HISTORY
VILLAINS FROM THE SEA
The walled city of Campeche, Mexico,
is the legacy of 200 years of pirate attacks in the Mundo Maya.
Text
by Beatriz Martí / Illustrations by Carlos Matehuala
At three o'clock
in the morning on July 6, 1685, the San Francisco church bells began to
ring. This was the signal for the entire town to assemble to hear important
news. Men, women and children all ran to the main square and into the
church to hear what the parish priest had to tell them.
But this time the
priest wasn't there. When practically the whole population was inside
the church, doors were slammed shut to stop anyone from getting out of
the precincts. Then they realized what had happened: yet again Campeche
was the victim of a pirate attack. From that moment, the town's new owners
devoted themselves to sacking it: house by house, business by business
and, above all, church by church. The pirates had already emptied San
Francisco, but there were many other rich churches.
Leading
the attack was the French pirate Laurent de Graff. An experienced sailor
and thief, he frequently used this method: approaching silently at night,
taking the principal church and then holding the entire town prisoner
inside it. However, this wasn't de Graff's only method, as he sometimes
attacked during the day. This savagery left the coastal cities very vulnerable,
as if Lorencillo (as De Graff was called), or anyone else of the same
mind, could come and do with them as they pleased.
Today
piracy is a popular theme for children's books, but, during the 16th,
17th and 18th centuries, it was a highly profitable business thanks to
Spanish domination of the Americas. But pirates weren't common thieves,
nor vagabonds with eye patches and wooden legs: pirate
ship captains were often fully paid-up members of the sailing club, seamen
with skill and experience in ocean navigation and warlike tendencies.
They were usually organized by countries that were enemies of Spain and
the Papal Bull, a decree which had granted Spain almost the entire Americas,
leaving out other great powers like England, France and Holland. England,
in particular, gave tacit royal approval to pirate attacks, for a share
of the booty.
In the case of
Campeche, the loot usually consisted of gold, jewels, silver, fine woods,
feathers, wax, cotton and dyewood or palo de tinte (a tree found
in nearby jungles that once played an important role in the European textile
industry on account of the orange-red dye it yielded), which left the
New World aboard vast galleons bound for Spain. Out there, in the middle
of the Atlantic, the pirates lurked.
Attacks also
occurred at night, crews were taken by surprise as they slept, subjugated
and usually abandoned while the pirates hauled up their anchors and made
off with their loot and ship. After the successful raid and voyage back
home, the pirates gave their king (or queen as sometimes was the case)
a percentage, either as a return on their investment or as a form of taxation.
The grateful ruler often bestowed titles on the pirates, who rubbed shoulders
with royalty for the simple reason that they looted and sacked in the
royal name.
In addition to
Spanish galleons, pirates began to attack the ports of the Americas; on
the Pacific coast, Acapulco and Huatulco; Veracruz and Tampico on the
Gulf of Mexico and Santo Domingo, Havana and Cartagena in the Caribbean.
Nearly all of these places were undefended, far from major cities, and
were barely supported by the colonial authorities.
Campeche, a port
in the Mexican state of the same name on the Gulf of Mexico, was a favorite
with pirates. It had grown wealthy from the export of dyewood and other
precious woods and the cultivation of tobacco on nearby plantations. The
streets were lined with churches and fine houses built by prosperous merchants,
making the city a worthwhile prize for any pirate. As an added bonus,
the port's defenses were weak.
Pirate attacks
on Campeche and similar cities began in the 1500s and continued into the
18th century. There were several bloody raids, during which pirates killed
many men and imprisoned large numbers of women and children, but on other
occasions the attacks were fended off. Campeche spent decades in terror
as it became wealthier and even more irresistible to buccaneers, until
Spain finally agreed to fortify the city.
In 1686, the first
stone was laid in what would come to be a walled city and construction
ended in 1704, effectively ending pirate attacks. A 2-meter-thick wall
was built in the shape of an irregular polygon, two sides, 6 meters high,
looked out to sea; and six more sides, 7.9 meters high, faced inland.
Every corner of the polygon was protected by a bastion, each with 16 cannons.
From
this time on, everything changed. The walls held back the attacks but
piracy itself was on the wane. Pirates did, however, leave their mark
on Campeche, in its walled architecture, bastions and forts; in local
customs, for example that of the men going to market while their women
and children stay at home; and in its oral history of unexaggerated bloody
attacks.
Today's history
of Campeche is very different, but vestiges of the walled city easily
bring to mind people woken in the early hours of the morning when dozens
of pirate ships neared the coast and prepared to attack. This was a time
when piracy was the citizens of Campeche's worst nightmare and in no way
a suitable theme for children's stories.
|
|
|
|
|
Site produced by Organización
Tips. Cancun, Mexico.
|
|