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Show MEXICAN and this course was pursued by some. HISTORY The captain-general made a i report to the viceroy in which he stated that all was quiet and the he danger A declared to exist by the friars was language used by the governor in his only imaginary. report was regarded The ae . ig le Fay 2, 2. i Nee Lf (R02 a | bi ye Lea ee as an ey we ie /g 4) San Diego canyon, Yo US, Yr 4 Ae Wy 7 Lap / o Aj yy tt | dn A G5 Fy 4 / Xe Vogue's lial) CeSy J Gh JOW up ie ee hj, eZ wu tf AEM Su Dah yy ae wt Wit y) Zefalairny yA ; df ¢ fit dbl Lo LLP? ee ye toy iG JLER / qx ] a. anke Jef Met a gt Kept L Z Ye ue & th : VG WSs, tHe Ah GE We, Lo g ben A bas am ” oT Y nf ie! f ? £ La? Af / Ag fg Nypis, # 1 be,tit hyyett ¢ fides a 10 J Ny Gi i y Lyjea LD IMO Tox Var iene Ade, {7 ‘ es <4? pe ao fy Vist Vuelo po +e y ) By + ile Piudien y C LL 2 Aik sot f, x 4a Ou ; " ‘Ah Lncions He Fh noily vy, Oe hj OSD A abn bei Mie gauge : fr typ,yp Aah aa A fierce partly at the Fi confederacy with Acoma and Zuni, and caused the Jemez to flee to the Navajé country. When Captain Lara reconnoitered the mesas two months later, they were deserted. The Jemez remained among OS ose Pe the Navajés for several years, finally returning to their old village and establishing themselves at or near the site of the present pueblo.* de Guerra, 1696, fol. 7-94. The letters Chavez and those of Captain Lara and of De Vargas’ » give information as to this bloody battle. Indians lost forty killed, while Lara of Fernando compadre, Bartolomé de Ojeda states that the says that only twenty-eight fell. Tt is that Escalante, who had access to the official papers at Santa Fe, does not mention this battle, which was one of the most bloody of the war, and at the same time the most important, it broke up the Jemez Lge wh“bape 0: eI? An! Gane tribe 4” 3 —- f fb fe Aa? tnt Be ee / VOY (ae A s GS ee yi? gn. Cn ; [Pos Vf Lb mb ¥ 260° i “ @ jer Be IP YC oe gue’ Le 4 abd | gl Fae-simile of Page from the Journal of Don Diego de Vargas containing entry on relative the chapel the to of making San Miguel a ‘ ee Ae ly Achy oe» &C hk ae tee CR é “ie ¢ s# o CH Ie p, Duran de Singular as Wy : by ore) - iy, f i ruins of the pueblo of San J uan, in which the Jemez and their allies were routed with the loss of thirty men. This defeat broke up the “1 Autos ¢ b y small detachment of soldiers under the command of Captain Miguel de Lara, and he, together with the alecalde mayor of Bernalillo, Don Fernando Duran de Chavez, took the field against the superior conflict took place, partly in the Ca y v/ Os, Loi Ys i} Ds ers. Af: “25 yo amma? oo their courage, and the friars who had come to returned to their missions. of June, 1696, the Indians of the pueblos of Taos Tehuas, the Queres of Santo Domingo and Cochitt, as well as the Jemez, rose, killing THE UPRISING OF JUNE 4, 1696 five missionaries and twenty-one other Spaniards, and then fled to the mountains. The friar at the pueblo of Jemez had repeatedly warned De Vargas of the condition of affairs at his mission but De Vargas paid no attention to his reports. This priest, whose name was Fray Francisco de Jesus, also known as Fray Francisco de Casaus, was murdered and all of the Indians fled. They had no time to build a new pueblo on the mesa and only erected temporary Shelters. Their first step was to secure help from the Navajos, from Acoma, and from Zufi, and to make hostile demonstrations against the Indians of Cia, Santa Ana, and San Felipe. F At Cia there was a Jey eek Ly, LLC. at “), imputation upon Santa Fé quietly On the 4th day and Picuriés, the numbers of the insurgents, starting on the 29th of June. hea ‘ tean OF NEW ~* = «Tt FACTS . LEADING rae Re ee A pee | . F Sets Se Fe ai, te ate °* on Re SOT SPV oat ak YE eet.at 4 ant ° 410 of repairs q |