Manuel Antonio Ay (c. 1817– July 26, 1847) was a Yucatec Maya military leader and revolutionary, and chief of the village of Chichimilá.[1]

Manuel Antonio Ay
Bornc. 1817
DiedJuly 26, 1847 (30 years old)
Occupation(s)Batab, caudillo
ChildrenAntonio

Life edit

Ay was the batab of Chichimilá. He would often help indigenous villagers with legal matters as he was literate while many of the local Maya could not read or write.[2]

Ay fought in the 1846 rebellion against the Merida-based government of Miguel Barbachano, President of the Republic of Yucatán. He participated in the capture of Chemax in 1846 and Valladolid in 1847 under the orders of Colonel Antonio Trujeque and with the support of Santiago Méndez. However, after their military success, many of the Maya troops decided to declare independence themselves, putting them at odds with Méndez.[3]

Ay was one of the most active organizers of the indigenous insurrection. In 1847, he met with Cecilio Chi, Jacinto Pat, and Bonifacio Novelo to plan the uprising that would become the Caste War. Reportedly, he stated that his goal was to have the white men driven from the Peninsula. He was discovered when a bartender found a suspicious letter he had left in his hat signed by Chi. Once Colonel Eulogio Rosado, the Commandant of Valladolid, learned of the letter, he arrested Ay. Ay was put on trial from July 21 to 25 before he was sentenced to death by hanging. Rosado ordered his execution carried out in the plaza of the Santa Ana neighborhood of Valladolid on July 26.[4] His corpse was transferred to Chichimilá, where it was covered and buried after being exhibited to warn the rebels.[5] As a result of Ay's killing, Cecilio Chi and Jacinto Pat led an attack on the criollo residents of Tipich, beginning the Caste War.

Ay left behind a son named Antonio who helped capture Valladolid in 1848. After the Maya fighters entered the town, Antonio executed the man who had carried his father's letter to Colonel Rosado.

Legacy edit

A statue of Ay is located in Chetumal, Quintana Roo next to a statue of Cecilio Chi. There is also a monument to Ay in the Santa Ana Park in Valladolid.[6]

References edit

  • Reed, Nelson. (1964) The Caste War of Yucatan Stanford University Press, Palo Alto.
  1. ^ "E-leaders". www.museogc.com. Retrieved 2018-02-05.
  2. ^ Rugeley, Terry (2010). Yucatán's Maya Peasantry and the Origins of the Caste War. University of Texas Press. p. 160. ISBN 9780292774704.
  3. ^ Jeffrey S. Dixon; Meredith Reid Sarkees (2015). A Guide to Intra-state Wars An Examination of Civil, Regional, and Intercommunal Wars, 1816-2014. SAGE Publications. p. 47. ISBN 9780872897755.
  4. ^ Don E. Dumond (1997). The Machete and the Cross: Campesino Rebellion in Yucatan. University of Nebraska Press. p. 93. ISBN 9780803217065.
  5. ^ (in Spanish) Raúl Casares G. Cantón, Juan Duch Colell; Michel Antochiw Kolpa; Silvio Zavala et álias, Yucatán en el tiempo, Mérida, 1998. ISBN 970 9071 04 1
  6. ^ "Honran a héroe campesino". Diario de Yucatan. July 27, 2019.