Martín de Ursúa
Martín de Ursúa (or Urzúa) y Arizmendi (February 22, 1653 – February 4, 1715), Count of Lizárraga and of Castillo,[1] was a Spanish Basque conquistador in Central America during the late colonial period of New Spain. Born in Olóriz, Navarre,[2] he is noted for leading the 1696–97 expeditionary force which resulted in the fall of the last significant independent Maya stronghold, Nojpetén, located on an island in Lake Petén Itzá in the northern Petén Basin region of present-day Guatemala. He served as governor of the Yucatán until 1708, when he was named president of the Philippines.[2] Around the time that he was named to that post, he was made a knight of the Order of Santiago.[2] He died in Manila in 1715.[3]
Ursúa arrived in Mexico around 1680 and initially served as a lawyer in Mexico City, until 1692. He used this period to cement relationships with colonial officials in Yucatán.[4] In 1692 he was appointed to be governor of Yucatán, with his term to begin in 1698.[5] By 1694 he had been appointed as alcalde ordinario (a Spanish colonial official) of Mexico City.[4] Ursúa took office in Yucatán four years earlier than planned, becoming acting governor on 17 December 1694.[6]
Family tree
Martín de Ursúa was from a line of distinguished and successful noblemen that was extremely well connected politically and that intermarried with other influential noble families to form a kinship network that was spread across Europe and the Americas:[7]
General Pedro de Ursúa y Arizmendi | ? | Diego Egües y Beaumont Governor and Captain General of Nueva Granada | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Pedro de Ursúa y Arizmendi de Egües Count of Jerena | ? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Pedro de Ursúa, Abbot of Pamplona | Martín de Ursúa y Arizmendi | Juana Bolio y Ojeda (criolla) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
See also
- Antonio María de Bucareli y Ursúa
- History of the Philippines (1521–1898)
- Spanish conquest of Guatemala
- Spanish conquest of Yucatán
Notes
References
- Jones, Grant D. (1998). The Conquest of the Last Maya Kingdom. Stanford, California, USA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804735223.