In the year of our Lord 1533, the Spanish establishment on the
island, named for the Trinity, discovered by the Grand Admiral forty-five
years ago, was comprised of just one pueblo at a place described by the
naturals as Mucurapo.
It was a fortified camp and consisted of thirty-one houses
with kitchens, stables, smithy and storehouses.
Before the attack in September of that year, it was
protected by a singly stockade, but now a double wall was constructed of heavy balks
of timber, filled between with earth. This wall was 180 paces each way, pierced
with loop holes and flanked by bastions mounted with cannons from the ships.
The strength of the last Indian attack had clearly left and indelible
impression upon the Spaniards. Antonio de Herrera in his 'Historia General de
Las Indias 1730' cited a report by Antonio Sedeño to His Most Catholic
Majesty's Audencia at Madrid:
"Thus we waited on watch until four o'clock in the early
morning of September 13th, 1533, as dawn was breaking upon the pueblo and
before the guards were relieved or the rounds made, a great number of Indians,
all clothed, swept down upon us, with loud cries contrary to their usual mode
of attack.
They at once surrounded the pueblo on all sides and launched
the attack with great courage and persistence as though they had been Turks,
and in half-an-hour about 15—20 of our men had been wounded.
So many were the arrows that they covered the ground. As the
horses were stabled in the middle of the pueblo, the Indians were not able to
get at them through the defenses, but by shooting arrows high up they managed
to wound five out of the eight before steps were taken to cover them. These
horses were the principal reserve and would be urgently required later, as we
felt certain that without them we should all be killed. We all agreed that if
these horses were lost, that day or soon after, it would be necessary to
abandon the Island with the loss of everything.
We then sent out the horses to resist and break up this
furious attack. As soon as the first horseman was seen, the Indians began to
shout loudly, 'Horses, Horses, Horses,' and to turn and fly. As the other
horsemen followed and wounded and killed the Indians, they broke completely and
fled to the hills, leaving on the battlefield many bows, arrows, shields and
war clubs. We killed about 30
Indians and captured three alive, from whom we learnt that many tribes had
united to make this assault. They had agreed to take arms to kill the Spaniards
and drive them out of the Island. If this attempt were not successful they had
agreed to return again in eight days in still greater numbers to make the
Island free of us.
This was sure to happen sooner or later and our men were
depressed at this news, for the punishment inflicted by the horsemen was not
sufficiently great. We searched the battlefield and collected our wounded,
about 20 or more. Amongst these was the Teniente of Paria who had been one of
the horsemen; his horse had been killed by two arrows tipped with poison, so that
it died raving mad."
The tribal people generally referred to as Caribs were
terrified of horses. The Spaniards with iron helmets and breast plates were
recognisable as men, but horses, it would appear, touched some nerve, some
primal fear. The second battle of Mucurapo lasted about an hour and half, involved some 3,000 Caribs. It
commenced in the pre-dawn hours. The warriors had moved silently across the
Savannah and through the high forest of giant silk cotton trees. This attack
was in response to one launched upon an Indian village by the Spaniards some
months before when at the one in the morning they had fallen upon a sleeping
village. The Indians had engaged in a desperate defense and refused to yield.
The Spaniards set fire to the huts so as to bring out the men, the women and
the children, and by the fierce light of their blazing homes, this bitter and
unequal fight continued to the end.
Event he women and children submitted voluntarily to the
flames rather than surrender. Many warriors died, a handful fled into the
northern mountains. Of the Spaniards, ten had died "raving in madness'
from the wounds of poisoned arrows. The Caribs took the fort by surprise and
penetrated the stockade of the Spanish camp and were engaged in hand to hand
fighting (K.S. Wise). It was only the timely action by the horsemen which saved
the day for Spain.
It was now evident that the Carib people had gathered in
strength and were not afraid to die for their Iere. Antonio Sedeño knew that
the margin by which he and his men had survived was very narrow. Fourteen
Spaniards had been killed, and only 30 men remained. All the horses had been
wounded. There was great dissent in the camp at Mucurapo. Antonio de Herrera
declared that this conquest of Trinidad was doomed to failure and that he
intended to leave for the main land.
That night, the rations almost done, they received food from
the cacique Maruana, leader of the south of the island. the Caribs, as well
received fresh reinforcements and a large quantity of poisonous arrows. From
the fort, their encampments could be seen dotting the forested areas of what is
now Woodbrook and St. James. The campfires in the fort were piled high with
logs and blazed brightly as the sun settled into the Dragon's Mouth, turning
gold to red with the intensity of primeval volcanoes. Starving sentinels scanned
the forest for a sign that could signal attack from the Caribs. The night grew
inordinately still.
Sedeño had received news that no assistance nor supplies
could be expected in Trinidad. Many men had deserted, preferring to risk the
crossing to the main in rotting and unsafe pirogues than to face the poisoned
arrows of the Caribs. Dissatisfaction and discouragement enhanced by the
absence of adequate supplies of food had grown since March 1534 the rest of his
men mutinied against Sedeño and demanded to be led away from Trinidad where
only death and destruction awaited them. That night, he was arrested by his own
men and removed to the mainland. The second battle of Mucurapo had been won by
the Caribs.
(from "Chronicles of the Carib Wars", K.S. Wise)
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