Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Conquistador - Vasco Nunez de Balboa


"A people without the knowledge of their past history, origin and culture is like a tree without roots." - Marcus Garvey

By 1500, word had spread all over Spain and Europe of the wonders of the New World and the fortunes being made there.  Young and ambitious, Vasco Nunez de Balboa was born to a less wealthy noble family and had to work during his youth.  Nevertheless he still had the title of Hidalgo. With no connections to wealth Balboa like many young men of the time looked to the new world to establish his fortune.  He joined the expedition of Rodrigo de Bastiadas in 1500 and sailed up and down the Panamanian/Colombian coastline.  Bastiadas and young Balboa traveled up and down the isthmus and encountered many idengious people groups including the Kuna Indians.  However, the poor condition of the ships, caused by shipworm that ate the wooden hull, forced Bastiadas to turn back and head to Santo Domingo to effect repairs.  Despite repeated repairs the ships eventually sank in port at Jacaragua, leaving most of the Indian slaves to drown, while some gold and pearls were saved.

 Using the money he earned Balboa settled in Haiti and purchased a pig farm.  A farmer he was not and was soon in debt to his creditors.  Instead of working hard to pay off his debts, Balboa became a stowaway on a ship hiding himself and his favorite hunting dog, Leoncillo, in barrels of supplies from his farm.  The ship was bound to San Sebastian de Uraba, founded by Conquistador Alonso de Ojeda, in what is now Columbia in 1509.  Captain Martin Fernandez de Enciso discovered the hitchhiker and threatened to leave him at the next desolate island.  He later wisely recanted realizing he could use Balboa’s expertise sense he had explored the area where they were going 8 years earlier.

Upon arriving in 1510 at the settlement, the Spanish saw their colony had been destroyed by the local inhabitants. Furthermore Ojeda was nowhere to be found.   Enciso decided to abandon the settlement and head back to Hispanola.  However Balboa convinced them not to give up but rather relocate to another area he had explored earlier with Bastidas called Darien located on the Gulf of Uraba.  The crew agreed and the new settlement was called Sainta Maria la Antigua de Darien.  Soon the new settlers quickly grew tired of Enciso and stripped him of his authority in favor of Balboa.  Enciso shamed sailed back to Spain with the Alcalde (Spanish magistrate) Zamudio with the intent of pressing charges.

Darien was occupied by a large chiefdom headed by Cemaco. Cemaco and his warriors fought bravely to defend their land but fell to the Spanish forces and their hunting dogs.  Balboa and his men founded their new  town by building it on the site of Cemaco’s old village.  Balboa was elected head of the settlement despite the fact he was not the senior officer.  Balboa received word from Alcalde Zamudio that Enciso had filed charges against him with the Spanish Crown and had obtained a sentence condemning Balboa and an order to return to Spain to face the charges. Balboa decided the only way to come out of this in good standing would be to discover something new.  Immediately he and his men began exploring the surrounding countryside. 



Balboa setting his dogs upon Indian practitioners of homosexuality

Balboa meanwhile had organized a series of gold and slave hunting expeditions into the Indian chiefdoms of the area.  His Indian policy combined the use of barter, every kind of force, including torture, to extract information and the tactic of divide and conquer by forming alliances with certain tribes against others.  The Indians of Darien, less warlike than their neighbors of Uraba and without poisoned arrows, were not formidable foes and often fled at the approach of the Spanairds.  The Spanish arsenal included their terrible war dogs, sometimes used by Balboa as executioners to tear Indian victims to pieces.

They found great quantities of pearls and gold and were able to subdue the surrounding chiefdoms mainly because they were not united. From Santa Maria Balboa heard rumors of lands of gold to the south near a great sea.  He gathered 200 men and marched south.  On September 1, 1513 Balboa set out with 199 Spanairds (Francisco Pizarro among them) and 1,000 indigeneous inhabitants.  On the 25 of the same month, Balboa reached a summit and sighted the Pacific Ocean.  On September 29, 1513, Balboa waded in its waters and “formally took possession of the Great Sea in the name of the Spanish Monarch.

The name of Nuflo de Olano appears in the records as that of a black slave present when Vasco Núñez de Balboa sighted the Pacific Ocean in 1513.

Balboa returned to Darien on January 18, 1514 with great booty and immediately sent messengers to Spain bearing presents, to give an account of his discoveries.  Ferdinand the Catholic, nonetheless, replaced Balboa with Don Pedro Arias de Avilla.  Undaunted Balboa continued to explore the Pacific Ocean by building two light brigantines.  With these armed ships he took possession of the Pearl Islands off the coast of Peru.

Balboa’s exploits were put to a halt by the jealous Don Pedro Arias de Avilla.  He was charged with the crime of mistreating Indians and attempting to overthrow Avilla.  The truth is Balboa's mistreated of indigenous inhabitants was no less cruel than his contemporaries.  Avilla was driven by personal jealousy who was envious of Balboa's successes.   Avilla forced the local judge to condemn him to death.  The sentence was duly carried out by beheading him in the city square he founded on January 1, 1519.

Balboa’s actions of locating the Pacific Ocean for Europeans consequently opened up the western coast of South America to Spanish exploration and conquest.


Mvto

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

CONQUISTADOR - CONQUERORS

"The Conquistadors of history were young men of noble birth, warrior soldiers who craved adventure and sought their fortunes in the New World. They had to finance their own expeditions which caused an overwhelming desperation to scavenge the Americas for gold.  These ancient terrorist scourged the lands leaving behind desolation, destruction, plagues and great afflictions".  – Neamathla Perryman

In 1510, Spanish author, Garci Rodriguez de Montalvo publishes a book called Las Sergas de Esplandian (The Exploits of Esplandian).  In his introduction to the text, Montalvo explains he has edited the first 3 books of a text that has been in circulation since the 14th century.
In the story, Esplandian, the son of Amadis, has many strange adventures, among which is a meeting with the Amazons.

Know that, on the right hand of the Indies, very near to the Terrestrial Paradise, there is an island called California, which was peopled with black women, without any men among them because they were accustomed to live after the fashion of Amazons…In this island called California are many Griffins, on account of the great savageness of the country and the immense quantity of the wild game there….Now, in the time that these great men of the Pagans sailed (against Constantinople) with those great fleets of which I have told you, there reigned in this land of California a Queen, large of body, very beautiful, in the prime of her years…Sergas-Chapter 157

Circulating books of mysterious places, tales of exotic riches, success in navigating around the continent of Africa and the recent blockage of the eastern trade routes by the Ottoman Turks catapulted the European urgency to find alternative routes; supplying the impetus for European expansion.

Conquistador - Juan Ponce De Leon
On November 19, 1493, Juan Ponce De Leon arrives in Puerto Rico as a member of Christopher Columbus 2nd voyage.  The indigenous Taino culture dominated the island which was called Boriken in their language, meaning “The Land of the Brave Lord.”  Columbus, however, named the island San Juan Bautista in honor of John the Baptist. 

Returning back to Hispanola, Ponce de Leon is instructed to quelch a Taino rebellion in the Higuey province of what is now Santo Domingo.  When the European settlers invaded Hispanola, the eastern section belonged to the Caique Higuey or Kingdom of Taino Indians.  Their leaders included Caciques Cotubanama and Cavaco, the female Caciqua Higuanama and other leaders.  This area became the last to be conquered by the Spanish.  Juan de Esquivel first led the conquest in 1503 on the orders of the newly appointed colony governor, Nicolas de Ovando.  His orders were nothing less than annihilation of the indigenous peoples.  Ponce de Leon joins the fight which is recorded by Barolome de Las Casas who also participated in the Higuey massacre.  The brave Taino warriors who surrendered after a short time but heroic resistance meet a grave fate.   Men, women and children were disemboweled alive.  Many were tortured by having their hands and feet cut off as the Spanish feed their limbs to their hunting dogs.  Others were hanged or rounded up to be knifed to death.  By 1519 the Taino of the Higuey region were enslaved and their numbers had declined sharply.  The Spanish then brought in African slaves to replace them as a much needed labor force.

Juan Ponce de Leon’s cruelty was rewarded by elevating him to governor of that same province.  He was awarded land and Indian slaves to work his farms.  He prospered as many ships stopped here to refill.  He marries and has three daughters.  It is also here he learns about the rivers of gold back on the island of Puerto Rico.

Ponce de Leon applies for and receives a “royal grant” to explore the possibility of exploiting the wealth of the land.  On August 8, 1508, Ponce de Leon founded Caparra, the first European settlement in Puerto Rico. 

Cacique Agueybana (the Great Sun) chieftain of the Taino people greeted Ponce de Leon when he arrived on the island.  In 1508, Ponce de Leon became the first appointed governor of Puerto Rico.  His first order as governor was to force the Tainos to work in the gold mines and to build fortifications.  Many died as a result of their brutal labor.  In 1510, upon Agueybana’s death, his brother Gueybana (the Brave), better known as Agueybana II showed his people that the white men were not gods by drowning Diego Salcedo in the river.  The new chief then lead a fight of resistance in 1511 in an effort to free his island of the foreign invaders. Within a year, Ponce de León had subdued a majority of the native population and gained control over most of the island.

Two years after receiving the governorship of Puerto Rico, the King of Spain revoked his titles and gave it to Diego Columbus the son of Christopher Columbus.  Political intrigue was the cause of this abrupt change.  Quickly Juan Ponce de Leon obtained from Charles V on February 23, 1512, a patent authorizing him to discover and people the Island of Bimini, giving
him jurisdiction over the island for life, and giving him the title of Adelantado. There are 17 key points in the charter.

1.      He had three years to do the task and 12 months to initiate the expedition from the day the contract was duly signed and registered by everyone concerned.

2.      The expenses of the expedition would be the responsibility of Ponce de Leon.

3.      He was allowed to recruit people from Spain and Espanola.

4.      Ponce de Leon had a priority in his claims of Bimini and the lands discovered if he initiated the expedition within one year.

5.      Ponce de Leon should assume the executive and all the judicial functions in the new territory.

6.      He should have the ownership of all the houses and estates that he will establish with his own funds in these new lands.

7.      The construction and direction of forts is a royal prerogative and therefore not under the jurisdiction of Ponce de Leon.

8.      Ponce de Leon shall receive for 12 years from the day of the discovery the appropriate "tenth" of all the revenues and profits, with the exception of those specified as royal properties.

9.      The distribution of the Indians to the Spanish lords should be done by the Crown, but the Crown will give priority in the allotment of Indians to those who have participated in the Ponce de Leon expedition.

10.  Gold and precious metals, plus other possible valuable commodities, shall be the property of Ponce de Leon and his men, with the exception of the "tenth" during the first years to the Crown; thereafter, the tax had to be a ninth for the second year, an eighth during the third, seventh for the fourth, sixth for the fifth year, and from then on, one fifth,

11.  Ponce de Leon should receive the governorship of all the discovered neighboring islands of Bimini as long as these places are unknown and unassigned.

12.  Ponce de Le6n is given the title of Adelantado of Bimini and of the other lands that he would discover.

13.  The exploitation and collection of gold, if there were some, would be the same as done in Espanola or as ordered by the King.

14.  Ponce de Leon was forbidden to have in his expedition foreigners and people not resident in Spain or Spanish dependencies and colonies.

15.  Everyone in the forthcoming expedition to Bimini before leaving must deposit before the Royal
Officials of Espanola valid bonds.

16.  Any frauds and other dishonesties must be reported to the Crown and its appropriate officials and anyone who was negligent of dispatching such reports should be as severely punished as those guilty of fraud.

17.  Ponce de Leon was required to mail detailed reports of his discoveries.

The King had signed the contract on February 23, 1512 but Ponce de Leon did not register the expeditionary force until January 29, 1513 at the port of Yuma in the province of Higuey on the island of Espanola. http://www.drbronsontours.com/ponce.htm

According to the “500th Florida Discovery Council Round Table”, on March 3, 1513, Juan Ponce organized and commenced an expedition with a crew of 200, including women and free blacks departing from Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico was the historic first gateway to the discovery of Florida which opened the doors to the advanced settlement of the USA.  They introduced Christianity, cattle, horses, sheep, the Spanish language and more to the land of Florida that later became the United States of American, 107 years before the Pilgrims landed.
On April 12, 1513 Ponce de Leon spotted land.  He named the peninsula he believed to be an island “La Florida” because his landing came during the time of the Easter feast, or Pascua Florida.  Captain Juan Ponce de Leon ordered the first voyage to limit its exploration to the coastline because they were unsuccessful in making contact with the local inhabitants.  In truth, the Calusa warriors did not permit them to land meeting the Spanish 3 ships in their war canoes armed with with long bows.  De Leon wisely chose to go back to Puerto Rico, regroup and return better armed.


On his second voyage to Florida in 1521, Ponce de Leon tried to establish a Spanish colony.  The group consisted of 200 men, including priests, farmers and artisans, 50 horses and other domestic animals, and farming equipment.  Soon after the landing, the Calusa warriors attacked the expedition defending their chiefdom from foreign invaders.  In the battle that pursued Ponce de Leon was hit by a poison arrow.  The expedition retreated back to Cuba where he died from his wounds.

It was years after his death when the fable of the “Fountain of Youth” was attached to Ponce de Leon courtesy of his political enemies in an attempt to discredit his name and to make him appear foolish.  http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/ponce-de-leon-never-searched-for-the-fountain-of-youth-72629888/

Link to the Florida Museum of Natural History:

You Tube Video:

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=As01jVTvLVI

Taino Indians Counted Out of Existence

  Mvto

Saturday, January 4, 2014

NEW WORLD TIMELINE

“History is orphan. It can speak, but cannot hear. It can give, but cannot take. Its wounds and tragedies can be read and known, but cannot be avoided or cured.”  Kedar Joshi

Within a generation of Columbus landing in the “West Indies” the Caribs and Tainos, the native population who once numbered 250,000, were nearly wiped out by forced labor and contact with European infectious diseases to which they had no immunity.  In 1510, new slaves were brought in from West Africa. The Spanish disappointment with the lack of gold prompted them to turn to sugar cultivation for profit. The harsh, labor-intensive plantation agriculture was now established in the Americas. The conquistadors who were warriors and not farmers, moved on, to cause ever greater ruin as they sought out new lands to terrorize for gold.

1492 Columbus lands on the island of Hispaniola in the Indies. He trades glass beads for gold and leaves a small settlement.

1493 Columbus's second fleet of 17 ships explores Jamaica and southern Cuba.

1498 Columbus, with colonists emptied from Spanish prisons, makes landfall at Trinidad. The Hispaniola colony is relocated on the south coast at San Domingo by his brother Bartholomew. 

1502 - 1504 On his fourth voyage Columbus explores the Central American coastline and encounters Maya traders at Bay Island in the Gulf of Honduras. 

1507 "America" appears on European maps for the first time.

1508 The first two Spaniards go ashore in Yucatan

1510 A settlement is established on the isthmus of Panama

1511 Several shipwrecked sailors are taken prisoner by the Maya. 

1513 Balboa crosses the isthmus of Panama and reaches the Pacific.

1514 Panfilo de Narvaez conquers Cuba. The priest Bartolomeo de las Casas records a catalog of Spanish torture and barbarity. 

1517 From Cuba, Francisco Hernandez de Cordoba explores the Yucatan coast. The following year Juan de Grijalua explores the coast of Mexico.

1519 From Cuba, Hernan Cortés lands at Veracruz. He rejects envoys with gifts from Moctezuma II and advances on the high plateau of Tlaxcala. At Cholula Cortès massacres the local chiefs. With the help of native allies Cortes reaches Tenochtitlán and takes Moctezuma hostage. Cortes wrecks the great pyramid before withdrawing. 

1520 Conquest of Greater Antilles is complete.

1521 After a 93-day siege Cortes takes and destroys Tenochtitlán.

1526 Francisco Pizarro, already enriched by slave-holdings in Panama, leads mercenaries into Colombia. Their terror tactics are unflinchingly cruel but to little avail and the expedition has to be rescued.

1529 Charles V of Spain grants a license to Pizarro to "discover and conquer Peru."

1532 The Inca invasion begins, the empire weakened by disease, is also wracked by civil war. The "Unique Inca" Atahuallpa is captured, forcibly baptized and executed by strangulation.

1535 The Pizarro brothers establish a coastal capital of Lima and begin shipping gold back to Spain. Rivalry with fellow Spaniard Almagro leads Pizarro to execute his former companion. Almagro's son takes his revenge by murdering Pizarro.

1536 Great Inca revolt is followed by resistance in Vilcabamba until 1572 when the last Inca, Tupac Amoru, is captured and executed. 

1528 Francisco de Montejo lands in Yucatan. He wages a 14-year struggle with the Maya before establishing his capital at Merida.

1542 Pedro de Alvarado takes the Mayan kingdoms of Cakchiquel and Quiche.

1543 Spain institutes annual treasure convoys.

1697 Martin de Ursua inflicts final defeat of Maya at Tayasal.


Other Timelines of Spanish Exploreres