
Oil on canvas portrait of Diego de Vargas by Julio Barrera, date unknown, from the collection of the
Palace of the Governors.
'Diego de Vargas Zapata y Luján Ponce de León y Contreras' (born in
Spain,
1643 –
1704), commonly known as 'Don Diego de Vargas', was a
Spanish Governor of the
New Spain territory of
Santa Fe de Nuevo México, today the
U.S. states of
New Mexico and
Arizona, titular
1690 –
1692, effective
1692 –
1696 and
1703 –
1704. He is most famous for leading the reconquest of the territory in 1692 following the
Pueblo Revolt of
1680. This reconquest is commemorated annually during the
Fiestas de Santa Fe in the city of
Santa Fe.
Pueblo Revolt
On
August 10, 1680,
Pueblo people from various
pueblos in northern New Mexico staged an uprising against Spanish colonists. They laid siege to the city of Santa Fe, forcing the Spanish to retreat on
August 21. The colonists fled south to El Paso del Norte (now
Ciudad Juárez,
Mexico), where they remained in exile for the next 12 years.
In
1690, Diego de Vargas was appointed Governor of New Mexico, assigned with the task of reconquering and recolonizing the territory for Spain. In July of 1692, de Vargas and a small contingent of soldiers returned to Santa Fe. They surrounded the city and called on the Pueblo people to surrender, promising clemency if they would swear allegiance to the
King of Spain and return to the
Christian faith. After meeting with de Vargas, the Pueblo leaders agreed to peace, and on September 14, 1692 de Vargas proclaimed a formal act of repossession.
De Vargas’ repossession of New Mexico is often called a "bloodless reconquest", since the territory was initially retaken without any use of force. Later, when de Vargas returned to Mexico in early
1693 to retrieve a group of settlers, the Pueblo people reneged on their peace agreement and again captured Santa Fe. This time with the peace agreement broken, de Vargas retook the city by force, resulting in hundreds of Pueblo fighters being killed or later executed. A Second Pueblo Revolt was attempted in
1696, resulting in the death of five missionaries and twenty-one Spaniards, but it was effectively thwarted. For the next several years, warfare continued between both sides, but by the end of the century the Spanish colonization was essentially solidified.
Notable soldiers who traveled with de Vargas
★ Ignacio Roibal (
Roybal) - Owner of the now-historic
Sena Plaza in Santa Fe.
References
★
New Mexico History
★
Old Houses of New Mexico and The People Who Built Them, , Sytha, Motto, Calvin Horn Publisher, , LCCN F797 .M67
See also
★
History of New Mexico