ACAPULCO TAKEN SUCCESSES OF THE INSURGENTS. 289 



joined him with their adherents and swelled his numbers to near a 

 thousand. They advanced to Acapulco, and having captured it 

 with abundant booty, the insurgents soon found their ranks joined 

 by numerous important persons, and, among them the Cura Mata- 

 moros and the Bravos, whose names have, ever since, been promi- 

 nently connected with the history and development of Mexico. 



The year 1811 was passed in a series of petty engagements ; 

 but, in January, 1812, the insurgents penetrated within twenty- 

 five leagues of the capital, where Galeana and Bravo took the 

 town of Tasco. 



Morelos was victorious in several other actions in the same and 

 succeeding months, and pushed his advanced guards into the val- 

 ley of Mexico, where he occupied Chalco and San Agustin de 

 las Cuevas, about twelve miles from the metropolis. Morelos 

 finally resolved to make his stand at Cuautla, in the tierra caliente, 

 on the other side of the mountain ranges which hem in the valley ; 

 and, to this place the viceroy Venegas despatched Calleja, who 

 was summoned from the north and west, where, as may readily be 

 imagined, so fiery a spirit had not been idle or innocent since the 

 defeat of Hidalgo. 



On the 1st of January, 1812, Calleja reached Zitacuaro, whence 

 the alarmed Junta fled to Sultepec. The insatiate Spaniard took 

 the town, decimated the inhabitants, razed the walls to the ground, 

 and burnt the dwellings, sparing only the churches and convents. 

 After this dreadful revenge upon a settlement which had committed 

 no crime but in harboring the Junta, he made a triumphal entrance 

 into Mexico, and, on the 14th of February, after a quarrel with the 

 viceroy, and a solemn Te Deum, he departed towards Morelos, 

 who was shut up in Cuautla de Amilpas. 



On the 19th Calleja attacked the town, but was forced to retreat. 

 He then regularly besieged the place and its insurgent visiters for 

 more than two months and a half. In this period, the troops on 

 ooth sides were not unoccupied. Various skirmishes took place, 

 but without signal results of importance to either party. Morelos 

 strove to prolong the siege until the rainy season set in, when he 

 felt confident that Calleja would be forced to withdraw his troops, 

 who could not endure the combined heat and moisture of the tierra 

 caliente during the summer months. Calleja, on the other hand, 

 supposed that by sealing the town hermetically, and cutting off all 

 supplies, its inhabitants and troops would soon be forced to sur- 

 render. Nor did he act unwisely for the success of his master. 

 Famine prevailed in the besieged garrison. Corn was almost the 



