Francisco Coronado Expeditions Francisco Vazquez de Coronado served as the political liaison for the preliminary exploration. Francisco came from a prominent Salamanca family after the passing of his father and mother he did not inherit the families fortune, this put him in a position to make a shift to New Spain and hopefully chase the dream of making a fortune and becoming rich. At the age of twenty five Francisco arrived in New Spain in 1535, upon his arrival he was introduced and attached to
Early Life Francisco Vasquez de Coronado was born in Salamanca, Spain, around 1510. His parents are Juan Vasquez de Coronado y Sosa de Ulloa and Isabel de Lujan. His father was a wealthy aristocrat, but the family fortune was promised to his older brother. Francisco was determined to make his own fortune in the New World. This is what made him an explorer. Francisco traveled to New Spain in 1535. He got a job working for the government. Within three years of his arrival, he had put down a slave
Francisco Vazquez De Coronado was a male Spanish Conquistador and explorer. He was born and raised in Salamanca, Spain, and he decided to go explore the Southwestern region of what is now the United States when he was 30 years of age. “Between 1540 and 1542 Francisco Vazquez De Coronado explored New Mexico, Texas, and Kansas searching for precious metals. His letter provides one of the first detailed European descriptions of the Southwestern environment and the inhabitants’ attitudes toward the Spanish
Francisco Vasquez de Coronado: The Search for the Seven Cities of Gold Francisco Vasquez de Coronado was unquestionably one of the most influential explorers of the New World. Close friend of the Viceroy of New Spain and governor of Nueva Galicia for a time, his influence in the Spanish colonies was great, even before he set off on his great expedition to the north. Exploring the far reaches of the Rio Grande River, nearly reaching the southern border of Nebraska, traveling through the great “Staked
DEAfonso de Albuquerque (14??-1515) was a Portuguese soldier and explorer who sailed to the Spice Islands (the Moluccas, a group of Islands in Indonesia) in 1507-1511, trying to monopolize trade with this area; from Europe, he sailed around Africa to the Indian Ocean. He was appointed the Viceroy of India by King Emmanuel in 1509. He forcibly destroyed the Indian city of Calicut in January, 1510, and took Goa (in southern India) in March, 1510, claiming Goa for Portugal. AYLLON, LUCAS VAZQUEZ DELucas
CHAPTER 7 NEW SPAIN EXPANDS NORTH 1565 One of the first explorations of the New World by Spain was to the continent’s east coast. Ponce de Leon, who had accompanied Columbus on his second voyage, and appointed the first governor of Puerto Rico, set out to explore farther north. Landing on the mainland on Easter Sunday, he named the land La Pascua Florida, Spanish for Flowery Passover, meaning the Easter Season. He was so impressed that he laid plans to return and
The Spanish explorer nicknamed them the Querechos after the many “cows”(bison) that that surrounded the tribe. When Coronado arrived he concluded that they were intelligent and gentle people. However, this viewpoint held by the Europeans would soon change. The Spanish explorer, along with his troops, returned to Mexico City in the autumn of 1542. During this period of