their +titles to those whom we should thus propose to them. [We also opposed +it] because the said governor ordered us to admit the said weigher +to the enjoyment and exercise of his office without bonds, although +all those who had thus far exercised that office had given bonds +in the sum of four thousand pesos for the security of your royal +estate, as it is an office that requires great faithfulness because +of the many and continually-recurring opportunities that present +themselves for him to make considerable thefts without your royal +officials being able to put a stop to it. That has been proved to us +by experience, for, notwithstanding all our efforts in watching him, +at the end of a year and slightly more (for so long a time did he +hold the said office) we found that he had stolen more than three +thousand five hundred pesos from your royal treasury. We began +a prosecution in your royal Audiencia. The said governor, seeing +that the weigher was proved to be a criminal by what was enacted, +and by his confession and deposition, in order that he might not +be completely exposed, had a memorial presented [to the Audiencia] +through a father of the Society of Jesus--in which it is stated that +a man had declared in confession that he was the thief, and that +the said weigher was not guilty; and had given him a certain number +of pay-warrants with which to satisfy, by way of restitution, the +[claim for] three thousand five hundred pesos. The said governor +ordered that this reparation should be accepted; and although the +pay-warrants had no justification--as their owners had been dead for +many years, and the papers contained no cessions or powers by virtue +of which receipts should be given and signed--we had to receive them, +because, as they had been examined before the auditor of accounts, +and attested by him, they were [technically] entirely sufficient, and +could and ought to be received. Thereupon, the said weigher went scot +free from prison. The said governor immediately sent him to Macan, in +order to remove him from the danger that might meet him at any time +in this city. In this manner, Sire, was so serious a crime as the +aforesaid punished; and in this wise does the governor protect his +henchmen, for there is no human strength which can oppose his. This +is a consideration that causes not a little sorrow to your Majesty's +servants and ministers; for only that name is left us, for we have +been stripped, for the sole purpose of being able to depreciate +and even disaccredit us, of all the power and authority which your +Majesty was pleased to give us in our titles, and in the ordinances +and many other decrees. However, I think and trust, God helping, that +that will not be attained, however vigilant the governor may be; for +we are and shall be always in your Majesty's service, and hope that, +as our pious king and sovereign, you will always examine our causes, +and that you will pity us for the calamities and miseries that we are +suffering for the sole reason of being so far from your royal presence, +and that you will take what corrective measures are most pleasing to +you. With that hope we receive new courage, although in the midst of +so many perils, to fulfil our obligations, as faithful and grateful +vassals and ministers of your Majesty, whose royal person may our Lord +preserve, with the increase of greater and more extensive empires, +as is necessary to us all. Manila, August 31, 1638. + + +Don Baltasar Ruiz de Escalona + + + + + + + +BANUELOS Y CARRILLO'S RELATION + + +Relation of the Filipinas Islands, by Admiral Don Hieronimo de Banuelos +y Carrillo [13] + + +The city of Manila is the chief city of the islands of Lucon, or the +Filipinas. It lies in a latitude of fourteen degrees thirty minutes, +is fortified on one side by the sea, and on its land side has a castle +called Santiago, although that castle furnishes no great defense. The +artillery of that castle points seaward, in order to prevent the +entrance of [hostile] vessels--which can, however, enter there, +without the cannon doing them any great damage. The chief port of +these islands is called Cavite, and there the ships from Nueva Espana +are anchored. That port of Cavite serves as a refuge for our sailors; +it is sheltered from the heavy winds, and very secure. Manila, on the +contrary, is an open bay, beaten by the north winds. The anchorage +there is very poor, and the entrance very difficult; but, on the other +hand, it is very well supplied with all that is necessary for commerce +and for war. One may say that it serves as a magazine for the richest +commerce in the world. There is abundance of bread, flesh, and wine +there; and although the wine is not so good as that of Espana, those +of the country who are accustomed to it do not hesitate to prefer it +to that of Goa, or that of Mexico--although those are used only for +the mass, and that of Espana for the tables of the richest men. The +Portuguese of Goa also send abundance of provisions there, so that +they can be bought in Manila at a very good bargain. There are one +hundred and fifty fires [i.e., households] in Manila. The houses of +the city are so suitable and those of the country so charming that +life in those islands is altogether delightful. At one musket-shot +from the city can be seen the Parian, the lodging of the Sangleys +or Chinese merchants. There are about twenty thousand of them, +all merchants whom business has attracted to that place. It is a +very curious place to see, because of the fine order in which they +live. Every kind of merchandise has its own separate quarter, and +those goods are so rare and curious that they merit the admiration +of the most civilized nations. [14] + +Although that Parian is built only of wood, and the Chinese who +live there have no weapons, we do not fail to keep a strong guard on +that side. We even have some pieces of artillery pointed toward that +city, for the Chinese are a very spirited and bold nation. We have +experienced that heretofore, and are still threatened [with danger] +in that hour that we are not so closely on our guard. There is no +Spanish house where nine or ten of these merchants cannot be seen +every morning, who take their merchandise there; for all the traffic +passes through their hands, even all that is used for the sustenance +of the Spaniards. There are some men who say that they mix a slow +poison in our food, which works its effect chiefly on the women. It +is a fact that a woman who reaches the age of twenty-six years is +seldom seen. Those persons add that their intention in doing that is +to prevent the Spaniards from fortifying themselves more strongly in +that island, and that the Chinese would drive them out entirely. That +would be very easy for them, by employing such means, if it were not +for the interest that they have in the commerce of the silver of Nueva +Espana. These people have a subtle and universal intelligence. They +imitate whatever one presents to them, and they make the article +as well as do those who invented it. The riches of Manila, and the +felicity of existence there, are steadily decreasing. I shall relate +here the causes for it, having regard only to the service of God and +of the king. + +The chief cause for the ruin of these islands is the great trade that +the Sangleys carry on. The king has permitted the inhabitants of the +Manilas to export a portion of their capital to Nueva Espana. in the +merchandise of that country. The Spanish inhabitants daily lend their +names to those Sangleys and to the Portuguese of Macao, so that they +may enjoy the freedom of that commerce. These people do not attempt +to hide the fact that they are acting as agents for the inhabitants of +Mexico; and these last years they sent such a quantity of merchandise +to Peru and to Nueva Espana that no sale could be found for it. That +is a hindrance to the voyages of the trading fleet. The king of +China could build a palace with the silver bars from Peru which have +been carried to his country because of that traffic, without their +having been registered, and without the king of Espana having been +paid his duties, as has been well shown by Dom Pedro de Quiroga y +Moya. That silver was sent at the account of influential persons, who +do not reside at the Manilas. The two vessels which left in his time +paid more duties to the king than all the other ships put together +which had made that voyage before; that clearly shows the neglect +of the other officials commissioned to receive the duties from his +Majesty. They have attempted to conceal this truth, by saying that +those ships were richer than the others because Dom Sebastian Hurtado +de Corcuera had written, in the preceding year, that he would not send +the vessels that year; and that he had even detained and caused the +unlading of those that had been on the point of sailing on the voyage +to Acapulco. I do not know his reason for so doing, but I know well +that he wrote that resolution at the Embocadero of Manila--that is to +say, eighty leguas from the city--and that without having consulted +the inhabitants of the Manilas. Those of the country are agreed that +that delay has been their ruin; for they all know that they cannot +maintain themselves against the Dutch or against the Mahometans except +by means of the regular succor that is sent them from Nueva Espana. + +The marques de Cadereta [15] came at that time to act as viceroy +of Nueva Espana. He sent a large reenforcement to the islands very +opportunely, under command of General Don Andres Cottigllo. The +latter brought news that Don Pedro de Quiroga had arrived at Mexico to +inform against the officials of his Majesty, and that he would go to +Acapulco to inspect the ships and regulate the Chinese commerce. The +inhabitants of the Manilas and the factors of the Portuguese tried +to get back their merchandise that they had already laded on the +vessels, being fearful of that news and that name of visitor. But +having finally recovered courage, they laded the two vessels that +the governor had detained the preceding year, which were worth about +five millions in gold. Nevertheless those of the country affirmed +that they were not so richly laden as those which had sailed before, +for one of the chief merchants [16] had not put a single box aboard. + +They report another reason for obscuring so apparent a truth. They +say that Don Pedro de Quiroga had specified among the orders that +he had drawn up as a remedy for the disorders of the past, that for +those ships; and that it was he alone who prevented their sailing. But +he himself says that that is false, and that he had heard that those +who had encomiendas [Fr., commanderies], and the merchants of Mexico, +had resorted to entreaties to Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera (for I +cannot believe that they were in compact with him); and that they had +represented to him the great quantity of Chinese merchandise then in +Mexico, and declared that, if new vessels were sent there, a market +could not be found for that merchandise, and that the merchants of +Mexico and Nueva Espana would lose a great amount by it. + +Don Pedro de Quiroga adds that having learned that the governor of +the Filipinas had given his word not to have any new vessels sail, +in order to better carry out his Majesty's service, he had employed +this expedient--namely, that if they entered the port that year, +they would enjoy the benefit of the rules which had been made during +that time; but that, if they came only the following year, they +would not enjoy these, and that they would pay the king's duties +in all strictness. That plainly showed that he was advised of the +promise which the governor of the islands had given to the merchants +of Mexico, to detain the vessels and the merchandise that ought to +have been sent that year. The transaction was, in truth, greatly to +the interest of the inhabitants of Mexico, and of the Spaniards who +have encomiendas--although to the great prejudice of the islands, +which cannot get along without the reenforcement which they ought +to have annually from Mexico; and to the decrease of his Majesty's +duties, which are an aid in the discharge of the expense for that +succor. In fine, if the marques de Cadereta had not reenforced the +islands as powerfully as he did, they would have fallen into extreme +need. It would be easy for me to show here other consequences of +that delay of the vessels which Don Juan Cereco y Salamanca had +prepared to sail that year, as is done every year; and it will not +be more difficult for me to demonstrate the other damages that we +suffer in that commerce. The inhabitants of the Manilas have nothing +on those vessels; their cargoes belong entirely to the Chinese, to +the Portuguese of Macao, or to the Mexican merchants. If the king +does not put a stop to it, the Chinese will absorb all the riches of +Peru, and the subjects of the king in those islands will be forced to +abandon them. I will go on to represent to your Excellency the other +disorders in the government of those islands, as far as I have been +able to learn them in the short time that I have spent there. + +The encomiendas are ruined. Formerly the king rewarded soldiers +with them, and now the islanders, who were formerly assigned under +those encomiendas, have become our enemies. There has been failure to +instruct those innocent people in the Catholic faith, and that is the +only title under which the king of Espana holds that country, which +does not belong to his patrimony. Instead of making them our friends +and brothers, we have made them our domestic enemies. We have received +the Sangleys in their place, with whom the profit of the traffic always +embroils us. Let one consider what damage has been committed since +by the inhabitants of the island of Mindanao. They have overrun the +shores of these islands with their caracoas or little boats, and the +governor was forced to leave the city in the hands of the Sangleys, +in order to leave the island and to go to make war on them, where he +lost more than one hundred and thirty Spaniards, without being able +to bring the war to a successful end. In this it cannot be said that +he was not greatly to blame; for one of his officers named Nicolas +Gonzales, at the first war cry, forced one of their best positions +without the loss of a single man, whence the governor had been unable +to drive them with all his forces. [17] + +We have also as enemies the people of Jolo and those of Terrenate, +who are also more to be feared on account of the help that they get +from the Dutch. They declare themselves neutral, but they help the +Dutch underhandedly on all occasions. The chiefs of those Indians take +the title of kings, but they are among the kings who go quite naked +and who live by their labor. True, those of Macassar, of Cochinchina, +and of Cambaya, are more powerful. But for all that, it would be enough +for us, for the little help that we can get out of them, to become the +arbitrator of their differences, and thus to keep them favorable to our +side. But since they have seen that we have made this friendship with +the Sangleys, with the inhabitants of Martavan, of Borneo, and other +neighboring islands, they have broken off all trade with us, and have +begun to take all the products of their country to the Dutch, so that +they do nothing except at their orders. If for that reason also the +king does not prevent the trade with the Sangleys, the Filipinas are +lost. I come now to the remedy that can be applied to this disorder. + +Among all those one hundred and fifty families who are settled +at Manila, there are not two who are very rich. My plan would be +to allow those inhabitants to export Chinese merchandise to the +value of two hundred and fifty thousand escudos, the greater part +of which should be raw silk and cotton bolls, so that they could +be manufactured in this country [i.e., Mexico]. For there is less +[chance for] trickery in that sort of merchandise than in the stuffs +manufactured in China, which ought never to be allowed to be taken to +Manila. The permission of trade to that sum would also be proportioned +to the ability of the Manila merchants; and they would get more than +five hundred thousand escudos in return for it, for the profits of +that trade are exorbitant. Today even, when there is so much of +this merchandise, four hundred per cent is gained on the poorest +quality exported. By that means the Spaniards could be employed in +manufacturing that silk, the textiles would be better, and they would +secure innumerable other advantages. Accordingly, the inhabitants +of the Manilas would not charge themselves with the commissions of +Mexico, and they would get all the profit derived from those islands, +which is now quite universally in the hands of foreigners. Further, as +their affairs in the country became more prosperous, they would become +more interested in its conservation; and they would be more careful +to have the Indians, who have been assigned to them in encomiendas, +instructed and held in subjection. They would save what they give +to their agents in Mexico, who often ruin them. They keep their +merchandise two or three years, and it has a poor sale in Mexico, +because of the great quantity that is taken there; and trading only at +Acapulco, and conducting their own business, they alone would enjoy, +and that every year, the profits of that traffic. + +Fifty thousand escudos could be employed in white mantas, unbleached +[crues] and of excellent quality; that is a kind of merchandise +very largely used among the Indians, and Mexico has great need of +it. That would be the right commerce that ought to be carried on +by pilots and sailors; for some of it can always be sold, and those +people are obliged to sell it quickly. Care must be taken that only +that quantity be carried, and that any surplus be confiscated; and +the governors and other officials should be very careful in this. In +order that your Excellency may see that I am not trying to weaken the +commerce of those islands, as some might believe, I will state here +that the inhabitants of the Manilas should be allowed to export as +many shiploads as possible of the products of their country--such as +wax, gold, perfumes, ivory, and lampotes. Those they would buy from +the natives of the country, thus preventing them from carrying those +goods to the Dutch. Thus would the people become friendly, and would +supply Nueva Espana with that merchandise; and the silver taken to the +Manilas would not be exported thence. I may be told that the king of +China does not use that silver to make war on us; but even if it is +used only to swell his treasury, it is as lost to us as if it were +at the bottom of the sea. Your Excellency should consider that one +and one-half millions in gold are sent annually to China. If what I +have just said be closely observed, the merchandise of the Manilas +will be sold to good advantage, and the natives of the country will +become our friends; while their neighbors will leave the Dutch, who +are deriving heavy profits from them; for there is scarcely a place in +those islands where the Dutch do not possess a factory. Thus have they +become the masters, and they give arms to the natives to make war on +us. Add to all these considerations that the Spaniards inhabiting the +islands will not be obliged to be continually on their guard because +of twenty thousand Sangleys or enemies, whom they have in a corner +of the world where the Spaniards can muster scarcely eight hundred men. + +Perhaps your Excellency will be told that, if we break with the +Sangleys, they will go to live in the island of Formosa, or in some +other place among the Dutch, and will carry to them the trade that +they have with us; and that, having enjoyed the trade of Japon as +conveniently as we have that of the Western Indias, they will still +carry their merchandise to Nangazaki, the chief port of Japon, from +which they will also obtain silver. To that I will reply that the +kingdom of China is so full of merchandise, and the Sangleys are +so shrewd in commerce, and so keen after gain, that they know what +quantity of that merchandise is needed by the English, how much by +the Dutch, and what quantity ought to be sold in all of Japon--and +that with so great exactness that a tailor, after once seeing the +figure of a person, decides how much goods is necessary to clothe +him. They do the same in regard to us, and, knowing that only two +ships sail annually to Nueva Espana, they generally have in the Parian +the quantity necessary to lade those ships. If the inhabitants of the +Manilas had trade with Japon, they would derive great profit from it; +but a secret judgment of God has broken the communication that we had +with those islanders, and has given it into the hands of the heretics, +after having permitted them to destroy our churches there, and their +having put to fire and sword all the Spaniards or Japanese Christians +there. Hence we do not believe that a single religious is now left in +all the country; and the people are compelled, under pain of death, +to come to denounce those whom they know to be Christians. Our +religious go there no longer, for it means certain death to them to +go to Japon. The following is the manner in which that persecution +was reported. + +A Vizcayan captain, named Sebastian, [18] having sailed from the +port of Acapulco for an island called Ricca doro, [19] was blown by +a heavy gale to the latitude of that island; and, not being able to +anchor, put in at Japon, and with the curiosity of a seaman sounded +the ports of that kingdom. That novel proceeding made the Japanese +suspicious. They asked an Englishman who was then allied to them what +could be the design of that Spaniard. He told them that the Spaniards +were a warlike nation, who were aiming at universal monarchy; that +they always commenced their conquest by means of the religious; that +after the religious of that nation had been permitted to preach there, +and to build churches, they considered the conquest of that kingdom +as secure; that that vessel had come to reconnoiter the country, and +the entrance of the ports, and that it would be followed by a great +army, which would complete that design. At that juncture a tono [20] +or prominent lord of the country died. The emperor had formerly tried +to buy from him a house built for recreation; but that lord, who was +fond of that place, refused to sell it. He was a Catholic, and left it +at his death to the Jesuits, whereupon the latter thought it best to +pay their respects to the emperor by offering it to him. That prince +reflected that what an emperor could not accomplish, the Jesuits his +subjects had compassed. Putting that reflection with the advice of the +Englishman, he determined to exterminate the Catholics. That resolution +was so executed that there are no Christians in Japon, except only the +Portuguese from Macao. I am too much ashamed to name the conditions +to which they submit, in order that they may be received there. + +Since that time all the trade of that island has fallen into the +hands of the Dutch, English, Portuguese, and Sangleys, although the +king of China has forbidden the last named to have any communication +with the inhabitants of Japon, under penalty of death, because the +Japanese had formerly revolted against China, of which they had +formed a part. But for all that, their greed for silver makes them +go there as they do to the Manilas, so that Japon does not lack any +of the goods that pass through the hands of those peoples. As for the +silver, the Dutch do not carry any more to China or to Japon, because +those countries get all the amount that they can buy by means of the +Sangleys who live in the Manilas. It would be very advantageous to +the inhabitants of the Manilas and to his Majesty to break off that +commerce with the Chinese, and it is unnecessary to say that by that +means advantageous disposition may be made of the silver of Peru and +the silks of the Filipinas--for in truth the king does not find there +his account; the silks would come to Mexico with greater advantage, +and the islanders and his Majesty would get more profit from it, and +that at the admission of all informed persons. As for the governor, +he should possess the following qualities: he should be discreet; +his distance from Madrid, and his authority as governor, should not +make him presumptuous, but should serve rather as a check than as +a cause for vanity; he should be a fine seaman, and very sedulous +in despatching and making the ships sail every year. All the exports +should be registered. In order that the islands be better reenforced, +the ships should be of five hundred toneladas, and they should have +two decks, better equipped than they have as yet been; for if they are +poorly equipped they take much time in making their voyage, and have +been the cause of great expense to his Majesty. Besides, the viceroy of +Nueva Espana has been unable to make them depart by the first of April, +as would be necessary. Those vessels ought only to carry seamen. The +offices of the ships ought not to be sold to merchants, but given +as a reward to those who have served well at sea. Great disorders +have happened from that, which was the former custom, and because +the offices of pilot, boatswain's mate, and steward have been sold. + +In the year 1637, when I was about to set out as admiral of the +vessels that were to take the reenforcements to those islands, I went +to the port of Acapulco. There I found the vessel "San Juan Bautista," +which had come that year from those islands, and which had lost its +mast on the way. I endeavored to get Don Pedro de Quiroga to advise +the marques de Cadereta of the poor condition of the masts and other +rigging of the vessel. He refused to permit it, and compelled me to +embark, telling me that if we failed to embark by the first day of +the month of April, we would run the risk of losing our voyage. While +at sea, I asked the boatswain's mate for an inventory of the sails +and rigging. I found that there were no spare sails, but one single +cable, and one other old cable, which was used to make fast the +pieces of artillery that were rolling about the ship. Ordering him +to bring me also the inventory of what there was when they left the +islands, I found that it had been equipped with three spare sails, +five cables, and a quantity of rigging. He answered me that the sea +had carried away the sails and that the ship had lost its cables as +they left San Bernardino. Without pressing him further, he confessed +to me that he had used the money that had been given him for that +purpose in buying merchandise, in order to discharge a debt of three +thousand escudos that he had paid for his post of boatswain, but +that he had not found his account in that merchandise. I endeavored +to punish him. He appealed to the commander-in-chief, and the latter +ordered me not to prosecute him until I should have arrived at the +Manilas. At the Manilas he was excused, because they said that he had +paid three thousand escudos, although he had made the king lose more +than sixty thousand. Those who furnish the provisions for the crew put +in food of poor quality. The pilots cram their room at the stern with +merchandise, thus endangering the vessel. Had I encountered a capful +of wind during that voyage, I could scarcely have finished it. I had +to take a capstan at Maribeles to lift my anchor, and to make the port +of Cabite, which is three leguas from that place. Thus for the twenty +thousand escudos that is drawn from the sale of those offices, thirty +thousand are lost, and the fleet is in danger of being lost--which +means, of losing those islands. It is not sufficient to give the +offices to sailors who deserve them; it is not at all necessary to +compel them to perform the functions of soldiers when they have no +inclination for it, or to punish them when they gamble, as is done. + +It is of great importance to have galleys on these coasts; that is +the means of keeping away from them the Dutch, and the Indians from +Mindanao and Jolo--who do not cease to be hostile to the Spaniards, +although they have neither courage nor discipline; for one Spaniard has +been seen to put twenty of their caracoas to flight with only one shot +from his musket. The enemy most to be feared are the Dutch, who have +taken possession of that sea. It is easy to manage the oared vessels +of that country, and they have been used in several emergencies to +tow the vessels, which otherwise would have been in danger of being +wrecked. Besides, those boats are more suitable for a sea like that, +full of islands, than vessels with high freeboard. It would also be +very much to the point to have work done in Camboya in the building of +new vessels, as the wood of those parts, and that of Angely, resist +the seaworms and decay better than other woods, and especially those +of the Filipinas. + +In the year 1637, when I arrived at the islands, there were no +vessels ready for Nueva Espana. They were obliged to send a small +vessel of one hundred toneladas to advise the marques de Cadereta +of their wretched condition, and to entreat him to send the usual +reenforcement--notwithstanding the prohibition of the commerce with +Peru, and their knowledge that there were no vessels at Acapulco. That +showed how important it is to be continually building vessels for the +Filipinas, and for the governor to be a seaman rather than a soldier +of the Low Countries. It is also important for the governor and the +archbishop to live in harmony. The spiritual government in these +countries is the one thing of greater consequence than the political +government, because of the scandal that the Indians receive from it. It +is also important that those sent by the viceroy be men of merit and +service, and that they be well treated in the islands. The observation +of all the above points will be of use to us in keeping off the Dutch, +who are the most terrible enemy that we have; and who will become +absolute masters of the Manilas, if they can attain their ends. Espana, +by observing those things, will triumph over its enemies. For my part, +I will fulfil my duty as a subject by doing my utmost for the service +of my master, and for the welfare of my country; and at the same time +I shall discharge my obligation toward your Excellency of serving you. + + + + + + + +GLORIOUS VICTORIES AGAINST THE MOROS OF MINDANAO + + +To the master-of-camp, Don Inigo Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the +Order of Santiago: [21] + +The despatch-boat which this year arrived from the Filippinas Islands +at Acapulco, a port of this Nueva Espana, was destitute of the silks +and other costly goods that the ships are accustomed to bring each +year from China, for it carried nothing of that sort. Nevertheless, +it came richly laden, with the news of the happy and fortunate +successes of the arms of Spain in that archipelago, directed by the +valor and prudence of Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, governor and +captain-general there for his Majesty, and a worthy brother of your +Grace. I received in all many different relations--although all of +them agreed, for truth is always one--from different persons, well +worthy of confidence, both ecclesiastic and secular. Every one--not +only the citizens of this great City of Mexico, the capital of this +kingdom, but those of all the other cities and towns--desired to see +these letters, and made urgent requests for them. To satisfy the +desires of so many, and give them pleasure, it was the opinion of +many that they should be printed. The truth is, that I was perplexed +and in doubt as to which one to use, because, as I have said, there +were several. After careful consideration I decided to print one by +Father Marcelo Francisco Mastrillo, a letter written to Father Juan +de Salazar, provincial of the Society of Jesus in those islands, +signed by Father Marcelo himself and sent to me. It gives a detailed +account of every event. No one could give a better account than the +father himself, for he was a witness of everything that happened, as +he always accompanied Don Sebastian with the standard of St. Francis +Xavier. In the simplicity and sincerity with which he recounts these +things, the truth shines more resplendent; so it seemed best not +to alter his style. In order that it may be better known who this +servant of God is, we will describe the miracle wrought upon him by +our father St. Francis Xavier in the city of Naples, and the occasion +of his journey to the Filipinas and his stay in Mindanao. We shall give +some information about the latter island, of the hostility which those +Mahometans have displayed for so many years to the Spaniards, and of +the friendly and subject Indians. We shall also give a description +of the naval battle which preceded the expedition to Mindanao. Then +we shall insert the letter of Father Marcelo, and conclude this +document with a description of the triumphal demonstration with +which Don Sebastian Hurtado was received in the city of Manila, +the rejoicings in that city, the thanks rendered to our Lord, and +the honors paid to those who died in the war, so that there will +be a complete account of everything. Besides the aforesaid reasons, +I was impelled to this on account of the obligations of our Society +of Jesus to Don Sebastian Hurtado (and especially by my own); for we +are always sensible of these, and our hearts will always keep them +alive, with perpetual acknowledgments. Besides, it seems to me that +one could not give your Grace a richer present, a more precious jewel, +an ornament of greater worth, than the exploits and triumphs of such +a brother, in whom one finds zeal for religion and the service of +God, appearing in all he does. The prudence with which he governs +his province, the unwearied solicitude with which he orders affairs, +the disinterestedness with which he serves the king our lord--well +worthy of the favor which his Majesty has shown him (in making him a +member of his Council of War, and sending him two [appointments in] +orders for his two nephews), and of those which I expect his Majesty +will yet grant him; the valor with which he defends those islands, the +grand courage with which he exposes himself to the greatest perils, +although his person is of such importance: all these are especially +praiseworthy, to say nothing of the admirable example by which he +encourages his soldiers to great undertakings, and the compassion +with which he watches over the Indians who were so harassed by so +many enemies. In short, your Grace will see in Don Sebastian Hurtado a +copy of your own holy zeal, prudence, care, disinterestedness, valor, +magnanimity, and many other virtues conspicuous in your Grace's own +heart. In him your Grace will see a true brother--as Tulio [22] said +(book 3, epistle 7), Frater quasi fere alter, "a brother is naught +else than a counterpart of the other brother;" so that they are hardly +two, but rather one soul divided between two bodies, as Quintilian +said (Declamation 321), [23] Quid est aliud fraternitas quam divisus +spiritus? [i.e., "What else is brotherhood but a divided soul?"] So +that your Grace's own valor, prudence, piety, and religion and Don +Sebastian Hurtado's are one; from that which God inspired in you, +may be inferred that of Don Sebastian; and in the virtues of this +great cavalier and captain-general shine those of your Grace, to whom +I offer a thousand congratulations on the triumphs of so glorious a +brother, whose exploits I offer to your Grace, and humbly place in +your illustrious hands. May our Lord watch over your Grace as this +your humble chaplain and servant desires. Mexico, February [25, 1638]. + + +Diego de Bobadilla + +[Folios 1-9 of Bobadilla's work are occupied with a long and detailed +account of a miraculous cure experienced by Father Mastrilli, and its +result in sending him to labor in the foreign missions. Its substance +is as follows: In 1633-34, Mastrilli was in Naples, and assisted, as +a priest, at one of the altars erected for a solemn feast in honor +of the Virgin Mary. After the ceremonies were over, Mastrilli was +accidentally wounded in the head by a hammer dropped from a workman's +hand. His life was despaired of; but an image of St. Francis Xavier, +miraculously endowed with speech, promised to restore his health if he +would go to the Indias. Mastrilli vowed to do this, and to renounce +country, friends, and all else that he held dear, for the sake of +that employ; and the next morning found him cured and sound. In +fulfilment of his vow he went to Spain, and set out for Japan; but +(as related in previous documents) he was obliged to land at Manila, +and accompanied Corcuera to Mindanao.] + + + + + + + +AN ACCOUNT OF THE GREAT ISLAND OF MINDANAO, AND THE HOSTILITIES +COMMITTED BY THOSE MOHAMMEDANS IN THE FILIPPINAS ISLANDS. + + +The great island of Mindanao is one of the largest in the archipelago +of the Filippinas Islands, which seem to be almost innumerable; and it +has even been said that there are over eleven thousand of them. [24] +I believe that if one counts islands large and small, inhabited and +desert, the above estimate is not far from the truth. In size, Mindanao +rivals the island of Manila, the chief and head of the others, for it +is almost three hundred leguas in circumference. Esteban Rodriguez de +Figueroa, one of the first leaders in the conquest of those islands, +and one of the most valorous soldiers who has been in them, made an +agreement with his Majesty to conquer this island at his own cost and +charges, and subject it to his royal crown--his Majesty awarding him as +tributary vassals, ten thousand of the first Mindanaos whom he should +subdue and choose for himself, and granting him other favors which +he sought. His Majesty accepted the agreement; and, with the title of +governor and captain-general, Don Esteban assembled at his own cost a +goodly army of Spaniards, which (as I have heard) numbered about four +hundred, and over four thousand Indians. They were all embarked in a +fleet of caracoas, which are oared vessels much used in the Filippinas, +carrying from fifty to one hundred rowers apiece. There are larger +ones, which are called juangas, and carry from one hundred and twenty +to one hundred and thirty rowers. They sailed from the island of Oton, +where the fleet was fitted out and collected. They reached Mindanao +and the army disembarked. When the enemy saw such a force, they began +to flee, and a victory was declared for Espana; but our satisfaction +was soon disturbed, for a wretched Mindanao audaciously resolved--it +is said, after he had taken opium, with which these people intoxicate +themselves--to assassinate our captain-general, even though he should +die in the attempt. The deed was to be done with his campilan, a +weapon something like a cutlass, with a lead weight at the hilt. The +weight makes its blows so terrible that it will cleave a man through +the middle. He hid in some bushes near the road on which our men +were marching in triumph. When General Esteban Rodriguez de Figueroa +reached a place abreast of the bush where the Mindanao was hidden, +the latter leaped out unexpectedly and struck the general so fierce a +blow on his head with his campilan that it cleft his skull from ear to +ear. I can account myself a witness of this, because, although I did +not see that event, and did not go to the Filippinas until many years +after, yet in 1632 I saw the skull, when they disinterred the bones +of this famous but unfortunate captain from the old church of our +college at Manila (which he founded, and where his body was brought +for burial), to transfer them to the church which we have recently +built. The skull shows very plainly the cruel blow of the campilan, +so that even I said, as I held it in my hands, with great grief, +"Our founder will not deny the blow of the campilan." Those who +accompanied our general killed the Mindanao on the spot, without much +difficulty. They sounded the retreat, and abandoned their pursuit of +the enemy. This was the origin and the beginning of the misfortunes +and calamities which for so many years have caused us so much sorrow in +the Filippinas. Our army, having lost its leader and captain-general, +did nothing further. The Spaniards retreated, and fortified themselves +in a place on that river, where they remained in garrison; and Father +Juan del Campo, a fervent man and a great minister of the gospel, +gave instruction to several villages, until he died there. Many of +the Indians along this river had rendered obedience, and were paying +tribute to his Majesty. Afterward the garrison moved to another place, +called La Caldera, where the Spaniards remained several years. Although +they made no conquest of that country, they served as a check to +the enemy, because the latter could not sail out with their fleets +on plundering expeditions. As Don Pedro de Acuna afterward decided, +when he was governor in the Filippinas, this garrison was withdrawn +from La Caldera, which resulted in the utter ruin of the islands, +because land and sea remained in the possession of the enemy. + +At that time the island was ruled by a Moro named Buysan who claimed +the entire seacoast as his. Another Moro, named Silongan, ruled the +well-populated district along the river. These two Moros conspired +together, and called to their aid other friends, and even in certain +ways their subjects--as those of the island of Sanguil and Sarragan; +and the Caragas, who inhabit the further [i.e., from Manila] shores of +this same island of Mindanao, which from that side faces our islands +of Pintados. They gathered great fleets of caracoas and jungas, +which at times numbered over one hundred and even one hundred and +fifty vessels--arming them with several large guns, many culverins, +a large number of arquebuses and muskets and many other arms; and +manning them so heavily, that they could land six to eight thousand +soldiers. In this way masters of the land and sea, they infested the +high seas, capturing all our ships that navigated those waters, robbing +and burning towns, sacking churches, carrying off the ornaments and +consecrated vessels, committing a thousand desecrations on the sacred +images, breaking them into pieces and insulting them, and capturing +Christian Indians in so great number that it would break one's heart +to tell of it; for one time those whom they carried away numbered over +two thousand and five hundred. The Spaniards had no better fortune; for +some were killed, and others carried away as slaves. In the year 1616, +they set sail with a powerful fleet, after effecting an alliance with +the Dutch, who came with ten galleons, and entered the bay of Manila +on All Saints' day. They were, however, defeated and destroyed in the +following April, 1617, by our fleet under the leadership of General +Don Juan Ronquillo. While the Dutch aided the Mindanaos, the latter +worked dreadful havoc, capturing, massacring, robbing, and burning +everything there was. They came as far as Balayan, a large and rich +town on the island of Manila, and not far from the city itself. They +attacked the shipyards at Pantao, where a galleon and a patache were +in process of construction, and indeed almost finished. These they +burned, and murdered almost thirty Spaniards--among them Captain +Arias Giron and Captain Don Juan Pimentel, who were in command of +the yards. Others, besides many Indians, they made prisoners. They +captured from us a large quantity of firearms and some artillery, +and inflicted on us great damage. Even the fathers and ministers of +the gospel have not been exempt; for, on the last occasion of which I +have spoken, they captured and murdered two Franciscan fathers. Before +that, on other occasions, they captured Father Hurtado, who was kept +a long time in captivity in Mindanao, and Father Pasqual de Acuna, +who was a prisoner at Caraga and still lives. Before and since the +time of his captivity, he has labored gloriously for the space of +almost forty years in the islands of Pintados--teaching those Indians +until his great age and his failing strength obliged him to retire, +and end his life in the fulness of his years, devoting himself to +God alone. The other fathers and ministers crossed the mountains +to escape the cruelty of these Mahometans, enduring great hunger, +hardship, and distress. + +To King Buysan succeeded Cachil Corralat, his son, who with +great sagacity and cunning set about making himself much more +powerful. Several times he made peace with the Spaniards, but his word +was ever a Moro's. It was soon known that he could not be trusted, +for he made and broke treaties with equal readiness. He infested the +seas with his fleets, sending out his own as he did in the year 1633, +when he sent out a large fleet which plundered and burned several large +and wealthy cities on this very island of Manila. But where he did most +harm was in our island of Pintados; for in the town of Ogmuc alone +he slew or made prisoners more than two hundred people--children and +women, as well as men. They captured the minister there, Father Juan +del Carpio of our Society, and cut him into pieces, of which his head +was the smallest. Cachil Corralat gave orders to his followers not to +carry to him a single father alive, but to slay them, in fulfilment +of a vow which he had made to Mahomet during a serious sickness, +not to leave a father alive if his health were restored. God, in His +just judgment and to punish us, chose to grant his prayer. + +Other Mahometans, their neighbors, joined the Mindanaos--tribes from +the island of Jolo, who at one time paid tribute and then rebelled, +killing all the Spaniards. Although that island is very small, +and there cannot be more than three thousand men able to bear arms, +yet they are very valiant, and they have very plainly proved it to +us when they have sailed forth to scour the high seas--especially +one chief, called Dato Achen, who can be compared with the most +destructive African pirates. This man once attacked a shipyard which +we had established in the province of Camarines, in which several +galleons were being built. After the usual robbery and burning, he +slew or made prisoners many Spaniards and Indians. He carried away +artillery and firearms, with which he strengthened his defenses in his +own country. He overran the Pintados Islands and did a great deal of +damage there. At Cabalian he captured Father Juan Domingo Vilancio +of our Society, a native of Luca--a holy man, and known as such by +Indians and Spaniards, and even by the Moros themselves. As such, +the latter revered him and did not ill-treat him in their own country, +where they carried him. While efforts were being made for his ransom, +it was our Lord's pleasure to give him complete liberty by freeing +him from the prison of this [earthly] body, and giving him in heaven +his reward for his faithful labors. He toiled thirty years or more in +the conversion of the pagans, to the remarkable edification of all; +and he displayed heavenly sincerity, which secured him the love of +God and men. The Moros buried him on their island of Jolo. Although +we have asked for the body, they will not give it up, saying that +they would rather keep it because it is holy (for sanctity and virtue +are pleasing even to Moros and infidels). They allege other things +in proof of his sanctity, which I shall not refer to, because they +are not thoroughly investigated. The Lord will make them clear later, +to His own glory. Returning, however, to the Joloans, they are grown +insolent with their fortunate successes, no less on land than on the +sea; for, although we have gone there three times with powerful fleets, +they have come off with credit and singing victory. In short, we have +returned without accomplishing anything. There was one time, however, +when Don Christobal de Lugo, lieutenant for the captain-general in +the Pintados Islands, went there with a fleet, and sacked and burned +the principal town, and did considerable damage; but they have always +escaped, and repaid to us their losses. They put their trust in a +hill very difficult of access, which they have well fortified with +artillery, to which they retreat whenever they are attacked. + +The evils that are suffered at the hands of these two enemies, the +Mindanaos and the Joloans, never were avenged, because, although +the governors sent out fleets after them, they did not encounter +the pirates on account of the great multitude of islands in the +archipelago; or else, if our ships did meet them, the Moros escaped, +for their vessels are remarkably swift and so have a great advantage +over ours. Then, to remedy so grievous injuries, Don Juan Cereco +Salamanca, who was then governor of the Filippinas, in the beginning +of the year 1634, overcoming remarkable difficulties which arose, +with a holy zeal for the service of God and of the king our lord, +ordered a position to be occupied on the island of Mindanao, at a +place which they call Samboangan. There he began to raise a fort which +should be a check to the Mindanaos and the Joloans, who came past +that place when they sailed forth on plundering expeditions. Although +they could pass us by standing out to sea, or in the darkness of the +night, without being seen from our fort, they would not so lightly +dare to leave behind their houses and lands with the Spaniard so near +a neighbor--for the latter could do them great injury by carrying +off their children and wives, and all their possessions, if their +towns were left unprotected when the men went away in their fleets; +or at least the Spaniards could await them on their return and knock +them in the head. The Moro king, Cachil Corralat, was much disturbed +at the proximity of the Spaniards; since now he could not make raids +in safety, as before; and he called upon the Joloans, the Borneans +and the Camucones to sail from various points to plunder our island, +which they did. + +The Camucones are a nation inhabiting some islands subject to the king +of Burney. Sometimes alone, and sometimes in company with the Borneans, +they have infested our seas with their fleets, pillaging our islands, +capturing many Indians, and killing all the Spaniards whom they took, +because they did not wish to carry these alive to their own country; +accordingly they granted no Spaniard his life. They are a base and +very cruel people. These robbers began as petty thieves, with a few +small vessels; but with the captures which they have been continually +making, they have grown so powerful that they send out great fleets +upon the sea, and do a great deal of damage. In the year 1625, while +the archbishop Don Francisco Miguel Garcia Serrano was visiting the +district of Bondoc, these Camucones attacked the town one morning, and +the archbishop had no little trouble in escaping over the mountains; +they stole whatever they could carry away, with the silver and the +pontifical vestments. That same year, they captured Father Juan de +las Missas of our Society, who had come from Tayabas to preach and was +returning to the island of Marinduque, which was in his charge. They +killed the father, and captured all who were aboard his ship, except +perhaps some one who escaped by swimming. They did much more damage, +continuing their depredations up to the year 1636, when, as I said, +they sailed with a large fleet, at the solicitation of the king Cachil +Corralat. They entered so far among the islands, that from them they +sailed out upon the high sea--an act of great daring. They arrived +at and plundered Palapag, a mission of our Society. They rounded Cape +Espiritu Santo, and captured over a hundred Christians at Baco. There +they divided into two bands. One passed over to Albay, on the island +of Manila, where they were met by the alcalde-mayor, Captain Mena, +of the Order of St. George, with several Spaniards and six Franciscan +friars. The Spaniards pressed the Camucones so hard that seven of +their caracoas went ashore on the island of Capul, where many of their +Christian captives were set free. The natives of the said island slew +some of the Camucones. Three of their caracoas they abandoned on the +sea, going aboard others to make their escape more easily. Not one +of our men was killed in this encounter, except that one Franciscan +father was wounded by a musket-bullet, and afterwards died of his +wound. The other band went out to sea again, coasting the island of +Ybabao. They entered a town called Bangahun and made prisoners there +more than one hundred other Christians. This troop fought a battle with +a caracoa full of soldiers from the city of Zebu, who inflicted some +injury upon the Moros, killing and capturing some. These Camucones, +returning afterward to their own country, while they were coasting the +island of Panay, were overtaken by a sudden storm, which drove three of +their caracoas ashore. Those who escaped with their lives were captured +by the natives, and many of them are now on galleys at the port of +Cavite. Other caracoas stealthily ventured to the Calamianes Islands, +where some Spaniards came out to meet them, and captured two of their +ships, and set free twenty captives from the island of Mindoro who +were among their prisoners. Fifteen other caracoas were coasting the +island of Paragua in company; and, two days before arriving at Borney, +they encountered thirty caracoas of Joloans, who had recently quarreled +with the Borneans. The Joloans attacked the Camucones and Borneans, +captured their fifteen caracoas, and made prisoners many Camucones and +more than one hundred of the Christians carried off by the Camucones; +these latter were ransomed at Samboangan, at a moderate rate. + +After these pirates Cachil Corralat sent his fleet, which did +considerable damage in our islands. In order to stop it and check +all these enemies, the governor, Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, +decided to go forth in person and make an expedition to Mindanao, to +begin the punishment of this enemy, because they were most powerful--as +we shall soon see, describing first the naval victory given us by +our Lord over the fleet despatched hither by Cachil Corralat. + +[The next part of this compilation is an account of the naval +victory over Tagal's fleet in December, 1636; it is practically +the same as that which we have already presented in our VOL. XXVII, +although rewritten and much abridged for publication. Then follows +Mastrilli's letter to his provincial (June 2, 1637) which also we +have published; Bobadilla states that he reproduces it verbatim, save +for the correction of "a few words which are not quite in accord with +our ordinary language, as he was a native of the city of Naples." The +document ends with a description of Corcuera's triumphal entry into +Manila, evidently compiled (with some additional details) from Juan +Lopez's letter on that subject, already presented to our readers.] + + + + + + + +ROYAL ORDERS AND DECREES, 1638 + + +REMOVAL OF NEGROES FROM MANILA + +The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order of +Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the Filipinas Islands, +and president of my royal Audiencia resident therein. In a letter +which you wrote me on the last of June, 1636, you declare that shortly +after your arrival at those islands, that city petitioned you to have +the free negroes and the freedmen, who number about four hundred or +five hundred, removed from it, because of the disorders that they +were creating within the city, as well as the thefts that they were +committing in union with the slaves--the former receiving and taking +to other places to sell what these said negroes had stolen. You +declare that that city demanded that the negroes should go to live +nine leguas away from there, but that that measure has not seemed +advisable; and the fathers of the Society gave you an islet which they +possess in the middle of the river, in order that they might settle +the negroes there, with the obligation to give them instruction--but +there would be no obligation to give the fathers any stipend for +that purpose beyond what is given them from the communal fund of the +Sangleys whom they have in Santa Cruz. Those Sangleys also render me +aid by giving me six reals per annum, besides the general license, +so that they may be allowed to live there with the fathers. They +number from about eight hundred to one thousand Chinese. The fathers +minister to those who have become Christians from this number, as +well as to the negroes--the latter being separated from the former +by an arm of the river. Also the Chinese pay all his salary to the +alcalde-mayor from their communal fund, which has been a saving to +my royal treasury. You declare that, in your desire to economize +and avoid so heavy expenses, you have deemed it best to give the +commander of artillery, who receives seven hundred pesos monthly +salary for his duties, the office of alcalde-mayor of the Parian; +for during the time while he should hold that office, there would +be an annual saving of seven thousand two hundred pesos to my royal +treasury. You also ordered the master-of-camp, Don Lorenzo de Olaso, +to go to live at the port of Cavite with his company, and to serve +there as castellan, chief justice, and governor of that port, with the +same salary as at present, as you say that the sargento-mayor would +be sufficient for you in that city. The above you reported to me, so +that I might understand it; and you say that by the aforesaid measures +and your method of governing, and provided that no one steals from +my royal treasury, you will entirely clear my royal treasury of debt, +and govern those islands from the proceeds of them. The matter having +been examined in my Council, it has been judged best to tell you that +it is thought that you will have given careful consideration to the +removal of the free negroes and freedmen from that city and their +settlement on the islet which was given you by the brethren of the +Society of Jesus; and the rest that you mention in the said letter +touching the said matter is neither approved nor rejected here, +for the present. It is to be feared, however, that those negroes, +having been removed from the city, and settled with the Chinese on +an uninhabited island, may commit more serious damage. Consequently, +you shall watch carefully so that you may remedy what needs correction; +and you are to note that in the matter of government, the best is not +[always] the easiest to execute, nor its results satisfactory. Hence, +for that reason, no new thing can be entered upon suddenly; and you +will, therefore, not carry out the execution of these new measures +until you shall have first reported to me all the things that you shall +see to be for my service, so that orders as to your course of action +may be issued to you. In the meanwhile, you shall not carry out your +proposed change of the persons of the commander of artillery and of +the master-of-camp, Don Lorenzo de Olaso; and I charge and order you, +that, jointly with the session [of the Audiencia], you shall inform +me, both in this regard and in others, of what changes should be made +from the past government, so that in everything decision may be made +as to what measures may be taken. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon + + + + +RESTRICTING THE RELIGIOUS ORDERS + +The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order of +Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the Filipinas Islands, +and president of my Audiencia therein: your letter of June 30, 636, +touching ecclesiastical matters, has been examined in my royal Council +of the Yndias, and answer is [hereby] made you. + +You say that the religious of the Order of St. Augustine need to be +reformed, for they pay no heed to the bulls of his Holiness, or the +decrees despatched in regard to the rotation; and that it would be +advisable not to give them any more religious for eight years--both +because they have many, and because of the causes that you mention for +such measure. I have thought best to charge you to have the rule for +rotation put in force strictly, without allowing more religious in each +mission station [doctrina] than, in accordance with my royal patronage, +shall be necessary for it; and that the others be occupied in missions +[misiones] and in preaching, for which purpose they were sent. + +In regard to what you write me concerning the advanced age of the +archbishop of those islands (who is so aged that his hands and head +tremble), namely, that it would be best to give him an assistant; +and that you are arranging to give such assistant an income of two +thousand pesos in addition to the four thousand pesos enjoyed by the +said archbishop, without taking that sum from my royal treasury, or +from my vassals: I charge you to explain to me the method or means by +which you can get that money without damage to my royal treasury and +the vassals who serve me, so that, if it be worth while to allow it, +you may execute it. + +So that the Order of St. Dominic, and the other orders resident in +those islands, may live with the regulation and good example that +is proper, and so that they may not increase the number of mission +stations granted them by my decrees, you shall allow no new elections +in them, which shall not be in harmony with my patronage. With +the advice of the archbishop, you shall endeavor to unite some of +the stations; and in those that shall be newly founded, you shall +endeavor likewise to have secular priests introduced, if you find +them intelligent and competent. Madrid. September 2, 1638. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon + + + + +APPOINTMENT OF SECULAR PRIESTS TO MISSIONS + +The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order of +Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the Filipinas Islands, +and president of my royal Audiencia therein: in one of the sections of +a letter which that city [of Manila] wrote to me on June 27 of 636, it +is stated that there are two colleges in that city--one that of Santo +Tomas, with religious of the Order of St. Dominic; and the other that +of San Josef, with religious of the Society of Jesus--both of which +have possessed, for several years past, authority to confer degrees +in all the sciences. It is also declared that, with this opportunity, +many students have excelled in those studies, and especially various +sons of poor citizens, who have graduated in all the degrees; but +that, since they have no beneficed curacies on which they can depend +for support, their studies bring them no advantage. It is said that +this is caused by certain religious orders, who have acquired from +the archbishop, bishops, and governors the aggrandizement of their +orders with many benefices which formerly were administered by secular +priests; and that this might be remedied if I would decree that all +the benefices which have been annexed to the religious orders during +the last twenty years should be restored to the [secular] clergy, and +that edicts should be issued in the form which I have ordained. This +matter having been considered in my royal Council of the Indias, I +have thought it best to issue the present, by which I command you that +in the new missions that shall be established, you shall--except when +they are in a territory assigned to the religious--it being understood +that there are virtuous secular priests, take pains to appoint them +to such missions; for such is my will. [Madrid, October 2, 1638.] + + +I the King + +By command of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon + + + + +COMPENSATION TO NUNS OF ST. CLARE + +The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order of +Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the Filipinas Islands, +and president of my royal Audiencia therein: in a letter which the +abbess and nuns of the convent of St. Clare in that city wrote me +on the thirtieth of June, 636, they make the following statements: +That the said convent was established so that they could live in it, +with all decorum and humility, with certain alms from the citizens; +and their house and church were built close to the wall of the said +city that lies next the river--a place that seemed most separated from +the business quarter, and so closely shut in that little save the +sky could be seen. That in front, on the other side of the street, +is the royal hospital for the Spaniards, which from the time of its +foundation has been administered by the religious of St. Francis; +and that in the hospital the religious who was vicar of the said +convent [of St. Clare], and administered the holy sacraments to the +nuns, had a cell, and they helped to support this religious out of +the alms bestowed upon them. That you, without any occasion or just +cause, drove out the religious from the said hospital by force and +violence, with armed soldiers--saying that the hospital should be +managed by a secular priest whom you took thither with you. That the +said vicar was thereby compelled to find shelter in the convent of +St. Francis, which is at a great distance from that of St. Clare; +and consequently, with the inconveniences of the excessive heat +and the violence of the rains in the wet season, he cannot go to +hear confessions and administer the holy sacraments at St. Clare, +especially at night. That their greatest annoyance is, that you are +constructing in the hospital a ward for convalescents, on the side +that faces the said convent; and that it is so high that it looks +down upon the convent, notwithstanding the enclosure of the latter, +and from the windows of that ward may be seen the beds of the nuns +in their infirmary and dormitory--a matter which requires thorough +reparation. They say that on the other side of their house is a +space between the houses and the wall (which was formerly a street), +which is a passage to the convent, and is useful to it; but that you +have closed this way, and are building another house, which abuts +upon their own ground-plot, for barracks and stables for the cavalry +troops. They entreat me that I will be pleased to command that a check +be placed upon this undertaking, and that, considering their poverty, +I order you to pay them the amount of one hundred and twenty pesos +in certified pay-warrants on the treasury there, which they hold, +which sum will be a great benefit and charity to them. The complaint +of these nuns has been considered in my royal Council of the Indias, +and the damage which they say has been caused to them by closing up +the street and by their being in sight of the ward that was built in +the cells [at the hospital], and by the stables and barracks that have +been placed so close to their house. I have therefore thought it best +to ordain and command you, as I do, that you shall not in any way cause +injury or inconvenience to the said nuns; and that the pay-warrants +which they say they hold, you shall cause to be paid--provided they +are duly certified--in their due value and at such time as the said +nuns desire; for such is my will. [Madrid, October 2, 1638.] + + +I the King + +By command of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon + + + + +REGULATING THE SEMINARY OF SANTA POTENCIANA + +The King. To the president and auditors of my royal Audiencia resident +in the city of Manila of the Filipinas Islands: it has been reported in +my royal Council of the Yndias that there is in that city a seminary +named Santa Potenciana, of which I am patron; that it was established +for orphan girls, and for the reception of married women when their +husbands are occupied in my service in various parts; and that for +some years the custom has been introduced of sheltering in the said +seminary certain women who live scandalously. [I am also told] that, +since this is of so great service to God our Lord, you, my president, +have given orders to the mother rector of the said seminary not to +receive in the seminary any woman sent by the archbishop of that +church, or by his provisor; and that no one of its inmates may +leave it. It has been judged best to order you (as I do hereby) +to take what measures appear to you most advisable in this matter, +considering all ends. Given in Madrid, November eight, one thousand +six hundred and thirty-eight. + + +I the King + + +Countersigned by Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon, and signed by the +members of the Council. + +[Endorsed: "To the royal Audiencia of Manila, in regard to the order +given by the president of the Audiencia to the mother rector of the +seminary of Sancta Potenciana of that city, that she should not receive +therein any woman sent by the archbishop or his provisor." "Ordering +that the president take what measures appear most fitting, considering +all ends."] + + + + +COMMERCE OF THE ISLANDS WITH MEXICO + +The King. To my viceroy, president, and auditors of my royal Audiencia +resident in the City of Mexico, of Nueva Espana: Don Juan Grau +Monfalcon, procurator-general of the Filipinas Islands, has reported +to me that the permission possessed by those islands of two hundred +and fifty thousand pesos of merchandise, and five hundred thousand for +the returns thereon, is very small, as that was conceded thirty-four +years ago, when the citizens and inhabitants were fewer, the duties +and expenses not so great, and the islands less infested by their +foes. Because of this latter, their needs have increased so greatly +that, if the said permission be not increased, it will be impossible +to maintain them, or for their citizens to support themselves. He +tells me that some illegal acts may have resulted from the present +narrow limit of the permission, both in the lading of the merchandise, +and in the returns of the silver. In order that those violations may +be avoided, and those islands and their inhabitants maintained in a +less straitened manner, he has petitioned me to have the goodness to +concede an increase of the two hundred and fifty thousand pesos of the +merchandise to four hundred thousand, and also of the five hundred +thousand pesos of silver to eight hundred thousand. For, besides +the above-mentioned advantages, my royal duties will thus increase, +to supply the expenses of the said islands; illegalities and frauds +will cease; and the inhabitants will increase in wealth. The matter +having been examined in my royal Council of the Indias, inasmuch as +I wish to know what permission the said islands enjoy, and that of +the count and duke of San Lucar, and whether it will be advisable to +enlarge the permission of the said islands; and considering their +needs and expenses, and other advantages: I order you to inform me +very minutely in regard to it all, so that, after examination, the +advisable measures may be taken. Given in Madrid, December eight, +one thousand six hundred and thirty-eight. + +I the King + +Countersigned by Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon, and signed by the +members of the Council. + +[Endorsed: "Don Juan Grau Monfalcon. To the viceroy, president, and +auditors of the Audiencia of Mexico, ordering information as to the +permission [of trade] for the Filipinas Islands, and that conceded +to the count and duke; and as to the advisability of increasing the +amount permitted to the islands."] + + + + +JURISDICTION OVER SEAMEN + +The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order of +Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the Philipinas Islands, +or to the person or persons in whose charge that government shall be: +in a letter which I wrote to you on the second of last September, +on various matters, there is a section of the following tenor: "I +have considered the arguments that you bring forward for its being so +expedient that the commander and the admiral of the ships shall have +authority and jurisdiction in the port of Acapulco, when he is not on +shore, to punish his sailors and soldiers; and that the warder of the +fort there shall not interfere with them by undertaking to punish them +on shore (regarding them as his subordinates, as hitherto they have +been) as they are persons of ability and good qualifications--since +from the time when the ships cast anchor, during all the time while +they remain in port, the men do not respect or obey, as it is right +they should, the said commander or admiral. Desiring to avoid +this difficulty, so that those officers may punish the culprits +in such cases, I have decided that what you propose may be done, +with the conditions that you mention; and, by a decree of the same +date as this letter, I am sending to the viceroy of Nueva Espana +advices to that effect. [I have told him] that as this seems to be +a general complaint, to judge from the instances [reported] here, +he must give the necessary orders for the execution of this decree, +unless some difficulty shall arise that may oblige him to defer it; +for when those men commit any disorderly acts on shore complaint can +be made against them, and the matter referred to the said commander +and admiral." And now a report has been made to me, on the part of +Don Juan Grao Monfalcon, procurator-general of that city of Manila, +that it is very advisable that the said commander and admiral of +the ships possess all necessary jurisdiction for punishing the men +aboard them--as is done at Cartagena, Portovelo, and other places; +and he entreats that I be pleased to command that this be accordingly +done. The matter having been considered in my royal Council of the +Indias, I have thought it best to issue the present, for such is my +will, that the usage which I have mentioned be put in practice in the +islands, as well as in Nueva Espana, since that is advisable for my +service. [Madrid, December 8, 1638.] + + +I the King + + +By command of the king our sovereign: + + +Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon + + + + +ON THE LADING OF THE GALLEONS + +The King. Don Juan Grau y Monfalcon, procurator-general of the +Philipinas Islands, has reported to me that certain citizens of those +islands, to whom were allotted toneladas in the amount [of lading] +permitted, have, for lack of means to ship the goods, sold that +space--which has thus been secured by the merchants of Nueva Espana +and Peru, who for that purpose have their agents in Manila. He states +that this practice is overlooked [by the officials], although, after +the first distribution of the permitted lading space has been made, +and the toneladas allotted, the citizens who through poverty or other +causes are unable or unwilling to lade the goods which belong and +are allotted to them cannot give, sell, or transfer that space to +any other person, unless they again declare the toneladas before the +bureau of allotment. The bureau again shares the space which was thus +declared among such citizens as ask for it, or who can occupy it to +better advantage; and these must pay for it, giving for each tonelada +the amount appraised, according to the season and the circumstances, +by the bureau itself. The proceeds from the said toneladas shall be +given and paid to the owners who had declared them. Thus poor persons +will obtain relief, and the citizens [of the islands] will have the +benefit of the entire amount of trade permitted to them, while those +of Nueva Espana will be excluded from it. [The said procurator] +entreats me to issue a decree in accordance with these facts, +including therein adequate penalties to secure its execution. The +matter having been examined in my royal Council of the Indias, and +the above statements carefully considered, I have approved [the said +procurator's request]. I command my governor and captain-general of +the said Philipinas Islands who now holds or shall in future hold +that office, and the auditors of my royal Audiencia therein, and other +persons who shall have in charge the allotment of the said toneladas, +and the bureau for the said allotment, that they observe and fulfil, +and cause to be observed and fulfilled, exactly and inviolably, +what is ordained in this my decree, without in any way contravening +or exceeding its tenor or form. And those who disobey this decree +are warned that such act will be charged to them in the visitations +and their residencias, and they will be punished according to law; +for such is my will. [Madrid, December 8, 1638.] + + + + + + + +FORTUNATE SUCCESSES IN FILIPINAS AND TERRENATE, 1636-37 + +Fortunate successes which our Lord has given by sea and land to the +Spanish arms in the Filipinas Islands against the Mindanaos, and in +the islands of Terrenate against the Dutch, in the latter part of +the year 1636 and the beginning of 1637. + + + + +FILIPINAS + +These Filipinas Islands, subject to the Catholic king our sovereign +for the past thirty years, have been so harassed and terrorized +by invasions, robberies, and fires caused by the Moros (Mindanaos, +Joloans, Burneyans, and Camucones), that one could not sail outside +the bay of Manila without manifest danger. Not a single village was +now safe, nor could an evangelical or royal minister perform his +duty undisturbed. These pirates--some at one time, others at another, +and sometimes all together--set out every year from their own lands, +and at first attacked the islands which are called the Pintados, +for these were the nearest; and afterward, becoming more impudent, +they came to coast along the island of Manila itself, and once they +even came to the suburbs of this city (although without making their +presence known). The Christians captured by them on these raids were +numberless; some were Spanish but the majority were natives, who, sold +afterward either among the enemies themselves, or among more distant +unbelievers, either abandoned the faith, or suffered living death in +a wretched slavery. The villages which they had ravaged were pitiful +to see, being either burned to the ground or abandoned and deserted; +for those inhabitants who were able to escape from the hands of the +enemy hid themselves in the thickets of the mountains, among wild +beasts and venomous serpents, without other food than a few roots +and wild fruits. And what is impossible to relate without shedding +tears, the gospel ministers were compelled to flee in this same way, +to endure the same calamities, and suffer the inclemencies of sky and +ground, in order not to fall into the hands of Mahometan cruelty. Even +thus they were not always able to flee, for some, cut to pieces, fell +into their hands; others were captured and ransomed at great cost, +or died of ill-treatment in their captivity. Those barbarians did not +spare the churches, but rather plundered them with an infernal fury; +burned them, and trampled under foot the ornaments; broke the images +and profaned the vessels; and impiously clothed themselves with the +sacred vestments. The most unbearable thing of all was to see all +those evils unchecked, our friends disheartened, the enemy unresisted, +and the villages defenseless. For, although the governors sent fleets +in pursuit of the enemy, nothing was effected--partly because the +latter hid themselves from our men among the numerous islands, and +partly because of the great speed of their boats, in which respect +they had great advantage over us. + +Finally, in the year 1633, the king of Mindanao, named Cachil Corralat, +sent out a very large fleet which did signal damage in the islands. To +put an end to this, Don Juan Cerezo de Salamanca, who was governor of +the islands at that time, surmounting many difficulties, commanded a +certain position to be taken and a fort to be begun in Samboangan, +on the island of Mindanao, and occupied by a Spanish garrison; for +that point was well suited to the purpose of restraining from there +the Mindanaos and Joloans, as they were forced to sight it when they +went forth to pillage. Soon the enemy Corralat felt the damage done +him by the new post of the Spaniards, and since he could no longer +sally forth at his safety, he called upon the Burneyans, Joloans, +and Camucones to set out in various directions to pillage--which they +did. He himself sent out after them, in the beginning of April, 1636, +a large fleet in command of a Moro chief named Tagal. This fleet, +as our garrison was but recently established, was able to proceed to +our islands, and attacking many places, to make many captures--among +them three Recollect religious of the Order of St. Augustine, and a +Spanish corregidor of the island of Cuyo; to pillage much property, +and to plunder the churches. They carried away the ornaments and +vessels, and destroyed the images, and especially the cloth of a +sacred crucifix, from which Corralat made himself a cape. Thereupon +he became arrogant, and boasted that he was carrying away the God of +the Christians a prisoner, because he had taken from among the sacred +vessels a monstrance and a lunette with the most holy sacrament; +and he returned to his own land, where they were already mourning +him as lost, because he had been absent from it for eight months. + +This last invasion, more than all the previous ones, afflicted Don +Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, who at that time had been proprietary +governor of the islands for a year. Inflamed with a zeal for the honor +of God and his king, he determined, after surmounting the numerous +difficulties and oppositions, to avenge in person the insolent acts +of those barbarians. But first of all he sent out, as governor of the +presidio at Sanboangan, Sargento-mayor Bartolome Diaz Barrera, and, +under his orders, Sargento-mayor Nicolas Goncalez, so that they might +be making preparations and sweeping the seas of those corsairs--a very +important matter, as will be seen subsequently. He then fitted out a +good fleet of champans (sailing vessels of moderate size, which are +used by the Chinese); and, embarking in one of them, made sail on the +day of the Purification of our Lady, the second of February, of this +year 1637. At Oton (which is about half-way) he received definite +information that Tagal was returning to his own country with eight +very well laden ships. The commander of the garrison at Sanboangan +was informed of that; and, preparing in two hours a squadron of five +caracoas (which are swift craft with oar and sail, which are used +by these Indians) and placing in command thereof Nicolas Goncalez, +the sargento-mayor of that presidio, he set out to round a very steep +cliff, in which a small mountain terminated, projecting out into the +sea, and distant about thirty leguas eastward from our fort. It was +necessary for the enemy to stop there, in order to discharge numerous +lances and arrows at the cliff (for it was their custom to sail by +that point when either outward or homeward bound)--a superstitious +custom of those barbarians. On account of this the place was known as +"the point of arrows" [punta de flechas]. The result was that which +our men desired for on the morning of the day of St. Thomas, the +twenty-first of December (at the time when prayer was being offered +up within the fort), the enemy was sighted; and both then and on the +following night our men made such an attack upon the enemy that, in +spite of a desperate defense, they surrendered. Of the eight ships +only one worthy of mention escaped, and that one in such a condition +that in order to escape, they cast overboard all its merchandise and +slaves. The other ships, heavily laden with merchandise, fell into the +hands of our soldiers and were plundered. There were not many firearms, +but they contained the vases and sacred ornaments, which were declared, +in order to be returned to their rightful owners. There died Tagal, the +commander of the enemy, with more than three hundred other Moros--so +obstinate and furious that they preferred death rather than surrender, +although they were offered their lives. Better was the course of one of +Tagal's brothers, who, when badly wounded, surrendered, protesting that +he had always regarded the faith of the Christians as the true one, +and begging for baptism, after receiving which he died. His example +was followed by fourteen other Moros, who surrendered and besought +baptism. Thus also there were recovered a hundred and twenty Christian +captives and among them a Recollect father, one of those whom the +Moros were taking away with them; but he was so badly wounded that he +soon died, although greatly consoled to have seen with his own eyes +the bravery with which our captains had punished the insolence of +the barbarians, obtaining so signal a victory as that, to the honor +of Jesus Christ and of the Spaniards, without its having cost even +a single man to our side. In that we began to enjoy the benefits of +the fort of Sanboangan; for if it had not been there, we could not +have encountered the enemy--who were none the less frightened by a +miracle which occurred on the very night on which the victory was +won. For having commenced by a terrific trembling of the earth and +sea, with a great noise of groans and screams, which were heard by +some, and which terrified all, that cliff--which we have mentioned +as an infamous place, both on account of the superstitious rite of +shooting arrows at it and many other things, and because there was +a tradition among the natives that the devil had been actually seen +there--became loosened from the land and fell with a great crash into +the sea, our Lord giving to understand thereby that the impiety so +strongly intrenched in that island was to fall and give place to our +holy religion, as events are constantly demonstrating. The shore has +already been consecrated to God with the name of Point San Sebastian, +so that the superstitions by which that place was contaminated may +be transformed by His holy arrows. + +The governor was highly elated with these tidings, and still more +when he received the ornaments, sacred vessels, and images which had +been recovered; and was moved to deep pity by the maltreated holy +crucifix, which had been made into a cape. [25] He ordained the latter +as thenceforth a standard for that expedition, as he did also with the +miraculous painting of St. Francis Xavier which was carried by Father +Marcelo Mastrillo, well known in the greater part of the world for the +so great mark of favor shown him by the Lord through the agency of +that great apostle of India. This father, while passing from Malaca +to Macan, a port of China, in fulfilment of the vow which he made at +Napoles, met with the Dutch corsairs, from whom the Lord delivered him +by a sudden wind which, while it turned him from the course which he +was pursuing, miraculously carried him, without a pilot who knew those +regions, into the bay of Manila. They anchored at the port of Cavite, +on the day of St. Ignatius of last year, for the signal consolation +and edification of all these islands, and for the good success of +this expedition (in which consisted the complete relief and remedy of +all)--especially to the benefit of the sick, of whom he took charge +during the entire course of the expedition. Our fleet reached the +port of Sanboangan on February 22, of this year; and all the men in it +having been confessed and having received communion, and having been +so encouraged (as they made evident to the father) by seeing from the +pulpit, the outraged image of the Crucified One, they cried out that +they would attack the whole world; and that the mothers were fortunate +who had employed their sons in so glorious an undertaking. Then the +soldiers returned to their vessels; they were divided into three +companies of Spaniards, and one of Panpango Indians. Without awaiting +the Spaniards and the volunteer Bisayan Indians they began to lay +their course toward Lamitan, on the fourth of March, in order not to +allow the enemies time to prepare themselves. At that place Corralat +had his principal village. The governor preceded the entire fleet, +with only four boats--both because the weather was contrary, and +because he had heard that there were some Moro merchantmen on the +sea from Java Major, very full of Christian slaves. Without the loss +of an instant's time, by sailing night and day, he came within sight +of Lamitan, on March thirteen. There the same man, in company with +only six musketeers as a guard, personally reconnoitered the coast +and river, with great valor and risk. Having fully ascertained that +the beach and the low grounds were safe, he disembarked with the men +of his four boats, as well as those of two others, that had already +come up at that time--in all, about seventy soldiers. He placed +these in battle-array, and marched with them to attack the village, +without knowing that it was so well fortified as was the case, as he +understood that all their force was about one and one-half leguas +inland on a high hill. It was an especial providence of our Lord, +and a brilliant stratagem, to leave an open road along the beach +(on which, as was afterward seen, the enemy had planted all their +artillery), and to deceive the enemy by taking another road on the +opposite side. This was very difficult and dangerous, both because of +the ambuscades which the enemy had prepared in the thickets (which were +quickly cleared by our men, by means of two field-pieces which were in +the vanguard), and by the swamps and river--which the soldiers forded +twice, with the water up to their breasts, with incredible valor. They +were encouraged by the example of their captain-general, who was the +first in all these hardships, as he was also later, when attacking two +large stockades, one after the other. Those stockades, notwithstanding +the fierce resistance made by the Moros in their defense, he entered +with his men, ever proving himself not less prudent in commanding +than spirited in attacking--personally encountering several Moros, +who set upon him with extraordinary spirit. Thereupon, they caught +sight of the fort with which Corralat had defended his village. It +was exceedingly well fortified with a new ditch, with eight pieces +of artillery, twenty-seven versos, many muskets with rests, and other +lighter arms, and with more than two thousand warrior Moros. But that +was of little use, for so gallant was the assault of the Spanish, +notwithstanding their small number, that they instantly gained +possession of the fort, killing a goodly number of Moros--among whom +was their castellan, who obstinately fought to the death--while the +others fled very badly wounded. From that place a portion of our men +went on ahead to a stockade which, with one piece [of artillery], +defended the house of Corralat, and it soon fell into our power; +for after the commander who had charge of it (and who until then had +kept them in good spirits by his vain and superstitious promises) +had been killed, those who accompanied him lost heart and fled, while +many of them were left there dead. The other body [of the Spaniards] +attacked the river at the same time, and, putting the Moros to flight, +captured more than three hundred craft, great and small. Of these they +sacked some large Javanese merchantmen which were heavily laden with +goods, and set free their Christian slaves. Some boats which were +suitable for our men were kept, and the others were burned, without +a single one being left. Had the fleet that left Sanboangan been all +together on that day, they would have finished matters with the Moro +king Corralat, who, with as many men as possible, withdrew to the hill +which he had fortified, disguised and borne on the shoulders of slaves. + +The governor after having given the village over to sack, having +gathered all the arms of the enemy--which, as aforesaid, consisted +of eight bronze pieces with ladles, one swivel-gun of cast iron, +twenty-seven versos, and more than one hundred muskets and arquebuses; +besides a very great number of cannon-chambers, and iron, balls, +and powder; campilans (what the Indians call by this name resemble +certain cutlasses), lances, javelins, and many other kinds of poisoned +missile weapons; and also after having repaired the fort which the +enemy had (now called San Francisco Xavier) with new and suitable +fortifications, which he planned, and himself commenced with his own +hands to execute; and having lodged his men without the loss of even +one (for only two servants deserted): he retired to a large mosque, +where he established a bodyguard. He first had the mosque blessed, +and a chair and some Arabic books of the cursed Koran burned. Quite +necessary was the garrison and watch set by the vigilant governor +during the days of his stay there, while awaiting the rest of his +fleet, in order to drive away some false and pernicious embassies, and +to defend themselves from the continual surprises which the defeated +Moros sprang upon them, especially at night. Our men did not receive +much hurt from them; on the contrary, various bodies of troops, +leaving their posts, overran the country, burning the villages, and +committing other damage on the enemy. Many Christian captives fled from +the enemy on this account, and were immediately sent to Sanboangan. + +On the sixteenth of the same month, Sargento-mayor Nicolas Goncalez +came to join the governor with the rest of the fleet, which sailed +from Sanboangan. The governor immediately began to prepare his men +with all temporal and spiritual equipment with which to invest the hill +on the next day. There was well seen the military prudence and skill, +and the zeal for the divine honor, of the captain-general, in the so +well arranged and efficacious address which he made to his soldiers, +and in the so definite orders that he issued. He divided his men; and, +committing about one hundred and twenty Spaniards, thirty Pampango +Indians, and some other Bisayans as carriers, to Sargento-mayor Nicolas +Gonzalez, ordered him to surprise the enemy by the rear of the hill, +first sounding his trumpets, so that he himself might attack the +front at the same instant by this means dividing the enemy's forces, +and weakening their defense. In accordance with these orders, the +sargento-mayor began his march. The governor, with the rest of the army +(after leaving a sufficient defense of soldiers in the fort and boats), +marched toward the hill at six o'clock the following morning. At its +brow was a very fine deserted village, where the governor fortified +a good house, and had a piece of artillery planted and a garrison +of Pampangos established, to be used as a place of refuge for his +men. Commencing to ascend the hill by the road which the Moro who +was guiding them showed him, he stopped near where there was another +road; and, having asked the guide whether that road also led to the +hill, and which of the two was the better, the Moro replied in the +affirmative, and said that both were poor. "Then if both are poor," +said the governor in reply, "let us go by the other, and not by the +one along which the Moro is guiding us." That was the inspiration of +Heaven, and very good military counsel, and so did the outcome declare +it; for that first road was taking them point blank into a cavalier, +garrisoned with three pieces, one of which was of bronze. It was +found afterward that, besides a double charge of powder, the piece +was loaded with two plain artillery balls, two crowbars, and more +than three hundred musket balls--with which, no doubt, at least all +the vanguard would have been swept away. Now freed from that danger, +and marching with great difficulty up the hill, the governor sent +some of the vanguard with orders to reconnoiter only the road, +and to halt at some fitting place in order to await the signal of +those who were to attack the enemy in the rear. In truth the road +was so difficult that it could be ascended in some places only with +great difficulty, by clambering up and laying hold of the shrubs with +their hands. It was narrow and very steep, and had precipices in all +parts, so that they could not mount upward except one at a time. And, +above all, it was so well commanded at the top by three forts--which +were inaccessible, both by the great height of their location, and +by the defenses of ditches, very stout stockades, and a very large +supply of weapons--that very few of the enemy, without receiving +any hurt, could with the use of only stones kill a million men who +might attack them in that part. Notwithstanding this, those who were +sent to reconnoiter the road were so blinded by their overweening +valor and spirit (truly Spanish) that, thinking that they could +easily gain all, they went ahead to attack one of the three forts, +without heeding the order that the general had given them; thereby +they encountered, for themselves and the rest of the vanguard, great +damage from the three forts, without doing anything to the enemy. More +than twenty [of the Spaniards] were killed and more than eighty badly +wounded. Much greater would have been the destruction of our men--for, +not considering those who were falling, they continued to involve +themselves and the others further, with false rumors of victory--had +it not been that the governor, placing himself in the greatest danger, +where the balls were raining down, and where they wounded his squire +(and others who were very near him fell dead), and recognizing that +victory was impossible in that part, and prudently hiding the disorder +which had happened, in order not to discourage his soldiers, caused +them all, both whole and wounded, to retire. This he did with so great +ease and gallantry on one side, while on the other he confronted the +enemy with so great valor, with sword in hand; had he not done that not +a single man would have remained alive, since the enemy were numerous, +the road full of precipices, and our men badly impeded with the wounded +and more than two hours of fighting. That night the governor passed, +with those who remained unhurt, in the retreat at the brow of the +hill--at the greatest risk of perishing, if the enemy had made a sally, +however vigilant our men had been. But God delivered them from that +danger; for the enemy did not make a sally, because they made a great +feast that night over the good result of having, as they imagined, +killed the governor. Already by this time the sick were in the camp, +in which miraculous cures of very deadly wounds occurred. One had +been shot through the head from temple to temple; another was shot +through the mouth by a ball that passed up through the stomach; +another had several poisoned dart-points (here called sompites) +left sticking in his throat; and both those and all the others, +excepting two or three who did not allow themselves to be treated, +are today alive and well. They, and all, attribute their miraculous +health to the special favor with which God chose to repay the holy +zeal with which all risked their lives for His Divine Majesty. + +On the following day, the eighteenth of the same month, while the +governor was hearing mass, the rattle and roar of artillery and +musketry was heard on the hill, which increased his anxiety. Suspecting +that Nicolas Gonzalez was fighting, he sent him, as a reenforcement, +a company of soldiers under command of Captain Don Rodrigo de +Guillestigui. And it was so that, the said sargento-mayor, Nicolas +Gonzalez, not having been able to arrive the day before at the assigned +place because of the great difficulty of the road, it was our Lord's +pleasure that, after conquering many difficulties and great obstacles, +he gained possession of an eminence which dominated the enemy's forts +in the rear. Thence he started to invest them, with such intrepidity +that, although the king, leading his men in person, began to resist him +furiously, he could not however withstand our charges. Consequently, +they were compelled to abandon their three forts, one after the other, +leaving an infinite number of dead Moros, who perished partly by the +balls, and partly through falling over precipices in escaping, as +the way was narrow. Among those who escaped by flight was Corralat; +he fled, badly wounded, to some small villages that he owned, which +were four leguas distant from the hill. The queen his wife, and many +others of his servants threw themselves over the precipices of their +own accord, in order to avoid falling into our hands. Many of the enemy +were captured and the Christian captives there freed. Among the latter +was found alive one of the Recollect fathers, who, as he had been +badly mangled, was judged to have lived as by a miracle until the day +following, when he died as a saint in the camp, after receiving all the +sacraments with great consolation. The third [Recollect religious] was +killed through the fury of the Moros, and it is not known where they +threw his body. The three forts, then, with all their arms (namely, +four pieces of artillery, and other numberless weapons of other kinds), +having fallen into our hands, as well as a great quantity of food, +and a quantity of wealth, and a suitable guard having been placed, the +governor was advised of everything. He was waiting anxiously in camp; +rejoicing over the good news, and more that no one of our soldiers +had been killed, he ascended the hill. In two days' time having taken +down to the camp with very few men the pieces which it had taken the +enemy six months to take up with more than two thousand Indians; +collecting many sacred vases and ecclesiastical ornaments which +were found; giving the house of the king over to sack, and others, +very large and full of riches, by which many Spaniards were greatly +advantaged; and having burned the buildings, and leveled the forts: +as he was no longer able to endure the stench which arose from the +[dead bodies of] the enemy who had been slain and those who had fallen +over the precipices, the forces returned to camp--leaving the Moro +king entirely ruined, as a chastisement for the many outrages which +he had impiously committed on the true God, on His priests, and other +Christians. From there, after having given thanks to our Lord with +a mass, and a solemn procession with the most holy sacrament on the +day of the Incarnation, they set sail for Sanboangan. + +When they left, the governor sent Sargento-mayor Pedro Palomino +with one hundred Spaniards to Cachil Moncay (the legitimate king, +although he had been oppressed by the tyranny of his uncle Corralat), +in order to tell him that, if he wished to be protected by the +Spanish arms of his Majesty, he must render homage and pay tribute +to the Catholic king our sovereign, wage war by fire and sword on +Corralat and his allies, free the Christian captives, and admit +gospel ministers. The king offered in person to do all that, and +afterward through his ambassador and brother-in-law, at Samboangan, +to the governor. The latter having issued the fitting orders in that +presidio, and having received the homage offered to our sovereign +by many--especially by the inhabitants of the island of Basilan, +to whom he immediately assigned gospel ministers, as they asked for +them--he entrusted one hundred Spaniards and more than one thousand +volunteer Indians (who had now arrived, although after the battle), +with orders to coast along the island, doing all the harm possible +to the enemy, and helping the Spaniards' friends. The said captain +performed all the aforesaid excellently, coasting along the island from +Sanboangan to Caraga. And although the Moros had retreated inland, +being terrified by the news of the victory, still the captain did +them considerable damage. He burned as many as sixteen villages, and +many other collections of houses, laid waste the fields and gardens, +destroyed more than one hundred ships (counting large and small), +and seized others for the use of the fleet, whose need he abundantly +supplied with many provisions which he collected. He also beheaded +seventy-two spirited Moros, who defended themselves against him, +whose heads he placed on pikes, in various places along the beach, +in order to terrorize the others. He made prisoners some others, +whom he took alive, with which the whole land became fearful. While +that was being done, as has been said, the governor set sail toward +Manila. He entered that city in triumph on the twenty-fourth of May, +with his four companies in battle-array, with the prisoners in their +midst, and with fourteen wagons heavily laden with many important +arms of the enemy, together with the banners which had been captured +dragging in the dust. There was general applause and rejoicing by the +Spaniards and natives. That was an affair well calculated to inspire +fear in the numberless infidels by whom we are surrounded. + +Finally, his Lordship, having shown certain very splendid honors to +those who had so gloriously perished in the war, and having ordered +a great number of masses to be said for their souls, ended the +celebration most happily on the seventh of June (the Sunday of the +Trinity), by a very solemn procession of the most holy sacrament as +an expression of thanks. In front marched the ransomed Christians, +very handsomely clad, carrying candles and rosaries. Four long paces +behind them were many sacred vases and ecclesiastical ornaments, +which were recovered from the possession of the barbarian. By that +sight the hearts of Catholics were moved to great compassion; and the +people gave many thanks to our Lord for the sight of that which they +had desired for so many years. They entreated Him that the work might +progress until, the enemies who remained in those regions having +received the faith of Jesus Christ, they and the other long-time +Christians might enjoy the desired peace and quiet. + + + + +TERRENATE + +The governor's great care and vigilance in preparing and arranging the +fleet of Mindanao did not cause him to forget the other enemy--infested +posts that his Majesty possesses in this archipelago. At the same +time, he despatched another very good fleet, consisting of two large +ships, one patache, and one galley, under command of General Geronimo +Henriquez, as a guard to a number of champans which were taking the +succor to the forts of Terrenate. Two excellent ships of the Dutch +enemy were awaiting them at the entrance. When they saw the courage +of our men the enemy retired in flight to the shelter of their fort +of Malayo, without daring to await them. The Spaniards were so keen +for fighting that, hastily leaving in safety the aid which they were +taking, they started in pursuit of the hostile galleons, and did +not stop until they met these under the enemy's fort, where they had +gone. There they fired so many volleys, both at the ships and at the +fort and village, that (as was learned afterward from some who took +refuge with our ships) very considerable damage was done, without +the Dutch daring to sail out, or being able to do us any damage of +importance. That was a very great cause for scoffing against the enemy, +and they lost as much reputation among those Moros, as was gained by +the Spaniards, especially with the king of Tidore, our friend, who very +joyfully thanked the commander Henriquez and the admiral, Don Pedro de +Almonte, with presents for that action of so great valor and gallantry. + +One month after that fleet had returned to Manila, Don Pedro de +Mendiola, governor of Terrenate, heard that two Dutch ships were +becalmed not a great distance from there. He instantly despatched +two galleys, which together spiritedly attacked the better of the two +ships. After it had been entirely defeated, and our men were about to +board it, a strong wind which suddenly arose snatched it from their +hands, although it was badly crippled by the discharges from our +galleys. The latter received no considerable damage. Thereupon that +enemy were greatly terrified; the Moro natives received a very exalted +idea of the Spaniards, while the latter were very joyful at beholding +the arms of the king our sovereign, even in these most remote bounds +of the earth, shine with the luster and splendor that they merit. + +With license. In Madrid. Printed by Diego Diaz de la Carrera, in the +year 1639. + + + + + + + +VALUE OF CORCUERA'S SEIZURES IN JOLO + + +[Under date of Manila, August 2, 1638, the city cabildo of Manila write +the king a detailed account of Corcuera's campaign in Jolo, which +was begun in December, 1637. Inasmuch as this letter covers ground +sufficiently treated in documents already presented in this series, it +is not here given. The original is conserved in the Archivo general de +Indias with pressmark, "est. 68, caj. 1, leg. 32;" and it is presented +by Pastells in his edition of Colin (iii, pp. 528-532). Pastells +(iii, pp. 532, 533) follows this letter by a document showing the +value of the artillery and other things seized from the Joloans, +and the money value of the captives who were sold as slaves. This +document is conserved in the same archives and has the same pressmark +as the above. It is as follows:] + +The relation of the expense incurred on his Majesty's account during +the expedition made to the kingdom of Jolo by Don Sebastian Hurtado +de Corcuera, in December, 1637; also the value of what was seized +and gained from the enemy; and the net gain. Subtracting the one from +the other, the result is as follows: + + + pesos tomins granos + + Gained from the enemy, 28,345 7 0 + Expenses of the expedition, 26,314 5 4 + + Net remainder of gain, 2,031 1 6 + + +The value of what was gained from the enemy can be analyzed in the +following form: + +[A list, partially duplicate, of the artillery taken from the Joloans +follows, of which we present only the final summary, in order to +avoid such duplication. It appears that the artillery when taken to +Manila was appraised by one Melchor Perez, royal chief of artillery +and artillery-founder.] + + +Bronze artillery, useful + +Pieces Weight in quintals and libras + Make Weight of ball in libras + Value of one quintal in pesos + Total value in pesos + +1 English 11 3 30 330 +1 falcon of King Don + Sebastian of Portugal 11 4 28 308 +2 of King Don Sebastian of + Portugal 15 10 26 390 +1 Manila, of the time of + Tavora 26,80 10 26 670 +21 camaras [26] 124 + +Bronze artillery, useless, appraised merely at the value of the copper + +1 English 11 3 12 132 +1 Siamese 4 1 12-1/2 54 +10 versos 14 12 168 + +Cast-iron artillery + +1 English 7 35 3 12-1/2 91 +1 Macao 12-1/2 4 12 156 +1 English 11 4 12-1/2 137 +1 Dutch 10 88 12-1/2 136 +1 English 12 25 5 12-1/2 153 +1 Dutch 12 25 5 12-1/2 153 +1 English 10 45 5 12-1/2 130 +1 English 14 63 7 12-1/2 182 +1 Dutch 18 9 12-1/2 225 +1 English 21 33 9 12-1/2 266 +1 Dutch 24 97 11 12, and + 1 tomin 312 +1 iron base [roquero] 4 + + +Firearms + + pesos + +3 Vizcayan arquebuses 12 +10-1/2 Macao muskets 31 +11 Vizcayan field muskets 66 +1 Dutch arquebus 4 +19 Macao arquebuses 57 +16 Dutch muskets 64 +1 musket de pinote of Macao 4 +2 Vizcayan arquebuses 10 +7 arquebuses from Macao 21 +7 Japanese small guns [escopetillas] 21 +2 Vizcayan field muskets 12 +5 Dutch arquebuses 15 +10 Dutch muskets 50 +1 bit of a Vizcayan gun [escopeta] 1 + + +Besides the above, in cloth or money, 2,866 [pesos]; in small darts +and blowpipes, 50 [pesos]. + +Lastly, from 192 captive Indians--men, women, and children--sold as +his Majesty's slaves at royal auction, 20,815 pesos. Of this amount +10,375 pesos were in cash, in coin; and the 10,440 remaining were +charged to the pay due the infantry and seamen. + + + + + + + +DOCUMENTS OF 1639-1640 + + + Events in Philipinas, 1638-39. [Unsigned; probably Juan Lopez, + 1639.] + Letters to the Holy Misericordia. Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera; + December 4, 1637, and October 26, 1639. + The university of Santo Tomas. Felipe IV; November 9, 1639. + Royal orders and decrees. Felipe IV; 1639. + Events in the Filipinas Islands, 1639-40. [Juan Lopez?]; August, + 1640. + Relation of the insurrection of the Chinese. [Unsigned and + undated; probably in March, 1640.] + Ecclesiastical and Augustinian affairs, 1630-40. Casimiro + Diaz; [1718?]. [From his Conquistas.] + Relation of the Filipinas Islands. [Diego de Bobadilla, S.J.; + 1640.] + + + +Sources: The first of these documents is obtained from a MS. in the +Academia Real de la Historia, Madrid; the second, from a MS. volume +in the library of Edward E. Ayer, Chicago; the third, and the eighth +decree in the fourth, from the Archivo general de Indias, Sevilla; +the fourth (except the above-mentioned decree), from the Archivo +Historico Nacional, Madrid; the fifth and sixth, from the Ventura +del Arco MSS. (Ayer library); the seventh, from Diaz's Conquistas, +pp. 267-444; the eighth, from Thevenot's Voyages curieux, t. i, +part ii--from a copy belonging to the library of Harvard University. + +Translations: These are made by James A. Robertson--except the fifth, +sixth, and seventh, and two decrees in the fourth, by Emma Helen Blair. + + + + + + + +EVENTS IN THE PHILIPINAS + +FROM THE YEAR 1638 TO THAT OF 1639 + + +Today, August 14, I learned that thirteen Macasars and Basilas, +of those who had been sold as slaves, had fled in a small boat, +and that they had been furnished with arms. Some suspected that the +Lascars aided them. A few days before, six of them had fled, but they +were captured and brought to this port by the Indians of Maragondon. + +At the end of September Nuestra Senora del Rosario [i.e., our Lady +of the Rosary] was robbed. Only three jewels were taken from her--a +diamond of the value of one thousand two hundred pesos; a cross of +smaller diamonds; and a gold rosary. The holy image was found in a +prostrate condition. It is said that there are some indications of +the robber. A portion of the robe was found in the possession of a +soldier; but he says that he found it on the ground, and it has been +impossible to prove anything else. + +In the beginning of October came a despatch from Sanboangan, in which +it is declared that although the Spaniards tried to constrain Cachil +Moncay to make his men pay the tribute, he replied that he would +not do so, but that he would take arms and declare war. In fact, +he retired to the mountains and took captive Father Francisco Angel; +but another chief, his opponent, had the boldness to take the father +from him and deliver him to the Spaniards. + +We are advised from Jolo that many of our men have been killed; and +that the islanders who have remained there have suffered great famine, +and consequently, an epidemic and plague is feared. It is also said +that Panguian a cachil, together with Dato Ache, has retreated with +almost all the brave men of Jolo to the island of Tabitabi, [27] +where they have fortified another hill, and are preparing ships to +go out to pillage our tributaries. The king and queen are in Jolo +without anyone paying any attention to them; and Panguian Cachil is +trying to make himself king of the Joloans. + +Three ships left this port for Macan: the Macan patache, on the +thirteenth of October; on the fourteenth, that from Camboja; and on +the sixteenth, that which came from India. It has to return here to +collect its goods which it left here [for sale] on commission [fiada], +and will go hence to Goa. + +October 26, a champan from Sanboangan arrived, in which was Father +Gregorio Belin, seeking the reformation that is especially demanded +by affairs in Jolo, whose commandant [28] has prevented many good +results and been the cause of many evils, by his bad government and +scandalous conduct. Don Sebastian [Hurtado de Corcuera] removed him, +as he was already well informed of what has taken place there. Father +Pedro Gutierrez informs us about Mindanao in a letter which he writes +to the father provincial, as follows. + + + + +Letter from Father Pedro Gutierrez + +"These three posts of Sanboangan, Jolo, and Mindanao, were left +so destitute, for lack of the little fleet that was here at the +beginning, that I am surprised that the commandant, Don Pedro de +Almonte, has been able to attend with so great promptness to the +necessities that have arisen. The time when the [lack of the] fleet +began to be felt was when a soldier and a Pampango were brought +badly wounded from Basilan. In order to remedy the damages that +might ensue from not inflicting punishment, it was necessary to +equip a caracoa with Pampangos and servants of the Spaniards. The +matter was entrusted to Adjutant Cristoval de las Eras, who had the +two evildoers shot in Basilan. Then, seeing that the Spaniards who +were in Basilan were poorly accommodated, and without any defense, +he advised the commandant, Don Pedro; and, by virtue of the order +sent him, he built a fortified house in a very good position. After +the people of the mountain (some of whom had absented themselves +through fear) had calmed down, he returned to this port. + +"During that time the commandant, Don Pedro, was already getting ready +a small fleet among the Lutaos, in order to attack the Joloans who had +gone to Tabitabi and other islands. That he might accomplish this, he +requested a good juanga which was at Dapitan, whence it was brought +with fifty Indians. With one that he procured from those that his +Majesty had here, and those which he had made by the Lutao chiefs, +he had five caracoas with four pieces of artillery, besides three +other small boats called pilanes, all of them excellently equipped +with infantry and ammunition. + +"While the fleet was on the point of being despatched, news arrived +from Mindanao of various acts of treachery which Moncay, chief of +Buayen, had attempted against the Spaniards; and that he had seized +Father Angel; and that after the said father had escaped from them, +they fell upon the food and the household effects that the father left, +thus declaring themselves. But the commandant, Don Pedro, seeing the +danger in delaying help, and knowing that if Corralat and Manaquior +were to unite with Moncay much damage might be done, determined to +send the fleet that was prepared for Jolo to Mindanao. For greater +abundance, he added a champan with food and ammunition for the +said fleet, and as an aid to the fort at Buayen. He charged Adjutant +Cristoval de las Eras with all this, on account of his experience as a +good soldier, and his knowledge of wars with the Indians. In addition +he charged me to go in the fleet, so that I might see Corralat and +Manaquior; and as that was my affair, and the Spaniards were not to +meddle in it, it was made certain that those chiefs would not unite +with Moncay. We came near to Lamitan, where Corralat was living, and +I found Father Carrion, who was with Corralat, and who was coming to +Sanboangan to ask for an order to make peace with Manaquior, to make +war on Moncay, to talk to Corralat, in order that he should not unite +with Moncay, and to request succor in some things. I told him that +the commandant Don Pedro had already prepared for all that he wanted, +and more; and that he was sending that fleet, collected as if by a +miracle. The father was very much surprised by that, and even told +me that if they saw what had been done, they would not believe it +in Buayen; for, as they know the limited resources in Sanboangan, +they had not dared to ask for a single soldier. + +"I landed alone, and the fleet went to await me at La Zabanilla. I +talked to Corralat, and he promised me all that I wanted. For greater +security, he told me that he would give two caracoas to guard me. He +offered me four, but I did not desire more than two, which he sent +after me. It was diverting to hear the Mindanaos say that on no account +must they separate from my caracoa; and when I told them, as we were +returning, to stay behind and look for food, that did not avail, for +they told me that they were not to leave me until I should return, +and they kept their word. + +"We arrived at the fort. I informed Adjutant Eras of the condition of +affairs. According to his orders, Manaquior was summoned; and he made +a treaty of peace with Captain Marquez. For a beginning, he offered +an iron piece that uses a ball weighing three libras, which he handed +over to the said adjutant Eras. We continued to ascend the river to +quiet the villages that the hostile Moncay had taken from Manaquior, +and which he had fortified. But when they learned that the Spaniards +were coming, they discarded their foolish ideas, and, as sensible men, +abandoned the village, which was excellently fortified. They set fire +to a part of it, but were unable to burn it all because of their haste +in escaping. They went to join those who were fortified in a village +higher up the same river, which was the village which prevented those +who could have done so from carrying refreshment to the fort of the +Spaniards. The Spaniards went up the river, and before they arrived the +natives deserted that village also, and that so hastily that they were +unable to burn more than one house. We went up as far as the village +of Manaquior, where we were well received. We took five days to reach +that place from the fort. Manaquior said that the inhabitants of the +two villages had united with a third, in order to fight, and that +they were on an arm of the river. The adjutant with his fleet, and +with Manaquior, who had always accompanied him, descended the river; +and, arriving at the entrance of the said arm, as one of the caracoas +was large, the adjutant left it there (it was the one in which I was +embarked), and ascended with the rest. Before his arrival, the enemy +also fled and said that all those who had abandoned the other villages +were going to fortify themselves in another position farther up the +river. Thereupon, those who accompanied Adjutant Eras tried to persuade +him not go any farther, since those Moros did not await them, and the +river was becoming narrower. The adjutant refused to do anything else +but pursue them, and did so for two days by that arm of the sea. He +reached the last site, where the enemy were fortifying themselves +with an excellent stockade. There must have been a great force of men, +since they had done so much in so few hours. They did not hold their +ground there, either, but according to the track that they left went +to the mountains in two divisions. Thereupon we returned to Samboangan, +after having reenforced the fort with food and ammunition. + +"Two bronze versos were found at that last site, which had been +hidden in the river. The adjutant seized them, and is sending them, +I believe, to Don Sebastian. I have been in various fleets, and +have seen in none of them what I have seen in this one--namely, +that although those people had never encountered Spaniards before, +there was not a single soldier who ill-treated any Indian, while the +latter came very willingly. Perhaps the cause for it was the speech +that Adjutant Eras made to the Spaniards--who, as they know that he +treats them with great courtesy, and that for that reason he will +stand no nonsense, did not wish to give him cause for anger. As we +were returning, I saw Corralat, and tried to ascertain from him his +intentions. He does not wish to fight with the Spaniards; but, on the +other hand, he makes impertinent demands--namely, that the country +from Sibuguei to near Catel (a region about two hundred leguas in +circuit), and the lake of Malanao, be left to him. As my intention +was not to make any agreement with him, except that he should not +unite with Moncay, I told him that I was writing to Don Sebastian, +as I did, whose letter I am despatching now. + +"All the Mindanaos fear the Castilians, especially Don +Sebastian. Corralat's whole anxiety was lest he might come here, and +he asked why he should come, when it would be sufficient to send a +captain; and he said other things in this manner. May our Lord arrange +matters as is most fitting to His holy service; and may He preserve +your Reverence, to whose holy prayers and sacrifices I earnestly +commend myself. Sanboangan, September 30, 1638." + + + + +Section of a letter written in Manila + +"Father Belin took with him about eighty Christian captives of those +who have come to our soldiers--both in that entrance which was made in +the villages, and of those who have been escaping from the Moros since +the time of the arrival of Don Sebastian, who exceed one hundred and +fifty Christians. Among them, at times, were some Moros who requested +holy baptism. The eighty who arrived here were disembarked at the gate +of Saint Dominic, where the sargento-mayor was awaiting them with the +captains and adjutants and the company of the governor, who marched +them down in their midst. When the procession or march was ended, +the alcaldes and Father Belin went through the street which leads to +[the house of] the master-of-camp and [the convent of] St. Augustine, +to the palace. Having gone round by the parade-ground, they went up to +the governor, where Father Belin thanked his Lordship for the liberty +that had been obtained through his mediation. His Lordship ordered +them to be lodged in the city; and directed the father to bring the +chiefs to the palace next day, as he intended to clothe them as he +had those whom he sent to Basilan. Among them is a Moro who is a +Christian, who is accompanied by more than twenty persons of his +relatives and household. All of them have resolved to be baptized, +and to live among Christians in Cabuyao. [29] That was the chief who +brought Father Angel to the fort, and withdrew him from captivity +when he came to our people. The fact was that that chief captured a +girl about twelve years old in that village of Cabuya, whom he has +married during this time, with the intention of making her his chief +wife until his death. She, having seen the love that he showed her, +told him that if he wished her to live in his company willingly, +not only was she to be a Christian, but he was to become one also, +in order to be her true husband and live among Christians. In short, +she won him so that he determined to come with her to her village. He +persuaded his men to do the same, and in accordance with that they +have come. In the champan, he told his Tagal wife that she should +not tell the Castilians that he had captured her, lest they kill him +or do him some harm; but that she could say that she was bringing +him and all his people to captivity, as was a fact. Don Sebastian, +influenced by reasons of expediency, orders that that family return +to live in Mindanao." + +October 31, the patache from the island of Hermosa entered this +port. It brings as news that five or six Franciscan and Dominican +friars are there, who have been exiled from China; and that they +hope to be able to reenter that country. The report that the Dutch +had occupied the post of Tanchui, which we had left, is said to +be false. On the contrary, the inhabitants of Tanchui came to beg +friendship and Spaniards, to which the only answer given was that +they should come with safety to the fort with their drugs, which +would furnish them a safe passage. + +A champan also arrived from Terrenate at the end of October. It brought +news that the sargento-mayor, Francisco Hernandez, made an important +raid into the country of the enemies, with good result. He found in +Macasar the Spaniards who deserted from this place last year with +Captain Ramos, whom they had already killed through anger. Francisco +Hernandez begged the king for permission and aid to arrest them; and, +being given it, arrested them and placed them in the galleys. + +A small vessel, called a cho, came from Macan November 2. It brings +more authentic news of the conversion of the king of China, than what +I wrote by the ships. The fathers say of him that he is earnestly +considering becoming and living as a Christian. Word is also received +that the fathers of the province of Macan, which is the same province +as that of Japon, formed a congregation; and that, because they +have strong hopes of the opening of the door for the conversion of +that kingdom, in which the faith has been so severely persecuted, +they have elected two procurators to go to Europa by two different +ways--Father Antonio Cardin, in the first place, who goes by way of +Goa; and Father Reymundo de Gouca, who is about to come to Manila in +order to go by way of Mexico. + +At midnight on November 10, so fierce a gale of wind came from the +south that it broke five of the moorings of the flagship "San Luis," +which was about to set sail to Terrenate, having been already laden +and with its artillery aboard. The wind carried away its shrouds, +and grounded it in the sand near Palanaque, but in such a manner +that it could be floated off after five days. The wind also drove +the second galley ashore, but without doing it any damage. + +At dawn on the morning of the eleventh, the ship from India, which was +the last to go to Macan, anchored in the bay. It lost most of its masts +by the fierceness of the storm, and the others were disabled. That +storm struck them after they had already anchored. Had it struck them +outside, all think that no one would have escaped, to judge from the +way in which the ship is disabled. + +News arrived on the night of November 20 that the second patache, +which was going to Octong to get a cargo of rice for Terrenate, +was driven ashore some leguas from here by the gale of wind above +mentioned, but that all the crew were saved. + +Early on the night of November 21, the two galleons, "San Luis" +as flagship and "San Juan" as almiranta, left for Terrenate. The +commander-in-chief is Don Pedro de Almonte, and the admiral Don Alonso +de Alcocer, although with the title of governor of the almiranta +galleon. The commander of the flagship as far as Sanboangan is +Don Pedro Fernandez del Rio, who is captain and sargento-mayor for +the voyage. + +A despatch [-boat] arrived from Sanboangan on the last of November, +which carried some Joloan captives. It happened in this wise. The +king of Jolo, desiring to recover his hill, and to fortify himself +anew with the arms that the Spaniards had there, set a snare for +them with this bit of treachery. He caused an Indian (who was a +clever leader of the fishermen), called Cahapitan, and his men to +become very friendly with the Spaniards and to sell them fish--a +thing that our men, not knowing his intentions, valued very highly, +because of the privation that they were suffering. After some days +he came with a message from the king, to the effect that he wished +to submit and to pay tribute, and that he was sending Indians to be +registered. In the meantime the fathers [30] were warned by a certain +Capot, a Christian, who had escaped, that the king was beyond all +question plotting treason, and they advised the commander of those +forts of it. He replied that the fathers were entertaining fears, +and that no attention was to be paid to it. He allowed Cahapitan, +as well as those who were to be registered, to enter the fort with as +much security as if they were in Old Castilla. Eight hundred Indians +having registered, a day was assigned for many more to come. The +Moros chose that day for the execution of their treachery. Cahapitan +arrived, with the word that he was bringing three hundred more, who +should be allowed to enter with him in order to be registered. By +that time there were already about two thousand Moros in ambush, +while others were in ships on the sea, in order that they might, +on seeing the signal, do their part--namely, kill the Spaniards, +and seize the fort. And that would have happened just as they wished, +if God in His ineffable providence had not obstructed it; for, at the +time agreed upon, the commandant caught a high fever, and accordingly +answer was sent them to return on another day, as he would not register +them [that day]. The Moros urged strongly that they be registered, +and their urging caused suspicion. Accordingly, a resolute answer was +sent that he would not register them until next day. Seeing themselves +frustrated in their principal intent, they went to the stone-quarry, +where the force of twenty-three galley negroes and some Sangleys were +getting stone, being guarded by only five Spaniards. Alleging peace, +they landed; and, attacking them, killed two Spaniards, three negroes, +and one Sangley, and wounded two Spaniards, who, with the other one +that was unhurt, escaped; and they captured the others--to the number +of thirty-eight persons, counting dead and captured. The commandant, +having learned of the treachery through those who escaped, sent a +despatch to Sanboangan asking for help. It was God's pleasure (and +that was another of His wonderful providences), that the commander Don +Pedro de Almonte should have determined of his own accord to visit +Jolo with a small fleet, which he had difficulty in collecting. He +was met at sea by the despatch-boat. He made haste and arrived at so +opportune a time that he met Cahapitan and all his men. Cahapitan, +hiding his treason, went to meet him with a white flag. The commander +Don Pedro received him cordially, but told him that he should follow +him to the fort, in order to be well assured that he was free from +guilt. He followed the commander very securely with thirty-six +persons; for he had so deceived the commandant at Jolo that he was +persuaded that Cahapitan was guiltless, and thus he assured the +commander Don Pedro. That deceit was brought about by his having +entrusted to Cahapitan a quantity of goods in order to trade them +for drugs of the country. Yet the commander, Don Pedro, although he +freed Cahapitan and two old men at the persuasion of the commandant, +in order that they might carry a letter to the king of Jolo (for the +commandant petitioned the commander, saying that he would advise that, +and the traitor [i.e., Cahapitan] desirous of performing another act +of treachery, facilitated it), detained all the other men. Cahapitan +went straight to a place where he had three negroes and two Sangleys, +who had fallen to his share as the principal author of the deed. He +ordered them to be killed, and his men killed four more of them; but +one, a Sangley, attacked him, and killed him with his own dagger. The +Sangley came all bloody to the fort, and disclosed the whole evil +plot. Thereupon the commandant awoke as from a profound slumber, in +which his self-interest had buried him. Afterward he confessed that he +had done wrong in not believing the fathers; thereupon the commander, +Don Pedro de Almonte, sent his boats under Captain Gaspar de Morales, +to overrun the island. In that raid much harm was done to the enemy, +to the profit of their allies, who secured rich pillage. Almost all +the people escaped; but those people who were captured, together with +those of Cahapitan, were made slaves. They numbered in all fifty, +besides three who were killed. That punishment made them tremble, +and many have concluded to settle quietly and to give hostages. All +the above I have taken, in summary, from a very long letter of Father +Alexandro Lopez, who took part in the whole affair; and was in the +fleet that went round the island. + +At Christmas came news that the Chinese pirates were pillaging these +neighboring coasts. A fleet was sent to attack them, under command +of Captain Maroto, which returned on the second of January, 1639. The +report he gives is, that some Chinese of the Parian of Manila fled in +a champan. They attacked another champan on the sea beyond Mariveles, +pillaged it, and sent it to the bottom. They attacked another anchored +in a port, and pillaged and burned it. After that they put out to sea, +in order to cross over to China. Our men brought in the Chinese who +had escaped from both champans. + +Later, at the beginning of January, news came that the same men were +pillaging, although in more remote districts where they had captured +some boats and killed many Spaniards and Indians, who were sailing +quite unsuspicious of danger. Consequently, a few champans under +command of Don Pedro Bermudez were again sent against them. + +January 15, General Don Geronimo de Sumonte took possession of [the +post of] castellan and other offices at this port. + +On January 18, news was received that the fleet of our champans +encountered the pirates in the entrance of Mindoro, eight in +number. They were pursuing a boat of the Augustinian fathers. The +Spaniards attacked the pirate's flagship, a champan, which, after our +men had damaged it considerably, escaped, with one other vessel. The +rest were either sunk entirely, or driven ashore with the loss of all +their men. Of those driven ashore, some Chinese were captured alive, +and they were executed by various rigorous modes of punishment. [31] +Our men did not follow the two other champans, as it was already +night. The latter returned toward the coasts of this island of Manila, +where other of our boats were sailing, and committed some depredations. + +January 27, a violent north wind sunk a boatload of Joloan captives +who were fleeing from Manila, six of whom were captured. + +February 24, an advice-boat arrived from Macan with news that the +Portuguese had done a thriving business in the fairs of Japon, but +that the Japanese were very particular that no priests should go +there. Accordingly they came to request that the fathers in these +islands wait patiently, and that no priests go there until God gives +a better opportunity. + +March 4, the father provincial arrived from the visit to Pintados. Two +days previous they had been attacked by two champans of Chinese +pirates--who were beaten off, however, because our vessel had +sufficient defense. Later however, they saw that the pirates were +pursuing another champan, and that of the father provincial hastened +to aid the latter, with which aid that vessel escaped safely--which, +had he not aided it, would infallibly have been captured. + +March 20, came tidings that large pieces of planking, masts, and the +ribs of a vessel which had suffered shipwreck had been found on the +coast of Paracali, opposite Manila. From appearances, it is thought +that it is the almiranta "San Ambrosio," which sailed for Mexico from +these islands last August, quod Deus avertat ["which may God forbid"]. + +In the middle of March, the ship from India set out for Goa. It was +the one which had come from Goa, and after setting out for Macan had +returned disabled to put in at this port. The cho from Macan returned +to its city by November. The four fathers of the Society who belong +to that province are going. Don Pedro Bermudez sailed once more, with +three champans, to attack the Chinese pirates who were harassing the +coasts of this island, and had committed depredations. They attacked +the flagship champan, which was a large vessel; they killed sixty +Sangleys in it, and seized and sent to Manila the others. These men +have disclosed extensive treacheries that the Chinese were plotting +in order to stir up the country. The authorities have been making +arrests and investigations, and they are still doing so; and in +the middle of April they hanged six of the Sangleys. They declared +that they were building two champans on the Pangasinan coast, of the +heaviest planking, and suitable for fighting. The Spaniards went for +these vessels, and brought them to Manila with the carpenters who +were working on them. God had great pity for these islands. + +On April 18 came the flagship and patache of the Terrenate relief +ships; they say that the almiranta was driven to leeward of them +near Macasar. The soldiers remained with the commander Don Pedro +de Almonte, in order to make an expedition in Mindanao, together +with other squadrons of ships that have sailed from Caragan and +Bisayas. From Xolo they write that the inhabitants have attempted to +plan other acts of treason like the past. The leaders have either +been killed or are in the galleys. Father Melchor de Vera writes +of the Moros near Sanboangan that some of them are being baptized, +and that there are hopes of a great conversion. + +On May 30 arrived the almiranta from Terrenate. They have suffered +many hardships, especially of thirst, which was so great that some of +them even drank salt water. They bring as news from Mindanao that our +men are building a fort at La Zavanilla, in the country of Corralat; +and that he, as well as Moncay, has retreated. Manaquior is daily +becoming more friendly. With the ships of Terrenate came one hundred +and fifty Siaos and fifty Terrenatan Christians, to take part in this +war. They were already about to enter the lands of the enemy. The +commander, Don Pedro de Almonte, also sent a portion of a fleet to +coast about the island of Xolo; for a report was current that Dato Ache +was getting ready to go out to pillage. To Mindanao had already come +one hundred and twenty valiant Caragas, who had always accompanied +Corralat from the time when they killed the priests in their land, +[32] and to whom Don Sebastian had sent a pardon. + +News of a new revolt came from Nueva Segobia. The natives killed +seventeen persons, counting soldiers and their wives. They did not +wish to kill the father who instructed them, as he was a mild-mannered +man. Don Marcos Zapata went to attack them, and killed thirty and +captured thirty others. The rest retreated to the mountains. + +It is learned from a ship from Macan, that the second patache, in which +were two of the recently-ordained fathers, and which sailed from here +in November, has not arrived at that city. During the last few days +the report has been current that both it and the vessel from India +(which sailed again from here in March) have been pounded to pieces +on the shoals of Paragua, and that great bits of wreckage have been +washed up at Calamianes, whence they write this. These losses will +be a great calamity. + +News came on May 23 that, our men having arrived overland at the +lake of Malanao, [33] in the island of Mindanao, two thousand five +hundred armed Indians were waiting for them in battle array. They +could not sustain the discharge of our firearms, and retired to the +lake. Our men had carried six boats in pieces, to fit them together +and navigate in them. When the Malanaos saw them on the water, they +gave themselves up as lost. Some five thousand of them fled, while +more than one thousand remained and offered homage and tribute to the +king our sovereign. They were all registered, and began immediately +to render allegiance. They admitted ministers of the gospel, and +gave hostages and security in everything. Doubtless those who fled +and hid will soon appear and submit. + +The fathers write from Jolo that Dato Ache has been entirely unable to +do anything since the occurrence at Lami, in which he was buried. [34] +It is added that since these things are so, all the Joloans are +perishing from famine. They will never humiliate themselves or +give signs of surrendering. In some raids that have been made, the +Spaniards have killed and captured some of their chiefs. Among them +was a pirate who captured the beneficed priest Francisco Vazquez, +and refused to give him up for less than two thousand pesos. Now he +is paying it in the galleys, where he has been put at the oar. + +Father Alexandro Lopez writes from Jolo that the commandant of that +island [i.e., Xines Ros] begged pardon in public from God and the +fathers for the insults that he had uttered, and for the injuries +that he had done them; and that he was building the church for them +with much fervor, before his successor should arrive. + +A champan arrived here on May 30, with fifty arrobas of nails which +had been taken from the wreckage of the ship which, as I said, had run +aground on the coast of Paracali. Those whose opinion is most accurate +in that matter have examined it, and believe that it is all from the +almiranta "San Ambrosio." On that account the profound sadness that +was general in April and May has ceased; for it had been reported +that indubitable signs were found that the flagship had been wrecked. + +On June 17 arrived a despatch from Sanboangan. The news brought by it +will be told by a letter from Father Pedro Gutierrez. "On setting out +for Terrenate, the commander, Don Pedro de Almonte, left an order that, +when the boats of the volunteers arrived at Samboangan, they were to +skirt the coast of Jolo. Six caracoas did that, as well as six other +boats from Basilan, under command of Adjutant Cristoval de las Heras, +and manned by some Spaniards. Inside of a fortnight, they coasted about +the island of Jolo and came to another small islet near by. They burned +many boats, killed some Joloans, and brought back a goodly number of +captives, without having lost any of our men. They did not delay longer +because a fixed time had been assigned to them. The said commander Don +Pedro came back from Terrenate on the sixth of March. As the almiranta +had not arrived, he despatched Sargento-mayor Don Pedro del Rio to La +Zabanilla with most of the fleet, so that he might fortify himself +in La Sabanilla and reduce a village of Caragas who had formerly +come to Corralat, when fleeing from the Spaniards. Thereupon, as +soon as the said sargento-mayor arrived at La Zabanilla, he began to +build the fort, which was finished in good shape, and he reduced the +Caragas; and, when the general arrived, he was already holding them +in La Zabanilla. As the almiranta did not arrive, the commander Don +Pedro came with the rest of the fleet. While he was in La Zabanilla, +a despatch from Captain Don Francisco de Atensa was brought. It gave +advices that he had arrived at the lake of Malanao, [35] having entered +by the gulf of Pangi [i.e., Panguil] with the Spaniards whom he had +in Caraga, as well as with Caragas and Butuanes; and having fought +with those of the lake, the Moros fled, and immediately, on the next +day, the chiefs began to come in to submit to the Spaniards. They +all did that except one, named Mancaya. In order to accomplish that, +the commander sent Sargento-mayor Don Pedro del Rio, with his company +and about five hundred Indians. They all reached the lake where they +found it unnecessary to stop, as Captain Don Francisco de Atensa +had pacified all the inhabitants of the lake, and Mancaya; and they +had given hostages and firearms, and had registered themselves to +pay tribute to the number of one thousand tributes. They promised to +receive fathers. Thus those villages of the lake were already reduced, +and had also given up some Christian captives whom they had taken. The +lake of Malanao is of a cold rather than a warm temperature, and the +people have plenty of rice and native fruits. Between the lake of +Malanao and La Zabanilla there are three chiefs who were related to +Borongon; those chiefs proceeded to some very rough mountains near +the lake. It is said that they have about three thousand warriors, +who are devoted to Corralat; and as he was not a declared friend of +the Spaniards, they gave us plenty to suffer on the return. For, as +the road was in such shape that it was necessary to go single file, +some of the Indians who accompanied the Spaniards were wounded. But +although the enemy made several ambuscades, they could not inflict +more damage, because of the care with which the march was made--until +Holy Saturday, when it began to rain; when a great number of them +attacked us from ambush and killed one Spaniard, who was without +[fire: crossed out in MSS.] arms, as he was sick. They also killed +four Indians, and wounded four others. It was our Lord's pleasure +that, notwithstanding the rain, the arquebuses of the Spaniards, +who were near, were not without effect. With that, no more damage +was done us; the enemy fled, dropping about thirty shields in their +flight, and they received some damage. The troops of Sargento-mayor +Don Pedro del Rio arrived at La Zavanilla, where Captain Pedro Navarro +had been left in command of the infantry, which was in the fort. The +commander, Don Pedro de Almonte, had gone to Buayen with the rest of +the fleet; and, having sent a message to Moncay, the latter answered +that he would fight. In order to seize the posts of the enemy, the +commander, Don Pedro, sent two boats to the mouth of a creek, by which +reenforcements could be taken, so that they could not reach Moncay by +that way; and also to a lake which was up the river of Buayen, which +was not only an entrance to Buayen, but also where the enemy had their +retreat in an excellent fortification. The best fortification was in +a swamp. On that undertaking, the commander, Don Pedro, sent Captain +Juan Lopez Lucero with his company, and our ally Manaquior and his +men. That was all very necessary, because of the great number of men +that the enemy had. They fought for three days, at the end of which, +it was our Lord's pleasure to let our men dislodge the enemy with +heavy loss. Of our men only one Spaniard was wounded and one or two +of Manaquior's men were killed, and one or two others wounded. Our +men burned all the houses and fortifications. + +"At that same time the commander, Don Pedro de Rozas, marched from +the Spanish fort to that of Moncay, which was very strong; for, +besides being surrounded by swamps and water, and by a dike that +had been made, and besides the fort (which was built long ago) of +stone, there had been added ditches, terrepleins, and stockades with +their bulwarks. Having reached it, our men planted two bulwarks upon +fascines with which they could bombard the enemy's fort. At the end +of three days, a white flag was displayed; and there was a cessation +in the hostilities, for the time being. Moncay, having declared +that he wished to become a friend, abandoned the fort that night, +after setting fire to some of the houses. Next day our men finished +burning what was left. Not a little wonder was caused, and thanks +to our Lord, at seeing that so strong a fort had been gained with +the loss there of one Spaniard and two wounded, one of whom died +afterward; and four wounded Indians, of whom one died. Besides that, +they burned many fortified houses, and destroyed palm-trees and sago +plantations. Some days afterward, the commander sent Don Agustin de +Cepada to reconnoiter the creeks. The latter came upon a well-fortified +house, which he burned. He sent Sargento-mayor Pedro de la Mata to +coast along the shores, and do all the damage possible to the enemy. He +found a fortified hill also, and it was regarded as a miracle that it +was taken without any loss of our men. It is thought that the chief +man in the post was one who was in the bulwark; for as soon as he was +laid low by a volley from the Spaniards, all the enemy fled, and the +Spaniards burned all the fortifications and the neighboring houses. + +"The commander, Don Pedro, also sent Captain Don Francisco del Castillo +to an islet which was situated opposite the bar of Buayen. He captured +some Lutaos, destroyed a great number of boats (and the same was done +by Adjutant Don Albaro Galindo, who destroyed some boats); but found +no people. He sent the chief Manaquior to discover whether there were +any means of finding Moncay, and returned at the end of fourteen or +fifteen days. As there was no way of being able to pursue Moncay, +and as the season was advanced, and many were falling sick, and as +he had to go to Jolo, the commander, Don Pedro Almonte, went with +the rest of his fleet to La Zabanilla, after having planned that the +Spaniards who remained in the fort of Buayen, and the men of Manaquior, +should continue to pursue Moncay--all being under the order of Captain +Juan Lopez Lucero, castellan and captain of the said post. + +"The inhabitants of Basilan, who had gone to Jolo to do all the damage +possible to the Joloans--in company with six Spaniards, under command +of Alferez Juan de Ulloa--returned with seventy-seven captives and +some of our Bisayans, who had been seized by the enemy. They destroyed +about two hundred boats, counting large and small, first selecting for +themselves fifteen of the best. They reported that a Lutao chief of +Jolo, named Lohon, had taken to the fort of Jolo fifty other captives, +with which, necessarily, the [forces of the] Joloans must be exhausted. + +"The commander, Don Pedro de Almonte, coming from Buayen, reached +the passage of the river of Sibuguei; and Datan, the chief of the +river, registered eight hundred tributes, and handed over the arms +and Bisayan slaves that he had there." + +We received news here, on the twenty-fifth of June, that the sea +of Camarines is continually floating ashore more fragments of the +wrecked ship, which some think that they recognize as belonging +to the flagship. Consequently, it has begun to be rumored again +as more probable that, if only one ship has been wrecked, it is +the flagship. But others are of the opinion that the wreckage shows +unmistakable signs of the two ships, both flagship and almiranta. That +casts a gloom over all the land. If that has happened (which may God +not have permitted), it is thought that it will be impossible for +these islands to recover in many years. + +June 27, a destructive hurricane came down upon this port from the +northwest, and veered about to almost all points of the compass. It +overturned some houses, and did great damage in all the others and in +the churches. It blew the tiles through the air as if they were bits +of paper. The galleons along the shore were a great cause for anxiety; +and the commander, Don Geronimo de Sumonte, and Captain Pedro Munoz +hastened to them quickly, with the prominent men of this port, all of +whom worked valiantly. That was very necessary; for the galleon "San +Juan Baptista," although held by eleven cables, came dragging upon "La +Concepcion," which was being made ready to sail to Mexico. They would +infallibly have been dashed to pieces, had they not been attended +to so carefully and diligently. Of the other smaller craft, some +have been wrecked; and some men were drowned. It was God's pleasure +to allow the wind's fury to last only four hours. Had it blown with +the same violence during all the twenty-four hours while it lasted, +no ship would have escaped, and not a house or church would have been +left standing. Two hundred houses were overthrown in the village of +the Indians. But what caused most fear to those natives (and the old +men say that they have never seen such a thing, or heard it told by +their ancestors), is that the hurricane carried into the air the small +boats that they use, which are called bancas and resemble canoes. It +is said that they were blown about like paper, and that when they +fell again they were broken to pieces. The hurricane blew with the +same violence in all the surrounding villages, and caused the same +damage; it blew down one hundred and seventy houses in Palanaque. + +Since July 7 there have been very severe storms of wind and rain. On +the nineteenth the passage boat [36] was wrecked in the bay and +it is said that eighteen persons were drowned. Many illnesses have +occurred during that time, in which a great number of people of all +nations have perished. Because of this, and because many have been +persuaded that the two ships of the past year have been wrecked--not +only because of the signs that the sea has thrown up, but because +news of their arrival is so belated--there is a universal gloom and +sorrow over all the country, such as it has never had before. May +God in His mercy console the land. + +On July 19, a letter was received from the alcalde-mayor of Nueva +Segovia, which states that two English galleons had anchored in a +port of that coast, and that they are coming to this port of Cavite +to trade; if the weather permits them to reach this place, their +intentions will be known. + +In the afternoon of July 24, six of the men who had sailed in the +flagship of last year, which was wrecked September 20, 1638, by the +fury of a tempest in the Ladrones Islands--on an island thirty-five +leguas away from the islands where our ships generally land on the +voyage--arrived here. Besides those who were drowned, many were killed +by lance-thrusts from the natives. Those who escaped went from island +to island to those of Uan and Harpana, [37] where they have been +well treated. The reason alleged for that was, that the Spaniards +are good men, and leave them iron when they pass there. From the +island of Uan the natives despatched six Spaniards and two Indians +in two boats, furnishing them with food from what they had. They +commended themselves to God, crossed the open stretch of more than +three hundred leguas, which they did in but one fortnight--a wonderful +thing, if one will but consider those small boats which are of much +less burden and steadiness than pirogues and canoes, and even smaller +than they. They arrived almost dead with hunger, thirst, and lack of +sleep. Our fathers of the Society of Jesus received them in Palapag, +and cared for them for several days; after that they recovered, +and immediately set out in a champan with a good supply of food. The +Indians of Uan sent those Spaniards, so that they could give the news +and send a boat for the other twenty-two Spaniards who are there alive, +with some Indians and negroes, and carry them iron, etc. + +As soon as the tidings were told in this port of Cavite, the sobs +and cries were so many that all were stunned, for there is no one +who has not lost a son, a father, a brother, a brother-in-law, +a father-in-law, a son-in-law, or a husband. The loss has been one +of the greatest that has ever visited these islands, because of the +loss of men and the poverty of the islands. [38] + +Good news is received of the almiranta, for they say that they saw it +but shortly before they were wrecked, sailing on a good tack; and that +it was a swift sailer, and seaworthy. Consequently it is thought that +it has arrived at Nueva Espana. May God grant that it has so happened. + + + + + + + +LETTERS FROM CORCUERA TO THE HOLY MISERICORDIA + + +Gentlemen of the financial board of holy Misericordia: Although +we must always have recourse to God in our troubles, the necessity +for so doing that offers itself to me at present, in the expedition +that I shall commence on the day of our Lady of the Conception, is +very urgent; and obliges me to avail myself not only of the regular +and ecclesiastical communities, where we are all friends, but also +of that holy house. [39] Therefore, I beg your Graces, with all the +persuasion in my power, that you cause God to be petitioned with all +earnestness in your holy Confraternity of La Misericordia and in your +residence, to give me favor and good success in this expedition; for, +besides its being for the common service of God and of the king our +sovereign, I shall, in so far as pertains to me, if it be the will +of His Divine Majesty that I return with life, demonstrate my thanks +and favor to that holy house, as far as may be possible to me. And +in order that this petition may carry some merit, I send to that +house one hundred pesos in alms, as an aid in the many alms that it +distributes among the poor. I would be very glad were I more wealthy, +in order that my affection and good-will might be seen. May our Lord +preserve your Graces as I desire. The palace, December 4, 637. + + +Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera + + + + +To the purveyor and deputies of the financial board of the holy +Misericordia: Of the hostages brought from Jolo by General Don Pedro +Almonte, twenty-odd Moros with their servants live here, and the +others are going [back] with the conditions for the peace that they +have made and the tribute which they are to pay. I have thought it +best to petition your Graces to be pleased to receive two of those +chiefs in the house of the holy Misericordia, in order that they may +be instructed in the Christian doctrine, and be gradually converted +and become Christians. This is a work that is befitting to that house, +until the time when all the other inhabitants of Jolo become quiet and +are reduced to obedience. Two or three will be assigned in the same +manner to the orders. If any needs arise with the lapse of time, I +beg your Graces to have me advised, so that I may have them supplied; +and also to entrust the instruction of those chiefs to a careful +person. May our Lord preserve your Graces as I desire. The palace, +October 26, 1639. [40] + + +Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera + + + + + + + +THE UNIVERSITY OF SANTO TOMAS + + +Letter to the Spanish ambassador at Roma + +The King. To the illustrious Marques de Castel Rodrigo, my cousin, +member of my Council, and ambassador in Roma: the bearer, Fray Mateo +de Villa, of the Order of Preachers, procurator of the province of +Santo Rosario of the Filipinas Islands in my Western Yndias, has +informed me that his province has a college called Santo Tomas in +the city of Manila, of which I am the patron, where there are thirty +secular collegiates; that for some years past that college has been +a university through royal permission; that bulls have been conceded +twice for its conservation; and that grammar, rhetoric, the arts, +and moral and scholastic theology are studied there, with especial +profit to the children of that community. He petitions me to issue +a royal decree authorizing the said college to become a university, +with the same qualifications and [right of] perpetuity as the others +of his order in the convents of Santo Tomas in Avila and Santiago at +Pamplona, in these same kingdoms. The matter having been examined +by the members of my royal Council of the Yndias, in consideration +that the city of Manila of the Filipinas Islands is more than three +thousand leguas from the nearest universities--namely, those of Lima +and Megico--and that the said university suffers some restriction, +I have considered it fitting to lend my royal consent for this case; +and this concession shall continue, for the present. Consequently, +if in the future there should be a disposition to found a separate +university, it may be done, as in the cities of Lima and Megico, +so that it may be a general university, in order that students may +be graduated from it in all branches, and that its degrees may be +recognized everywhere. Accordingly, I charge and order you in my name, +and in virtue of the letter of credit that I am writing, to supplicate +his Holiness to be pleased to concede a bull, so that the said college +may be a university with the same qualifications and [right of] +perpetuity as those of Avila, Santiago, Lima, and Megico; for there +is not a university of that rank in those islands and provinces, and +this is therefore expedient for my service and the general welfare of +those regions. You shall give the matter the care that I expect from +you, so that the said bull may be immediately drawn up; and therein +you will render me a service. Madrid, November nine, 1639. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Graviel de Ocana y Alarcon + +Signed by the members of the Council. + + +[Endorsed: "Duplicate. College of Santo Tomas of Manila. To the +ambassador at Roma, ordering him to petition his Holiness to concede +a brief so that the college of Santo Tomas of Manila of the Order of +Preachers may become a university."] + + + + + + + +LETTER FROM FELIPE IV TO URBAN VIII + + +Most Holy Father: + +I am writing to my ambassador, in that court, the marques de Castel +Rodrigo, to petition your Holiness in my name to concede a bull, so +that a college of the Order of Preachers in the city of Manila of the +Philipinas Islands, in my Western Yndias, may become a university, with +the qualifications and [right of] perpetuity of the others which that +order possesses in Avila and Pamplona in these my kingdoms, as well +as those of Lima and Megico; and so that, if there be a disposition +to found a separate university in the city of Manila, it may be done, +because there is a distance of three thousand leguas to the other +nearest universities, which are Lima and Megico. I petition your +Holiness to grant him audience, and to give entire credit to what +he shall say about this matter and propose in my name; and that you +order his affair to be despatched with all promptness and with entire +fulfilment [of the petition]. Thereby I shall receive a special favor +from your Holiness, whose very holy person may our Lord preserve, +and may He increase your life for the good and prosperous government +of His universal Church. Madrid, November nine, 1639. + +[Endorsed: "College of Santo Tomas of Manila. To his Holiness, +petitioning him to concede a brief so that the college of +Santo Tomas of Manila of the Order of Preachers may become a +university. Duplicate."] + + + + + + + +ROYAL ORDERS AND DECREES, 1639 + + +MISSIONS IN MINDANAO + +The King. To Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order of +Alcantara, my governor and captain-general of the Filipinas Islands, +and president of my royal Audiencia therein: a letter of August 21, +637, has been examined in my royal Council of the Indias, in which +you advise me that you have stationed ministers of the gospel in the +islands of Mindanao and Bacilan--not only for the instruction of the +infidels who are in those islands, but for administering the holy +sacraments to the Castilian soldiers whom you leave there--and that +you have assigned them such stipends as you considered necessary. I +approve what you have done in this matter. Moreover, to provide for +future increase [in the number of infidels converted], the necessary +mission stations [doctrinas] will have to be established; but in this +you must avoid unnecessary expense, and, conformably to my royal +patronage, confer regarding such establishments with such persons +as you should consult. I trust in you that you will carry out my +intentions. [Madrid, February 3, 1639.] + + +I the King + +By command of his Majesty: + +Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon + + + + +IN BEHALF OF GRAU Y MONFALCON + +The King. To the council, magistracy, and municipal body of the +city of Manila in the Philipinas Islands: Don Juan Grau y Monfalcon +has reported to me that in the past year, one thousand six hundred +and thirty, you appointed him as your procurator-general; and that +during all that time he has attended to your business affairs, +with the utmost intelligence, personal attention, friendly interest, +and promptness (as is generally known). He states that you assigned +him a salary of a thousand pesos a year, paid in that city, which +was to come here, invested, at his account and risk; but that, even +when it arrives in safety, he can realize very little from it that +remains free from the costs. He regards a thousand pesos as a very +small salary for his continual occupation [in your affairs], and on +this account claims that it be increased. Moreover, besides the many +negotiations that he has despatched, he has been occupied nearly +two years in preparing and composing the printed memorials which +he has presented, and which have been examined in my royal Council +of the Indias; and has given them much labor and solicitude, since +they embrace so many, so diverse, and so important considerations +for the conservation of those islands and their commerce, in order +that they may be presented clearly and distinctly. He has furnished +from his own funds all the money that has been spent for these books, +and has never received one real on account of that expense. This sum +amounts to much more in times so straitened as these, and should be +highly esteemed. It would be a great disappointment to him if, after +he had proceeded in all matters with the greatest tact and discretion +possible (as is proved by the many negotiations which he has concluded +for the benefit of that city), the powers which he has held from the +city should be revoked--as usually happens, and as has been done with +others, his predecessors, solely through interested motives and for the +personal ends of some of the governors who go to that country. They, +being well-affectioned to the correspondents whom they leave here, +urge that city to entrust its affairs to those persons--for which +no opportunity should be given, since that advice is influenced by +various motives and considerations. To obviate this, and because it +is not right that some other person should secure that for which he +has toiled and incurred expense with so much zeal and solicitude, he +has entreated me that I would be pleased to command you not to revoke, +without legitimate cause, the powers that you have given him; and that +you shall, before enforcing such revocation, state what reasons you +have for doing so. The matter has been examined in the said my Council, +where have been and are very evident the personal care, interest, and +solicitude with which he has been and is attending to your affairs +aforesaid--as also you will have understood by my decrees of the +ninth of October in the year one thousand six hundred and thirty-six, +and the twenty-first of October in six hundred and thirty-seven, +to which I refer you for all this; together with what you wrote me +in regard to this in a letter of the fourteenth of June, six hundred +and thirty-six. In that letter you express your satisfaction with the +promptness and care with which he furthers your affairs, and ask me to +confirm the salary which you assign him of the said thousand pesos a +year, from the funds belonging to that city. I have thought it best to +issue the present, by which I approve and confirm the salary which you +have assigned to the said Don Juan Grau as your procurator-general, +in order that it may be paid to him from the day when it was voted +to him. And it is my will that this salary be not revoked, either +now or at any time, while he shall attend to your affairs at this +my court, unless there be legitimate and sufficient cause for doing +so; also that the said my Council be first notified of such cause, +so that, having considered it in their sessions, they may declare +whether or not it is legitimate; and the said salary shall always be +paid to him, until some other decision be made. I also command my +governor and captain-general of those Philipinas Islands, both him +who now is and those who shall hereafter be in that office, and the +president and auditors of my royal Audiencia which resides there, +and yourselves, that you all observe and execute, and cause to be +observed and executed, exactly and inviolably, the commands contained +in this my decree, without contravening or exceeding its tenor and +form in any manner; for such is my will. [Madrid, March 29, 1639.] + + +I the King + +By command of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon + + + + +RESTRAINING THE AUGUSTINIANS + +The King. To Don Diego Faxardo, whom I have appointed as my governor +and captain-general of the Filipinas Islands, and president of my +royal Audiencia therein. It has been reported in my royal Council +of the Yndias that the religious of the Order of St. Augustine are +trading in merchandise with whomever they please; and that they make +use of the natives of the regions and districts wherever they are and +reside, for whatever they need, without paying the poor men who work +in their service, or giving them anything else (employing violence +for this), and thus obtain great wealth for [their houses in] these +my kingdoms. This is all considered to merit severe correction, both +because of the traffic and trading that they openly engage in, and +because of the oppression that many of the said natives receive. I have +thought best to tell you to be very careful in this, and to provide, +by the most gentle and prudent measures, all that may be necessary for +the correction of those transgressions. You shall regulate yourself +by the decrees and orders that have been issued in this regard; and +you shall cause those decrees and orders to be observed according to +their tenor. Madrid, June 2, 1639. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon + + +[From another transcript made from the copy of this decree in the +Archivo general de Indias--its pressmark, "Audiencia de Filipinas; +registros de oficio; reales ordenes dirigidas a las autoridades del +distrito de dicha Audiencia; anos 1635 a 1672; est. 105, caj. 2, +leg. 2, libro 4, folio 122 verso" we take the following endorsement: +"To Don Diego Faxardo, whom your Majesty has appointed governor of +the Filipinas Islands, advising him of certain things touching the +religious of the Order of St. Augustine, which require a remedy; +so that he may know them, and take what measures are advisable, in +accordance with the orders and decrees that have been issued regarding +it." This transcript states also that the decree was signed by the +members of the Council.] + + + + +REGARDING ECCLESIASTICAL DISTRICTS + +The King. To Don Diego Faxardo, knight of the Order of Santiago, whom +I have appointed as my governor and captain-general of the Philipinas +Islands: report has been made to me, on the part of the archbishop +of that city of Manila, that Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, +your predecessor, gave the district of Quiapo (which belonged to the +seculars), and the Indians who were reserved for the service of the +cathedral and of the archiepiscopal house (which was the sustenance +of the cathedral), to the fathers of the Society of Jesus, because +of the great pressure that they exerted on him for it, on account of +the advantages that would follow to them, as they have many estates +of importance near that district. One of the conditions of their +removing the said archbishop's exile, was that he must consent to +have that district given to the fathers of the Society. In order to +relieve himself from his distressed condition, the archbishop feigned, +under compulsion, assent to this--regarding it as certain that, as +such action was to the prejudice of my royal patronage, I would not +consent to it. He also petitioned that I would be pleased to have +my royal decree issued, ordering that the fathers of the Society be +despoiled of the said district of Quiapo, and that it be restored +to the seculars, together with the adjoining districts of San Anton +and Santa Cathalina--which the bishop of Camarines separated from +the said district, in the time while he governed the archbishopric +during the exile and absence of the said archbishop; and which he +gave to the cura of Santiago, who was his creature; also the district +of Nauhang, on the island of Mindoro, which has always belonged to +seculars. By negotiations effected by the fathers of the Society, +those districts have been set aside for them, to the prejudice of so +many poor seculars. The matter having been examined by my royal Council +of the Yndias, as well as what was written to me concerning the same +matter by the said archbishop, I have considered it fitting to issue +this my decree. By it, I order you, immediately upon its receipt, +to place those districts, exactly, and without admitting any excuse +or other reason, in the same condition that they always had and have +had, notwithstanding the contract signed by the said archbishop, at +the instance and petition of the said my governor and of the auditor +then in my Audiencia. You shall advise me at the first opportunity +that you have carried out my order. Madrid, July 8, 1639. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Acana y Alarcon + + + + +REBUKING THE BISHOP OF CAMARINES + +The King. To the reverend father in Christ, bishop of the church +of Camarines of the Filipinas Islands, and member of my Council: +I have been informed that you are not living in your bishopric, [41] +and that you are residing in the city of Manila, where your free life +is giving offense; and that you have attempted to erect a tribunal of +appeals, without leave, declaring yourself to be an apostolic judge +by a brief from his Holiness. Inasmuch as your residence outside of +your church may occasion troubles, besides your necessary obligation +to live there, I have decided to charge you (as I am doing), to leave +the city of Manila or any other place where you are residing, as soon +as you receive this decree, and to go to govern your church. If you do +so, I shall consider myself well served by you. In order that you may +not offer any excuse in this matter, I am ordering the royal officials +of my royal treasury not to pay you any of your stipend from my royal +treasury so long as you do not comply with what I here order you. I +have been surprised that you should have attempted to hold a tribunal +in the said city of Manila, under pretext or title of appeals. Madrid, +July 8, 1639. + + +I the King + +By order of his Majesty: + +Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon + + +The King. To the officials of my royal treasury of the Filipinas +Islands: inasmuch as it was reported in my royal Council of the Yndias +that the bishop of Camarines resides in that city of Manila, where he +attempts to hold his court under pretext of certain appeals, I charge +him, by another decree of the date of this, to go immediately to his +own church, because of the deficiency that his person may cause in +its government. In order that he may offer no excuse in this matter, +I order you to grant him nothing from my royal treasury on his +salary, unless he shall obey my orders; for so is my will. Madrid, +July 8, 1639. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon + + + + +INSPECTION AT ACAPULCO + +The King. To Marques de Cadereita, my relative, member of my Council +of War, and my viceroy, governor, and captain-general of the provinces +of Nueva Espana: in a letter written to me by the royal officials of +the port of Acapulco under date of last February 24, of this year, +[they stated] that you sent the auditor [contador], Christoval de +Medina, to that port with a salary of twenty-three ducados which +was distributed among himself, the constable, and the notary, to +investigate the merchandise that came from Philipinas this year in +the patache that was sent from those islands; and that my royal +duties scarcely amounted to four thousand ducados. Since I have +three satisfactory and trustworthy officials in the said port, they +have petitioned me to have the above three men removed from that +place. They say that by the going of such judges they themselves +serve only as witnesses of what is public, since no other thing is +permitted them; and that such an action deprives them of the authority +and exercise of their offices, and they are disaccredited and left +without respect and reputation, as all think and believe that you +did it because of some incapacity in them. The matter having been +examined in my royal Council of the Yndias, together with what you +wrote me in regard to it, I have considered it fitting to issue +the present. By it I give you authority to send such ministers to +Acapulco whenever any extraordinary causes shall arise; but that, +if there are no such causes, this may be dispensed with, because of +the expenses that are incurred by my royal estate, especially since +Don Pedro de Quiroga was there so short a time ago. Inasmuch as the +commerce of those islands has been reported to be in great distress, +I charge and order you to try to encourage and aid it by all possible +means. Since some change has been made in the amount permitted to +them, you shall see what can be done for their greater relief, until +the arrival at those kingdoms of Don Juan de Palafox y Mendoza, [42] +of my royal Council of the Yndias, to whom the settlement of those +matters is committed. Madrid, September 16, 1639. + + +[I the King] + + + + +COLONISTS NEEDED IN THE ISLANDS + +The King. To Marques de Cadereyta, my relative, member of my Council +of War, and my viceroy and governor and captain-general of Nueva +Espana, or the person or persons vested with its government: in a +letter written to me by the city of Manila, under date of August two +of the past year, six hundred and thirty-eight, in regard to various +matters, and which has been examined in my royal Council of the Indias, +there is a section of the following tenor: + +"This kingdom finds itself in great need of inhabitants at the present +time, as a result of the said campaign; for they are dying off, and +it is many years since people have come to live in these islands +as citizens. That has been understood to arise from the loss that +the citizens have experienced, both in the affairs of this commerce +and in the execution of the favors and rewards that his Catholic +Majesty Phelipe Second, our king and sovereign (who is in heaven), +was pleased to grant to such citizens. For at present, with those of +account in this community, the citizens do not number ninety. This +is very pitiful, and it is fitting that your Majesty please to have +it corrected by ordering the said viceroy to use all possible and +effective efforts in sending as many citizens as possible every +year. They should be persons of good standing and ability, both for +the service of your Majesty and for the greater renown and authority +of this kingdom." + +And inasmuch as it is proper that you attempt to relieve such +necessity, I order you to try to procure this by all possible ways +and plans, and with all the mildness and prudence that is fitting. By +so doing I shall consider myself well served by you. Given at Madrid, +October three, one thousand six hundred and thirty-nine. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon + +Signed by the members of the Council. + + +[Endorsed: "To the viceroy of Nueva Espana, ordering him to endeavor +by all the means possible to send to Filipinas every year as many +citizens as possible who should be of good standing and ability."] + + + + +DIRECTIONS TO THE ARCHBISHOP + +The King. To the very reverend father in Christ, archbishop of the +metropolitan church of the city of Manila: your letter of July 31 +of the past year, 1638, has been examined in my royal Council of the +Yndias, and I shall answer you in the present in regard to some points +that have been decided. + +You state that, although the mode of the presentations for the missions +has been resolved upon and determined, the decrees are not obeyed; +that there is a very great need of seculars for those missions, and +those who are there are but youths who do not understand the language +[of the natives]; and that hence you have deemed it advisable not +to assign any mission to seculars: You state that having conferred +on this point with the Audiencia, they resolved that no innovation +should be made until the arrival of the governor, who had gone on +the Jolo expedition. It has been deemed best to tell you that when +the governor shall arrive, and shall come to a decision, you shall +advise me of the results of it. In the meanwhile you shall observe +the decrees, unless serious troubles result from doing the contrary. + +The prebends that you state are vacant in that church have been +provided with incumbents, as you will have heard. My royal Council +of the Yndias will take care of the names which you present to me, +for the occasions that arise. + +In regard to the property of Don Fray Francisco Zamudio, bishop +of Nueva Caceres, who died on the twenty-seventh of last April, +you shall cause the orders that have been issued to be observed, so +that his creditors may be heard and paid, in accordance with justice, +and upon legal proof of their claims. + +I have read what you wrote about the great exhaustion and distress +experienced by the natives of those islands through the many +assessments that are made continually, throughout the year, on all the +products of the country. I am writing to the governor and Audiencia +not to make any innovation in these matters, so that this evil may +be corrected; and under no consideration to load any new troubles or +burdens on the Indians. Madrid, December 16, 1639. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon + + + + +OPPRESSION OF THE INDIANS + +The King. To the president and auditors of my royal Audiencia of the +city of Manila: in a letter written to me by the archbishop of that +church, July 31 of the past year, 638, he states that the natives +of those islands are greatly exhausted and burdened by the many +assessments made on them every year, in all the products of the +country, by my governors. The latter take the products from them +at a loss, gathering and collecting them with great trouble to the +natives, and no money is given them; while they are seized and beaten, +and thrust into prison for many days, because they do not give what +they do not possess--although the goods can be bought at a somewhat +higher price in the market-place. On account of this, and by the +hardships consequent on sending them to the forests to cut wood, the +natives are being exterminated, and are dying off. The matter having +been examined in my royal Council of the Yndias, I have considered +it fitting to issue the present. By it I order you not to make any +innovation; and you shall not, under any consideration, cause new +troubles or burdens to the Indians. Madrid, December 17, 1639. + + +I the King + +By order of the king our sovereign: + +Don Gabriel de Ocana y Alarcon + + + + + + + +EVENTS IN THE FILIPINAS ISLANDS + +FROM AUGUST, 1639, TO AUGUST, 1640 + + +On the fourth of August, 1639, orders were given that the ship +"Concepcion," built in Camboja, should leave the port for her voyage +to Nueva Espana; and in the afternoon of that day began a furious +vendabal, which lasted three days. This compelled the ship to ask +for aid by firing two cannons, as its people feared some danger; +but when the storm was over, the ship began its voyage. + +At that very time, five large ships had sailed from Manila, on +their return to Great China; and two of these were driven ashore by +the great force of the wind, four leguas from Manila. Six hundred +China-men were drowned, although a still larger number escaped [to +land]; for, on account of the lack of succor in these two years, +[43] many were returning, leaving their houses and shops deserted. + +On the seventh came the unexpected news of the relief-ships; their +arrival was celebrated with the utmost joy, and all the bells were +rung. The people were revived by this news, all the more because +these ships were the almiranta of last year, and the patache of two +years ago--which, with so great injustice and excessive harshness, +had been detained at Acapulco--the [sort of] injury of which this +country has complained to God and to the king for many years. Wives +who had put on mourning for their husbands took off those garments, +giving thanks to God and receiving from His hand their husbands, +as it were, restored to life. The Chinese, who learned the news on +board their ships, disembarked, and returned to their shops and their +trading. There was also a circumstance in this coming of the ships, +in which God displayed the providence that He exercises over this +country; for they arrived at the port of Nueva Segovia, from which +had just departed two hostile Dutch galleons, who had pretended that +they were English and friendly [to us]. + +On the eleventh of August arrived from Maluco Father Manuel Carballo, +rector [there] of the Society; he came on behalf of the governor, +Don Pedro de Mendiola, to ask for aid, because the kings of Tidore and +Terrenate had formed an alliance--a thing which we had never expected, +because those peoples were more hostile to each other than dogs and +cats. The reason which the king of Tidore gives for this unfriendly +act against the Spaniards is, that the present which the governors [of +Filipinas] were wont to send every year, in the name of his Majesty, +to the kings of Tidore his ancestors, has not been sent to him for +the last four years. The father rector of Maluco says that this may +be true, and is perhaps the ostensible reason; but that the king has +other and hidden reasons, which go deeper and give more cause for +anxiety. Now Francisco de Figueroa is going [there] as proprietary +governor, and he will aid in soliciting the proper assistance for +any emergency. + +On the fifth of August, Captain Cristobal Marquez set out for Hermosa +Island; he is going as successor to Sargento-mayor Pedro Palomino, who +is governor there. The warder of this port of Cavite is Sargento-mayor +Alonso Garcia Romero, of the Order of Santiago; [he fills that office] +to the great satisfaction of all. + +On the twenty-first of August, at daybreak, a Spaniard arrived here +from Nueva Segovia; he says that the two relief ships from Mejico +were wrecked at that port, and one hundred and fifty persons were +drowned, which has been a severe punishment from God upon the past; +[44] and with this news the people have returned to their former +sadness. The ships were lost on the fifth of August. It was afterward +learned that the succor despatched by the king had been taken out +of the ships before they were wrecked; but that the property of the +citizens that has been lost will amount, in luxuries [45] and money, +to five hundred and fifty thousand pesos. + +At the end of September, General Don Pedro de Almonte arrived from +Jolo, where our affairs have been steadily improving. The natives of +the island remain subdued; almost all their chiefs who would undertake +to defend themselves are dead; and even those who never paid tribute +to the king of Jolo are now registered and are our subjects. All +the pirates have fled, and the king is hiding in the mountains; and +our men have taken more than three hundred captives during the last +three months. + +On the sixth of October, the cho (craft) which came last year arrived +here from Macasar. It came loaded with slaves, and pepper, and various +kinds of cotton cloth. Its people say that the king was sorry that +he had not put to death those of his vassals who fought against +the Spaniards in Jolo; and that if any of them should go there, +the king would take his life. Knowing that Malaca was expecting +to be blockaded by the Achenese and the Dutch, and that the city +had not sufficient provisions, the king had ordered his people to +collect a quantity of rice--two hundred coyos, each coyo containing +thirty-two fanegas--and had sent it [to Malaca] in his galleys; it +is not yet known what success they had. Those people say, moreover, +that in Macasar they have heard the English and the Dutch themselves +say that in the independence and strength of Holanda there are solid +foundations for believing that that state will make strong efforts +to extend its power from the year 1640 on. + +They also relate, as news, that the Dutch were at the entrance to Goa, +with fourteen ships; and the Portuguese came out in staunch galleons +to fight them, sending eleven of the Dutch vessels to the bottom; +while two of their own were sunk. It is also stated that the patache +which was purchased at Macao from the English, and despatched from +here for Yndia, was seized by the Dutch in the strait of Sincapura; +its captain, one Carballo, remained in Macasar, and it was he who +related this misfortune. + +Ytem: [it is said] that a man named Caldeira went from Malaca as an +envoy to the king of Achen, regarding himself as quite safe; but that +the king gave orders that his men should arrest the envoy as soon as +he should enter the palace. When they tried to carry out this command, +this man and the other Portuguese placed themselves on the defensive; +all the men on the ship hastened to their aid with fire-balls, [46] +and with these they killed many Achenese; and the palace was set on +fire, being entirely consumed. They estimate the losses of the king +at five millions. All the Portuguese there were killed. + +On the last day [of October], a ship from Terrenate arrived at +Manila. Its people say that the Tidorans and Terrenatans, aided by +the Dutch, had put to death Cachil Naro, the former king of Tidore--a +very regrettable event. He was deposed by the master-of-camp Pedro +de Heredia; and recently had come an order from his Majesty that our +people should restore Naro to power, because he had given more evidence +of friendship to us than had the present king. Indeed, the authorities +were endeavoring to accomplish that change, even if this order had +not arrived. Extensive revolts are feared there; and on this account +reenforcements are being sent, together with galleys, which are very +effective in those islands. It is also said that the Dutch will lie +in wait for these reenforcements; so, in order to circumvent them, +we shall endeavor to send the relief earlier than ever before. + +By this ship comes some news from Mindanao: that Moncay had +captured a brigantine from our then and slain all the Spaniards +(who defended themselves bravely)--except their commander, who was +soon laid low by them, and remains a captive. Ytem: they say that +Moncay is making great efforts to form an alliance with Corralat; +who has answered Moncay that he must try to gain over Manaquior, and +that, if the latter shall declare himself against the Spaniards, he +[i.e., Corralat] will garrison his forts against them. Those chiefs +have assailed Manaquior with their entreaties, urging him to desist +from aiding the Spaniards; and it is reported that he already shows +himself lukewarm in his friendship to us. + +From Jolo we are informed that the islanders are in such haste to be +enrolled for paying tribute that now very few of them are missing +from the list. The rest of the news will be told by extracts from +the following letters. + +In one from Father Alejandro Lopez, of the Society of Jesus, dated +at Jolo on August 9, 1639, sent to Father Luis de Pedraza of the same +Society: "On the second of August, I baptized two women--one a Lutao, +the other the slave of another Lutao," etc. + +In one from Father Andres de Zamora, of the Society of Jesus, in +Mindanao, at La Sabanilla, August 13, 1639, to the same father Pedraza: +"In Buhayen, thanks to our Lord, our affairs are prospering. On the +occasion of an expedition which Lucero made to Taulan, the Spaniards +obtained by a clever plan and stratagem a crowd of captives, both men +and women. Part of them are going in this champan, and the rest will +go with the brigantine--which Captain Lucero sent, in order that some +reparation might be made to them; I baptized them all. The Spaniards +who were with Manaquior went down to the lake with the dato; and +Balatamay was there with five hundred Moros, waiting for the Spaniards, +to fight against them. But they did not remain there, recognizing that +our troops were stronger than they. Our men killed twenty-five of +the Moros, and carried five to the fort. One man, who came mortally +wounded, asked for baptism, and died within twenty-four hours. On +the eighth of October, Captain Don Pedro Bermudez set out with fifty +Spaniards, in two champans, to be stationed in the presidio at the +lake of Malanao in Mindanao; Father Gregorio Belin goes with him. At +the same time, Don Pedro will pursue the Camucones, who have appeared +on a piratical expedition with sixty boats. It is known that they +have captured some vessels and the licentiate Raymundo de Quinones." + +In this month of October came from Hermosa Island Sargento-mayor +Pedro Palomino, who was governor there and goes with the same office +to Samboangan. Of the two champans that went with Captain Cristobal +Marquez, one foundered in mid-ocean, with its men and the money. On the +return voyage of those who came with Palomino, one was separated from +the rest by a storm, and up to this time has not arrived at Manila. + +The patache "San Nicolas" is going with the relief for Terrenate; +its chief pilot is Captain Machado, a pilot of long standing and +great experience. This vessel has orders to go, on the return voyage +from Terrenate to the Ladrones Islands, in order to carry away the +Spaniards and other people from the wrecked ship who are there. + +On the fifth of November the relief for Terrenate left this port; +it carries an abundant supply of men and provisions, and is under +the command of Captain Andres de Urbina. On the same day we learned +of the depredations committed by the Camucones; and it is believed +that Dato Ache is coming, who was in Borney, urging the king to send +a large armed fleet against these islands. + +On the twenty-first of November, in the morning, confused reports +reached us that the Sangleys had revolted at Calamba; and all the +rest of the day they spent in strengthening their forces. They +killed the alcalde-mayor and two priests, and burned the church; +and destroyed other churches in neighboring villages. Don Sebastian +received the news on the twentieth, at night; he had the gates of +Manila opened, although keeping them under close watch, in order +that the people living outside the walls might take refuge within, +with their goods. That very night, he despatched by land Captain +Pedro Martin de Aduna with his company of horsemen, in order to find +out how the matter stood, and punish the insurgents. On the morning +of the twenty-first, they encountered the Sangleys, who, they said, +amounted to three thousand men, while the Spanish cavalry numbered only +thirty. The captain and three others carelessly advanced into a marshy +place, where they could neither extricate themselves nor be aided, +and were slain. The rest, after killing some Chinese, retreated, +as they were so few and their horses were tired out, to Paranaque, +to await the orders of the governor; and this was the condition in +which affairs remained yesterday. It is said that the Sangleys attack +like mad dogs, and that the weapons that they carry are the sickles +with which they cut their rice, fastened to poles, and some lances. + +At this port of Cavite the Chinese have remained peaceable, and with +the Indians and Japanese they very willingly dragged out some pieces +of artillery, with which Sargento-mayor Alonso Garcia Romero, who is +in command of the port, armed two small forts, which are at the end of +the village. With these and other precautions of an excellent soldier, +we all consider ourselves very safe. The natives, although they have +not forsaken their village, have sought shelter, as far as possible, +with the religious orders. The Japanese, blacks, and Indians are +full of courage, whatever be the outcome; I believe that they will +rejoice, if the opportunity arise, to satiate themselves for once +with killing Chinese. + +In order that the origin of this disturbance may be understood, it +must be noted that Don Sebastian, desirous of augmenting the estate +of his Majesty, set a great number of Chinese at work in some large +meadows which are watered and rendered fertile by certain rivers, +and are called Calamba. Many of these men were levied by force, +and entirely against their will; many of them fell sick during the +past months, and it is said that more than three hundred of them +died. Accordingly, they became desperate; and it is well known that +the season is an unwholesome one. The time came for the Chinese to pay +their license money and rent, which in all was more than twenty-five +pesos for each one. The officials harassed them for the pay, and they +had not the means to pay what was due; accordingly they have broken +loose in this revolt. The rents from the lands, too, have proved to +be unprofitable, from the manner in which they have been let; while, +if they belonged to individuals, they would be a source of gain. + +Since the twenty-second of November, when I wrote the above, I have +purposely omitted to write an account of current events, for along with +the facts were reported a thousand lies; but today, the twenty-eighth +of the same month, everything is now known and manifest. + +After the Chinese killed Captain Martin de Aduna, they came close to +Manila, rousing to revolt all the Sangleys whom they encountered. They +arrived at San Pedro de Macati, the novitiate's residence of the +Society of Jesus. As the church there was strongly built, and vaulted, +Father Francisco Vicente and the brothers Esteban de Oliver and +Raimundo Alberto, who were the only inmates of the house at that time, +went up into it. Some mulattoes and house-servants had also taken +refuge there, as well as over one hundred persons from the native +village. These made some resistance to the enemy, but, as they had +no other weapons than tiles and bricks, finally the multitude of the +Sangleys (who numbered more than three thousand) broke down the doors +of the church and the house, and set fire to the buildings. Those +who were in the church, tormented by the smoke and flames, within +twenty-four hours came to an agreement with the insurgents, who +assured them of their lives and kind treatment. Some of the mulattoes +and natives came out with the father and the brethren; the Chinese +treated the father well, and manacled the brethren, but they killed +all the rest (fifteen in number), on the spot. At this sight, those +who had not come out of the church held back, and refused to leave +it; and this saved their lives, for at that time the sargento-mayor, +Don Juan de Arceo, arrived, with two hundred Spanish infantry and +eighty horsemen. He also had a hundred Pampango and four hundred Tagal +Indians, all carrying firearms; and two field-pieces. These began to +do damage to the enemy, but only for a short time; for the Sangleys +asked for a truce, which was granted them. The Sangleys sent Father +Francisco Vicente to negotiate a peace for them with the Spaniards. By +a special providence of Heaven, at that very time arrived, by way of +the river, Adjutant Benavides with twenty-five men. He dashed upon +them like a lion, and with his men made so fierce an attack upon +the crowded Sangleys that many of the enemy were slain. The Sangleys +who were engaged in discussing a peace sent Brother Alberto to tell +the Spaniards who had come from the river not to do them any harm, +because they were already making an agreement for peace. Arriving, he +saw that some of the enemy were beginning to make some resistance, and +he called aloud, "Spaniards, at those who are fleeing!" But they had +no need to do so, for the enemy were already in flight; the Spaniards +followed them and dislodged them from the church, and all the Sangleys, +in confusion, began to disperse. In this confusion, Brother Esteban +was able to make his escape, and those who were in the church could +now leave it. The troops of Don Juan de Arceo seized their weapons, +and also fell on the conquered ones; and the latter were quickly +dispersed through the fields, leaving some three hundred Sangleys +dead. The mulattoes and Indians from Manila killed many, and captured +more than three hundred; most of these are here in the galleys. More +than a thousand Sangleys must have been killed in these encounters. + +Don Juan de Arceo, thinking that most of the enemy would go back +toward Calamba, went after them. At this time Don Fernando Galindo, +who was then at Los Banos, assembled five hundred Indians, to fall +on the Sangleys. But the sargento-mayor arrived, and learned that +fifteen hundred Sangleys had fortified themselves on a lofty hill +[47] that is above Calamba; and they agreed that their men should +ascend this hill, the Indians on one side, and the Spaniards on +the other. This was accordingly done; the Spaniards reached the top +first, and overcame the enemy, killing more than thirteen hundred +Sangleys. The rest broke away on the side where the Indians were, +and have been driven into the mountains; a company of Spaniards and +some Indians have gone in pursuit of them. With this encounter, which +was on Saturday, the whole affair has come to an end; and therefore on +yesterday, which was Sunday, the Te Deum laudamus was sung in Manila. + +Among those who distinguished themselves in this last combat were Juan +de Montoya, Lezcano, and Ugalde. This last one came here this year; +although he had received three lance-thrusts, he pursued the enemy, +fighting valiantly. Don Fernando Galindo, moreover, did valuable +service in urging forward the men to the attack. + +Among those whom we mentioned above as being killed with Aduna in the +marshes of Vinan was Alferez Don Antonio Tornamira, who fell senseless +when they attacked him with clubs, and they left him for dead. Later, +he came to himself, and while he was looking for some place where +he could hid himself he came upon a Sangley, who also had hidden in +a thicket; he did not wish to go with the insurgents. They agreed +together to seek for some way of escape, and the Sangley advised the +Spaniard to dress himself in Chinese garb; he did so, and finally +the two reached Manila. The governor, Don Sebastian, gave Alferez +Tornamira a suit of his own garments; and to the Sangley he granted +an exemption [from tributes?] for several years. The latter declared +that he wished to be baptized. + +Yesterday and day before yesterday, the entire revolt was regarded as +suppressed and ended, without there having been any disturbance on the +other side of the river. This morning, the twenty-ninth of this month, +we saw many large fires toward Manila; we knew not what to think, until +we received a letter in which we were informed that from the other side +of the river from the river San Mateo, many new insurgents had come, +who were burning everything; and the fires that we saw were Meyhaligue +[48] and Santa Cruz, on opposite sides of the river. From the Parian +alone different troops of soldiers, both foot and horse, have sallied +out against them; we are hoping for their entire success. We are +informed that people are talking very earnestly of taking steps to +prevent such things from ever happening again; for this purpose there +was held yesterday a general conference of all the civil, military, +and religious. [49] + + + + + + + +RELATION OF THE INSURRECTION OF THE CHINESE + + +Its causes and beginning + +Desires for the increase of the royal revenues, which Don Sebastian +Hurtado de Corcuera, governor of those islands, always tried to carry +out, with greater exactitude in intention than success in the outcome, +gave occasion to the Chinese of the city of Manila and its environs +to attempt an insurrection, the destruction of that country, and +the complete extermination of the Spaniards there. I do not mention +other causes, [50] in order to reduce them to those that have existed +and those which the Sangleys have tried to assign as a pretext for +their insurrection. That which surpassed the others, as being the +greatest in their estimation, was that many laborers saw that they +were obliged to live in a new village which the governor built in the +lands of Calamba, [51] for certain advantages to the royal service; +the object was, to produce there the rice sufficient for the presidios +of these islands, by which his Majesty would be spared a great expense, +and the government employees the neglect and difficulty [usual] in its +provision. The good intention of the one who made this arrangement was +recognized, if it had also been so on the part of those on whom its +fulfilment depended. Its execution was not without hardships, which +occasioned all the more resentment the more the comforts experienced +in their old villages, attracted them. The exemptions promised by +the government, with the desire of keeping the Chinese contented, +because of the advantage that accrued to his Majesty in obtaining +the necessary food from those lands--by which the Chinese could gain +greater profits, and the Indians, being exempted from such burdens, +could make extraordinary gains--were sufficient to overcome those +difficulties. Attention was given to both of those peoples in the +change. But as it caused many of them to fall sick in a short time, +and more than three hundred died because of the unhealthful climate, a +great disturbance was caused in their minds--which was greater because +they were oppressed by the alcalde-mayor with continual extortions and +punishment. Consequently, desirous of lifting so heavy a yoke from +their necks, they rushed on to the last risk, whether to themselves +or to others; and determined to kill him who ruled them there, and +to go ahead, committing all the damage possible in all the Indian +villages, and on the possessions of the Spaniards, until they came +in sight of Manila, where they would call out the other Chinese from +the Parian and the villages round about--if they did not rise before, +of which it has not been possible to gain certain information; for, +the cause being their own, they all would force the governor, who +had but few infantrymen, to pardon their deed; and, if they did not +succeed in this, confident in their multitude, they would go forward +to besiege the city. Then, in conformity with the resolution adopted, +they assaulted the house of the alcalde-mayor [52] on November 19. He +was entirely unguarded, the more for [having no] fears of so fatal +an outcome. They treacherously killed him, manifesting their cruelty +against him, as in revenge for the cruelties that they were shortly +before lamenting as caused by him on themselves. They burned the +village, ordering their wives to hide in the mountains, while they +went to try their fortune--saying that, if they found a good one, and +gained the victory over the Spaniards, they would return for them; +or, in case of adverse fortune and their own defeat, their families +would remain alive and safe in their place of retirement. + + + + +Advice is given in Manila. First assault of the enemy, and its result + +News of the insurrection reached this city on the night of November +20; and warning was given to the entire city and its environs by two +cannon that were fired. The gates were opened, although with care +and caution, so that those outside could seek shelter, and those +who wished could guard their property. Inasmuch as the importance +of the matter did not admit of any delay, the governor despatched +Captain Martin de Aduna that same night overland, so that with his +company of cavalry, he might go to see what was being done, and mete +out the suitable punishment to the enemy, since people here were on +the outlook because of the news with warning. The governor also sent +advices to the castellan and chief magistrate of the port of Cavite, +namely, Sargento-mayor Alonso Garcia Romero, so that he might be on +the watch. Captain Aduna left Manila immediately, and taking thirty +horsemen with him, he came within sight of the enemy on the morning of +the following day, to the number of more than three thousand. All were +armed with spears, or with bamboos hardened in fire, and on these were +fastened the blades with which they harvest their rice. They defied +the Spaniards to come on and fight. Their own guilt, the number of +men, and the fortified position that they were occupying--which was +certain swamps in the lands of Vinan, whose houses and churches they +had burned--caused them to be bold. Our captain attacked them with +greater valor than prudence, for, not heeding the danger, [53] he +advanced into the swamp, where, finding it impossible to manage his +horse, he and three others who followed him in the same enterprise +were killed. The others having killed more than two hundred Chinese, +and being but few in number, retreated (since the horses were tired, +and they were in a position where they could not be aided) to the +village of Paranaque, to await the governor's orders to whom a +father of the Society, who had accompanied the captain to confess +and encourage our men, went to give advices. + + + + +The enemy advance to San Pedro. They are pursued, and are defeated +in Calamba + +The news of the death of Captain Martin de Aduna caused disquiet and +sadness in the city, for he was well liked there. Greater damages +were feared if they did not immediately summon all their forces, +in order to deprive the enemy of their strength and hobble their +feet. In order to do that the governor sent out his sargento-mayor, +Don Juan de Arceo, with two hundred infantrymen, eighty cavalrymen, one +hundred Pampangos, and four hundred Tagal Indians, all with firearms, +and two pieces of cannon. They were being prepared with all possible +rapidity in Manila, when the enemy began to march toward San Pedro, +the house of the novitiate of the Society of Jesus, doing all the +harm possible along the way. They had about four thousand men, +and were joined, either through force or willingly, by those of +Calamba and the farm-lands round about. That same day, November 21, +they reached San Pedro, where a father and two brothers were then +living. The father confessed all the people of Pasay, a village +whose people had, in order to escape the danger, taken refuge in +that house. The brothers, with some of the more courageous Indians, +tried to put themselves in a state of defense; and, although with only +tiles and bricks, they wounded many Sangleys, and killed some. However, +the fury of the multitude was greater than that of the resistance; and +accordingly, the doors of the church having been battered down, the +Sangleys entered it, whence they penetrated into the house, to which +they set fire. Thereupon those above, in sore straits, surrendered +after twenty-four hours with assurance of their lives and of good +treatment--although, not trusting to the promises of the enemy, many +remained upon the vaulted roof of the church. On account of the fire, +in a short time these could not descend, nor could the insurgents +climb to the roof; consequently the former escaped with their lives, +which [otherwise] they would have lost through the barbarous cruelty of +the infidels. This was further displayed [by the Chinese] in breaking +the promise that they had given; for they put to death those who had +descended with the father and the brothers, who numbered some fifteen +persons. They bound the father securely, carrying him to their own +camp, and manacled the brothers--the chief leaders of the Sangleys +not daring to treat them more severely, as others claim, in order +not to provoke further the anger of the governor and the Spaniards +against themselves. By this time the Spanish forces, not only troops +of infantry but horsemen, had reached the enemy's camp, and began to +skirmish with them; the Chinese lost some men on their side, but we +none. An entire stop was put to this presently, by the arrival of a +great number of Sangleys from Manila to treat for peace. In order +to settle the terms of peace, the insurgents sent to the governor +the father of the Society. The suspension of hostilities lasted but +a short time; for the adjutant Benavides (now captain), having no +knowledge of it, or of the discussion that was going on, arrived +at San Pedro by way of the river, with twenty-five Spaniards. These +attacked with such fury that, suddenly falling upon the Chinese where +they least expected it, the latter immediately fled; the Spaniards went +in pursuit of them, and the enemy left three hundred dead [scattered] +through the fields, while as many more were captured by the Indians +who were scouring the country, and were taken to the galleys at the +port of Cavite. On account of the Chinese being surprised by this +unexpected attack, the brothers of the Society who were their prisoners +had an opportunity to regain their liberty; they took refuge among the +twenty-five Spaniards, and coming with them reached that same night +their college at Manila, both wounded, although not dangerously. When +the governor knew that the enemy were marching back to Calamba, +he ordered the sargento-mayor to go there with his men in pursuit +of them. By this time Admiral Don Fernando Galindo, who was at Los +Banos, seeing how the country was disturbed, collected five hundred +Indians to attack the Sangleys. But when the sargento-mayor arrived, +and learned that two thousand of the latter had fortified themselves +on a hill, in the ruggedness of which they placed their main hope +of defense, [the two Spanish leaders] determined to attack them in +various places [at once]--sending by some paths troops of Indians, +by others Spanish infantry and Pampangos, and horsemen with both +these parties. As soon as our men came in sight of the enemy, they +saw how difficult was the task; but Spanish valor conquered it. The +Spaniards arriving first, with the Pampangos, began to climb the hill +so courageously that the Chinese, although at first they thought to +beat back our men with stones and lances from the ascent, finally, +losing courage and judgment, rushed down from the hill, those who +escaped from our infantry encountering our horsemen. Thus some one +thousand five hundred of them were killed in a short time; and those +who remained alive tried to escape into the most hidden ravines and +passes of the mountains, but even there they did not find themselves +safe from the Spaniards and the courage of the Indians. This was the +first victory that was obtained over that enemy; and it was generally +understood that it had put an end to the insurrection, and taken away +the courage of those who had caused these first disturbances. It +was proposed to sing the Te Deum at Manila, by way of thanksgiving +that a fire which threatened so great destruction had been so easily +extinguished, by means of the company and soldiers of Sargento-mayor +Don Juan de Arceo, to whom the Lord had given so brilliant a victory +without any cost. This result was greatly aided by the experience and +courage of Don Fernando Galindo and of the captains who took part in +the combat--Don Rodrigo de Guillestegui, Juan de Montoya, [Francisco] +Lezcano, [Esteban] [54] Ugalde, and Don Martin de Ocadiz. The Pampangos +behaved nobly and courageously. [55] + + + + +The Chinese of Sagar and Santa Cruz rebel + +In proportion to the satisfaction which the news of this victory +caused in Manila was the resentment of the Sangleys when they heard +of the death of their comrades. Eager for revenge, those on the lands +of Sagar [56] rose in arms, and hurried that establishment; and then +they summoned [to join them] the Chinese who were scattered among +the other estates, as far as Manila. A large number of them arrived +at daybreak on Tuesday, November 29, at the residence of Meyhaligue, +to which they set fire. At the same time when we heard of this new +enemy, we learned of the arrival of Sargento-mayor Don Juan de Arceo, +victorious, with all his men; and orders were immediately given to +him that, without entering Manila, he should proceed to Santa Cruz, +to occupy that post and check any commotions among the Sangleys who +were there or those of the Parian--preventing them from joining and +uniting their forces by way of the river. + +In order to be ready for everything, the governor also went to Santa +Cruz with Master-of-camp Don Lorenzo de Olaso, on the possibility that +the enemy (who were running, not marching) would attempt an entrance +by way of Santa Cruz--as they actually did, not having had warning of +the arrival of our troops, or knowing how ready the city was to resist +them without the soldiers. The Chinese at Santa Cruz who were friendly +were told that they might go down the river, with their vessels, to +the shelter and protection of the fort; and those who were not were +told to do as they pleased, so that they might be thoroughly aware how +little importance was attached to their revolt. Many others went on +board their boats, to the number of some two hundred; professing to be +loyal, they asked permission to go out and fight their own countrymen, +in order to drive them back. Those who had charge of them had strong +suspicions of their undertaking and intentions, but the governor gave +his consent; and in his very sight those Chinese approached and joined +the traitors, and began with them to take possession of Santa Cruz--now +declared enemies to us, although they had a little while before been +pretended friends. Half the street they held as their own, the careful +arrangements of the governor giving them all this space so that our men +might manage their guns more safely. The Spaniards began to fire these +so skilfully, and to oppose the enemy so valiantly that, many of the +Chinese being killed, they found themselves compelled by the force +of our resistance to turn and run, displaying no little swiftness +in their flight. The governor left their punishment to General Don +Juan de Esquerra and his brother, Admiral Don Francisco--the first +with some horsemen, the second with his infantry company and some +other footmen, who intercepted the enemy on the rear--at the same +time ordering the master-of-camp to fortify himself in the church of +Santa Cruz, planting in it some strong artillery, so that he might +be well prepared for resisting the insurgents, and for checking +the designs, suspected although not manifest, of the Chinese in the +Parian. Immediately all that company [of infantry] fell apart, so as +to give room for the free handling of the cannon; and, the village of +Santa Cruz being set afire, the Spaniards and Indians pillaged it. [57] +In it were the troops from Manila; and when they reached the lands of +Meyhaligue the horsemen, infantry, and Japanese attacked the Sangleys; +the latter fighting with barbarous desperation, were aided by the +great number of their men in stations and ambuscades. They killed +some of our men, among these Captain Agustin Tenorio, Captain Juan +Martin[ez] de Avendano, Adjutant Cristobal de Saldado, and Alferez +Pedro de Soria; and others were wounded. Thirteen [58] Japanese +were killed, who could not be relieved [in time] by the valor of our +horsemen--which, although great on all occasions, in this one even +surpassed itself. Those who died sold their lives dearly, and those +who survived risked their lives nobly. The danger was alike for all, +and their courage equal; but their fate was not the same. Finally, +those who remained alive thought themselves fortunate that they could +retreat, considering the great number of those who attacked them, +the exhausted condition of their horses, little used to such raids, +and the advantage of position which the insurgents had over them. The +latter, although they saw many of their men stretched on the field, +held that loss as gain--since they were so numerous, and constantly +saw more men joining them--on account of the decrease of the Spaniards' +number by death, of which they made haughty boasts, cherishing hopes of +greater successes. The governor commanded that the troops and artillery +that were in Santa Cruz should that night be withdrawn to the city, +in order not to leave Manila in danger from a sudden insurrection +in the Parian, which was momently feared; also to leave the enemy +in perplexity--having seen that fortification by day, and not being +aware of the [Spanish] retreat so that they might not dare to approach +the river, or attempt to pass it, in the night. He commanded that the +bridge over it should be removed, and the boats that were there broken +up, so that the Chinese [of Santa Cruz and the Parian] might not cross +to each other; at the same time he gave orders that, if there should be +any tumult in the Parian, it should be demolished by the artillery on +the city walls. The whole city remained in suspense and uncertainty, +which was greatly increased by seeing how numerous grew the forces +of the insurgents. These, made arrogant by their recent exploit, +roamed through all the [surrounding] districts, nothing escaping their +cruelty. Several times they attacked the church and convent of Tondo, +[59] which was fortified; but our people in it were prepared for them, +so that, having lost many men, they saw themselves obliged to desist +for the time from their intention. They undertook to make themselves +masters of the church at Binondo, [60] but with the same result; +for the Sangley mestizos who were in the church, desirous of giving +proof of their loyalty, resisted the enemy, who accordingly regarded +their attempt as impracticable, or [at least] exceedingly difficult. + + + + +The Sangleys of the Parian revolt + +From the twenty-sixth of November to the second of the following +month the insurgent Sangleys continued to be so elated that every +day we saw them from Manila, on the other side of the river, with +many little banners which they proudly waved, daring the bolder of +our men to fight; for they thought that even if every Spaniard cost +them fifty of their own men, they would finally remain conquerors, and +masters of the country, on account of the smallness of our numbers, +the many men in their camp, and the accession of those who were +continually joining them. Our artillery quickly made them disperse +and retreat; but the decision was reached that it was not expedient +to sally out against the enemy, on account of the little confidence +that was felt in the Sangleys of the Parian, and because our army +could not hold these in check [no les cogiesen por las espaldas] +if it were engaged in a campaign. But on the second of December, +the day of the great apostle of India, St. Francis Javier, between +ten and eleven o'clock in the forenoon, the suspense came to an +end, and our uncertainty regarding the fidelity of the Parian was +cleared up. For those Sangleys, seeing that the insurgents had more +troops than on former occasions, and that they were more daringly +undertaking to make an attack at one side, also raised the banner +of revolt, and sallied out from the shops in which they were; and +they killed some negroes and Indians, and a few soldiers who were +stationed near the church of the Parian itself. They raised an outcry, +"For the bridge!" and "To arms against the Spaniards!" desiring to +join their countrymen by way of the bridge, which for this purpose +had been replaced. The sargento-mayor went out against them with the +infantry which were in garrison on that side, and made them turn back, +retreating toward the church of the Parian; and because the greatest +danger was at the bridge, the master-of-camp, Don Lorenzo de Olaso, +went to defend that passage. Although his men were few, with gallant +defiance he repulsed the main body of the enemy; but he saw that he +was in great danger, and his very courage extricated him. Immediately +they began to demolish the Parian, and to throw down their houses on +the land side. The governor went to the walls, to give orders as to +what must be done in view of the present necessity; and, since there +was so great need of men, all the ecclesiastics and religious were +obliged to go with arms to guard the walls, as it was suspected that +the enemy might attempt to scale them. At that time the city was full +of confusion and tumult; for as there were even in the [Spanish] houses +so great a number of Sangleys, the people within these saw that they +were in danger if the Sangleys escaped outside. To free themselves +from this, the cry was made, I know not by whose order, that, under +penalty of treason all should kill the Sangleys whom they kept, [61] +which immediately rendered active the indignation or the hatred against +them. Through all the streets the Sangleys were seen lying dead; and +everywhere were heard their outcries or their weeping, causing in all +natural compassion, [even] in the midst of the general danger. In the +fort were many Sangleys who had been seized in various sallies, who, +seeing death so near, tried to escape it, defending themselves even in +the place where they were imprisoned; but they all died there, slain +by arquebus-balls. The artillery continued its fire from the walls, +killing thus a great number of the Sangleys. Others flung themselves +into the river, but immediately fell into the hands of some of our +men who were guarding it in boats, and perished miserably. Fire was +set to the Parian; it immediately began to burn, and a great quantity +of wealth was reduced to ashes by the flames. [62] Many persons who +had concealed themselves were burned to death; others, who thought +it a less evil to be the object of our men's harshness than to become +the prey of the flames, rushing from the buildings, threw themselves +upon the sharp swords. Thus in a few hours the costly structure of the +Parian [perished], and its beautiful church alone was left [63] as a +memento of what had been there--the pillars of stone which remained +standing being monuments, as it were, which proclaimed, "Here stood +Troya." The number of those who died that day in the city and fort, +in the Parian, and in the river, amounted to three thousand, according +to the statement of those who make the most moderate estimates. On the +morning of the following day, some two hundred traders came out from +some marshes and miry places that were behind the Parian; they had +buried themselves in the mud there, in order to preserve their lives +in the general misfortune of their countrymen. All came with crosses +in their hands, entreating mercy; this could not be denied to them +by Christian charity, all the more when it was known that these men +were not accomplices in the insurrection. Command was therefore given +that they be conveyed to the fort, where they were kept under guard; +and they were aided with their support in a time of so great need, +in which they were utterly destitute. Many of those who died had time +[allowed them] to become Christians first, and those who already +were such, to make their confessions; others were deprived of this +by their own obstinacy, or by the sudden anger of our people. + + + + +Events at the port of Cavite and other places at this time + +There was anxiety at the port of Cavite when they heard the cannon +from Manila, and saw the clouds of smoke from the Parian; then news +of the result arrived, with an order to the warden of the fort, +Sargento-mayor Alonso Garcia Romero, to put to the sword all the +Sangleys who were in that port. [64] Hardly was this information +guessed at when all the people--Spaniards, Indians, Japanese, Sangleys, +and mulattoes ran in dismay through the streets; all suspected one +another, and all tried to secure their own safety. The women and the +more valuable articles of property were collected in the churches; +and there prayers were offered aloud, entreating God for mercy. In +the present tumult, the prudence with which the warden acted was of +great value; for he restored tranquillity among all, especially the +Sangleys, who were most disturbed. Within half an hour he gathered +about a thousand of them in the royal buildings, making it known that +this was for the purpose of securing them from the public fury. They +were satisfied with this, closed their houses, and proceeded to take +refuge in the buildings assigned to them. While the Ave Maria was +ringing, the warden went to all the religious orders, requesting that +priests should go to baptize the infidels and hear the confessions +of the Christians, since all of them must die. They went immediately; +and the warden commanded that the Chinese should be taken out by tens, +on the pretext that the governor had summoned them to Manila. In this +way, they cut off the heads of as many as three hundred Sangleys, +many of them receiving the sacrament of baptism, and many who were +Christians that of penance. At this time a Spaniard made the mistake +of cutting off the purses which the Sangleys always carry with them; +this was seen by some, who immediately called out that they were +taking the Chinese away to kill them, and that the rest would better +put themselves on the defensive, and either save their lives or sell +them dearly. The Spaniards who were inside at once tried to escape, and +did so, although with some wounds from stones, taking the precaution to +close the gate of exit--a prudent act of great importance, because the +rest of the Spaniards, running up to that place, began to fire their +arquebuses wherever they could. The Sangleys then set fire to the royal +building, close to the gate, in order to make an opening by which they +could escape; others, climbing above, began to throw stones and tiles +at the Spaniards, and broke in pieces an ivory image of the blessed +Christ, with which they wounded some of our men. Many Indian women +had been sheltered in these buildings the day before, thinking that +they would there be safe, and seeing themselves suddenly in extreme +danger. Only three of these, with one child, died on this occasion, +at the hands of the Sangleys; another woman and another child flung +themselves down from the windows, but, falling upon some dead Sangleys, +they received no injury of importance. Nor did the rest of these women, +who, seeing their danger, did the same; they threw themselves down +and remained safe, although bruised by the fall. The fire was now +seizing on the entire building; [65] and those within, with death +so near and in their sight, broke down the wall on two sides, and as +many as four hundred flung themselves through this opening, the rest +remaining among the flames. Here they were opposed by the Spaniards +and Japanese, whom the Sangleys confronted with such mad fury that, +although armed only with stones and clubs, they strove to make way +for themselves, wounding some of our men (among these the warden), +and killing two Japanese. Finally they took the road to the beach, +and, being pursued thither, many of them continued to fall until, +being hindered by a fishing corral in which they were crowded together, +they were a mark for the bullets of our soldiers, and for the balls +from a blunderbuss which was fired from the fort of La Magdalena, +and thus thirty of them died. Those who remained alive went out into +the country, continually pursued by our soldiers at short range, +so that few escaped; and most of those were caught next day by the +ranchmen. Others hanged themselves from the trees; and, according to +the best information that can be obtained, only twenty three were left +who could carry the news to those in Manila. The slaughter continued +on the following day, since there were many who were hidden in the +houses. This success was a great mercy of God; for it was afterward +known that the Sangleys of the port had agreed upon an uprising +for that very night; they had planned to set fire to the village in +all parts of it, which they could have executed all the more easily +because their houses were very near to those of the Spaniards. In the +house of a rich Chinese Christian was found the banner to which they +were to rally. Many kept hidden in the fireplaces pincers with which +they intended to torture certain Spaniards by tearing away their flesh +piecemeal, in revenge for the Sangley pirates who were punished by that +torture in Manila in the past year. [66] The number of those who died +in the port of Cavite reached one thousand three hundred. Immediately +afterward all the Sangley laborers on the lands in that district +revolted, of whom some five hundred perished at the hands of the +Indians and ranchmen--not to speak of others who were scattered in +Maragondon and Silan, probably four hundred and fifty. Many were also +killed in the neighboring jurisdictions: in Bulacan, three hundred; +in Pampanga, six hundred; in Pangasinan, two hundred; in Taal and +Balayan, five hundred. Besides this, the corpses of more than six +hundred Sangleys have been encountered in the villages and coasts of +Zambales, the coasts of Maderas, and other places. [67] + + + + +Encampment of the insurgents; damages which they inflict; levies of +men to oppose them + +The damages which the Sangleys continued to commit--which were +especially seen among the recent arrivals in the Parian--have been very +heavy. They set fire to many houses of Spaniards and of religious; +and they burned the villages, with the churches, profaning all +that was sacred [68]--hacking the images with knives, wearing the +chasubles, and making from the altar-coverings garments to cover +themselves, and flags. Some of these articles were taken from them, +in encounters which the Spaniards had with them. The villages which, +with their churches, were burned were: Santa Cruz (although they did +not entirely destroy it), Quiapo, Meyhaligue, Sampaloc, San Sebastian, +San Francisco del Monte, and part of San Juan de la Penitencia. They +also burned the ranches of Santiago Castelu (or Gastelu), General +Asaldegui, Admiral Ezquerra, and others; and a large part of the +villages of Tondo and Binondo. + +They arrogantly continued these forays, and they were further +confirmed in their notion that they were masters of the field by +having therein more than twenty-six thousand fighting men, and knowing +that the Spaniards who could be assembled hardly amounted to three +hundred. Accordingly they formed their encampment opposite Manila, +with fortifications at intervals, where they remained about twenty +days, without our men crossing the river to attack them--the Spaniards +contenting themselves with depriving the Sangleys of boats, so that +the latter might not cross from the other side; and they waged war on +us in two directions. It was our prudent decision, and its importance +was recognized by the insurgents, not to let our force of soldiers be +weakened; and they exerted all their strength to overcome it, sparing +no effort in order to carry out their intention, and in one case +almost succeeding. Only by their great [number was it] [69] possible, +and their natural ingenuity; they undertook to intercept the river, +although it was so broad and deep, with a causeway of stone--a work +which they were able to complete in a short time, by each Sangley +carrying only one stone. With this they were masters of the river +as regards its passage, which they prevented to the boats which were +coming down with provisions from Laguna de Bay; but they were checked +in this by the diligence of those who had in charge the safety of +those supplies. These were General Asaldegui and Captain Ugalde, who +had various skirmishes with the Sangleys to keep them back from the +passage of the river, killing many of them without serious loss of our +men. By that time, recognizing the dangerous character of the war, +and that it would apparently be a long one, the governor continued +to make provision of all sorts of munitions and food; and raised +levies of men from Pampanga [70] and other jurisdictions--not only +arquebusiers, but Indians armed with arrows, lances, and shields. At +this summons, all showed their fidelity to the king, their affection +for the Spaniards, their hatred to the Chinese, and their promptness +in obedience. The Pampango Indians quickly rallied, constrained +not only by their ancient loyalty but by the present need; in this +they were not a little encouraged by seeing the spirited conduct of +their women whom they left behind, who offered to come with them to +fight. As it was impracticable to accept this offer, they were ready, +even at the cost of their lives, to defend their homes and villages, +in case the insurgents should undertake to enter these. + + + + +The enemy are dislodged, and pursued as far as Bocaue + +The new soldiers who had come to the succor of Manila, desirous +of encountering the enemy--for which there was not yet opportunity, +according to the arrangements of the governor--made forays through the +open country, in small bands, always with good success. [71] They were +encouraged to these sallies by the reward which the governor offered +to any one who should bring in the head of an enemy; as a result, +many heads came in to the city every day. A large number of men having +been collected, the governor resolved to post troops close to the very +camp of the insurgents, in order to surround them; and although they +tried to prevent this, they were unable to do so. Instead, they found +themselves, in all the attacks that they made, compelled to retire with +losses always of many men--although on one occasion, when the governor +with the master-of-camp and some Spaniards undertook to reconnoiter a +position, the Sangleys came about them, placing them in such evident +danger that they were very fortunate in being able to escape. This was +secured by the coming, with succor, of Captain Sebastian de Gastelu, +who was stationed at a neighboring post, with his men. Some took +the governor for the master-of-camp. The sargento-mayor, Don Pedro +de Jara, and Captain Gastelu peppered them well with the artillery, +which caused them so great loss that even within their very camp +they were not safe. Preparations were now made [on our side] for +attacking them on a set day; but it seems that the enemy, guessing +this plan, and the disastrous result which they might expect from +it, since they were surrounded on all sides by towers and redoubts, +concluded to take flight. This they did on Thursday, December 29, +at night, with so much silence (since the [word in MS. missing] was +so great) that there was no indication or suspicion of their resolve +until, on the morning of the next day, certain knowledge of their +departure was furnished by our noticing that they did not sally out +into the open country. The governor, who was in our camp, immediately +commanded that the enemy's camp be delivered over to pillage; in it +they found more than ten thousand fanegas of rice, by which not only +the Spaniards but the negroes and Indians of the surrounding villages +profited. The governor went in pursuit of them with his men, and got +sight of them between the villages of Pasig and San Mateo, to which +they had gone with the intention of crossing the river on rafts, for +which purpose they had cut there twenty thousand bamboos. They were +prevented from this, and our people prepared to give them battle on +Saturday, December 31; but the Chinese did not wait for them, but took +to flight that night also. Our troops continued to pursue them, [72] +and reached them at nightfall, finding them encamped in the village of +San Jose, a visita of Bocaue, which is a mission village of the fathers +of St. Francis. When the governor was asked there where our men were +to be lodged, he replied, "Where the enemy are." Our soldiers were +so honorably obedient that, crossing a stream that separated the two +forces, they dislodged the Sangleys from their camp, compelling them +to flee; the enemy left behind the supper that they had prepared, as +spoils [for our men, disregarding] the opportunity, and its importance +for the hungry and needy condition in which they were. [73] + +On the first of January, 1640, in the morning, the Sangleys were +attacked by our men, and forced to do as they had done the night +before--although with greater loss, since many in their flight rushed +head-long into the river, where they perished. The rest took the road +to Pampanga, intending to secure through that province a passage to +that of Pangasinan; but, after fighting their way, and receiving damage +on all sides, they fell back to Bocaue. This move caused anxiety among +our people, who feared that the Sangleys did this with the intention of +again crossing the river of Manila, in which case they would destroy, +as they had already done on the side opposite [Manila], the churches +and villages on the other side. Seeing, then, the danger at this time +of need, and considering that the soldiers were with the governor +and the citizens acting as garrison, and that in no place could the +forces be divided, since everywhere they were so small, father Fray +Juan Ramirez, the Augustinian provincial, offered to keep guard over +the river with his religious, and asked the other religious orders to +help him in this with such men as they could spare. All willingly gave +their aid, and the governor also sent the commander of the galleys, +Andres Lopez de Asaldegui, for the same purpose; and, aided by so many +religious, he kept the river safe for our trade, and prevented the +enemy from crossing it. At Bocaue the governor was confronting the +enemy, and having various skirmishes with them, being sometimes the +attacker, sometimes the attacked; and although usually these occasioned +loss to the enemy, sometimes also our people lost--especially one day +when a large troop of Indians, with a number of Spaniards, sallied out +against the Sangleys. The latter resorted to the artifice of setting +fire in all directions to the patches of sedge (or rather the fields +of cogon [74]), which were a great cause for fear; and the Indians, +unexpectedly surrounded by fire, took to disorderly flight. This was +the cause of some few Spaniards being left there dead; their firearms +were seized by the Sangleys, who with these did considerable damage +to our men. On this occasion the governor was in notable danger; for +he, considering that the enemy's encampment was in an advantageous +location, convenient to food-supplies, and having plenty of water +(which our camp lacked), determined to dislodge them from it. For +this purpose, on the night of January 9 he erected a tower near the +enemy's camp, defended by ditches, spikes driven into the ground +[empuyados], and a stockade, and well furnished with artillery. He +appointed as its commander the chief captain of the artillery, Juan +Bautista de Molina, with Captain Gastelu [as second]; and placed in +it two artillerists, twenty soldiers, and a hundred Indians armed with +arrows and arquebuses. When the Sangleys, in the morning, saw the new +fort, so unexpected to them, they rushed with great fury to carry it +by assault; but those within defended it valiantly, making great havoc +among the enemy. Hearing the report of the cannon, the governor and +the master-of-camp hastened to give them aid. Before they could arrive, +the enemy turned their backs and fled to their camp; the governor and +those who accompanied him therefore returned to their quarters. At one +o'clock the Sangleys again endeavored to seize the fort; they found +the same resistance and valor among our men as in the morning, and +many of their people were killed, without any loss to us, except that +a bullet wounded Captain Gastelu in the knee. At the time, this injury +was not considered dangerous or likely to last long; but finally, +at the end of five months it caused his death, to the sorrow of +every one that his Majesty should lose in him a valiant and energetic +officer. The governor and the master-of-camp came, as in the morning, +to the aid of the fort; but the enemy were now retreating, and, the +governor sending four men on horseback to reconnoiter their course, +God inspired such fear in those who were retreating that they began +to flee in a disorderly crowd, leaving in their camp their weapons +(lances and arquebuses) and a large quantity of provisions. Some of +our men followed them for the distance of half a legua, and in that +space killed more than one thousand five hundred of them; and when +the soldiers of our force were called together, the affair could +be considered by them all as concluded. It was regarded as a great +victory, on account of the great fear which had filled the minds of +the Sangleys, the utter disorder and confusion with which they fled, +and our having gained from them an encampment so convenient, with the +death of so many and the booty of so many weapons; and the news of it +was sent to Manila at ten o'clock that night. It was received with +general satisfaction and the ringing of bells; and on the following +day in all the churches solemn masses were said before the most holy +sacrament, by way of thanksgiving for so fortunate a success, and in +supplication to that same Lord that He would continue that favor to +our forces. + + + + +The enemy return to Sagar and San Mateo + +The governor had no information of the road that the enemy took +in their flight; accordingly, while he was waiting for this, +he endeavored to have his army take some rest in the village of +Bocaue. But little rest did the insurgents have; for, seeing the +misfortunes that pursued them, and so many of their men (in whose +numbers they were trusting to make themselves masters of the country) +dead, or wounded, or disheartened, they resolved to remove from [the +vicinity of] our camp. Returning to their familiar haunts of Sagar and +San Mateo--which is a visita of the village of Pasig, belonging to the +fathers of St. Augustine--desirous of avenging their defeats and the +loss of their dead, and feeling safe on account of our troops being +so far away, they sent some bands of their people to burn the church +and village of Pasig, which they did. Other Sangleys, roaming through +the hills, found among them some tiny hamlets of the natives, where +they had concealed their valuables, and their children and wives, to +save them from the common danger; and these were in very great danger +of falling into the hands of these enemies. Our Lord delivered these +people, although the Sangleys took possession of what they found in +the huts. Then their scattered bands being reunited with those whom +they had sent to hunt for provisions, they formed their camp on a hill, +and the various bands built shelters for themselves. + +As soon as the governor knew where the enemy were now encamped, he +went in pursuit of them, and on the twelfth [of January] he halted +on the river San Mateo. The next day he went in person, with some +few horsemen, to reconnoiter, and on the way encountered a troop of +about a hundred Sangleys; fifty of them were armed, and the rest +were laden with rice and other provisions. Our men attacked them +and killed twenty or more of the Sangleys, without any loss on our +side--although Captain Juan Fiallo found himself in great danger. On +this as on other occasions he displayed honorable proofs of his valor; +for, having wounded a Sangley in the forehead with a lance-thrust, +and felled him to the ground, the latter, suddenly raising himself +from between the horse's feet, slashed at him with a Japanese catana, +with which at one thrust he wounded both the captain and the horse. The +captain quickly turned his horse about, and securing room for using +his lance, ran it entirely through the Sangley's body, at one side; +it pierced so deeply that it was impossible to pull out the weapon, +so he had to leave it sticking in the body. But the Sangley, with the +anguish or the desperation of death, eager to avenge it rather than +endure it, with his own hands drew out the lance, and, bracing himself +with it on the ground, attempted to attack the man who had wounded +him. But at this moment he was himself attacked by a lay religious +belonging to the Society of Jesus, who rendered good service in the +war throughout its active period--and at this time with especial good +fortune, since he freed the captain from danger by completing the +killing of the Sangley. All the rest of the Sangleys fled, and the +governor returned to his camp, to give orders for the attack on the +enemy, who during all the time while they remained in the hills never +ceased from inflicting damages. They burned the church of San Mateo, +and that of Taytay, a house and church of the Society of Jesus, and a +visita of Antipolo; also Santa Cruz and Mahayhay. According to what +many of them said, their chief incentive to setting these fires was +what happened to a certain Sangley. Desiring to become a Christian, he +buried an idol which he had, of which they relate fables very similar +to those about Mars, calling it "the god of battles." This Christian +Sangley was one of the insurgents, and, desiring to appease this god, +managed with others to disinter it, entreating its protection on the +present occasion. They say that the idol spoke to them, saying that +it considered itself appeased and satisfied for the previous injury +done to it; and promising them, besides this, its favor, provided +that they would burn all the churches, profane all that was sacred, +and inflict on the Christians all the harm that they possibly could. + + + + +Success of our troops, and defeat of the enemy in Antipolo + +The enemy, not regarding themselves as safe in the mountains where +they had hidden, managed to retreat to those of Antipolo, as being more +suitable for the fortified post which they built there. On account of +the extent of the place, the greater part of their people had gone +into it, after burning the village and the residence of the Society +of Jesus; they attempted to do the same with the church, but could +not accomplish this, as it was built of stone. Some remained behind, +and, desirous of reconnoitering the place, and doing the enemy some +damage, Captain Juan Fiallo went out with as many as thirty horsemen, +and a large number of Indians with lances and bows. The roads were +exceedingly rugged, and both footmen and horsemen had to trust to their +own exertions for success. They commenced to make their way through +the mountains, with more spirit than reflection, for at the middle of +their journey they found themselves unable to go on. The enemy were on +their rear, and at either side were precipices and deep ravines--all +the fault of ignorant guides. It was impossible either to advance or +to retreat; and so they fell in death, one after another, their courage +ineffectual, and without room in which to make resistance. Accordingly, +they rushed to fling themselves down the precipices, abandoning some +their horses and some their weapons, and all in this danger losing +their presence of mind. The enemy had the opportunity to put an end +to all of our men, if God had not blinded their eyes. Five or six +Spaniards, with their arms and horses, returned to the camp and gave +news of this disaster; and within a few days some others returned, +unarmed and on foot; as for the rest, the Sangleys disposed of them +as we shall see later. + +The governor, grieved at this result, collected more horses from the +neighboring ranches, and, sending to Manila for saddles, equipped his +men anew, all eager for vengeance. This consumed much time, which gave +the enemy leisure to fortify themselves in four places, in the village +of Antipolo and in the mountain region thereabout; but it deprived +our troops of [the opportunity of] marching against the enemy until +they arrived in sight of the new fortifications. The difficulty of +the attack was very evident, for the enemy held the heights, and had +stones with which they had built their enclosures, by hand-work, very +strong and well-arranged, as was remarked by our men. In this work, +the great number of their men, and their strenuous efforts, had made +up for the lack of time. No less active were our men in making ready +[for the attack]; and the more difficult the undertaking, the more +their courage rose. The Indians displayed great gallantry, with a +few Spaniards making themselves masters of the first two strongholds +or intrenchments--from which the enemy retreated with the loss of +some of their men; the rest, a crowd of armed men, taking refuge in +the other two defences, at the highest part of the fortification, +regarded these as impregnable, and accordingly kept in them provisions +of all kinds, enough to last a long time. There they awaited our men, +who marched in good order, and attacked the first intrenchment on +three sides. They were everywhere preceded by Indian shield-bearers, +in order that these might with their shields stop the stones and +other missiles that the Sangleys were throwing; the Indians did this +valiantly, being thus very helpful to the rest of the army; for the +Spaniards, being able to use their firearms without hindrance, with +them everywhere drove back the enemy. The latter, discouraged at the +death of so many of their number, and seeing our soldiers ascending +the hill, took to flight. This gave new energy to our victorious men, +who in order to complete their conquest at once continued their +march, with the same good order and precaution, to the innermost +fortification, the strongest and most difficult of all, and the most +skilfully built and best provided with supplies. Nothing withstood +the perseverance of our men, flushed by their recent success, and +stimulated by the sight of their governor, who was present throughout +the action; they eagerly attacked the enemy, who valiantly resisted, +replying with their firearms to the volleys from our arquebuses, and +with stones to the javelins and arrows [of our Indians]--relying on +these weapons alone, as they had the advantage in position. But their +courage alone could not equal that of our men; and, seeing that ours +were now pressing them hard, and, almost on their hands and knees, +steadily gaining possession of their last height, the Sangleys, +having little strength to defend it, turned their backs and began +to flee. Our men kept up the pursuit of the enemy for more than a +legua, until they drove out the fugitives from their hiding-places, +and many of the latter flung themselves over the cliffs in those +mountains--where the enemy, although at the outset he had been well +defended, was on this occasion thoroughly defeated. + +Those [of the Spaniards] who were killed in this combat and assault +were about twenty; and as the victory had been so glorious, not only +by the strength of the enemy but by the valor of our soldiers, all the +bells were rung in Manila, and on the following day, at the governor's +request, solemn mass was said in all the churches, and the most holy +sacrament was exposed, in thanksgiving for so fortunate a success. + +In the enemy's camps were found large quantities of supplies and +arms; and on the ground were many books which they had taken from the +religious houses that they burned; from these they made breastplates +and other defensive armor. In the cemetery of Antipolo, which was the +quarters of their leaders, were found several of their proclamations, +in Chinese characters; these were fastened to the trees, to serve +for the proper government of their forces. There were twenty dead +horses who had fallen into the ravines, with their saddles broken; +and three Spaniards were found whose heads had been cut off. These +were part of those who had flung themselves from the precipices; among +them was a lay religious of the Augustinians, who had accompanied +the soldiers on that expedition. These bodies, although they were +putrid, were so tightly bound that the cords had cut into the flesh, +all indicating the cruelty of the Sangleys. Although this moved our +men to deserved compassion and just indignation, they felt much more +keenly the discovery of many fragments of holy images that lay on +the ground. In especial, there was found a carved figure of the holy +Christ, three palmos in height, among the embers and ashes of a house +which the Sangleys had undertaken to burn; the fire had been content +to blacken the image a little, in order that it might testify to the +miracle--since all regarded it as such, that the image should remain +unhurt in the midst of so hot a fire. The soldier who found the image +presented it to the governor, who at sight of it was deeply moved, +as were the army also when it was raised on high, [made] by him who +had abased it more glorious than before; and all entertained hopes +that the army which should fight under such a banner would annihilate +the enemy by a signal victory. + + + + +Injuries which the enemy committed during their flight + +It is characteristic of cowards to affect courage when they meet no +opposition or do not fear resistance; the enemy did not encounter +this in the ranch of Antipolo, whither he went when he emerged +from the mountains and hollows in which he had taken refuge from +our attacks and the slaughter which he could not make among our +troops. For the latter were marching accompanied by the governor, +who was desirous of catching the enemy in the flat country that he +might offer them battle there, when they would not be able to avail +themselves of the ruggedness of the mountains or the depth of the +ravines; the armies faced each other, now ready to come to blows, and +the enemy were almost surrounded by our troops on all sides. Although +without realizing how little they could depend upon their hands, they +trusted to their feet; they now placed their main defense in flight, +burning the village and church of Baras--valiant for only such acts +of cowardice. Our men kept at the heels of the enemy, although it was +one of the greatest hardships of this war to have to march so long +through very rough roads amid the inclemencies of heat and rain. The +insurgents pursued the route toward the village of Tamar, whither also +our army proceeded, in order to compel them to give battle, or else to +harass and disturb them by never allowing them opportunity to have any +rest. Our men reached the flat top of a hill, and halted on the summit, +without having any knowledge of the enemy--who were so near that even +their voices could soon be heard. When our men perceived the enemy, +and saw how few they were (for at that time they did not number two +thousand), they began to surround the Sangleys in order to attack them; +and the battle began with such fury that the enemy, in desperation, +came close to the mouths of the Spanish arquebuses. Our men defended +themselves valiantly, at little cost to themselves but with much +loss to the enemy; since, although the battle began with great risk +[to us] on account of their multitude, our weapons were well plied +on both sides [of them]. When the enemy had attacked our position and +would have gained the advantage, Don Rodrigo de Guillestegui arrived, +whom the governor had sent with a company of horsemen and five hundred +Indians, sounding the alarm to them through the rearguard. At the sound +of the drums, and when the enemy saw themselves attacked on both sides, +and knew that the rest of our army (which had been absent) was there, +they already used their weapons with less spirit; and, their hopes of +gaining the victory being dashed, they began to retreat, so as not +to give it to our men--but with much loss of their own--and as they +were in a place where the cavalry could range freely. The damage that +they received was much greater [than what they inflicted], and was +sufficient to enable those of their number who had more prudence to +urge more strenuously, from that time on, negotiations for peace--of +which they had begun to talk a few days before, but with little, +if any, effect. + + + + +Garrisons are placed in the churches, and peace is discussed + +When the governor saw the destruction that the enemy had wrought in +the churches, and that he could not check it because the army that was +fleeing always had the start of the other, he determined to put the +churches in a condition of defense, and accordingly assigned to each +one a number of soldiers who should confront the Sangleys--so that, +since the people of the villages could not deliver themselves from +the enemy's fury, the temples and the dwellings of the religious, +which were most important, might be saved. The governor also sent +them word, threatening that he would put all the Sangleys that were +left in the country to the sword, if they did any more damage to the +villages or the churches, since it was a token of cowardice to wreak +vengeance on him who was not to blame, or who made no resistance. They +replied that they did no harm where they were not harmed, and that +they would leave the villages in peace if the roads were left free +to themselves by which they were intending to pass to Los Limbones, +in order to build champans there to make ready for [their return to] +China. This reply was less haughty than the tone of their earlier +bravado. From that time they did not burn any church, although they +burned the village of Santa Maria and that of Siniloan, with a visita +of Pangil, because the Indians had been stationed there and many of +the Sangleys slain. After this, they continued their march to Cainta, +and the governor in pursuit of them to the post of Mahayhay--a place +through which the enemy must necessarily pass if they would go to Los +Limbones--in order to fight there with the enemy the battle which +was impossible in the mountains which the enemy had selected for +their encampment. Many from the enemy's camp came every day to ours +asking for mercy, alleging [that they had been coerced by] violent +measures on the part of their leaders in the revolt. They readily +found mercy, and with this and kind treatment they were sent back to +Manila. The opinions of the rest were as vacillating as their courage, +many of them lacking confidence in the governor. Thinking that they +did not deserve pardon for their offences, they preferred to persist +in these obstinately, rather than to yield to the governor's mercy +and surrender; and although there were embassies from one side to +the other, this intercourse was carried on with little confidence +on either side. On ours, negotiations for peace were carried on by +a father of the Society of Jesus, [75] who was a minister to the +Sangleys, and General Geronimo Enrriquez, their alcalde-mayor of +the Parian, for whom they had the utmost affection; on their side, +by some of their leaders, with the mandarin--although not with so +much privilege, [76] on account of having been created for their +purpose--the lieutenant-commander of the Sangley forces. He was a +boastful and audacious man, who resisted the negotiations for peace, +and had with his own hand killed several men because he was suspicious +of their being concerned therein. But the father of the Society, +anxious that peace should be secured, in order that the shedding of +so much blood might be stopped--especially for the sake of the many +Sangleys who were there more because they trusted others than to +carry out their own purpose--laying aside any consideration of his +own life, went many times, at the evident risk of death, to confer +with the mandarin and the leaders, assuring them, on the part of the +governor, of pardon and kind treatment to those who laid down their +arms and surrendered themselves to him. He answered their complaints, +the chief of these being that the governor had commanded that their +comrades who were scattered through the provinces should be slain, +when they had committed no offence. The answer was that the very +people in their own camp who had been caught by our men had revealed +that those others were accomplices in their guilt, and cognizant of +the revolt; for they had confessed that it was general throughout the +provinces. He said that there was therefore no wisdom in leaving some +of the Sangleys free while we were fighting others in the field, since +the former would take up arms against us at the first opportunity; and +finally that they should avail themselves of the present opportunity, +as being invited to make peace, and should not constrain the governor +to an extreme demonstration of his anger, as that would result in +the entire destruction of them all--as they themselves could see by +the few who had been killed on our side, and the thousands that had +fallen on theirs. Persuaded by these arguments, they undertook to +hold another council and give an answer on the following day. + + + + +Peace is concluded, and both armies return to Manila + +After thorough reflection, while those of our camp were waiting for +the enemy to submit and give up their arms, the latter saw that the +conditions demanded for making peace did not depend on him whose +strength had been broken, but on him who was able to boast of his +advantage and superiority; and how, if the negotiations for peace +arose more from the needs of the case and from our strength than from +mercy and compassion, the governor would have closed, as it were, +the gates of mercy with the determination to destroy them, if he had +not checked his anger, and given to the religious in whose hands was +this affair time for endeavoring to convert them to a more prudent +decision. Finally, they agreed that all should surrender themselves +and give up their weapons. A place was appointed at a little distance +from our camp, between which and theirs was a river; at its crossing +stood our men in two ranks, before whom the Sangleys passed, laying +down the weapons that they carried. As soon as all of them, some +eight thousand in number, had reached their station, arrangements +were made for their return to Manila, the governor charging the +master-of-camp to set out with the two armies. This was done, and +they marched until they arrived in the parade-ground at Bagumbayan, +opposite the city, on the evening of Friday, March. 15. The governor +arrived that same evening, and the two armies encamped there for the +night. At dawn of the following day, the drums sounded for the march, +which was conducted in this order. In the vanguard went Captain +Juan Fiallo with the cavalry, to the sound of trumpets; next some +companies of Pampango infantry, those of the Cagayan Indians, the +Zambal archers, and the Indians who carried javelins and shields in +the battalion. Next came all the Sangley forces, and in the rearguard +the Spanish infantry, with the master-of-camp. The halberdiers of +the governor followed, and in their midst was one on horseback, who +carried as a standard the image of the blessed Christ from Antipolo, +mounted on a staff. Last of all came the governor, accompanied by his +suite, and by many volunteer horsemen who had gone to the war. In this +order they proceeded along the causeway to the bridge over the river, +and across it to Tondo; and there our troops left the Sangleys inside a +stockade which they had built as a precaution, with soldiers guarding +them on all sides. The governor went thence to his palace by water, +and the master-of-camp marched with his soldiers to the city. The +people received them with great joy at seeing the war ended, as it +had caused them so much anxiety and lasted so long a time--for it +began on November 20, 1639, and came to an end on March 15, 1640. + + + + +The slain in both armies; the enemy's weapons and mode of warfare; +and the damage committed by them. + +Those who make the most careful estimate of the deaths on both +sides state that the number of Spaniards who died in the war, +from its beginning to its end, were about forty or forty-five, and +of Indians three hundred; and it was always the main care of the +governor to watch over his men. On the side of the enemy, they make +the number of deaths approximate twenty-two thousand to twenty-four +thousand--including therein those who died in the provinces. [77] +Thus is made very evident, by the unequal and disproportionate number +[of deaths] on both sides, the special protection of our Lord over +our army--a fact acknowledged even by the very infidels. + +The weapons that the Sangleys collected, besides some few firearms, +were: javelins and Japanese catanas, fastened to poles (and some were +made in Manila), some of these weighing more than an arroba, which +will indicate the force with which they could be used; sickles and +pruning-hooks, also fastened to poles; iron tridents; and bamboos with +sharp points hardened in fire, four or five brazas in length. They +also carried away the iron from the houses and churches that they +burned, and whenever they were left undisturbed in any encampment, +they set up their forges and made weapons, in order that no one might +he unprovided with them. The men were divided into tens, like [the +Roman] decurias, so that the exact number of their men was known; and, +of each ten, six fought, and four were responsible for their food, +in order that the fighting men might be entirely relieved from that +work. [78] They did not fight all at one time, but only three from +each decuria, in order that while these were fighting the others +might rest, and thus always they could have men who could enter the +battle in fresh condition. They employed stratagems in fighting--in +the beginning, when they had not so many arms, they made sham weapons, +covering these with cloth, so that they looked like steel. In their +camp near Sanpaloc, [79] in some towers that they built they placed +straw figures of Sangleys, so that our infantry might fire at these +and use up their bullets, and then the Sangleys could, without risk +of being hit, rush to attack our men. + +The damages which they committed throughout the period of the +insurrection are very great. They made havoc among the sacred images +and utensils, besides which they burned the village of Calamba and +its church; the village of Taluco, [80] in charge of secular priests, +with a wooden church and a stone clergy-house; houses and property +in Vinan; the house of San Pedro, belonging to the Society of Jesus; +the house and church at Meyhaligue and Santa Cruz; the village and +church of Quiapo, belonging to the Society of Jesus; many houses in +the villages of Tondo and Binondoc; the village of Sanpaloc, with a +house and church of stone belonging to the fathers of St. Francis; +the village of Taytay, with house and church of stone belonging to the +Society of Jesus; the villages of Mahayhay, Santa Cruz, Antipolo, and +Baras, belonging to the Society of Jesus; the villages and churches +of San Mateo and Pasig, belonging to the fathers of St. Augustine; +the villages of Santa Maria and Siniloan, and some visitas, belonging +to the fathers of St. Francis. They also burned ranches and country +houses belonging to [the fathers of] St. Augustine, the Society of +Jesus, Captain Gastelu, General Don Juan Claudio, Alferez Medrano, +General Azaldegui, Admiral Ezquerra, and Admiral Juan Alonso; besides +other stone houses and property belonging to private persons. + + + + +The persons who most distinguished themselves in our army + +From the very outset of the war the governor was active in it, not +sparing himself from any of its dangers, which were very great. If +any proof were needed of his energy, valor, executive ability, and +military circumspection, the present emergency would have furnished +it. Distinction was honorably gained by the master-of-camp, Don +Lorenzo de Olaso; he was always the first in dangers--none of which +he shunned, although he experienced several attacks of illness, +and even lay stretched at the foot of a papaw tree--escaping from +them, or being drawn out of them by his brave heart and valiant +spirit. Many personages of Manila in private life displayed their +courage, adding merits to their former ones by their service in +the army, and causing the enemy to recognize their bravery in the +skirmishes and assaults, that they might relate how they had conducted +themselves in these; it is sufficient to mention who they are. The +commanding officer of the artillery, Juan Bautista de Molina, was +present in some of the engagements, and the rest of the time he was +directing his artillery in the city. General Geronimo Enrriquez, +lieutenant of the master-of-camp, and general in the army, having +been appointed on New Year's day alcalde-in-ordinary, preferred to +fight in the campaign rather than to remain in Manila in the quiet +and repose of his house, although opportunity to do so was given him +by so honorable a title. General Don Juan Claudio de Verastegui, who +fulfilled the obligations that he had inherited by birth and acquired +by military service. Admiral Don Francisco Ezquerra, who, sometimes +accompanying his brother, General Ezquerra, and sometimes following +the army, everywhere gave proof of his valor. Captain Don Rodrigo +de Guillestegui, his deeds making him appear like a veteran soldier, +although he was so young. All the encomenderos and citizens of Manila +also played the part of veterans, either guarding the city by day and +by night, or serving in the camp, being present in various notable +encounters, wherein the cavalry distinguished themselves. The company +of Captain Juan Fiallo, who with his men was the terror of the enemy; +Captain Juan de Montoya, and Alferez Alfonso Gomez. The ranchmen and +mulattoes, as being accustomed to the management of horses and skilful +in hurling javelins, caused the greatest losses to the enemy on all +occasions. The Spanish infantry, with their captains Don Manuel de +Rivera and N. [sic] de Ugalde (who are worthy of the highest praise), +always fulfilled their duties with good results. The Pampango infantry +was not without glory--the archers and shield-bearers from Pampanga, +whose leader besides their captains was father Fray Juan de Sosa, prior +of the convent of Betis, always as thorough a religious as he was, +on occasion, valiant and courageous; they never returned to our camp +without leaving tokens of their presence in that of the enemy. The +Zambal archers, who went under the orders of Fray Antonio de las +Misas--a Recollect religious, and a person who was in all respects +such as the emergency required--always endeavored to win a reputation; +and if they were previously known by report, they were now by their +deeds. The companies of Cagayans and Terrenatans, as war was not a new +thing to them since they were born and trained in it, did not hesitate +to risk their lives, at the cost of a great number of enemies whom +they left dead behind them. The Tagal Indians of all this province +accompanied their valor with their loyalty, which was so great that, +although their losses had been so considerable in villages, houses, and +possessions, forgetful of all these, and remembering only the treason +plotted, the sacrilege committed, and the design of the Sangleys to +make themselves masters of the country, [81] these Indians took up +arms against them most of the villages serving in their companies, +and by so honorable an act giving proof of their fidelity toward God, +and of their affection for the Spaniards, tokens also of their loyalty, +subjection, and obedience to the king our lord and his officials. + + + + +The activities in Manila during the time of the war, not only in +defense of the city, but in prayers + +In proportion to the anxiety which the war occasioned was the +solicitude that was felt in the city for its protection; no citizen +shunned the performance of the duty that was allotted to him, and +all were [in turn] continually serving on the walls. The direction +of the fort [82] was in charge of the commander and castellan, +Don Fernando de Ayala; the cavalier [i.e., tower] of San Gabriel +was in the keeping of General Don Juan de Ezquerra; and the gate +of the Parian, in that of Sargento-mayor Don Pedro Jara, until he +had to take his station and plant artillery against the enemy at +Sanpaloc. At the new gate, Captain Don Gregorio Mujica commanded; +at that of Dilao, Sargento-mayor Palomino--and afterward Captain Mena +of the cavalier, whom they call De Carranza; in charge of San Pedro, +Captain Lorenzo Lopez. Admiral Luis Alonso de Roa attended to the +foundry [for artillery]; and Captain Aumada, to emergencies [del +inmediato]. Alferez Orgaz was in charge of the gate of Santa Lucia; +and Alferez Bernave Martinez and Sargento-mayor Don Marcos Zapata +of that of Santo Domingo. But, as the Spaniards were few in number, +it was necessary that they should be aided by the ecclesiastics +and the students. The clerics were placed in charge of a cavalier; +the students or collegians of Santo Tomas were under the orders of +the fathers of St. Dominic; those of the other, San Jose, under the +[fathers of the] Society of Jesus. They wore the clerical garb all the +time while the war lasted, with that of the military. The religious +hastened to take arms and defend the walls on the day of the attack; +and, every night when there was cause to suspect another, they were +found at the posts assigned them. + +The city was provided with a new moat, which continuing with the +old one by the side of the foundry, extended almost to the sea--a +celebrated work which was completed in a very short time, all due to +the assiduity and personal attention of the master-of-camp of the +artillery. Its commander, General Don Juan Zapata de Molina, gave +much attention to this work; it was greatly aided, and new inventions +and devices for [the use of] fire were furnished, by the solicitude +and experience of Captain Geronimo de Fuentes [Cortes]. There was +no one who did not, on occasion, render all kinds of service. A +company of free negroes [83] was formed, who were very useful within +the city, being distributed through the cavaliers for the effective +management of the artillery. Duties were assigned to the slaves, but +with discreet caution, on account of rumors which had been current +(although without foundation) that they were making great plans +when they saw the Sangleys in revolt; this was done partly [to give +them] occupation, and to deprive them of any notions of undertaking +another insurrection to the injury of the colony. But as its citizens +recognized that its main defense must come from the Supreme Power, +they did not neglect to raise their hands toward heaven, everywhere +offering continual petitions to our Lord for the fortunate result +of the war, and for the repose and pacification of these islands. In +the cathedral was begun a novenary [i.e., nine days' prayer] to the +glorious St. Joseph, all the [religious] communities repairing thither, +each on its own day, to recite solemn mass to him. The fathers of +St. Dominic, at the request of the city, celebrated another mass to +our Lady of the Rosary, all the religious orders also going thither +to say mass before her image. On the last day, [the image of] the +glorious patriarch St. Francis, who so loved this city, was carried in +procession to the cathedral, with supplication for favors through his +agency--which have been received heretofore, as is acknowledged, in the +first insurrection; and finally a procession was made in honor of the +immaculate conception of the Virgin, and other prayers were offered. + +[The following additional points regarding the Chinese insurrection are +taken from a pamphlet entitled Relacion verdadera del levantamiento +de los Sangleyes (i.e., True relation of the Sangley insurrection), +which was printed in Madrid, by Catalina de Barrio y Angulo, in +1642 (our transcript of the same having been made from the original +existing in Biblioteca y Museo de Ultramar, Madrid): "Calamba is +twelve leguas from Manila. The Chinese corresponded with a Chinese +pirate named Yquan Sanglus; it was arranged that he should come to +aid them on Christmas Eve, 1639 (the day set for the treason), and +to capture the galleons from New Spain. There were 35,000 licensed +Sangleys in Manila and its vicinity, besides 10,000 more in remote +provinces. In Manila at this time there were thirty foot-soldiers, +thirty horsemen, fifty Japanese, and seventy Siyaos. The value of the +goods destroyed in the Parian was 5,000,000 pesos; and the houses +(built of molave wood), with the church and the stone houses, all +together were worth 2,000,000. Twenty champans brought to Mariveles +the Sangleys from neighboring provinces, to join the Manila insurgents; +but a Spanish and Pampango force went out against than, who sank eleven +of the champans and killed six hundred and fifty men. Among the troops +levied by the governor were a company of Japanese, and two of Sangley +mestizos. Chinese prisoners confessed that their general had offered, +to each Sangley who should bring in a Spanish head, a large reward, +including a Spanish woman to be his wife. A body of religious from all +the orders, aided by some Indians and ten soldiers, undertook to defend +the passage across the river, and killed many of the enemy. On February +24, 1640, the starving Sangleys surrendered, to the number of 7,793."] + + + + + + + +ECCLESIASTICAL AND AUGUSTINIAN AFFAIRS, 1630-40 + + +[In VOLS. XXIII and XXIV of this series was presented the history of +the Augustinian order to the year 1630, as written by Fray Juan de +Medina. Continuing that history to 1640, we give (mainly in synopsis) +the most important matter on this subject in the Conquistas of Fray +Casimiro Diaz (Valladolid, 1890), book ii, pp. 267-444. As usual, the +parts synopsized or merely referred to are printed within brackets; +these will be readily distinguished from words or phrases supplied +in translation, which are printed in the same manner.] + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +After the death of the lord archbishop Don Fray Miguel Garcia Serrano, +the ecclesiastical cabildo of Manila attempted to interfere in +the government of the vacant see--alleging for this purpose that +the brief of Paul V, and the royal decree, had been obtained by +underhand means and misrepresentations. The bishop of Cagayan, Don Fray +Hernando Guerrero, also brought forward his claim to the vacant post; +accordingly, both parties presented the arguments in behalf of their +respective claims. The decision thereon was deferred for some time, +the cabildo always resisting Don Fray Hernando Guerrero's efforts to +take possession of the see, and denying not only the claim which he +preferred, but also the right which the bishop of Cebu, Don Fray Pedro +de Arce, had--which he, moreover, had yielded to Senor Guerrero. This +contest lasted two years in the royal Audiencia; then, the auditors +having declared that the government of the archbishopric belonged to +Don Fray Pedro de Arce, the cabildo appealed to the Council of the +Indias. Nevertheless, the royal Audiencia and the governor sent for the +bishop of Cebu, who reached Manila on the twenty-second of January, +1630. The cabildo having been commanded, by a royal decree, to hold +a session, Don Fray Pedro de Arce presented himself at that meeting, +and made the following proposition: "Sirs, it is well understood, as +you will satisfy yourselves, that my coming to this city, and just +now to this cabildo, is quite contrary to my own inclinations; for +I desire and love a quiet life, and I hold very dear the sheep of my +bishopric. The example [of this that I have given] is very evident; +for Fray Hernando Guerrero having gone to my diocese so that I might +confer upon him the orders for which he had been consecrated, I also +transferred to him the right to the government of this archbishopric +that I hold in virtue of a brief from his Holiness Paul V, issued +by him on January 7, 1612. But the claim of the said bishop of Nueva +Segovia was not allowed, for reasons which you know. After that, Don +Juan Nino de Tavora, governor and captain-general of these islands, +wrote to me so urgently in the name of the gentlemen of the royal +Audiencia, sending me his Majesty's royal decree, and laying a burden +upon my conscience if I did not accept this duty, that I could not +refuse it; accordingly, I come to this city, certainly against my own +wishes, and to the injury of my health in my advanced years. But, sirs, +it has seemed to me expedient to come, as a measure of peace and love, +to expostulate with you, and ask that you carefully consider all these +motives and reasons. I ask that, without delay or opposition, you at +once admit me to the government of this archbishopric, to which his +Holiness and his Majesty call me, considering that my earnest desire +and intention is to strive to labor in the service of both Majesties, +and to promote, for yourselves and all this commonwealth, the welfare +and harmony which should prevail, and which are right." Thus spoke +Don Fray Pedro de Arce; and answer was made to him by the dean, +Don Miguel Garcetas, in behalf of the cabildo. He said that they all +fully appreciated the bishop's kindness, and that all were entirely +satisfied of his good intentions in this matter, and of his great +virtue, prudence, and learning; but that, in order that they might +proceed in this matter with all harmony, certainty, and deliberation, +it was necessary that all the members of the cabildo should assemble +(for some were not present at this meeting). The dean added that in all +their acts they would follow the rulings of the sacred canons and the +constitutions of the cathedral church, and that his Lordship might be +certain that all of them confessed themselves to be his affectionate +children, and desired to render him service; and that they entreated +him to show them the bulls and other documents that he possessed, +in order that all these might be duly fulfilled. To this the bishop +replied that the bulls were already before the cabildo, and by virtue +of them he had been admitted to the government of the archbishopric +by the death of Don Diego Vazquez Mercado; accordingly, they must +settle the matter without delay because, if they did this amicably, +they would find in him a father and protector; but if not, he would +enforce his claims by the severe measures which he could by law employ. + +The cabildo met on the twenty-ninth of January, and decided that, +after having consulted learned persons, they were of opinion that the +cabildo ought not to surrender the government; but that, on account of +the many and serious difficulties [that might arise from this], they +would yield under protest. Accordingly, they received Don Fray Pedro de +Arce on the same day as ruler of the vacant see, although the cabildo +took much umbrage at it; and from this affair originated continual +strife and dissensions. At the outset, they denied to Don Fray Pedro +the seat in the choir, the cabildo asserting that the bishop was not +competent to possess it because he was not a proprietary bishop; and +that, although he had been consecrated, it was in another diocese, and +one suffragan to that of Manila. The prudent bishop felt this slight +keenly, for they had given him this seat when he first administered +the vacant see; but finally they gave him the seat (to which he was +legally entitled), as they had done before. Don Fray Pedro de Arce +ruled with the prudence and uprightness which in him were so eminent, +which together with his virtue and piety, made him a most accomplished +prelate, and truly a father to all. In the course of his government +he made enactments very important for the conduct of the church; +in especial, he imposed the cuadrante [84] for the choir in the +cathedral of Manila with great exactness--aiding the prebends with +great readiness in their choir, the subsidy that they receive being +still so small that some of them have hardly enough for their support. + +[The rest of this chapter is mainly occupied with secular occurrences, +which we omit here because they have already been fully related in +other documents for that time--the fruitless expedition against +Jolo under Lorenzo de Olaso, shipbuilding in Cambodia attempted, +the despatch of an envoy to India to secure Portuguese cooperation +against the Dutch, the coming of the royal visitor Don Francisco de +Rojas, and the death of the governor Nino de Tavora--and the relation +of various miraculous cures and deliverances performed through the +Santo Nino (or image of Christ) in the church of Cebu. The following +paragraph states the proceedings at the meeting of the Augustinian +provincial chapter of 1632:] + +The year 1632 having arrived, the provincial chapter was convened +in the convent at Manila, on the first day of May; the president at +this session was father Fray Juan de Tapia, and the election [for +provincial] resulted, with the general consent of the entire province, +in the choice of father Fray Geronimo de Medrano--a very courteous and +discreet religious, who governed this province well. As definitors +were chosen the fathers Fray Juan de Montemayor, Fray Francisco de +Mercado, Fray Luis Ronquillo, and Fray Juan Ramirez; and as visitors, +the fathers Fray Alonso Carbajal and Fray Antonio de Porras. They made +regulations very useful for the proper government of the province; +and as its procurator for Espana was appointed father Fray Diego de +Ordas, at that time prior of the convent of Santo Nino at Cebu. He +made the journey that year, and, having performed it very successfully, +returned [to the islands] in the year 1635. + + + + +CHAPTERS VII-XIV + +[These chapters are occupied with accounts of the persecutions in +Japan, and the biographies of Augustinian priests who were martyred +therein.] + + + + +CHAPTERS XV-XXXIV + +[These chapters relate the coming of Corcuera as governor, +his controversies with the bishop, and the exile of the latter; +biographical accounts of various noted Augustinian missionaries, +some of whom were martyrs in Japan; and the final incidents of the +persecution in that country, so far as Diaz could learn of them, up to +about 1715. Nearly all of this matter is either a repetition of what +we have already presented in previous volumes, or irrelevant to our +purpose; but we select occasional passages which properly belong to +the history of the islands, especially its ecclesiastical aspects. In +our VOL. XXV may be found extracts from Diaz's work regarding the +contest between Corcuera and Guerrero (chapters xv-xviii). Chapter +xix is devoted to the opinion of "a learned auditor of Manila" on the +banishment of the archbishop; the editor of Diaz, Father Tirso Lopez, +prints this opinion, in order to reproduce all of Diaz's history, +which is his only reason for not suppressing "this conceited, most +tedious, and ill-digested document." Chapters xx and xxi are devoted +to the biographies of two Augustinian missionaries, Fray Alonso de +Mentrida and Fray Juan de Medina respectively. The former excelled +as a linguist.] + +[Pp. 353-355:] He composed a curious and ingenious grammar [arte], by +which the main difficulty in [learning] those languages was surmounted +in a short time. He also composed a copious vocabulary of the languages +of the two islands, Panay and Cebu, which are quite distinct. In the +mountain region of Ogton a very harsh language is spoken, which they +call Halaya; and along the coast another, more polished and elegant, +which is called Hileygueina. This work [i.e., the vocabulary] cost him +much labor, and is very useful to the ministers. He left it complete, +and after his death it was published by father Fray Martin Claver. [85] +He [Fray Alonso] composed a brief catechism, accurately written, +in the Bisayan language, which is very useful for instructing those +natives in the mysteries of our holy faith; this was printed twice, +in order that there might be an abundant supply of a work so important +for the welfare of souls. He also published the ritual by which the +holy sacraments are usually administered in these islands; and this +work is deserving of esteem, since one finds therein a compilation of +what is strictly necessary for the more safe administration [of the +sacraments]. It is so highly regarded by the other religious orders +that, although two large editions of the work have been printed, +it is now necessary to issue a third, since all are trying to obtain +this book. [86] + +Father Fray Alonso de Mentrida spent many years in the provinces of +Ogton and Panay, [87] where he gathered much fruit in the conversion +of those souls, especially in the district of Ogton--which in those +times was, in the greater part of its mountain region, shrouded +in the darkness of error. There the devil was well entrenched in +those rugged mountains, having solidly established his kingdom and +worship among those simple natives--who, influenced more by fear +than by any other consideration, prostrated themselves before that +demon, and gave him their worship and adoration. His crafty designs +were successful among them through the agency of many priests and +priestesses (in the Bisayan idiom called babaylanes), who, being +especially assisted by that infernal spirit, concoct certain frauds +and delusions, with which they deceive the simple Bisayans. These +priests, moreover, secure much advantage from this mode of life, +since by it they make their living, and are feared and looked up to; +for most of them have a compact with the devil, by means of which +they wreak such evil as they can on those persons on whom they try +to be revenged, or whom they wish to injure because some one else +has done them harm. Against this infernal horde father Fray Alonso +de Mentrida waged continual battle, roaming through those mountains +on foot, and accompanied only by one servant, a very good Christian, +who aided him much in his work. This man died at a great age (more +than one hundred and ten years); he lived in the village of Guimbal, +of which he was a native, and his name was Vilango. They journeyed +so destitute of human aid that they carried in their pouches only +some roots, cooked, which in that country are very common, called +camotes, with a little rice, eaten cold and half-cooked. This sort of +abstinence was so continual in Father Mentrida that he ate nothing +else than the vegetables and pottages of the country, with a little +fish when he wished to appease his more pressing hunger; and it is not +known that he ate meat until, in his old age and in several attacks +of illness that he suffered, the duty of obedience compelled him to +moderate so austere a diet. In such a mode of life this apostolic +man wandered through those mountains, preaching to the infidels the +word of God, and persuading them to leave their straggling hamlets +[rancherias] and settle in some small villages, that he might more +advantageously call them together and instruct them, separating them +from their errors and blindness. With great benefit to their souls +the simple mountaineers of Ogton received the gospel preaching, +as they all are gentle and well-inclined people; the father's only +opponents were those ministers of Satan and children of perdition, +the babaylanes, who with their lies sowed their diabolical tares +upon the grain of heaven, and easily smothered the seed that took +root in piously-inclined hearts. Those priests artfully suggested +to the natives the anger which their divatas (thus they name the +spirits to whom they give adoration) felt against them, and on +their own part uttered threats against them, menacing either their +lives or their poor property--which is a scanty grain-field of rice; +and by these shameless acts they terrorized the people, and caused +some of them to lose their solicitude for attending church. Father +Fray Alonso de Mentrida spared neither hardship nor effort to bring +back to the fold of the Church those whom these malicious ministers +had, through their crafty methods, caused to backslide; and he held +with those priests extraordinary discussions, from which, in place +of gaining good results, he obtained only their plots. With these +they tried, on several occasions, to deprive him of life by their +arts and witchcraft; but the Lord, who watched over His servant, +did not permit them to succeed in their damnable attempts, and, +for the greater humiliation of the common enemy [i.e., the devil], +held back the father from the greatest dangers. + +During the time when this apostolic minister was preaching in the +mountains of Ogton, there were visible apparitions of the devil, +standing upon a rock and teaching superstitions and giving laws +to a great multitude of Indians, who, deceived by him, followed +him. Moreover, in those mountains are many demons, who appear to the +natives in horrible forms--as hideous savages, covered with bristles, +having very long claws, with terrifying eyes and features, who attack +and maltreat those whom they encounter. These being are called by +the Indians Banuanhon, who are equivalent to the satyrs and fauns of +ancient times. Even at this day these hideous monsters are wont to +appear to the Indians, some of whom remain in a demented condition for +months from the mere sight of them; others go away with these demons, +and are lost for a long time, and then will return in a terrified +and fainting condition, few of them failing to die soon afterward. I +would have much to tell and relate if I should stop to mention what +has occurred with such monsters, who have been seen not only in the +mountains of Ogton and Panay, but very frequently in the province +of Taal. They are called in the Tagal language Tigbalang; and many +persons who have seen them have described to me, in the same terms, +the aspect of the monster. They say that he has a face like a cat's, +with a head that is flattened above, not round, with thick beard, and +covered with long hair; his legs are so long that, when he squats on +his buttocks, his knees stand a vara above his head; and he is so swift +in running that there is no quadruped that can be compared with him. + +[Diaz proceeds to relate several incidents connected with these +demons, and the difficulties encountered by Mentrida, caused by the +hostility of the native priests--who much resembled the "medicine-men" +of the North American Indians; and adds (p. 356): "In these holy +occupations he passed much time in that mountain wilderness, as his +companion Vilango has told me; and gradually those hearts, hard as +diamonds, were softened, and they were converted to our holy faith. He +proceeded to gather those people into villages, founding those of +Agra (with the advocacy of St. Nicholas), Baong, Santiago, Limao, +San Pedro, Taytay, and Catingpan--which remain to this very day, +and in my time preserve the memory of this apostolic man, to whom, +as they recognize, they owe the knowledge of the truth." Mentrida +remained in the missions until 1618, when he was summoned to Manila, +to become prior of the Augustinian convent there; and in 1623, he was +elected provincial. The rest of his life he was afflicted by age and +broken health; and he died at Manila, March 22, 1637.] + +[Diaz sketches the life and labors of Juan de Medina (whose history +of his order in Filipinas we publish in VOLS. XXIII and XXIV of this +series), giving the following summary of his achievements: "It is +not easy to relate in full the great labors of this religious in the +conversion of the Indians in the province of Ogton, when they all, +on account of the coming of the Dutch the first time to the point +of Iloilo, took refuge in the mountains, forsaking their villages, +so that it was difficult for several years to bring them back to a +sedentary life. During that time, this religious traveled, carrying +little more than his staff, through all the mountains of Ogton, +preaching to the people that they might be converted, and maintaining +a continual battle with the devil--who had, through the agency of his +ministers the babaylanes, persuaded the people that the Spaniards could +not deliver them from the Dutch. During that time he suffered many +dangers through the plots of those infernal ministers, who at various +times tried to take his life--divine Providence delivering him from +them all, for the greater gain of those Christian communities. Amid +those dangers did this religious convert most of the peoples in +Ogton, Xaro, Baong, and Pasig. In all places where this minister +went, he left an especial reputation for his virtue and apostolic +teaching. He visited some nine times the entire province of Bisayas, +and usually held the office of vicar-provincial--obedience obliging +him to accept it, on account of the great importance of his direction +for the greater glory of the order." After twenty years spent in these +labors, he obtained permission (1631) to go to Spain, and miraculously +escaped from the wreck of his ship in the very port of Cavite. He then +returned to the Visayan missions, but again set out for Spain in 1635; +while crossing the Pacific, he was carried away by disease. Chapters +xxii-xxv are devoted to the persecutions and martyrdoms of Christians +in Japan; chapter xxvi treats mainly of the controversy within the +Augustinian order regarding the "alternation" of offices between the +friars sent from Spain and those who had taken the habit in the Indias +(already related in our VOL. XXVIII). The following paragraphs are +of interest here.] + +[Pp. 386-388:] After the father provincial Fray Juan Ramirez (who +was one of the best superiors of that time) had governed this +province very successfully and judiciously, the time arrived for +the provincial chapter; it was held at the convent of San Pablo in +Manila, on the twenty-fourth of the month of April, 1638. Father Fray +Jeronimo Cornuetano, the general of the entire order, presided over +the meeting; and it resulted in the election, by unanimous consent, +of father Fray Martin Errasti, a religious who was much endeared to +all the rest by his many fine qualities. The definitors elected were +fathers Fray Juan de Trexo, Fray Jeronimo Venasque, Fray Francisco +de Madrid, and Fray Francisco de Villalon; and the visitors, father +Fray Juan de Boan and Fray Jeronimo de Paredes--all being religious +of recognized abilities, and men to whose care the interests of +this province could be confided. It was decided to send to Espana a +procurator to conduct a party of religious to this province, although +the choice of one was not effected until the following year; this fell +upon father Fray Pedro de Quesada, prior of the convent of Bulacan, +who had recently arrived, driven back by stress of weather, from [a +voyage to] the kingdom of Japon--whither he went with some religious +of St. Dominic; but stormy head-winds obliged them to return to Manila, +divine Providence keeping them in reserve for another ministry. + +The Moro pirates of Mindanao and Jolo did not cease to infest the +Pintados Islands every year with their armed fleets--capturing +the natives, burning the villages, plundering the churches of the +consecrated vessels, and then destroying those temples by fire. So +far had gone the boldness of Corralat--who came to those islands, +subjected to his anger, without the Spaniards displaying any purpose +to defend them, or going out to hinder those injuries--that he +soon attributed this negligence to cowardice, and to the fear of +him which the Spaniards felt. This so increased his boldness that +his little fleets were daring enough to approach even the bay of +Manila. They experienced no resistance, save only in the province of +Caraga--[whose natives are] a warlike people--and this was due to +the valor of its alcalde-mayor, Captain Don Francisco de Atienza y +Banes, a native of Toledo; and to the great courage of a discalced +Augustinian religious named Fray Agustin de San Pedro, who was very +celebrated in those times, and feared by the pirates, [who was known] +by the name of "Father Captain" [Padre Capitan]. [88] The exploits +of this religious in defending the villages where he was a minister +of religious instruction, and in going out to find the enemy in their +own country, would be material for many chapters of history. He was a +religious of great virtue, and of zeal for the welfare of souls; and, +besides this, God had given him extraordinary courage, and a genius +worthy of Scipio and Hannibal. Accordingly, seeing that those who ought +to conduct military operations remained with folded hands, without +going out to the defense of those harassed peoples, he determined +to do so himself. On one occasion he went out from Butuan, where +he was prior, with some Spanish soldiers, and men whom he gathered +in Caraga; and with them he faced and put to flight an armed fleet +of Corralat. When Don Francisco de Atienza saw what aid he had in +the valor and experience of father Fray Agustin, the two laid their +plans to perform an exploit that should do them credit; and, manning +some caracoas with the best soldiers from the presidio of Tanda, both +Spaniards and Caragas, and providing two boats which could be taken +to pieces and carried overland in sections, and afterward be again +put together and framed, Don Francisco, accompanied by father Fray +Agustin, took the route to the lake of Malanao, [89] which was under +the jurisdiction of Corralat. This lake is in the island of Mindanao, +opposite the island of Bohol; from north to south it is eight leguas +long, and it is four leguas wide. Its shores are thickly settled by +several tribes, some Mahometan and others heathen (although all of +them are vassals of Corralat); but they are people who are very poor +in all except foodstuffs, of which they have a great abundance. Don +Francisco de Atienza and father Fray Agustin de San Pedro arrived at +this lake; and, as the water at its entrance was very low and there +were many miry places, they took the four [sic] vessels to pieces and +placed them on the lake, where they again [put them together and] +manned them. By this means the Spaniards went through that region, +carrying on hostilities among those tribes, and leaving them subjected +to the crown of Espana--although this submission did not last long, for +Corralat again reduced them, because the Spaniards had not left behind +a fortified post. This conquest was not one of much profit; but it +was enough to leave the Moros warned for some time by this punishment. + +[Chapters xxvii and xxviii are occupied with the expedition of +Corcuera against Jolo, already described in our VOL. XXVIII. Chapters +xxix-xxxiv are devoted almost entirely to the Chinese insurrection +in Manila and its environs in 1639, and to an historical account of +former disturbances caused by them in the islands, from the time of +the pirate Limahon down. A brief paragraph mentions the death of +the provincial of the Augustinians, and his temporary successor: +"In the middle of the year 1639 occurred the death of the father +provincial Fray Martin de Herrasti, a loss which was keenly felt +by all the province on account of his many endowments and lovable +qualities. He was a native of Guipuzcoa, and a son of the convent at +Burgos. Having come to this province in the year 1617, he was assigned, +by his obedience, to the ministry in Pampanga, where he remained, an +excellent missionary, for a period of twenty years--until the province, +satisfied as to his virtue and discretion, chose to employ so worthy +a minister to govern it, and elected him provincial, although it +enjoyed but little of the direction of so excellent a superior. The +government of the province was assumed by father Fray Juan Ramirez, +as the most recent past provincial; and thus was somewhat lessened +the general grief caused by the loss of the deceased provincial."] + + + + + + + +RELATION OF THE FILIPINAS ISLANDS + +By a religious who lived there for eighteen years [90] + + +The islands called Filipinas, because of having been conquered during +the reign of Felipe II, were discovered in the year 1521, by Hernando +Magallanes, a famous Portuguese, who gave his name to the strait. That +great pilot, after having forever perpetuated his name by a navigation +so new and so difficult, landed on one of the Filipinas Islands--a +very small one, named Matan--where he was treacherously killed by +the Indians. Ruy Lopez de Villalobos sighted the islands again after +him in the year 1539. [91] Finally they were pacified in the year +1571 by the adelantado Miguel Lopez de Legaspi. It is a cause for +surprise that the Portuguese, who had discovered the Malucas, China, +and Japon, some years before, and had made their homes there, did +not know anything about those islands until long afterward, although +they are, as it were, the very center and middle part of their other +discoveries. They knew well the island of Borneo, which is the last of +those islands toward the south, but they had never stopped there while +en route to the Malucas--urged, perhaps, by their too great greed for +the spices and drugs which are produced so abundantly in those islands. + +The geographies say that there are eleven thousand islands in that +great archipelago of which the Filipinas are a part, and that they are +adjacent to Asia as are the Canaries and the Terceras to Africa. They +cross into the torrid zone and extend along the coasts of China and +India. South of them lie the Malucas, and on their northern coast, +Japon. More than forty of them are subject to the king of Espana, +the largest and most important being Manila and Mindanao. Manila is +the capital of all the others, the residence of the governor and the +archbishop, and the seat of the royal Audiencia. Those two islands are +each six hundred miles in circuit; they are full of mountains, have +rivers and dense forests, and lie in thirteen and one-half degrees +north latitude. The other islands are not so large, some being one +hundred miles in circuit, some fifty, and some even less. Almost all +of them are inhabited by Indians, and those which are not are used by +the Indians for their crops, and for the chase of deer and wild boars, +and for the gathering of wax, with which the islands most abound. + +The islands not yet under the dominion of the king of Espana have +their own kings, who are Mahometans. The island of Borneo, three +times greater than the whole of Italia, is the largest of all the +islands. Those subject to the king of Espana are Manila, Zebu, Oton, +Mindanao, Bohol, Leite, Samar, Mindoro, Marinduque, the island of +Negros, the island of Fuegos, Calamianes, Masbat, Jolo, Taquima, +Capul, La Paragua, the island of Tablas, Verde Island, Burias, +Tiago, Maripipe, Panama, Panaon, Sibuian, Luban, Bantajan, Panglao, +Siquior, Catanduan, Imaras, Tagapolo, Banton, Romblon, Similara, +Cuio, Cagaianes, Marivelez, Poro, Babuianes, the island of Cabras +(which is distant from the others), and other smaller ones. + +In the islands subject to the king of Espana, every married man pays +ten reals of tribute, and he who is unmarried five. Nearly all of them +have received the gospel, and hence there are few heathen. However, +in the islands of Mindanao, Taquima, and Jolo, conquered but recently, +most of the people are Moros or heathen; but it is hoped that the +zeal of the missionaries will convert them very soon to Jesus Christ. + +Before the conquest of those islands by the Spaniards, the natives of +the country were subject to the chiefs among them, who were recognized +as nobles, and all the others obeyed them. Those chiefs possessed a +great amount of gold, and slaves in proportion to their nobility. I +knew two chiefs, one in Bohol, and the other at Dapitan, a village +of Mindanao, who had more than one hundred slaves apiece. They are +not foreign slaves, as those of Angola who are in Europa, but of the +same nation. It was a lamentable thing to see with what violence and +for how little a thing, these chiefs made slaves. For, however small a +sum one owed to another, the interest, for lack of payment, amounted to +so great a sum that it was impossible to pay it; and consequently, the +person of the debtor being pledged for the debt, he became the slave of +his creditor, together with all his posterity. They also made slaves, +with unusual tyranny and cruelty, for crimes of slight importance, +such as not keeping silent at the graves of the dead, and for passing +in front of the chief's wife when she was in her bath. Those captured +in war were also all made slaves. Now with baptism, all those acts +of violence and tyranny have been suppressed--although there still +remains one very peculiar custom among them, which does not follow +that general rule, namely, Partus sequitur ventrem; [92] for there are +some who are wholly slaves, and others who are only half slaves. The +former are those born of a slave father and mother; the others who +are born of a slave father and a free mother, or vice versa. In some +villages it is the custom that, if the father is slave and the mother +free, one of the children is free and the other slave. The privilege +of those half slaves is that if they pay a certain sum of money to +their master, they may oblige him to grant them their liberty--an +advantage that is not possessed by those who are wholly slaves. + +All the religion of those Indians is founded on tradition, and on a +custom introduced by the devil himself, who formerly spoke to them +by the mouth of their idols and of their priests. That tradition is +preserved by the songs that they learn by heart in their childhood, +by hearing them sung in their sailing, in their work, in their +amusements, and in their festivals, and, better yet, when they bewail +their dead. In those barbarous songs, they recount the fabulous +genealogies and deeds of their gods, of whom they have one who is +chief and head of all the others. The Tagals call that god Bathala mei +Capal, which signifies "God the Creator." The Bisayans call him Laon, +which signifies "Time." They are not far from our belief on the point +of the creation of the world. They believe in a first man, the flood, +and paradise, and the punishments of the future life. + +They say that the first man and the first woman came out of a reed +stalk which burst in Sumatra, and that there were some quarrels between +them at their marriage. They believed that when the soul left the body, +it went to an island, where the trees, birds, waters, and all other +things were black; that it passed thence to another island, where all +things were of different colors; and finally that it arrived at one, +where everything was white. They recognized invisible spirits, another +life, and devils hostile to men, of whom they had great fear. Their +chief idolatry was in adoring and regarding as gods those of their +ancestors who were most remarkable for their courage, or for their +intelligence. Such they called humalagar, or, as is said in Latin, +manes. Each one, as far as possible, ascribed divinity to his father +at death. The old men even died with that conceit, and that is why +they chose a remarkable place--as did one in the island of Leite, who +had himself placed on the seashore, so that those who went sailing +should recognize him as a god, and commend themselves to him. They +also worshiped animals and birds. They regarded the rainbow as a +sort of divinity. The Tagals worshiped a totally blue bird, of the +size of a thrush, which they called bathala, which was a name of +the divinity. They worshiped the raven, which they called meilupa, +meaning "the master of the earth." They had a great veneration for +the crocodile. [When] they saw it in the water, they called it nono, +or "grandfather." They offered to it prayers regularly, with great +devotion, and offerings of what they carried in their boats, in +order that it might not harm them. There was no old tree of which +they did not make a god, and it was a sacrilege to cut it. I have +seen a very large one called nonog, [93] in the island of Samar, +which a religious ordered to be felled, in order to destroy all those +superstitions. He was unable to find an Indian who would undertake +it for him; and it was necessary for some Spaniards to go to fell +it. They also worshiped the stones, rocks, reefs, and promontories +of land which jut into the sea; and made offerings to these of rice, +fish, and other like things, or fired their arrows at them in passing. + +Between La Caldera and the river in the island of Mindanao, a great +point of land runs into the sea, which makes the coast dangerous and +very high. The sea beats violently against that cape, which is very +difficult to double. The Indians in passing offered it their arrows as +a sacrifice, praying it to allow them to pass. They shot them with so +great force that they made them enter the rock, and hence it is called +the Punta de Flechas. One day the Spaniards burned a number of those +arrows to show their hatred of so vain a superstition; and in less than +one year more than four thousand were found there. When Don Sebastian +Hurtado de Corcuera conquered the island of Mindanao three years ago, +[94] he ordered that that point be called no more Punta de Flechas, +but San Sebastian. They had innumerable other superstitions. If they +saw a snake or a lizard, or if they heard a bird that they called +corocoro [95] sneeze or sing, they took it as a bad sign, and did +not go farther. They had no remarkable temples, and no festivals of +days of public sacrifices; but each one made his offerings to the +humalagar or divata (which was the name of their god) in private, +according to their purpose or need. Although they had no temples, +they had men and women who acted as priests, who were called catolonan +by some and babailan by others. Those priests were most inclined to +allow themselves to be deceived by the devil, and to deceive the +people afterward by a thousand tricks and inventions--chiefly at +the time of their sicknesses, when they are depressed, lose courage, +and crave a prompt remedy; and give all their possessions to him who +promises it to them. + +There are some priests who have special communication with the +devil. He speaks to them through the mouths of their little idols, +and makes them believe that these are the voices of their ancestors, +whom they worship. Sometimes the devil passes into the bodies of their +sacrificers, and, during the short time of the sacrifice, he makes +them say and do things that fill the bystanders with fear. They take +that order of sacrificers from among their friends or their relatives, +who wish to learn the mystery of it from them. Their blindness causes +them to esteem that rank greatly, for besides the reputation and +respect that that employment brings them, they also receive large +offerings. All who have been present at the sacrifice make them gifts, +one cotton, one gold, and one a fowl. The sacrifice takes place in +their houses. The victim is now a hog, now a fowl, now some fish or +rice; and the sacrifice is differently named according to the various +victims. It is performed by the sacrificer stabbing the victim amid +certain ceremonies, which he performs to a cadence marked by a drum +or a bell. That is the time in which the devil takes possession of +them. He causes them to make innumerable contortions and grimaces, +after the end of which they tell what they believe they have seen +or heard. + +As for their persons, those people are well built, have handsome +features, and are light-complexioned. They are clad in a garment +that falls to the ankles, which is made of striped cotton of various +colors. When in mourning, they wear white; however, that mode of dress +is not so general. Those called Pintados, and those of the island of +Mindanao, wear short white, yellow, or red tunics, which hang to the +knees, bound in by a girdle one vara wide and two and one-half brazas +long; this is, as a general rule, white or red, and always falls +to the knees. They wear neither stockings nor shoes; and instead +of a hat they use a bit of cloth, which they wind twice or thrice +around the head. Their whole adornment consists in having very rich +and beautiful necklaces, earrings, and gold rings or bracelets. They +wear those bracelets above the ankle; some wear these of ivory, and +others of brass. They also have little round plates three fingers +in diameter, which they pass through a hole that they make in the +ear. In some of those islands, the men formerly marked all the body +with figures, whence comes the Spanish name "Pintados" ["pictured," +i.e., tattooed]. That operation was performed in the flower of +their age, and at the period when they had most strength to suffer +that torture. They had themselves adorned in that way after they had +performed some illustrious deed. The masters of that art first trace on +their bodies the design of the picture, which they next follow up with +pricks from very sharp points, and throw on the blood which comes out +a powder which never fades away. The whole of the body is not pricked +at once, but bit by bit; and formerly, in order that one might have +the right of making it for each part, it was necessary to perform an +illustrious deed, and to show new prowess. Those pictures are pretty, +and well proportioned to the portions of the body on which they are +made; and, although they are of an ashen color, they are nevertheless +agreeable to the sight. The children are not tattooed at all. The +women do not bear the marks of that adornment except on one hand and +on some part of the other. In regard to their teeth, they imitate +the men in everything. They file them from their earliest childhood; +some making them even in this way, others filing them into points, +thus giving them the appearance of a saw. They cover the teeth with +a black, glossy polish, or one that is flame-colored; and thus their +teeth become black, or as red as vermilion. In the upper row, they +make a little covering which they fill with gold, which shows off to +advantage on the black or red background of that polish. + +The women as well as the men are continually in the water, and they +also swim like fish. They need no bridge to get over rivers. They bathe +at all times of the day, as much for pleasure as for cleanliness. Women +who have but recently given birth cannot be prevented from bathing, +and bathe in the waters of the coldest springs. As soon as the child +has issued from its mother's womb, it is placed in the water; and +on taking it from the bath its head is rubbed with ajonjoli [i.e., +sesame] oil mixed with civet. They do that also on other occasions, +and to show politeness, especially the women and little boys. They +bathe also during their sicknesses, and have for that purpose springs +of hot water, especially at the shore of Laguna de Bay, which is in +the island of Manila. [96] + +There is no one language that is general for all the islands, +but each district has a special one. True, they have some relation +between one another, such as exists between the Lombard, Sicilian, +and Tuscan. There are six dialects in the island of Manila, and +two in the island of Oton; while there are some languages which +are spoken in several islands. The most general are the Tagal and +Bisayan. The latter is very rude, but the former is very polished, +and most remarkable. Thus a religious, who was well versed in those +islands, was in the habit of saying that the Tagal language had +the advantages of the four chief languages of the world: that it +was mysterious, like Hebrew; that it had the articles of the Greek, +both for appellatives and for proper names; that it had elegance and +abundance, like the Latin; and that it was not less suitable than +the Italian for compliments and business. [97] They have only three +vowels, but these serve as five. They have only a dozen consonants, +which they express differently by placing a little dot above or below, +as can be seen in the following figure. + + + Marginal note: "The consonants not marked with any point are + pronounced with 'a;' if they have a point above, they are + pronounced with 'e,' or 'i;' if the point is below, they + are pronounced with 'o' or 'u.'" + + +They have learned to write from us [98] by making their lines from +left to right, instead of their former way of writing from top to +bottom. Reeds or palm-leaves serve them as paper, and the point of +an iron style is used instead of a pen. They use their writing only +to letters from one to another, for they have no histories or books +of any learning. Our religious have printed books in the languages of +the islands, concerning the matters of our religion. In the Malucas, +they have a very pretty method of writing to their friends. They +collect flowers of various colors, and make a bouquet of them; and +he who receives the bouquet understands, on beholding the varieties +of flowers and their colors, as if they were so many different +characters, the thoughts of his friend. They have not sufficient +capacity to apply themselves to learning, and they content themselves +with being good carpenters, and with working gold and iron well. They +have been employed during these last few years in making silk and +cotton stockings; in writing and reading our characters; in singing +and dancing; and in playing the flute, the guitar, and the harp. The +strings used for those last instruments are made from twisted silk, +and produce as agreeable a sound as ours, although quite different in +quality. They formerly had an instrument called cutiape, which some +of them still use. It bears a close resemblance to a hurdy-gurdy, +and has four copper cords. They play it so cleverly, that they make +it express whatever they wish; and it is asserted as a truth that +they speak, and tell one another whatever they wish, by means of that +instrument, a special skill in those of that nation. + +Most of those islanders have only one wife, but it is not true that +there are not some places in the country where they have several, +especially in the island of Mindanao. It may be said that the husbands +buy their wives there, since they generally make some present to +their parents according to their rank: that of dato, for instance, +which signifies "a man of rank;" of tinaua, which signifies "free;" +or oripuen, which signifies "a slave." The women in the islands +of the Pintados are called binocot, or "woman who is in the room;" +for bocot signifies "a room," and the women go outside but rarely, +and even are carried then on the shoulders of their slaves. I have +seen one woman of Dapitan, a settlement of the island of Mindanao, so +delicate and so fine, that she always had herself carried to church +on the shoulders of her slaves whom she best liked. It is a mark of +politeness among those women always to keep the right hand in front +of the mouth when they talk to a man. [99] + +Those people live in houses thatched with straw, with the leaves of +trees, or with large reeds which, divided into two, serve them as a +tiling. There is but little furniture to be seen in their houses. But +rarely are chairs seen there, for they always sit on the ground, or +on carpets made from reeds. They have neither beds nor mattresses, as +their reed mats serve as both. They eat on the ground or on very small +low tables, but the tables are used only among the chiefs. Banana +leaves, which are one braza long and one-half braza wide, serve +them as napkins. Their employment consists of agriculture, the very +abundant fishing along their coasts and in their rivers, and hunting +wild boars and deer with dog and spear--an employment to which their +agility and their skill renders them very suitable. They also go to +gather honey and wax in the mountains or in the trees, where nature +has taught the bees to make both those substances. + +The arms of some are spears, of others arrows; the campilan, which is a +large cutlass; the kris, or poniard; the zompites or blow-guns, through +which they blow little poisoned arrows; and bacacaies, or little reeds +hardened by fire at the end. To defend their grain from animals and +from men who could harm it, they scatter caltrops, which the old men +call tribulos, [100] made so that one of the four points of which they +are composed is always up, and those who pass there get caught without +perceiving the traps. But now the Spaniards have taught them how to +use firearms, and they get along very well--especially a nation called +the Pampangos, many of whom are enrolled in the Spanish troops. These +men serve with great fidelity, and well second the courage of which +the Spaniards set them an example in their combats by sea and land. + +They are very fertile, and I have seen but few married people without +children. When these are born, they name them according to the +incidents that happen at the time of their birth. One will be called +Maglente, because of the thunder that sounded at the time of his birth; +for lente signifies a clap of thunder. Another will be named Gubaton, +because the foes appeared on the coast at that same time; for gubat +signifies enemy. They esteem nobility; and I have known a woman +called Vray--that is to say, "fine gold"--who had been given that +name because of the nobility of her lineage. In some of the islands +they were accustomed to put the head of a new-born child between two +boards, and thus pressed it so that it would not be round, but long; +and they also flattened the forehead, in their belief that it was a +mark of beauty to have it thus. [101] At the birth of a child to one +among them who is of the highest rank, they hold a festival of a week, +during which very joyful songs are sung by the women. + +They lose courage when they are sick. They do not use either bleeding +or other remedies, except certain medicinal herbs, of which there is +abundance in these islands. They use the cupping-glass; but it is not +made of glass, for there is no glass in that country, but of small +shells or the small horns of deer. They drink the liquor of cocoanuts +after it has been kept some time in the evening damp; and that liquor +is so healthful that their continual use of it keeps them from gravel, +a disease of which the name is unknown among those peoples. + +When anyone dies, the music of the mourning and lamentation begins +immediately. Some weep because they are truly touched by their loss; +others are hired by the day to weep. Women are usually chosen, as they +are most apt for that music. They wash the body of the deceased to that +sad cadence, and perfume it with storax, and other perfumes which are +used among them. After bewailing the body for three days, they bury +it. They do not place it in the earth, but in coffins of very hard +and incorruptible wood, which they kept in their houses. The boards of +the coffins are so well joined that the air cannot enter. They placed +a piece of gold in the mouths of some, and adorned their coffins with +precious gems. Moreover they were careful to carry all sorts of food +to their grave, and to leave it there as if it were to be used by the +deceased. Some they would not allow to go alone, and it was necessary +to give them some male and female slaves to keep them company. They +killed the latter after having given them a fine repast, so that they +might go with the deceased. With one of their chiefs of the country +they once encased a galley equipped with rowers, so that they could +serve him in the other world. The most usual place of burial was the +house of the deceased, in the lowest story, where they dug a hole to +place the coffin. Sometimes the burial was in the open field; and in +such case great fires were made below the house, and sentinels were +posted there, for fear lest the deceased should come to take away +those who were yet alive. The tears and lamentations were finished +with the burial; but the feasts and orgies lasted a greater or less +time, according to the station of the deceased. The Tagals wore black +as a sign of mourning; the Bisayans wore white, and shaved the head +and eyebrows. When a person of rank happened to die, silence was +observed throughout the village, until that the interdict should have +been removed--which lasted a greater or less time, according to the +quality of the deceased. During that time not the least noise could +be made. But the mourning of those who had been killed in war or by +treachery lasted a longer time, and did not end until their children +and relations had killed many others--not only those who were known +as enemies, but even strangers or unknown men; for their fury having +thus been assuaged, they thought that they could put an end to their +mourning, and solemnize it by great festivities and prolonged feasting. + +They are for the most part good sailors--I mean for the navigation +among the islands; for, as they do not use the compass, they do not +get along so well on the open sea. They use various kinds of craft, +which are propelled by sail and oar. The largest craft of the second +class are called caracoas. Although these are not very large, they do +not hesitate to put one hundred Indians in them; for there are three +banks of rowers on each side. They make use of those craft for trading +among those islands; and they lade them with dried fish, wine, salt, +wax, cotton, cocoanuts, and other like merchandise. + +They are cowards naturally, and more apt to make an ambuscade than +to face their enemies. Upon that is chiefly founded their submission +to the Spaniards, for they do not serve them out of affection. + +They readily received our religion. Their meager intelligence does +not permit them to sound the depths of its mysteries. They also have +little care in the fulfilment of their duties to the Christianity which +they have adopted; and it is necessary to constrain them by fear of +punishment, and to govern them like schoolchildren. Intoxication and +usury are the two vices to which they are most addicted. The piety +and care of our religious have not as yet been able to make them lose +those habits altogether. + +The climate of Manila and most of the other Filipinas Islands is very +warm. The difference between the seasons is not perceived, for the heat +is equally great all the year. The rains commence at the end of the +month of May and last for three or four months without interruption; +but beyond that time it rains but rarely. In the months of October, +November, and December, the country is subject to hurricanes, which +the natives of the country call vaguios. They are furious winds which +make the entire round of the compass in twenty-four hours, commencing +at the north. They break the palm-trees, uproot the largest trees, +overthrow the houses, and sometimes carry persons into the air; +and some have been seen which have hurled vessels a musket-shot inland. + +At the extremity of the island of Manila, near the Embocadero, where +the vessels en route from Nueva Espana enter, there is a volcano or +mountain whence often issue flames, and always smoke. [102] In those +islands there is neither grain, wine, nor olive-oil, nor one of the +fruits which we have in Europa, except the oranges, of which I shall +speak later. Rice grows there in great abundance, and serves instead +of bread. They have two kinds of it. One kind is sown in places always +under water, and the other on the mountains, where it is moistened +only by the water from the sky. Their drink also is made from rice, +by soaking it in water; or it is taken from palm-trees, or cocoanuts, +or from another variety of small palm called nipa. They keep those +liquors in large crocks, and draw from them only on holidays and +days of rejoicing. Those liquors mount to the head and intoxicate, +as much as does the wine of Europa. + +The horses and cows in those islands have been carried thither from +Mexico and China, for there were none there formerly. The flesh of +swine is their most usual food, and there is a great abundance of it; +it is very healthful and savory. There are also innumerable fowl, +deer, wild boars, goats, and civet-cats; also plenty of beans, +cotton, strawberries, and even cinnamon--which is found only in +the island of Mindanao, and which does not begin to be as good as +that of Ceilan. They have no silver mines in those islands, and the +little silver seen there has been carried from Mexico, in return +for the merchandise exported there annually. There are gold mines +in the island of Manila, and on the river of Butuan in the island of +Mindanao. There is truly not sufficient to satisfy the desires of the +Spaniards; but the little that there is of it sufficed the Indians, +who value it only for the little use that they make of it, since it +does not enter at all into trade. There is a quantity of honey and +wax in their mountains; and since the Spanish have lived there they +have built many sugar mills; and sugar is so common there that one may +buy twenty-five libras of sixteen onzas apiece for one teston. They +have three varieties of fruit that are most common: bananas, santors, +and birinbines. [103] There are fifteen or sixteen kinds of bananas, +some of them are sweet, but that sweetness has an admixture of bitter +in others. Some of them smell good, but all of those varieties are +very agreeable to the taste. I know of no fruit in Europa to which +to compare them, unless it be the musas which grow in Sicilia. The +birinbines and santors are eaten preserved more often than in any +other way, because of their tartness; when prepared in preserves, +they taste like plums. If they are allowed to ripen on the tree, +they smell like quinces, although they have no other resemblance +to quinces at all. Those islands have many other trees which grow +wild. Their mountains furnish them with roots, from which they draw +their most usual nourishment; these are called pugaian and corot. [104] +They have other roots which they cultivate, such as the apari, the +ubi, the laquei, and others which they call camotes, which are the +potatoes [105] of Espana. The Spaniards use the last named, as also +do the Indians. + +But the most useful tree of all is the palm--not that which bears +the date, for they do not have that species, but those which bear +cocoanuts, of the size of an orange. Those nuts are filled with a very +sweet liquor, which is very good to drink. They make wine, vinegar, +and honey of it; and when that fruit becomes dry as it ripens, that +liquor changes into white meat harder than an almond. It is from +that meat that oil is extracted and a milk resembling that extracted +from almonds. The cocoanut has two coverings. The first, which is +less hard, is used for tinder when dried; also for the rigging and +smaller cordage of the ships, or as tow for calking them. The other +covering is harder, and is used for drinking vessels, or as dishes +in which to prepare their food. The palm-leaves are the tiles with +which their houses are thatched. The trunks of the same trees are +used to support the houses, and in making the pillars. They have one +other tree which is no less useful to them, for it serves them as a +perpetual spring, and furnishes water to an entire village--which, +being located on a very high and dry site, has no other water than +what they get from that tree by making incisions in its trunk, and +in its largest branches; for a clear sweet water flows out of it. The +trees of those islands are always green, and there are only two species +that shed their leaves, one called batelan, [106] and the other dabdas. + +The reeds [i.e., bamboos] of those islands have the following +peculiarity, namely, that they are as much as three palmos +in circumference and eight brazas in length. They are used as +the materials out of which to build a whole house. The pillars, +the lintels, the stairs, the floors, and the walls are made from +them. They are used as rafters for the roof, and split into several +parts, as tiles for covering the roof. They have no other saucepans in +which to cook their food than those reeds, and no other wood to burn; +for the trees serve them as material with which to build their little +boats--or rather, rafts--with which they carry for traffic their rice, +cocoanuts, and abaca, the hemp of that country. + +Those islands have a great abundance of various kinds of oranges, +peculiar to those countries for their good taste. I have seen them so +large that they were four palmos in circumference. Some were red as +scarlet inside, and very sweet. There are some which contain another +little orange in the place of the seeds; and these are called on that +account "oranges which have children." [107] + +I will place in the list of vegetables a sort of leaf which serves +them for nourishment, or rather for refreshment. It is used very +commonly among the Indians, both Christians and Mahometans, and even +among the Spaniards. A mixture is made of it which is called mamuen, +into which three things enter: one is this leaf, which is called buio, +which is smooth, and resembles in color and size a large ivy leaf, +but it is not so thick. It smells very good, and is aromatic. It is +planted under some dry tree, on which it climbs. The other fruit that +enters into that mixture is called bonga, and it is as large as an +olive. Lastly, they mix in a small quantity of quicklime. A little +cornucopia is made of the leaf, the bonga and lime are placed inside, +and it is all chewed together. That mixture colors the saliva as red +as blood, and the lips the most beautiful vermilion ever seen. It +preserves the teeth, strengthens the stomach, and produces a very +good breath. Eighty of those leaves can be bought at Manila for one +real. Nevertheless, so great a quantity is consumed that it has been +ascertained that it was sold in one year to the amount of ninety +thousand reals, of seven and one-half sols apiece. + +There are many snakes in those islands, which are very dangerous; +some of them, when they have young, attack people. [108] The bite of +those called omodro is very dangerous, and those who are bitten by +it do not live one-half day. It is from that effect that it derives +its name, for odro signifies one-half day. There is another very +large snake called saua. I have killed one of that species which was +two and one-half brazas long. The skin of another, which measured +thirty-two [Spanish] feet in length, was brought to our residence +at Manila. The sauas hang to the branches of trees along the roads, +whence they dart down upon people, or deer, or on any other prey. They +wind themselves three or four times around the body, and after having +broken the creature's bones devour it. But God has provided a number +of herbs in those islands which are used as antidotes to all kinds of +poisons. Roots and herbs are found in the mountains, which are so many +specific remedies against snake-bites; the chief ones are manongal, +manambo, logab, boroctongon, maglingab, ordag, balucas, bonas, bahay, +igluhat, dalogdogan, mantala. + +There are also animals in those islands of which I ought to give +a description. The civet-cat is found in the mountains. Its skin +resembles that of a tiger, and it is no less savage than the tiger, +although much smaller. It is captured and bound, and, after its civet +is obtained, which is contained in a little pouch under its tail, +it is set at liberty to be caught once more. The crocodiles, of which +their rivers are full, are so huge that when their jaws are open, a +man of the largest size could stand upright between the two jaws. The +crocodile is quite covered with scales; has scarcely any tongue; and +its teeth are set closely together, and are very sharp, and arranged +in several rows. The teeth of the middle lower row fit into holes +or breaks in the others which correspond to them in the upper jaw; +and consequently, when it seizes its prey, there is no force that +can make it let go. It lays a great number of eggs. In the water +it is furious, and attacks boats. It is not so greatly feared when +ashore--where it goes sometimes to seize some prey, or to sun itself. + +The woman-fish [109] is so called because its face and breast are +quite like those of women, whom it also resembles in its manner of +copulation with the male. That fish is as large as a calf, and its +flesh, of which I have eaten, tastes like beef. It is caught with lines +as thick around as the finger, and when the line becomes fast within +[its mouth] it is killed by javelin-thrusts. Its bones and teeth have +great virtue against all sorts of dysentery, especially against bloody +discharges. Some have tried to assert that those fish were the sirens +of the sea, so celebrated among the poets; but they have nothing of +the beauty of face and of the voice that is attributed to sirens. + +I will end [this account], finally by a description of the tabon, an +ashen-colored bird as large as a hen, which lays eggs three times as +large as those of hens, but which lays them in a peculiar manner. It +chooses desert islands and those full of sand, where it first makes +a hole one or one and one-half brazas deep; and after having laid its +eggs, it covers them over with sand. The chicks break the shell, and +gradually turn up the sand that covers them with their feet. If any +of those chicks is so unfortunate as to break the egg at the lower +end, it does not succeed so well, and dies for lack of strength to +overturn the sand. Sometimes one hundred and fifty of the eggs are +found in the same hole. I have eaten those eggs often when I have +had occasion to stop at those islands during my voyages. + +There is cinnamon in the island of Mindanao; and pepper at Patani, +and at Champan, a country lying on the mainland of China. + +The political government of those islands is the same as that of other +provinces subject to the crown of Castilla. The governor resides at +Manila, and is president of the Audiencia; while, as captain-general, +he has charge of all the posts of peace and war, as well as of the +encomiendas of one or two thousand Indians [each], who pay their +encomendero the tribute that the other Indians pay to the king. But the +encomendero who has been appointed by the captain-general is obliged +to get the confirmation of his grant from Madrid within three years. + +The governor establishes the corregidors and alcaldes-mayor, or +governors of the provinces into which these islands are divided. He +appoints the captains and the admirals of the fleets which sail to +Acapulco and Terrenate annually. He takes cognizance of civil affairs, +on which the royal Audiencia pronounces the decisions or decrees. That +Audiencia is composed of a president (who is always the governor), four +oidores or auditors, and one procurator-fiscal. There are four cities +in the Filipinas--Manila, Zebu, [Nueva] Cacares, and Nueba Segovia; +and one town, called Arevalo. There is a garrison at Manila and at +Cabite, which is the port where the warships enter, six miles from +Manila. There are also garrisons at Zebu, Otong, Carouga, Lanbuangang +[sc. Zamboanga], Jolo, Nueva Segobia, the island of Hermosa, and +the Malucas. All those ports are fortified, and have their redoubts +mounted with artillery. Whatever is necessary for those garrisons is +sent from Manila. It would be a very difficult task to mention the +names of all the different peoples among the Indians, and in those +islands, who are subject to the king of Espana. There are fully three +hundred thousand families, who might count one million souls. + +The archbishop of Manila has three suffragans, those of Zebu, +[Nueva] Cacares, and Nueva Segovia. They have no other income than +what the king gives them; that of the archbishop is three thousand +ducados, while each of his suffragans receives one thousand five +hundred. The city of Manila is small, but it is beautiful and well +fortified. Its houses are all built of stone, and are spacious, +and very airy. Its streets are long and straight, and one may walk +in the shade all hours of the day. The churches are beautiful. There +are five convents: that of the Augustinians (which is the oldest); +that of the Franciscans, that of the Dominicans, [110] and that +of the discalced Augustinians. There are two universities, one in +charge of the fathers of St. Dominic, and the other in that of the +Society. Those religious are also distributed among the islands, +where they have charge of the instruction of the Indians. The city is +enclosed by a fine wall and moat; and its redoubt and its ramparts +are well garrisoned with artillery. At the foot of its wall flows a +river, which is navigable; over this is a wooden bridge, with stone +pillars. There are two thousand Spaniards in Manila (counting soldiers +and inhabitants), and twice as many Indians. There are also twenty +thousand Sangleys or Chinese, who practice all the arts needed in +a community; and every year they pay nine escudos and six reals of +tribute. Galleons much larger than those which sail the Mediterranean +are built at Manila; for there is a great abundance of wood, pitch, +and abaca--which resembles European hemp, and of which good rigging +is made for the ships. The anchors are imported from Goa; and the iron +for the nails comes from China in little bars, and is very serviceable. + +The Spaniards of the Manilas trade throughout the islands of that +archipelago, at Borney and Camboa, whence they carry wax, butter, +camanguien or storax, ivory, and bezoar. They formerly traded in Japon, +before the persecution of the Christians was begun. Thence were carried +iron, flour, all sorts of fruit, and little boxes, and cabinets, +varnished [i.e., lacquered] and very well made. Nangoza [sc. Nagasaki], +which was the port where that trading took place--and for which it was +very suitable, because it is not distant from Manila--is now closed +to us; for the emperor of Japon believes that people are entering his +country, under pretext of that trade, to preach the gospel, the thing +that he fears most of all. We trade also with the Portuguese of Macao, +who come to the Manilas every year with two or three ships, and bring +here silks, musk, precious stones, and eagle and calambac wood--which +is a sweet-scented wood that is very valuable. The inhabitants of the +Manilas also go to Macao sometimes, to carry their merchandise there; +but their chief trade is with the Chinese, who come annually, at the +end of the month of December and the beginning of January, with twenty +or thirty vessels, laden with products and valuable merchandise. They +sail usually from Ocho and Chincheo, ports of Anay, a province of China +which faces the Filipinas. They carry small oranges, nuts, chestnuts, +plums, raisins, and chicuei--a fruit resembling an apple, very round, +transparent, and, when it is ripe, having the color of yellow amber; +its peel is very loose, and its flesh very sweet and very pleasant +to the taste. [111] They also bring all sorts of cloth stuffs, and +some of these are as fine as those which come from France and the +Low Countries; and many black stuffs of which the Indians make their +clothes. They bring silk, plain and twisted, of all colors; damasks, +velvets, tabbies, and double taffetas; cloths of gold and silver, +galoons, and laces; coverlets, and cushions; and porcelain--although +not the finest variety, as the trade in that is prohibited. They bring +pearls and gold; iron, in little bars; thread, musk, and fine parasols; +paste gems, but very beautiful to look at; saltpetre, and flour; +white and various-colored paper; and many little fancy articles, +covered with varnish, and gold in relief, made in an inimitable +manner. Among all the silk stuffs brought by the Chinese, none is +more esteemed than the white--the snow is not whiter; and there is +no silk stuff in Europa that can approach it. + +The Chinese return in the month of March, and carry to China silver +in return for their merchandise. They also take a wood called +sibueno [112]--that is, brazil-wood, which is used in making their +ink. Those Chinese merchants are so keen after gain that if one sort +of merchandise has succeeded well one year, they take a great deal +of it the following year. A Spaniard who had lost his nose through a +certain illness, sent for a Chinese to make him one of wood, in order +to hide the deformity. The workman made him so good a nose that the +Spaniard, in great delight, paid him munificently, giving him twenty +escudos. The Chinese, attracted by the ease with which he had made +that gain, laded a fine boatload of wooden noses the following year, +and returned to Manila. But he found himself very far from his hopes, +and quite left out in the cold; [113] for in order to have a sale +for that new merchandise, he found that he would have to cut off the +noses of all the Spaniards in the country. + +Besides the Chinese merchandise that is brought into the islands, +there is wax, cinnamon, civet, and a sort of very strong cotton cloth +which is called campotes [misprint for lampotes]. All those goods are +exported to Mexico, where they are sold at great profit, and on the +spot. I do not believe there is a richer traffic in the world than +that. The duties that the king gets out of it are large, and, with +what he gets from the islands, amount to fully five hundred thousand +escudos. But he spends eight hundred thousand in the maintenance of +his governor, the counselors, the archbishop, the bishops, the canons, +those who possess the prebends, and the other ecclesiastics. The +greater part of that sum is employed in the equipment of the galleons +that are sent to Mexico and to the Malucas, and of those which are kept +in those seas to resist the Dutch. A considerable sum is spent on the +maintenance of alliance with the kings of those districts--especially +with the king of one of the Malucas, called Tidore. Consequently, +the king of Espana rather holds those islands for the conservation +there of the faith, as was stated by Felipe the Second in a certain +council-meeting, than for the profit that is derived from them to this +hour. The Dutch have been unable to get a footing on those islands, +although they have attacked them many times. They have a considerable +city [i.e., Batavia] on the island of Java Major, whence they send +what their garrisons at the island of Hermosa, Amboina, and Terrenate +need. They have made an alliance with the inhabitants of that island, +and they secure the greater part of the cloves of the Malucas. They +trade in Japon, in a port called Firando. The Chinese have refused +to have trade with them, because of a tradition current in China, +that blue-eyed men will some day conquer them. + +The voyage from Manila to Mexico lasts four, five, six, or seven +months. Manila, which lies in thirteen and one-half degrees, is left +in the month of July, during the vendavals. The course is taken to +the north, until the ship reaches thirty-eight or forty degrees. The +pilots take that course because they are more certain of finding +winds; for otherwise they would run the risk of encountering calms, +which are more to be dreaded in long voyages than are the most furious +gales. From the time that the Filipinas are left until almost the coast +of Nueva Espana is reached, no land is seen, except a chain of islands +called the Ladrones, or La Sapana, [114] which lie three hundred +leguas from the Embocadero of the Filipinas. The people who inhabit +those islands are barbarians, who go quite naked. When our vessels +pass there, those people carry to them fish, rice, and fresh water, +which they exchange for neither gold nor silver, but only for iron, +which they value much more, because of the use to which they put it in +the manufacture of their tools, and for the building of their little +boats. The first land sighted after that is the island of Cedros, +quite near the Mexican coast. The open expanse between that island +and those of the Ladrones is subject to great storms, which are to +be feared especially near the Japanese Islands--which are passed, +however, without being sighted. During the whole course of so long +a voyage, scarcely a day passes without seeing a bird. There are +usually some birds that live in the sea, and many large whales and +porpoises are seen. + +As the [American] coast is neared, at a distance of sixty, eighty, +or one hundred leguas signs are to be seen in the sea by which it is +recognized that the ship is within that distance. Those signs consist +of long reeds, brought down by the rivers of Nueva Espana, which being +massed together resemble a kind of raft; and on those reeds are to be +seen monkeys--another sign that they are approaching the coast. When +the pilot discovers those signs, he immediately changes his course, +and instead of continuing east he puts the nose of the ship south, +in order to avoid getting caught in the land, or in some gulf whence +he would have a hard time to get out; but, when he has sighted the +coast of Nueva Espana, he follows it to the port of Acapulco, which +lies in eighteen degrees. + +Acapulco is a fine port, well sheltered from all the winds, and +defended by a celebrated redoubt. There the passengers and goods are +disembarked, and are afterward carried by mules to the City of Mexico, +which is eighty leguas distant thence. The way is desert and bestrewn +with mountains; and the pest of mosquitoes is suffered, as well as the +extreme heat. In order to go to Espana from Mexico one goes to the port +of Vera Cruz, a journey of eighty-five leguas; en route is passed the +city of Los Angeles, which has about six thousand inhabitants, and +whose bishop gets a salary of sixty thousand escudos. The reefs and +rocks at the mouth of the port of Vera Cruz defend the entrance better +than the fortress that commands it, although that fort is an excellent +one. At that port anchor the trading fleets that come from Espana, +laden with wine, olive-oil, cloths, wax, cinnamon, paper, and other +European merchandise. Those trading fleets formerly passed the winter +there, as they arrived [formerly] in the month of June, and remained +there until the same month of the following year. Now they reach that +port in the month of May, and leave about the month of August. They +take as a rule three months to go to Espana. For my part, I took +one hundred days in making that voyage. The port of Havana in Cuba, +which is the best port of the Western Indias--and which is very safe, +and defended by three redoubts--is touched at. There the two trading +fleets--that of Mexico and that of Tierrafirme--are united with the +galleons. Thence, after having coasted along the shores of Florida, +and of Nueva Francia, they make the cape of Fineterre [Finisterre] +or San Vincent, in order to lay their course toward Cadiz, which is +the end of their voyage. That will also be the end of this relation, +which I have written in order to be obedient to a person to whom I +earnestly desire that it may prove agreeable. + + + + + + + +BIBLIOGRAPHICAL DATA + + +The following documents are obtained from MSS. in the Academia Real +de la Historia, Madrid--in the collection "Papeles de los Jesuitas:" + +1. Events in Filipinas, 1637-38.--In tomo 84, no. 35. + +2. Fortunate successes, 1636-37.--In tomo 32, no. 17. + +3. Events in Filipinas, 1638-39.--In tomo 4, no. 34, fol. 268. + +The following documents are obtained from the Archivo general de +Indias, Sevilla: + +4. Letter from Corcuera.--"Simancas--Secular; Audiencia de Filipinas; +cartas y espedientes del gobernador de Filipinas vistos en el Consejo; +anos 1629 a 1640; est. 67, caj. 6, leg. 8." + +5. Letter from treasurer.--The same as No. 4. + +6. The university of Santo Tomas.--"Audiencia de Filipinas; registro +de oficio; reales ordenes dirigidas a las autoridades y particulares +del distrito de la Audiencia; anos 1605 a 1645; est. 105, caj. 2, +leg. 12." (In this same legajo may be found two of the decrees of +1638, those of November 8 and December 8; and that of October 3, +1639, has the same pressmark, save "leg. 2, lib. 4.") + +The following documents are obtained from the "Cedulario Indico," +in the Archivo Historico Nacional, Madrid: + +7. Decrees, 1638.--The first four, in "tomo 39, fol. 235b, 225b, 262, +and 267," respectively; (the fifth and sixth, see No. 6, ante;) the +seventh, in "tomo xxxi, fol. 144b;" the eighth, in "tomo 7, fol. 352b." + +8. Decrees, 1639.--In the same order as printed, these are found +as follows: In "tomo 39, fol. 276b; tomo xviii, fol. 55; tomo 39, +fol. 281; tomo 31, fol. 142b; tomo 39, fol. 285b and 285; tomo 2, +fol. 315b;" (for October 3, see No. 6, ante;) "tomo 39, fol. 290b +and 290." + +The following documents are obtained from the Ventura del Arco +MSS. (Ayer library), vol. ii: + +9. Events in the Filipinas, 1639-40.--Pp. 167-184. + +10. Relation of the Chinese insurrection.--Pp. 185-250. + +The following document is obtained from a rare printed pamphlet in +the Museo-Biblioteca de Ultramar, Madrid: + +11. Glorious victories against Moros.--Part of this is synopsized in +translation. The pamphlet is designated in the Museo-Biblioteca by +the number "111, 21-2a." + +The following document is obtained from a MS. volume in the possession +of Edward E. Ayer, Chicago; the volume is undated, but is supposed +to be written in 1835, and is entitled, Demostracion historica de +cuantas depredaciones llevan cometidas las Moros, etc.: + +12. Letters to Misericordia.--In fol. 6b, 7, and 8. + +The following documents are taken from printed works: + +13. Relation by Banuelos y Carrillo.--From Thevenot's Relations de +divers voyages curieux (Paris, M.DC.XCVI), tomo i, part ii; from a +copy belonging to the Prescott Collection in the library of Harvard +University. (The original printed pamphlet by Banuelos y Carrillo is +supposed to be no longer extant.) + +14. Value of Corcuera's seizures.--From Pastells' edition of Colin's +Labor evangelica, iii, pp. 528-533. + +15. Ecclesiastical and Augustinian affairs.--From Casimiro Diaz's +Conquistas, pp. 267-444. + +16. Relation of the Filipinas Islands, by a religious.--The same as +No. 13. + + + + + + + +NOTES + + +[1] Spanish, buenas collas de bendabales. In August the prevailing +winds at Manila are from the southwest, the vendavals. It often happens +that in the months of June and July there develop in northern Luzon +centers of minimum pressure so slowly that they appear to remain +stationary for many days, followed, as is natural, by continuous +currents and showers of rain from the third quadrant, known by +the native-born residents as "collas" (Report of U. S. Philippine +Commission, 1900, iv, pp. 229, 236; this chapter is furnished by the +Jesuit fathers in charge of the Manila Observatory). + +[2] Juan Zubelzu, a native of Biscay, and a novice in the Dominican +convent at Mexico, came to the Philippine Islands in the mission of +1615. After his ordination, he ministered to the Indians in Bataan, +and in Cavite and Manila--where he died, December 14, 1657. He built +a stone church in Samal, for which, it is remarked, he did not harass +the Indians, although they were few in number. (Resena biografica, +i, p. 350.) + +[3] "Son of the devil, scourge of God, and other similar things." + +[4] Spanish, padres barbados; also known as Barbones, from their +practice of wearing long beards; they came in 1635, with Corcuera, +headed by Collado, and formed the congregation of San Pablo (for +mission work only), by "warrants fraudulently obtained." A royal decree +of February 21, 1637, commanded the Dominican provincial at Manila +to suppress the Barbones; it is the execution of this decree which +is described in our text. See Resena biografica, i. pp. 338, 391, 420. + +[5] This statement about the Sangleys is printed by Barrantes +as a postscript to Lopez's letter of July 23, 1637 (q.v., +VOL. XXVII). Internal evidence indicates Juan Lopez as the author of +the present document, and that it was written at Cavite, where Lopez +was in charge of the Jesuit house. + +[6] Melchor de Vera was born in Madrid about 1585, and entered the +Jesuit order at the age of nineteen. Two years later, he departed +for the Philippine mission, and after his ordination labored in the +missions of Visayas and Mindanao. He was for a time minister of Manila +college, and afterward rector of Carigara, and superior at Dapitan and +Zamboanga. He was well versed in architecture and military defense, +and several forts were built (especially that at Zamboanga) under +his direction. He died at Cebu, April 13, 1646. See Murillo Velarde's +Hist. Philipinas, fol. 153 verso; and Combes's Hist. Mindanao. + +[7] Fernando de Estrada, a native of Ecija, Spain, was a missionary +among the Bisayans and Tagals, and at Ternate. He died at Manila in +1646, at the age of forty-five. See Murillo Velarde's Hist. Philipinas, +fol. 193 verso. + +[8] Charles I sought at various times to play Spain against France, +but his Spanish policy was, on the whole, a failure. + +[9] Morabites: the name of a Mahometan sect, founded by the son-in-law +of Mahomet. The name was also used among Mahometans to indicate a +wise man or a mystic. + +[10] Antonio Francisco Cardim was born at Viana, Portugal, in 1596, +and entered the Jesuit order in February, 1611. Seven years later +he went to India, and labored in Japan, China, and other countries +until his death--which occurred at Macao, April 30, 1659. Sommervogel +describes several missionary reports and other writings by Cardim. + +[11] That is, the small amount of their returns from Mexico prevented +the Manila merchants from making their usual large purchases from the +Chinese traders, and it was feared that the latter would not think +it worth while to bring their goods to Manila. + +[12] This was Tsongching (VOL. XXII, p. 197, and note 44), the last +emperor of the Ming dynasty; he was favorable to the Jesuits, but can +hardly be called a convert to the Christian faith. By "Father Pablo" +is probably meant Paul Siu (or Sin, according to Cretineau-Joly), +a Chinese official of high standing, who was converted by Father +Ricci, and served as an evangelist among his people, besides aiding +the missionaries with gifts and his influence at court, and revising +their writings in Chinese. See Cretineau-Joly's Hist. Comp. de Jesus, +iii, p. 172; and Williams's Middle Kingdom, ii, pp. 302, 304. + +[13] A marginal note reads: "Translated from the Spanish relation +printed at Mexico in the year 1638; dedicated to Don Garcia de Haro +y Abellaneda, count of Castilla, president of the royal Council of +the Indias." + +[14] Marginal note: "The rules of this traffic, which will be found at +the end of the relations of the Filipinas, elucidate this point." This +evidently refers to the Spanish originals. + +The "list of relations and voyages" at the beginning of Thevenot's work +contains this title: "Three relations of the Philippine Islands, with a +large map of China," etc. To correspond with this, the text contains: +the "Relation" of Banuelos y Carrillo; the "Relation and memorial" +by Hernando de los Rios Coronel; and a "Memorial in behalf of the +commerce of the Philipine Islands," by Juan Grau y Monfalcon--all +with consecutive pagination; and apparently abridged or paraphrased +to suit the editor. These are followed by (Bobadilla's) "Relation +of the Philipine Islands," and an "Account of the great island of +Mindanao" (which contains a letter by Mastrilli)--also with their own +and consecutive pagination; these, however, are not mentioned in the +list above referred to. We translate from Thevenot the documents by +Banuelos and Bobadilla; but for the others we have recourse to the +Spanish originals. + +[15] Lope Diaz de Armendariz, marquis of Cadereita, the sixteenth +viceroy of Mexico, was appointed (1635) to succeed the marquis +of Cerralvo (who was removed at his own request, because of poor +health). His term of office was quiet, and only marked especially by +his quarrel with the archbishop, with whom the royal Audiencia seem +to have sided. He was removed in 1640, his successor being Diego +Lopez Pacheco Cabrera y Bobadilla, duke of Escalona and marquis de +Villena. See Bancroft's Hist. Mexico, iii, pp. 93-98. + +[16] Marginal note: "Bartolome Tenorione." + +[17] The following letter from the Sevilla archives ("Cartas y +espedientes del gobernador de Filipinas vistos en el Consejo; anos +1629 a [1640]; est. 67, caj. 6, leg. 8"), contains an interesting +reference to Banuelos's relation, and also suggests the well-known +deficiencies in Thevenot's "translations." It is to be feared that +he has omitted much valuable matter from Banuelos's account; but no +other source is available: + +"I return the paper which your Lordship sent me, concerning the +military exploit in Mindanao, which was written and sent, as appears, +by Father Marcelo Mastrili. Although its contents must be true, and +it is well written, yet as your Lordship knows, the Council thought +it advisable not to have it printed until they could compare it with +the letters that the governor had written about the same exploit, +and with others written by various persons, which make it out to have +been of little value and importance. They even attempt to say that +we have lost rather than gained in that campaign--particularly in a +discourse or treatise printed in Mexico by Don Geronimo de Banuelos +y Carrillo, and addressed to your Lordship. In it he declares that +those who were conquered were not Moros, but certain poor Indians; +I do not know whether [he says this] from zeal for the truth, or +because he has little affection for the governor. He wounds him quite +to the quick in this and in other things. I was making an abstract of +them in order to report to the Council, as I was ordered; but today, +on going out, Don Juan Grao Monfalcon told me that he is at present +printing another report, to oppose that of Banuelos. I do not know who +has given permission for it, nor that, in the care of the relation of +Father Mastrili, there is anything that is not well understood. What +the Council discussed was (as I have said), only whether it is exact +and faithful to what happened; and of this I have not yet been able +to form a sufficient judgment or idea. I am getting new documents +hourly from the secretary's office, and I shall detain them until +the one that I am now enclosing is returned, if convenient. May God +preserve your Lordship, as we your servants desire. Today, Tuesday, +February eight, one thousand six hundred and thirty-nine. + + +Don Juan de Solorzano Pereira" + +"The count, my master, has ordered me to send again to your Lordship +the enclosed relation of his success from the governor of Filipinas, +in order that there may be progress in the deliberations of the Council +on this question. May God preserve your Lordship, as I desire. Buen +Retiro, February 16, 639. + +Antonio Carnero" + + +"I return these papers to your Grace, so that you may continue what you +were doing. May God preserve your Grace. My house, February 16, 1639." + +[18] Referring to Sebastian Vizcaino (VOL. XIV, p. 183). The Englishman +here referred to is doubtless Will Adams (VOL. XXII, p. 169, note 39), +then high in favor with Iyeyasu. Regarding the expulsion of religious +at that time, see VOL. XVIII, p. 81. + +[19] A marginal note reads as follows: "Ricca douro is an island which +was discovered by a vessel from Macao. They landed there in order to +repair their galley fireplace, and a week later they perceived that +that earth had been converted into plates of gold. I suffered a violent +tempest in the latitude of that island, as the maps show it; and there +are few vessels that sail in that latitude, without having trouble." + +See also notes in VOL. XIV of this series, p. 183; and VOL. XVI, +p. 204. + +[20] In the margin is the following note: "Tono in the Japanese +language signifies a person who holds the rank that a duke of Cardone +or a marquis of Carpio would have in Espana." This means a daimio, +or feudal lord (see VOL. XVIII, p. 216). + +[21] Following is a translation of the title-page of the book from +which this account is taken: "Relation of the glorious victories on +land and sea won by the arms of our invincible king and monarch, Felipe +IIII, the Great, in the Filipinas Islands against the Mahometan Moros +of the island of Mindanao and their king Cachil Corralat, under the +leadership of Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera, knight of the Order +of Alcantara and one of his Majesty's Council of War, and governor +and captain-general of those islands: drawn from various relations +sent from Manila during this year (1638). 1638. With license. Mexico; +at the press of Pedro de Quinones, opposite the Professed House." + +[22] Tulio (misprinted Fulio), for Tullius (Cicero). Apparently there +is some error in the reference given in the text, for this citation +from Cicero is not found in the place indicated by it, in the standard +editions of his Epistolae. + +[23] Attached to the editions of Quintilian's works are 164 +Declamations, which remain out of a collection consisting originally +of 388 of these compositions. It is supposed, however, that these +were written by various persons, at different periods of time. + +[24] "It is believed that the number of islands exceeds 1,400, although +thus far no one has stated their number with exactness." (Archipielago +filipino, p. 6.) The latest information (Census of the Philippine +Islands, Washington, 1905, i, p. 185), gives the total number of +islands, however, as not less than 3,141, although the exact number +is still unknown. + +[25] This is the literal translation; but it will be remembered, +from previous accounts, that the figure of Christ here referred to +was painted on a sheet of linen or cloth; it was this sheet which +was used by the Moro as a garment. + +[26] Camaras were tubes or cylinders which received the charge and +were introduced into the breech of the cannon, sometimes fitted by +pressure, at other times by screwing (see Diego Ufano's Treatise on +military; Brussels, 1617). Some of the ancient pieces of ordnance +had these spare chambers, so that, after a charge had been fired, the +chamber could be changed and operations carried on more rapidly. Thus +they served as do the cartridges of modern breech-loading guns. Some +camaras were used independently of the cannon, for firing salutes. See +Stanley's Vasco da Gama (Hakluyt Society publications, London, 1869) +pp. 226, 227, note. + +[27] Tawi Tawi is the largest island of a group having the same name, +in the extreme southwest of the Philippine Archipelago, nearly 700 +miles distant from Manila. It contains over 100 islands, mostly +very small; but five of these contain ten or more square miles of +area. The island Tawi Tawi contains 187 square miles; its surface +is one of fertile plains interspersed with forests, and broken by +five peaks ranging from 736 to 1,941 feet in height. The islands +are thinly populated (estimated at 1,815 fighting men) by Malayan +tribes supposed to have migrated thither from Borneo--the Suluanos, +Camucones, and Tirones. Navigation among the islands is difficult +and dangerous, except for the small, light native craft; and they +have been the hiding-places of pirates from the earliest times. + +[28] Referring to Captain Gines Ros y Aviles, who had been left by +Corcuera as governor of Jolo. Combes gives a detailed account of +all this affair (Hist. Mindanao, Retana's ed., col. 369-395). Ros +applied himself, after Corcuera's departure, to the profits of trade, +and was deceived by the Moros, who pretended submission but planned +to surprise and kill all the Spaniards. The officer next in command, +Gaspar de Morales, with the two Jesuits, finding their warnings +unheeded, sent word to the governor's lieutenant at Zamboanga, Pedro +de Almonte--who immediately went to Jolo, again subdued that island, +and placed Morales in Ros's post as governor. Cf. La Concepcion's +account, Hist. Philipinas, v, pp. 348-359, 412-427. + +[29] A village in Laguna, Luzon, on the southwest shore of Laguna +de Bay. + +[30] The two Jesuits who remained in Jolo as missionaries, Fathers +Alejandro Lopez and Francisco Martinez. + +[31] "Of these [Sangleys] several champan-crews armed themselves to +infest the seas; and, occupying the narrow passages of Marivelez, +they captured various vessels which came from Bisayas and other +provinces to trade.... Armed ships were despatched against them from +Manila, and, despite their resistance, several of their champans were +seized; and the pirates were punished with death, as their insolence +deserved--several of them being baptized, by dint of exhortations, +just before their torture." (La Concepcion, Hist. Philipinas, v, +pp. 429-431). One of these "rigorous modes of punishment" is mentioned +post, on p. 226--that of tearing away the flesh with pincers. + +[32] Probably referring to the revolt of the Caragas, 1629-31, and +their murder of several Recollect missionaries at Tandag. + +[33] Combes describes very fully this and another Spanish expedition +into the region of Lake Lanao in 1639; and "a third and last one," +which was unsuccessful, and compelled the Spaniards to retreat, +in 1640. See his Hist. Mindanao (Retana's ed.), col. 145-177. + +[34] Referring to the injury sustained by this chief in the explosion +of a mine at the siege of Jolo; it is described by Lopez in his +chronicle for 1637-38 ante, pp. 44, 45. + +[35] See Combes's description of Lake Lanao (Hist. Mindanao, Retana's +ed., col. 145-147); lanao means simply "lake," and malanao, "people +of the lake." Cf. A. H. S. Landor's description--in Gems of the East +(New York and London, 1904), pp. 303-308--of the lake legion and +its people. In 1902 the American military authorities constructed +excellent highways from the seacoast to Lake Lanao, from Malabang on +the south to Iligan on the north. A description of this work, with +valuable observations on the character and habits of the Malanao Moros, +appears in the Atlantic Monthly for December, 1903, from the pen of +Major R. L. Bullard, U. S. A., who directed the building of one of +these roads. The Malanaos were never conquered by the Spaniards or +any other people. The present district of Lanao contains part of the +Rangaya range of mountains, 5,000 to 8,500 feet in height; and its +eastern part is traversed by the Pulangui River (Rio Grande). The +lake is twenty-two miles long and sixteen miles wide, and its outlet +is Iligan River. + +[36] Apparently referring to the boat which carried passengers from +Manila to the port of Cavite. + +[37] Also Zarpana, the modern Rota. Uan apparently means the present +Guam. The place where the ship was wrecked was, according to Diaz +(Conquistas, p. 402), the island of Seypan. + +[38] Diaz states (Conquistas, p. 402) that this galleon ("Nuestra +Senora de la Concepcion") was "the largest one built up to that time," +and that it contained the greatest wealth of the islands. The few +men who escaped to land were afterward rescued by Spanish ships, and +taken back to Manila--save one, a Chinese blacksmith, who spent the +rest of his life there and acquired great influence over the natives. + +[39] La Concepcion states (Hist. Philipinas, v, p. 351) that +when Corcuera returned to Manila in triumph, the Confraternity of +La Misericordia gave him 100,000 pesos from its treasury, for the +expenses of the Jolo campaign. + +"For Governor Corcuera to secure, even in part, the successful result +that he desired in this conquest, he was obliged to resort, for the +necessary succor, to the treasury of Santa Misericordia; for in this +emergency he found closed on all sides the gates of resource for the +accomplishment of his so laudable designs. He found this aid, as prompt +as liberal, in the sum of 104,609 pesos, two tomins, and one grano, +which the brethren carried to him at the royal offices, as a loan, +to aid his needs and enable him to push forward this conquest, which +depended on such aid." This statement is taken from the Demostracion +historica (MS. in Ayer library; see following note), fol. 7 verso. + +[40] These two letters are obtained from a MS. volume in the library +of Edward E. Ayer, of Chicago, entitled: Demostracion historica +de cuantas depredaciones llevan cometidas las Moros desde que se +incorporaron estas Yslas a la Monarquia Espanola; inedidas de toda +especie tomadas por el Gobierno para contenerlos; y indicasiones que +se presentan para hacerles la guerra con mejor fruto que hasta aqui, +a fin de que las Visayas se vean libres de las continuas opresiones +qe. sufren--"Historical exposition of the many depredations which +the Moros have committed, from the time when these islands were +incorporated with the Spanish monarchy; the measures, of all kinds, +taken by the government for curbing them; and indications that +suggest how war may be waged upon them with better results than have +hitherto been secured, to the end that the Visayas may be freed from +the continual cruelties that they suffer." This work (evidently +intended for publication) is undated; but the conjectural date +"1835?" appears on the fly-leaf, which is headed "1a. Parte." As +appears by the introduction to the book, it was written by one of +the members of the Sociedad Economica of the Philippines--founded +by Basco y Vargas in 1780, and reestablished by Folguera in 1819; +and his "only motive in writing it was to meet his obligations to +that society." The MS. is contained in a plainly-bound volume of 291 +folios (582 pages), and displays fine, round, legible, and beautiful +handwriting, from several different hands. Folios 1-11 cover the +period antecedent to 1750; the rest of the book, that from 1750 to +1806--more than two-thirds of this part being dated after 1788. The +writer evidently had access to valuable original documents, some +of which, as these letters to La Misericordia, he cites directly; +and his narrative is well and carefully written. + +[41] This was Fray Francisco de Zamudio, who had come to Manila in +1636, and acted as provisor-general during the temporary exile of +Archbishop Guerrero. + +[42] The great visitor-general of New Spain and the bishop of +Puebla. He had a "special commission to take the residencias of +Cerralvo and Cadereita, and to investigate the commercial relations +with Peru and the Philippine Islands." He was of noble family, although +illegitimate, but was legitimized by his father. He was a man of great +abilities, which won him speedy recognition and high offices until he +decided to enter the priesthood (1629); and, after serving in various +capacities in Spain, he went to Mexico in 1640. He was energetic +and impartial in the exercise of his duties, and before long this +embroiled him with the indolent and easily-influenced viceroy. Finally +he was offered the archbishopric, and at the same time ordered to +assume charge of the government. He refused the archbishopric, but +accepted the latter, and in 1642 assumed that office--which he held +for five months, during which he ruled well and impartially. After +retiring to his bishopric he had various troubles with the Jesuits, +the new viceroy, the archbishop, and others, until he was ordered to +retire to Spain in 1648, where he died bishop of Osma in 1659, much +regretted by the people of his bishopric. See Bancroft's Hist. Mexico, +iii, pp. 98-136. + +[43] Meaning that the failure to receive the usual supplies of money +from Mexico had rendered the Manila merchants unable to buy the +goods brought by the Chinese traders--the latter being thus unable +to maintain their shops in Manila, and obliged to return to their +own country. + +[44] Apparently some words have been omitted in Ventura del Arco's +transcription; probably it should read, "upon us for our past sins"--or +possibly, "for the past two years." + +[45] Spanish, regalos; referring to the articles (mainly those of +luxury) imported from Mexico by citizens of the islands. + +[46] Shells or hollow balls, sometimes of clay, sometimes of heavy +canvas, which were filled with combustible substances; when kindled, +they were shot or hurled against the enemy, either to cause injury +by their explosion, or to set his works on fire. + +[47] "A mountain called Socol, distant from Calamba a short league" +(Diaz, Conquistas, p. 406). + +[48] This was an estate belonging to the Jesuits (Diaz, Conquistas, +p. 408). + +[49] Pastells' transcript of this document (Colin's Labor evangelica, +iii, p. 129) contains a few lines of additional matter, as follows: + +"Of the whole affair a full relation will, I think, be printed; so I +leave it here, entreating our Lord to look with pity on these islands, +which are so full of misery and poverty." + +[50] In passing through Mexico Senor Corcuera found so much cloth +from this [Chinese] commerce stored in the warehouses that, in +consideration for the interests of the merchants, he thought it best +not to send a ship [to Acapulco] that year; as a result, in this year +of 1638 the Chinese found less silver [in the Philippines] than their +business required. It also contributed [to their discontent] that, +since the royal treasury was unable to meet the great expenses of so +many armed fleets and wars, the contributions [levied] on the Chinese +were greater and more exacting--not only in actual money, but in other +necessary supplies." (La Concepcion, Hist. Philipinas, v, p. 429). + +[51] Diaz states (Conquistas, p. 403) that besides the Chinese of +the Parian, who were chiefly traders, there were at the time of this +revolt more than 20,000 others scattered through the islands, who were +occupied in tilling the soil, and that of these more than 6,000 were at +work on the rich lands of Calamba. La Concepcion says (ut supra) that +there were 33,000 Chinese living in the islands--too large a number +for safety, after the warning furnished by the insurrection of 1604. + +[52] This was Luis Arias de Mora, an advocate belonging to the Manila +Audiencia; according to Diaz (p. 404) he was even more avaricious +and extortionate than his predecessors in the alcaldia of La Lacuna, +and so oppressed those Chinese that in desperation they decided, +to kill him--which they did with much and barbarous cruelty. + +[53] Diaz says (p. 404) that the Jesuit Villamayor, who accompanied +the Spaniards, tried to persuade Aduna not to pursue the Chinese; +but the captain refused to listen to him, and went on to his death. + +[54] The names in brackets are obtained from Diaz (p. 406); and some +names occurring later in this document are similarly filled out, +from the same source. + +[55] Diaz states (p. 406) that the Augustinian friars of Comintan +(the ancient name of Batangas province) after this battle assembled a +large troop of Indians, and with them scoured the surrounding country, +killing the scattered Sangley fugitives. + +[56] A visita of the Augustinian mission station at Pasig. + +[57] According to Diaz's account (p. 408), the Sangleys of Santa Cruz +attempted to seize Corcuera's person; but he escaped their hands, +ordered the village to be set afire, and then attacked the Chinese, +who numbered some 6,000 men. To check their advance, a detachment of +Spaniards was sent to a certain spot with a troop of Moros, "aimed with +campilans, who had come with the ambassador from Sanguyl." Olaso was +soon recalled to Manila, leaving Santa Cruz defenseless--an imprudent +step, which resulted in loss, "since that post was most necessary +and convenient for guarding the river and the Parian." + +[58] Diaz (p. 409) makes this twenty-three, besides a Japanese priest +who accompanied and encouraged his countrymen. + +[59] Diaz (p. 408) says that the friars at Tondo gathered the natives +within the convent, "which, as it was very strong and spacious, +was capable of being a sufficient fortification for 6,000 Indians." + +[60] "In Binondoc father Fray Francisco de Herrera was fortified, with +the Sangley mestizos, and kept within the walls more than 160 Christian +Sangleys; the governor commanded that these should be taken from that +place, because they were continually making signs and writing notes +[to their countrymen?], and they were conveyed to Manila, to the +public prison, in order to make sure of them." (Diaz, p. 413.) + +[61] Diaz states (p. 412) that the governor issued this command, +which was executed by one of the auditors of the Audiencia and the +two alcaldes of the city; "they killed a great many Chinese, although +there were many whom the religious and the citizens concealed." + +[62] "By the fire were destroyed more than 3,000 pesos of rents +from the municipal property of the city, and more than 80,000 pesos +of those belonging to private persons, for the houses in which the +Sangleys lived; the riches lost in the property of the Sangleys were +immense, because the looting of these could not be enjoyed on account +of the fire, and because the [military] authorities would not allow +the Spaniards to be diverted from their attention to the defense of +the city." (Diaz, p. 412). + +[63] Diaz says that the church was burned; but this probably refers +to its woodwork only. + +[64] "On December 5 orders were despatched to the provinces to put to +death all the Sangleys in them--although the opinions of the jurists +[regarding this step] differed." (Diaz, p. 412). + +[65] "They burned the magazines, where there were large quantities +of the supplies necessary for the equipment of the galleons" (Diaz, +p. 413). + +[66] See p. 156 and note 31, ante. + +[67] Diaz's figures are somewhat different, and more extensive +(p. 413). "In Cavite as many as 1,100 were slain, and more than 600 +were seized. In Pampanga, where Santiago Gastelu was alcalde-mayor, +few escaped; for the said alcalde exercised such care and so vigilant +guard that as soon as the order arrived he caused it to be executed +in all places at the same time, so unexpectedly that he gave them +no opportunity to take the defensive; accordingly he beheaded them +all, 1,800 in number, including infidels and those baptised. In the +province of Bulacan, where there were more Sangleys, the slain did +not exceed 500; for as they were farm laborers, and were scattered, +they went away, deserting their houses, and joined the rebels, without +Captain Juan Diaz, the alcalde-mayor of that province, being able to +hinder them.... In the province of Tondo, as many as 300 were beheaded, +because, as the insurrection was going on therein, only those were put +to death who could not easily join the rebels. In the province of Bay +were beheaded 200, of those who had been sheltered in the convents, and +of those who were seized as accomplices of the uprising in Calamba. In +the province of Taal they slew others.... In Pangasinan they beheaded +500 Sangleys, through the energy of the alcalde-mayor, Captain Don +Fernando Suarez Deza; and in that of Ilocos, which was governed by +Sargento-mayor Pedro de Tursis, as many as 100 were slain. The same +was done in the other provinces, by which the forces of the enemy +were diminished, and the revolution checked." + +[68] "The leaders in these sacrilegious acts were the Christian +Sangleys, who showed that they were renegades from the faith which +they had pretended to profess." (Diaz, p. 412). + +[69] The bracketed words are conjectural, to replace some that are +illegible or worn in the original MS. + +[70] "On December 7 Captain Santiago Gastelu arrived from Pampanga +with a large reenforcement of men, and in his company was father Fray +Juan de Sosa, a religious of our father St. Augustine, and minister of +the village of Porac, who came with 800 Zambal archers whose leader +he was in all the fights that occurred, ... urging on the Pampangos, +who were a terror to the enemy; a thousand of them were arquebusiers, +and the [above] 800 were archers." (Diaz, p. 415.) + +[71] Some of these are described by Diaz, whose account throughout +is more full and detailed. + +[72] "On the way, our people heard how the Aetas from the hills had +gone out to lie in ambush against the Sangleys, and had done them much +damage; for in one place seven Aetas, naked and armed with some bamboo +darts, had rushed in among more than 6,000 Sangleys--of whom they slew +seventy, the Aeta band losing only one of their seven men." (Diaz, +p. 418). + +[73] Diaz (p. 418) gives the main credit for this achievement to the +Augustinian friar Juan de Sosa, who offered to dislodge the Chinese +from their camp with his Indian archers--the Spanish troops seconding +the attack of the Indians. + +[74] "Cogon (Saccharum koenigii): a rapidly growing plant reaching +three meters (about 10 ft.) in height, and forming a tangled mass +only penetrable by fire or knife. The areas are burned over during +the dry season, the young shoots being cut for cattle fodder +when 18 inches high. Where nipa does not grow cogon is used for +thatching." (U. S. Gazetteer of Philippines, p. 71.) E. D. Merrill's +Dictionary of Plant Names (Manila, 1903), p. 52, gives the botanical +name as Imperata arundinacea. + +[75] This was Onofre Esbry (Esvri--incorrectly made Esbin by Diaz's +editor); he was a native of Tortosa, and entered the Jesuit order +at the age of fifteen. At the time of this insurrection, Esbry was +but twenty eight years old. In 1647, while sailing to Macao, he was +slain by Chinese pirates, near Sanchon Island. See Murillo Velarde's +Hist. Philipinas, fol. 108 verso, and 154 verso. + +[76] The statement in this sentence is not very clearly expressed; +but the apparent meaning is that the Chinese commander was not +officially entitled to the designation of "mandarin," which had +been conferred upon him by the insurgents without due right to +make such appointment. S. Wells Williams says (Middle Kingdom, i, +p. 326): "The word mandarin, derived from the Portuguese mandar, +to command, and indiscriminately applied by foreigners to every +grade from a premier to a tide-waiter; it is not needed in English +as a general term for officers, and ought to be disused, moreover, +from its tendency to convey the impression that they are in some +way unlike their compeers elsewhere." See his account of the Chinese +government, general, provincial, and local, and the classes of the +Chinese people (pp. 322-352); also Winterbotham's description of the +"mandarins of arms," or military officers, in his Chinese Empire, ii, +pp. 8-10. Cf. note on civil mandarins, in VOL. XIX of this series, +p. 44. + +[77] "For more than six months, it was impossible to drink the water +in the rivers, they were so corrupted by the dead bodies; nor did +the people eat fish in a circuit of many leguas, since all these were +fattened on human flesh." (Diaz, p. 427). + +[78] "Every day those people knew what their losses were, through the +regular plan that they followed. This was as follows: every ten men +formed a mess; of these, two went out to procure food, six to fight, +and two to guard and attend to their lodging. Every ten troops of these +were under a captain; and a field officer commanded ten captains, +with a thousand men each. Each soldier had a chapa (a bronze coin +that is current among them), and at night each one handed this to +his captain; then all these were counted, and the soldiers knew, by +the number of coins that were lacking, how many men they lost each +day." (Diaz, p. 423.) + +[79] In the MS. here and elsewhere, "S. Paloc"--evidently supposed +by the transcriber to be the name of some saint. + +[80] In Diaz, "Tabuco, a visita of Quingua." + +[81] Diaz relates (p. 414) the plots concocted by the Sangleys for +this insurrection, which was set for Christmas; they were to carry +gifts of fowls on that day, as was their custom, to the Spaniards of +their acquaintance; and were to perform a comedy near one of the gates, +to divert the attention of the citizens from any suspicion of their +designs. Then at an appointed hour they were to kill all the Spaniards, +and take possession of the city. This was frustrated by the premature +rising at Calamba; sixty of those concerned therein were slain by their +own countrymen, because they had not waited till the appointed day. + +[82] In the MS., guerra; probably a transcriber's conjecture for a +word poorly written, since the context requires fuerza--referring to +the fort of Santiago at the mouth of Pasig River. + +[83] According to Diaz (p. 414), two negroes (slaves), who under +torture confessed that they had aided the insurgents, were hanged. + +[84] The name of the smallest coin current in former times, the word +meaning literally "one-fourth." Apparently, the bishop imposed a +slight tax on all who attended mass, for the benefit of the poor +prebendaries. It will be noticed that the word coro has several +different meanings. In this sentence, it means the body of clergy +in the church who chant the sacred offices; above, referring to the +bishop's seat, it meant the place which the clergy occupied during +the church services. + +[85] The title-page of the Bocabulario states that additions were made +to it by Claver before sending the work to the press. This friar came +to the Philippines in 1624, and was assigned to the Visayan missions, +where he labored until 1639, when he was sent as procurator to Madrid +and Rome; he died at Madrid, in 1646. Claver wrote several books, +the most important being a history of the Augustinian province of +Philipinas, which has been lost. See Perez's Catalogo, p. 105, and +T. H. Pardo de Tavera's Biblioteca Filipina, pp. 262, 263. + +[86] For bibliographical account of Mentrida's works, see Pardo de +Tavera's Biblioteca Filipina (Washington, 1903), pp. 262, 263. They +are as follows: Bocabulario de la lengva Bisaia Hiligvoyna y Haraia +(Manila, 1637), and another edition (Manila, 1841); Arte de la lengua +Bisaya Hiliguayna (Manila, 1818), possibly this was a second edition; +and Ritual para administrar los Santos Sacramentos (Manila, 1630), +reprinted in 1669. Pardo de Tavera says: "He died in 1637, leaving +various works which have since been lost, not having been printed; +Father Agustin Maria says that he had an opportunity to see these in +Panay, about 1770 to 1780." + +[87] Colin says (Labor evangelica, Pastells' ed., i, p. 31): "For +greater convenience in governing it, this island of Panay is divided +into two jurisdictions: the territory belonging to that of Panay is +all of the northern coast, from the point of Potol to Bulacabi; the +rest of the island belongs to the jurisdiction of Oton, the principal +[Spanish] post in which, at this time, is at Iloilo--a point which +projects into the sea on the southern coast, between the two rivers of +Tigbauan and Jaro; and makes, with the island of Imaras, a strait half +a legua wide and an open harbor." This would make the jurisdiction of +Fanay correspond to the present province of Capiz; and that of Oton +to the provinces of Antique and Iloilo. The boundaries between these +present divisions are the rugged mountain chains which fill a great +part of the interior of the island, their peaks ranging in height +from 3,500 to 7,200 feet; they render traffic between the provinces +almost impossible, except as it is carried on by way of the sea. The +island of Guimaras is 26 1/2 miles long by 12 miles wide, and has +important fishing and agricultural industries. + +[88] One of the most notable names in Philippine missionary annals +is that of Agustin de San Pedro (his family name Rodriguez), born in +Portugal in 1599. He was a student in the university of Salamanca, +but, desiring to enter the religious life, he assumed the habit of +a Recollect Augustinian at Valladolid, and made his profession at +the age of twenty. Three years later, he set out for the Philippine +mission, and soon after reaching Manila was sent to Mindanao. There +he labored with the Indians in the districts of Butuan, Habongan, +Linao, Cagayan, Tandag, and Romblon; and accompanied the expedition +of Atienza Ibanez (1639) to Lake Malanao. Retana and Pastells +(in their edition of Combes's Hist. Mindanao, col. 725) state that +this missionary converted some 10,000 natives to Catholicism. More +than that, he aided in the defense of his converts, several times +fighting at their head against their heathen and piratical enemies; +and, having been as a student proficient in mathematics and military +science, he constructed forts in the Christian villages which +enabled them to repel their invaders, and taught the natives the +art of fortification. Fray Agustin died in Romblon, in 1653. See +accounts of his life and exploits in Prov. S. Nicolas de Tolentino, +pp. 290-292; and La Concepcion's Hist. Philipinas, v, pp. 362-391 +(which will appear in a later volume of this series). + +[89] This expedition, departing from Tandag (on the north-eastern coast +of Surigao, the easternmost province of Mindanao), sailed northwest +to the point near the town of Surigao, then, passing through the +strait of that name, southwest into Iligan Bay on the north shore +of the island. Ascending the Iligan River (which is the outlet of +Lake Lanao), they reached the lake, after a journey of sixteen and +one-half miles. Now, as then, the valley of the river and the vicinity +of the lake are thickly settled, and the Moro inhabitants carry on +extensive industries in agriculture and commerce. On the Jesuit Atlas +de Filipinas (Washington, 1900), map no. 27, appears a village named +P. Capitan--evidently in memory of the soldier-missionary Fray Agustin; +but no such name is given in the U. S. Gazetteer of the islands. + +[90] Marginal note: "This relation has been translated from a Spanish +manuscript existing in the library of Don Carlo del Pezzo." + +This relation is unsigned, and undated, but Rev. Pablo Pastells, S.J., +said during the course of a conversation with one of the Editors, +in 1903, that the author was undoubtedly Father Diego de Bobadilla; +and in his edition of Colin's Labor evangelica (Barcelona, 1904), +he says (iii, p. 798, note): "This father [i.e., Father Bobadilla] +was the author in 1640 of the famous relation which was translated +by Melquisedec Thevenot." + +[91] See our VOLS. I and II for the history of these early +expeditions. It will be noticed that the author of the present relation +is inaccurate in regard to the date of the voyage of Villalobos, +and that he omits mention of some of the early voyages. + +[92] That is "Birth follows the womb." + +[93] See VOL. XXII, p. 300, note 61. + +[94] For this expedition to Mindanao by Hurtado de Corcuera, see +previous documents. This reference proves the present relation to +have been written in 1640, as the expedition above mentioned occurred +in 1637. + +[95] Visayan name (also colocolo, elsewhere) of the fishing gannet +(Sula piscatrix). Delgado says (Historia, p. 820) that he had a tame +one in his house, which would bring home fish that it had caught, +and carry them to the kitchen. + +[96] French, Estang du Roy ("the King's Pool"); evidently referring +to the hot springs near Laguna de Bay (see VOL. XIV, p. 211), and +the word Roy is probably a misprint for Bay. + +[97] It is Chirino who is here (although inexactly) cited; see +VOL. XII, p. 236. + +[98] See Chirino's account, in VOL. XII, p. 241; he says that the +art of writing was imparted to the Visayans by the Tagals. + +[99] Marginal note: "Prudish" (melindrosa). + +[100] That is, "star-thistles"--the common name of a genus (Tribulus) +of plants, which bears prickly fruits, very injurious to the feet of +animals or men. The military instrument called "caltrop" resembles +that fruit, from which it may have been evolved; and the appellation +tribolo is one of the etymological elements in "caltrop." + +[101] See the Cleveland reissue of the Jesuit Relations, lxv, p. 131, +for a description of head-compression by the North American Indians. + +[102] Mt. Bulusan, near the center of the province of Sorsogon, Luzon; +at present "almost extinct, but at times emits an abundance of watery +vapor and sulphurous fumes" (Report of U. S. Philippine Commission, +1900, iii, p. 149). + +[103] Also called balimbin; the fruit of Averrhoa carambola; used for +food and sweetmeats, and also has medicinal qualities. See Blanco's +description, Flora, p. 274; and Delgado's Historia, pp. 505, 506. For +note on santor, see VOL. XVI, p. 87; on banana (Musa), VOL. V, p. 169. + +[104] The corot (Dioscorea triphylla) is very common, with leaves +one palmo long, and very small flowers. Its sap is yellow and very +poisonous, and has cleansing power which is utilized to whiten +abaca. The root is very large and is eaten cooked by the Indians, +after having soaked it in the water for three or four days. + +The ubi is the Dioscorea alata, and the plant grows rather high and is +widely disseminated. The root is violet in color, and often attains a +great size; it is eaten cooked. The best variety is that known as the +Cebu ubi or ube, which comes from Bohol, and which makes a delicious +jelly. The ubi and analogous roots must be carefully prepared, or else +they prove poisonous. See Blanco's Flora, and U. S. Gazetteer of the +Philippine Islands. Delgado (p. 763) enumerates eight varieties of +this root. + +The apari is perhaps the apalia or paria (Montordica balsamina), +a climbing plant, which bears a fruit which is rather bitter to the +taste, and eaten in salads. The juice of its leaves is used instead +of soap. The ripe fruit soaked in olive, cocoa, or beneseed oil makes +an excellent balsam that is used for medicinal purposes. + +[105] French, patanes, apparently a misprint for patatas. The camote +or sweet potato (Convolvulus batatas, Linn.; now named Batatas edulis) +is extensively cultivated in the islands. Blanco (Flora, p. 69) cites +Mozo as saying that this plant was carried to the islands from Nueva +Espana; but Blanco regards it as indigenous in the Philippines. Delgado +(pp. 766-768) enumerates twenty-nine varieties of camote. + +[106] The Batelan is perhaps the balete; see VOL. XII, p. 214, note +56. For note on dabdab, see ibid., p. 215, note 57. + +[107] Apparently a reference to the variety of orange known at the +present day as navel oranges. + +[108] For a treatise on the snakes and poisonous animals of the +Philippines, see Delgado's Historia, pp. 889-907. He describes the +omodro as the odto (Hemibungarus collaris)--from the word meaning +"half-day" or "noon," and given to it because the bite proves fatal +if given at noon, but at no other time. It is of various colors and +very furious at the hour of noon. The saua (Python reticulatus) is +the largest snake of the islands and is often domesticated, and is +not poisonous to man. + +[109] The dugong (a word corrupted from the Malay name duyong); +not a fish, but a marine mammal (Helicore australis). Crawfurd says +(Dict. Indian Islands, p. 125) that it is found in the shallow seas +of the Malayan archipelago, but is not often captured; and that its +flesh is greatly superior to that of the green turtle. This creature +is one of those from which originated the fable of the mermaids. + +[110] Thevenot has translated the Spanish term for Franciscans +(padres de San Francisco or padres franciscanos) into the popular +French term cordeliers, so called because of their girdle. Similarly +he has translated the term for Dominicans (padres de San Domingo or +padres dominicanos) as Jacobins, also the popular French appellation, +so called from the name of the church of St. Jacques, which was +given them in Paris. See Addis and Arnold's Cath. Dict., article +"Franciscans," p. 356; and Chevin's Dict. Latin-Francais, p. 353. + +Either Thevenot the translator, or the author, omits mention of +the convent of the Society of Jesus, only the four above mentioned +being given. + +[111] The persimmon; see VOL. XVI, p. 180. + +[112] A misprint for sibucao (VOL. III, p. 196; XV, p. 256). + +[113] There is evidently a play of words in this passage. The French +reads Mais il se trouua bie loing de ses esperances, & auec vn pied de +nez. Pied de nez (literally "a foot of nose") is an exact equivalent of +the Spanish phrase palmo de narices, and the French expression demeurer +avec un pied de nez is equivalent to the Spanish idiom quedar con un +palmo de narices, which signifies "the frustration of one's hopes," +or "to be left out in the cold." + +[114] Apparently a corruption of Zarpana, the name given by its +inhabitants to the island of Rota, one of the Mariannes or Ladrones +Islands. + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898, +Volume 29 of 55, by Various + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PHILIPPINE IS., 1493-1898, VOL 29 *** + +***** This file should be named 38748.txt or 38748.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/7/4/38748/ + +Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project +Gutenberg. + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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