English buccaneers in a small piece of…
1636 CE to 1647 CE
English buccaneers in a small piece of territory between the New Spanish provinces of Yucatan and Guatemala early in the seventeenth century had begun cutting logwood (Haematoxylum campechianum), which is used in the production of a textile dye.
According to legend, one of these buccaneers, Peter Wallace, called "Ballis" by the Spanish, settled near and gave his name to the Belize River as early as 1638.
Many Maya are still in Belize when the Europeans come to the area in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
Several Mayan provinces lie across the frontiers of modern Belize, Mexico, and Guatemala.
The Mayan province of Chetumal, for example, consists of the northern part of present-day Belize and the southern coast of the Mexican state Quintana Roo.
In the south, crossing the present-day frontier between Belize and Guatemala, are the Mopán Maya, and still farther south, the Ch'ol-speaking Manche groups.
In central Belize lies the province of Dzuluinicob, meaning "land of foreigners" or "foreign people."
This province stretches from New River in the north to Sittee River in the south, and from close to the present-day Guatemalan border in the west to the sea.
The apparent political center of this province is Tipu, located east of modern Benque Viejo del Carmen.
Lamanai, several towns on New River and on Belize River, and Xibún on Sibun River, are included in this province.
Spanish missionaries from Yucatán have begun to travel up New River in present Belize and establish churches in Mayan settlements with the intention of converting and controlling these people.
One such settlement is Tipu, which, although conquered by the Spanish in 1544, is too far from the colonial centers of power to be effectively controlled for long.
Thousands of Maya had fled south from Yucatán in the second half of the sixteenth century, and the people of Tipu had rebelled against Spanish authority.
Tipu is apparently too important to ignore because of its proximity to the Itzá of the Lago Petén Itzá region of present-day Guatemala.
Two Franciscans, attempting to convert the people in 1618 and 1619, had built a church in Tipu.
A period of resistance had begun in 1638 n Tipu, and by 1642, the entire province of Dzuluinicob is in a state of rebellion.
The Maya abandon eight towns at this time, and some three hundred families relocate in Tipu, the center of rebellion.
Tipu's population in the 1640s totals more than one thousand.