Three Maya "provinces" exist in the seventeenth…
March 1697 CE
Three Maya "provinces" exist in the seventeenth century in the Lake Petén area.
They are Kan Ek' (Canek), Yalain, and Kowoj (Couoh).
The Kan Ek' may have been the dominant "province" in the end of the seventeenth century.
The title of the rulers of Kan Ek' was Aj Kan Ek'.
Since the late 1690s, the last Aj Kan Ek' started a more open attitude towards the Spaniards, which included receiving and protecting the emissaries from the Spaniards at Noj Peten (also known as Noh Peten or Tayasal) In 1695, three Franciscans had headed to Tayasal, an island city in lake Petén Itza, accompanied by four Christian Maya singers.
They had been well received, and a number of the Itza had consented to be baptized.
The Itza King, however, had refused to convert to Christianity or pledge loyalty to Spain; he said a time would come when this would be the proper thing to do but that time had not arrived.
A force of sixty Spanish soldiers and Maya allies had been sent to the Petén the following year, but had been beaten back by fierce Itza attacks.
The command in Mérida has decided that a major force is needed, and in 1697 sends out a force of two hundred and thirty-five Spanish soldiers and tens of thousands of Xiu Maya under the command of Martín de Urzúa y Arizmendi, along with artillery and a large supply train of mules and men to cut a path through the jungle.
They set up a fort on the shore of Lake Petén Itza across from Tayasal, and reconstruct a small warship on the lake which has been brought with them in pieces.
This force succeeds on March 13, 1697, in conquering the Itza capital of Tayasal.
The Spanish burn the Itza library of books "containing lies of the devil", and report later that the city had so many idols that with almost the entire army set at work, it took from nine in the morning until half past five in the evening to break them all.
Mesoamerica is not to see another independent native state for over a hundred years.