Page:Vol 2 History of Mexico by H H Bancroft.djvu/114

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CHAPTER VI.

CORTÉS AND GARAY IN PÁNUCO.

1522-1523.

Rivalry for Pánuco — Cortés Hastens to Occupy It — Battle at Ayotochtitlan — Operations at Chila — Native Tactics — Founding of San Estévan del Puerto — A Shipwreck Incident — Disappointing Results — Campaign in Tututepec Mountains — Rejoicings on the Receipt of Cortés' Commission — Alluring Projects for Southern Conquests — Startling News — Garay Prepares to Descend on Pánuco — His Lack of Ability and Firmness — March from Las Pamas — Negotiations with Vallejo.

North of Villa Rica extended the fertile province of Pánuco, so called after the ruling chief,[1] whose villages bordered the deep-flowing rivers that seek the sea at the present Tampico. It was skirted on the east by woody ranges from which a number of streams ran down the undulating slopes to a flat and sandy seaboard broken by a series of lagoons. While the shore-line was unhealthy and thinly inhabited, the interior was salubrious, and rumor placed there rich mines of gold. To And this gold had been the chief inducement for the expeditions of Garay, and the hostility of the natives, together with a few thousand pesos obtained by barter, had only served to confirm the rumor.

The revelation that others were intent on establishing an independent government so close to his own, had been a source of anxiety to Cortés ever since the encounter with Pineda in August 1519.[2] He ac-

  1. 'Cuyo rey se llamaua Panuco.' Gomara, Hist. Mex., 67. The province was known to the Mexicans as Pantlan or Panotlan. Sahagun, Hist. Gen., iii. 132.
  2. See Hist Mex., i. 189, this series.
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