Nuño Beltrán de Guzmán was born around…
September 1528 CE
Nuño Beltrán de Guzmán was born around 1485 in Guadalajara, Spain, to an old noble family.
His father was Hernán Beltrán de Guzmán, a wealthy merchant and a High Constable in the Spanish Inquisition; his mother was Doña Magdalena de Guzmán.
The Guzmán family had supported Prince Charles in the Revolt of the Comuneros and achieved gratitude of the later Emperor.
Nuño Beltrán de Guzmán had received some education in law, but had never completed a degree.
For a period he and his younger brother served as one of one hundred royal bodyguards of Carlos V: he had accompanied the Emperor on a trip to Flanders in 1522 and had undertaken sensitive diplomatic missions, including one dealing with the Bishop of Cuenca (Spain).
In 1525 the Spanish crown had appointed him governor of the autonomous territory of Pánuco on the Gulf Coast in what is now northeast Mexico.
He had traveled with Luís Ponce de Leon and arrived in Hispaniola in 1526, but here he fell sick and had not not arrived in Mexico until May 1527, immediately assuming his post.
Cortés had already extended his reach into Pánuco, so that Guzmán's appointment was a direct challenge.
His appointment had been opposed by the pro-Cortés faction of the struggle for power in early colonial Mexico, who view him as an outsider with no military experience, but he has the support of the Council of Indies and the Spanish Crown, who see in him a counterbalance to the figure of Cortés, whose aspirations to power worry the King of Spain.
Guzmán's appointment has given heart to Spanish conquerors who have not received what they consider sufficient rewards from Cortés's distribution of encomiendas and to Spanish settlers who had not participated in the conquest but see their paths to position and wealth blocked by the Cortés faction.
Guzmán's rule as a governor of Pánuco is stern against Spanish rivals and brutal against the Indians.
He strikes down harshly against Cortés's supporters in Pánuco, accusing some of them of disloyalty to the Crown by backing Cortés's claim to the title of viceroy, some are stripped of their property, others are tried and executed.
He also incorporates territory from adjacent provinces into the province of Pánuco.
These actions bring New Spain to the brink of civil war between Guzmán and supporters of Cortés, led by Governor of New Spain Alonso Estrada, when Estrada sent an expedition to reclaim the lands expropriated by Guzmán.
As governor, Guzmán has instituted a system of Indian slave trade in Pánuco.
During a raid along Río de Las Palmas in 1528 he allows every horseman to enslave twenty Indian slaves and each footman fifteen.
Enslaved Indians are branded on the face.
Enslaving Indians had not been explicitly outlawed in the period before 1528.
Beginning in 1528, Indian slaving operations come under increased royal control but are not prohibited.
The regulations of September 19, 1528, require slave owners to present proof of the legality of the taking of any slaves before branding.