- This article is about the Spanish explorer soldiers of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, for other uses see Conquistador (disambiguation)
A Conquistador (Spanish loanword: [kon. A loanword (or loan word) is a word directly taken into one Language from another with little or no translation kis. t̪a'ð̞oɾ]) (English: Conqueror) is one of the Spanish soldiers, explorers and adventurers who took part in the gradual conquest of large parts of America and Pacific Asia, bringing them under Spanish colonial rule between the 15th and 19th centuries. English is a West Germanic language originating in England and is the First language for most people in the United Kingdom, the United States This list of explorers is sorted by surname See also the links below. An adventurer or adventuress is a term that usually takes one of three meanings One whose travels are unusual and often exotic though not so unique as to qualify ConQuesT is an annual Science fiction convention held in the Kansas City Missouri, area by the Kansas City Science Fiction and Fantasy Society The Americas are the lands of the Western hemisphere or New World, consisting of the Continents of North America and South America Asia-Pacific or APAC is the area generally regarded as encompassing Littoral East Asia, Southeast Asia and Australasia near the The Spanish Empire (Imperio Español was one of the largest Empires in history and one of the first Global empires In the 15th and 16th centuries
The term used for the Portuguese explorers and conquerors of Brazil is the Bandeirantes. Portugal, officially the Portuguese Republic (República Portuguesa is a country on the Iberian Peninsula. |utc_offset = -2 to -4 |time_zone_DST = BRST |utc_offset_DST = -2 to -5 |cctld The Bandeirantes were Portuguese colonial Scouts who took part in the Bandeiras exploration expeditions
Characteristics of the conquistadores
The bulk of the Conquistadors were generally younger men, while their Captains and leaders were mostly middle aged.
"The Captains of the company were not conquering youth and adolescents as the rest of the host. They were, rather, mature men. Neither young nor old people, because the waiter he loses respect and the old force. The warlords of the conquest of Mexico (Cortes, Alvarado) was 34 years. Hernán Cortés de Monroy y Pizarro 1st Marqués del Valle de Oaxaca ( 1485&ndash December 2, Pedro de Alvarado y Contreras (born Badajoz, Extremadura, Spain, ca Francisco Pizarro, was the oldest of all. Therefore, the Spaniards called him "El Viejo"(Old) and the Incas called him the "Apu Machu". " by Pablo Macera
The relationship between the soldiers and heads Reaz was extremely vertical, servile and occasionally horizontal (according to some authorities). The authority of captain was assured by the royal commission, experience and control of the spoils. On some occasions, they had to resort to extreme measures to ensure their authority, as when Hernán Cortés ordered his men to burn their ships or Francisco Pizarro when he charted the bay with his sword on the island of Gallo. Hernán Cortés de Monroy y Pizarro 1st Marqués del Valle de Oaxaca ( 1485&ndash December 2, Francisco Pizarro González 1st Marqués de los Atabillos (c 1471 or 1476 &ndash 26 June 1541 was a Spanish Conquistador, conqueror of the Incan Empire Since such actions, the soldiers began to see the Conquistador captains as heroes, legendary figures. In the case of the conquest of Peru, discipline was maintained until stiffbefore sharing the spoils{clarifyme}}. Thereafter, the casualties were unleashed passions, murders, acts of indiscipline and civil wars.
Another feature of the Conquistadores was a tendency not to come from nobility. Julio R. Villanueva Sotomayor tells us that one only 30% of Conquistadores were noblemen, the lowest degree of Spanish nobility. The rest of the class consisted of commoners. The Conquistador company was a very attractive method of social advancement in a rigidly stratified society, and a particularly enticing one for un-employed veterans and mercenaries.
The conquest of the Americas by Spain

Pedro de Valdivia founding of
Santiago de Chile.
Pedro de Valdivia (c 1500 - January 1, 1554) was a Conquistador and first royal governor of Chile. Santiago ( (litteraly in spanish Saint James) is the Capital of Chile, and the center of its largest Conurbation ( Greater Santiago Spanish chroniclers have traditionally characterized the conquest of the Americas as an impressive and laudable feat, that occurred at a speed that has not been matched by any other people. On the contrary, the testimony of indigenous peoples as well as some Spanish humanists, clergymen and other writers have presented the Spanish Conquest of Americas as an unfortunate fact, morally questionable, driven by greed for gold, with the destruction and disappearance of cultures of native peoples as an unparalleled event which stands out above all other results of the Conquistadors' actions.
With the opposite direction Fray Bernardino Sahagun said:
" This point has happened to these Indians, Spaniards, because they were so hit and destroyed them and all their things, that no appearance of them was what they were before. [1]"
Historians have highlighted the short time that happened at the call of Americas conquest by Spain, placing emphasis also on the demographic catastrophe in Americas after the arrival of Europeans, in which diseases brought from Europe played a decisive role and that in a few decades decimated the indigenous population. The disease moved even faster than conquerors arrived and even many times before. This was the case in the Inca Empire, where, when the Spanish conquistadors arrived, it had already been decimated by a smallpox epidemic that also killed the emperor triggering a civil war.
For its part, the American historian Charles Mann said that Spain:
" . . . would not have defeated the Empire (Azteca), while Cortes built boats, Tenochtitlan had not been wiped out by smallpox in the same pandemic that subsequently hit the Tahuantinsuyu . . . The great city lost at least one third of population in the wake of the epidemic, including Caitlahuac. "[2]
Something similar is said by the chronicler Pedro Cieza de Leon in Chronicle of Peru:
"When I have to write for people of today and tomorrow, about the conquest and discoveries made here in Peru, I can only think that I am dealing with one of the biggest issues one of which could possibly write a whole establishment with regard to the secular history. Where before have men seen the things they have seen here? And to think that God has allowed something so great the world would remain hidden for a very long time, unknown to men, and then left to be found, discovered and won all in our time!"
The same Fray Bartolomé de las Casas who saw the Conquest of Americas as one of the "wonders" of the world, also defined as "the destruction of the Indies" and described as follows:
"Amongst these tame sheep, and the above-mentioned qualities for his Maker and Creator well equipped, entered the Spaniards, of course knew that, as wolves and tigers and lions cruelly hungry for many days. [ 3 ] And another thing they have not done forty years now, until today, and today on this day they do, but to fragment, kill them, distress, afflict, and destroy them tormented by the strange and new and several other such views and never read nor nor heard ways of cruelty. "
Factors
While technological and cultural factors played an important role in the victories and defeats of the Conquistadores, one very decisive factor was diseases brought from Europe, especially smallpox, which in many cases annihilated entire nations before the arrival of the Spaniards. Another key factor was the ability of the Conquistadores to manipulate the political situation between indigenous peoples, either by supporting one side of a civil war, as in the case of the Inca Empire, or allying with natives who had been subjugated by more powerful neighboring tribes and kingdoms, as in the case of the Aztec empire.
Militarily, Conquistadores had several advantages over native peoples, especially firearms and steel. The indigenous peoples had the advantage of established settlements, determination to remain independent, and sheer numerical superiority, which in many cases was a decisive factor in the defeat of the Conquistadores.
In all cases indigenous nations which claimed the Spanish conquest exceeded these numbers: on average the Spanish population never exceeded 2% of the population of americas. The Spanish Conquistadores commonly allied with natives to bolster their numerically inferior ranks with thousands of indigenous auxilliaries. The army with which Hernán Cortés besieged Tenochtitlan was composed of 200,000 soldiers, [4] of which less than 1% were Spaniards. Hernán Cortés de Monroy y Pizarro 1st Marqués del Valle de Oaxaca ( 1485&ndash December 2, San Lorenzo Tenochtitlán [5]
Although many American civilizations had developed sophisticated methods for working metals (gold, silver, bronze, tin, copper), this knowledge was applied mainly to the development of religious objects, artistic and symbolic, as well as household utensils for everyday use, as opposed to military applications. Only the Quechuas and Purépechas developed weapons of copper, but these did not reach the edge and hardness of iron and steel. Most used wooden weapons, Flint and Obsidian were also used. Flint (or flintstone) is a hard sedimentary Cryptocrystalline form of the Mineral Quartz, categorized as a variety of Chert Obsidian is a naturally occurring Glass formed as an extrusive Igneous rock. The iron armor and helmets used by the Spanish were an important factor. However, the refined textile technology of Andean civilizations, allowing tissues up to 500 threads per inch structured in successive layers, enabled them to develop efficient armor tissue cushioning (escaupil) that were eventually adopted by the Spaniards, leaving their helmets and metal breastplates, [6] as these were not suitable for tropical climates, both because of the heat which gave carriers such as that suffered by corrosion.
The main weapon of the Andean armies was the deep, made from fabrics, with whom were throwing stones heated to boiling point, wrapped in cotton and pitch. Using these weapons the Quechuas razed Cuzco occupied by the Spaniards in 1536. [7]
In the first moment of conquest firearms and especially arquebuses were very effective against natives, and caused a great impression on morale because of the noise, light and smoke. Pero su efecto militar fue escaso. But their military effectiveness was limited, as were their numbers. The swords of steel and iron knives and armor proved to be much more effective militarily. For this reason, when they took control in any nation, the Conquistadores banned access to weapons of iron by the subjugated peoples.
The animals were another military factor. On the one hand, the introduction of the horse by the Spaniards, in some cases allowed them to move quickly and launch quick attacks. But in mountain and jungle, the Spaniards were less technologically adapted to the Amerindian cultures, using the flame and special techniques to build roads and bridges adapted to such land. In some cases native peoples, mainly in North America, the pampas and Patagonia, appropriated and developed techniques of horse training and riding higher than those who were Spaniards, and became a decisive factor for resistance to the Spanish. The Spaniards also used dogs to track and attack indigenous people and slaves in the jungle and forests. Horses and war dogs both were more effective as psychological weapons than physical ones against the Indios, who in most cases had never seen dogs, and in all had never seen horses, and they both caused much terror amongst the natives.
The way of doing war of Spaniards, like that of most Europeans were more bloody and involved more than warriors Native Americans were accustomed to using. Weapons of iron and steel produced injuries as evident as those of the poisoned arrows. In addition, some native peoples did not have the habit of killing people on the battlefield, but that caught and held for occasions of ritual sacrifices, or as a festive banquets. Hence, European practice in the war become more brutal.
But the decisive factor in the defeat of American civilizations was the demographic collapse. Among researchers and social sectors there is no consensus on the causes of that collapse, giving each a genocide, others to the introduction of new diseases and a third group to a combination of both causes. The American researcher HF Dobyns [8] has estimated that 95% of the total population of americas died in the first 130 years after the arrival of Columbus. For his part, Cook and Borak, University of Berkeley, established after decades of research, that the population in Mexico declined from 25. 2 million in 1518 to 700 thousand people in 1623, less than 3% of the original population. [9] In 1492 Spain and Portugal boards did not exceed the 10 million people. [10]
There is some consensus that the demographic collapse of the original population of americas was the main cause of its military defeat. Steven Katz has said about it:
"Muy probablemente se trata del mayor desastre demográfico de la historia: la despoblación del Nuevo Mundo, con todo su terror, con toda su muerte. [ 11 ] Very likely this is the greatest demographic disaster in history: the depopulation of the New World, with all its terror, with all his death. [11]"
The American historian Charles Mann said that Spain "would not have defeated the Empire (Azteca), while Cortés built boats, Tenochtitlan had not been wiped out by smallpox in the same pandemic that subsequently hit the Tahuantinsuyu . . . The great city lost to least one third of population in the wake of the epidemic, including Caitlahuac. "[12]
Something similar happened with the Inca Empire, defeated by Francisco Pizarro in 1531. Francisco Pizarro González 1st Marqués de los Atabillos (c 1471 or 1476 &ndash 26 June 1541 was a Spanish Conquistador, conqueror of the Incan Empire The first epidemic of smallpox in 1529 and killed, among others, the emperor Huayna Capac, the father of Atahualpa. Huayna Capac (Quechua Wayna Qhapaq "splendid youth" was the eleventh Sapa Inca (1464 &ndash 1527 of the Inca Empire and sixth of the Hanan Atahualpa, Atahuallpa, Atabalipa, or Atawallpa ( Quito – Cajamarca, August 29, 1533) was the last sovereign New epidemics of smallpox were declared in 1533, 1535, 1558 and 1565, as well as typhus in 1546, influenza in 1558, diphtheria in 1614 and measles in 1618. [13] Dobyns estimated that 90% of the population of the Inca Empire died in these epidemics.
Authors like Jared Diamond summarizes the causes of the victory of Pizarro (paradigm of the Spanish conquest) in "military technology based on firearms and steel and horses, infectious diseases endemic in Eurasia, European maritime technology, centralized political organization of States Europeans, and in writing. "[14] In the latter regard, Diamond explained that the errors of judgement Atahualpa and Moctezuma, who led them to be deceived by the Spaniards were due to them belonged to a literate society that, thanks to writing, had at its disposal a huge body of knowledge about human behavior and its history, something that no American nations. Regarding the allegations of Jared Diamond, it must be borne in mind that companies had discovered Mesoamerican writing several millennia before the arrival of the Spaniards.
List of Spanish conquistadores
See article: List of conquistadors
- Cristóbal Colón (bt. A Jerónimo de Aliaga Diego de Almagro Pedro de Alvarado Pedro Arias de Ávila August and October 1451 – May 20, 1506)
- Francisco de Aguirre (Chile, 1540-1581)
- Jerónimo de Alderete (Chile, 1540-1556)
- Diego de Almagro (Peru, 1524-1535, Chile, 1535-1537)
- Pedro de Alvarado (Mexico, 1519-1521, Guatemala 1523 -1527, Perú, 1533-1535, México, 1540-1541)
- Antonio de Aragón, conquistador de Tucumán. Don Francisco de Aguirre ( Talavera de la Reina, 1508&mdash La Serena, 1581 was a Spanish Conquistador who participated in the conquest Chile, officially the Republic of Chile ( Spanish:) is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow Coastal strip wedged between the Jerónimo de Alderete y Mercado was born in Olmedo, Castille in 1516 and died in Panamá April 7 1556. Chile, officially the Republic of Chile ( Spanish:) is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow Coastal strip wedged between the Diego de Almagro ( Almagro, Spain, c 1475 &ndash Cuzco, Peru, July 8, 1538) also known as El Adelantado Peru (Perú Piruw Piruw officially the Republic of Peru ( reˈpuβlika del peˈɾu is a country in western South America. Chile, officially the Republic of Chile ( Spanish:) is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow Coastal strip wedged between the Pedro de Alvarado y Contreras (born Badajoz, Extremadura, Spain, ca The United Mexican States ( or commonly Mexico (ˈmɛksɪkoʊ () is a federal constitutional Republic in North America. Guatemala (República de Guatemala) is a country in Central America bordered by Mexico to the north and west the Pacific Ocean to the southwest Peru (Perú Piruw Piruw officially the Republic of Peru ( reˈpuβlika del peˈɾu is a country in western South America.
- Sebastián de Belalcázar (Ecuador y Colombia, 1533-1536)
- Lorenzo Bernal del Mercado (Chile, 1549-1596)
- Bartolomé Blumenthal (Chile, 1540-1585)
- Melchor Bravo de Saravia (Chile, 1557-1575)
- Gonzalo Calvo de Barrientos (Chile, 1533-1537)
- Alonso del Castillo Maldonado
- Beltrán de Zetina, (Yucatán, 1527-1546)
- Hernán Cortés (México, 1518-1522, Honduras, 1524, Baja California, 1532-1536)
- Pedro Cortés de Monroy (Chile, 1555-1598)
- Alonso Dávila (México, 1520-1533)
- Nicolás de Federmann (Venezuela y Colombia, 1537-1539). Sebastián de Belalcázar (1479 or 1480 to 1551 was a Spanish Conquistador. For a topic outline on this subject see List of basic Ecuador topics. Colombia (kəˈlʌmbɪə officially the Republic of Colombia () is a country in northwestern South America. Chile, officially the Republic of Chile ( Spanish:) is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow Coastal strip wedged between the Bartolomé Blumenthal (in some texts Blumen) alias Bartolomé Flores (1511 in Nuremberg, Germany – November 11 1585 in Chile, officially the Republic of Chile ( Spanish:) is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow Coastal strip wedged between the Melchor Bravo de Saravia y Sotomayor (1512 Soria, Spain &mdash1577 Soria was a Spanish Conquistador, interim viceroy of Peru, and Chile, officially the Republic of Chile ( Spanish:) is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow Coastal strip wedged between the Chile, officially the Republic of Chile ( Spanish:) is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow Coastal strip wedged between the Yucatán is one of the 31 states of Mexico, located on the north of the Yucatán Peninsula. Hernán Cortés de Monroy y Pizarro 1st Marqués del Valle de Oaxaca ( 1485&ndash December 2, Mexico State or State of Mexico (often abbreviated to " Edomex " from Estado de México in Spanish) is a state in the Honduras in Spanish, República de Honduras) is a democratic republic in Central America. Baja California (pronounced ˈbɑːhɑː kælɨˈfɔrnjə in English is the northernmost state of Mexico. Chile, officially the Republic of Chile ( Spanish:) is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow Coastal strip wedged between the Mexico State or State of Mexico (often abbreviated to " Edomex " from Estado de México in Spanish) is a state in the Venezuela (ˌvɛnəˈzweɪlə) officially the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela (Spanish República Bolivariana de Venezuela) is a country on the Colombia (kəˈlʌmbɪə officially the Republic of Colombia () is a country in northwestern South America.
- Juan Godíñez (Chile, 1540 - ?)
- Martín de Goiti, (Manila, Philippines, 1570-1571)
- Juan de Grijalva (Yucatán, 1518)
- Francisco Hernández de Córdoba (Yucatán, 1517)
- Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada (Colombia, 1536-1537, Venezuela, 1569-1572)
- Miguel López de Legazpi, (Philippines, 1565-1571)
- Domingo Martínez de Irala
- Pedro de Mendoza (Argentina, Paraguay 1534-1537)
- Pedro Menéndez de Avilés (La Florida, 1565 - 1567)
- Francisco de Montejo (Yucatán, 1527-1546)
- Pánfilo de Narváez (La Florida, 1527-1528)
- Diego de Nicuesa (Panama, 1506-1511)
- Vasco Núñez de Balboa (Panama, 1510-1519)
- Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca (North America, 1527-1536,, 1540-1542)
- Alonso de Ojeda (Venezuela, Colombia, Guyana, Aruba)
- Cristóbal de Olid (Honduras, 1523-1524)
- Francisco de Orellana (Amazon River, 1541-1543)

Francisco Pizarro
- Francisco Pizarro (Peru, 1509-1535)
- Gonzalo Pizarro (Peru, 1532-1542)
- Hernando Pizarro, (Peru, 1532-1560)
- Juan Pizarro, (Peru, 1532-1536)
- Juan Ponce de León (Puerto Rico, 1508, Florida, 1513 y 1521)
- Rodrigo de Quiroga (Chile, 1540-1580)
- Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo
- Juan de Salcedo, (Northern Philippines, 1570-1576)
- Ulrich Schmídel, (Argentina, Paraguay 1534-1554)
- Hernando de Soto (North America, 1539-1542)
- Inés de Suárez, (Chile, 1541)
- Martín de Ursúa, (Petén, 1696-1697)
- Pedro de Valdivia (Chile, 1540-1552)
- Lucas Vázquez de Ayllón (North America, 1524-1527)
- Francisco Vázquez de Coronado (North America, 1540-1542)
- Diego Velázquez de Cuéllar (Cuba, 1511-1519)
- Sebastián Vizcaíno (New Spain, the Philippines, the Baja California peninsula, Alta California, and Japan. Juan Godíñez (1517 - 1571 Conquistador Juan Godínez was born in the city of Úbeda, Spain. Chile, officially the Republic of Chile ( Spanish:) is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow Coastal strip wedged between the Martín de Goiti (15?? &ndash 1574) was a Spanish Basque Conquistador and founder of the city of Manila. The City of Manila The Philippines ( Filipino: Pilipinas, officially known as the Republic of the Philippines (fil ''Republika ng Pilipinas'' RP Juan de Grijalva (born around 1489 in Cuéllar - January 21 1527) was a Spanish Conquistador. Yucatán is one of the 31 states of Mexico, located on the north of the Yucatán Peninsula. Francisco Hernández de Córdoba may refer to Francisco Hernández de Córdoba (Yucatán conquistador (died 1517 Francisco Hernández de Yucatán is one of the 31 states of Mexico, located on the north of the Yucatán Peninsula. Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada (1509&ndash1579 was a Spanish explorer and Conquistador in Colombia. Colombia (kəˈlʌmbɪə officially the Republic of Colombia () is a country in northwestern South America. Venezuela (ˌvɛnəˈzweɪlə) officially the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela (Spanish República Bolivariana de Venezuela) is a country on the Miguel López de Legazpi ( 1502 &ndash August 20, 1572) also known as El Adelantado (The Governor and El Viejo (The Elder The Philippines ( Filipino: Pilipinas, officially known as the Republic of the Philippines (fil ''Republika ng Pilipinas'' RP Domingo Martínez de Irala (c 1509 Vergara, Guipuscoa – c 1556 Asuncion, Paraguay) was a Spanish Basque Conquistador Pedro de Mendoza y Luján (c 1487 &ndash June 23 1537) was a Spanish Conquistador, and the first Adelantado of the For a topic outline on this subject see List of basic Argentina topics. Paraguay, officially the Republic of Paraguay ( Spanish: República del Paraguay; Guaraní: Tetã Paraguái) is one of the only Pedro Menéndez de Avilés ( February 15, 1519 - September 17, 1574) was a sixteenth century Spanish admiral and pirate hunter known most notably La Florida ( Spanish for "flowery" is a commune of Chile located in Santiago Province, Santiago Metropolitan Region. Francisco de Montejo y Alverez (c 1479 in Salamanca &ndash c 1553 in Spain) was a Spanish Conquistador in Mexico and Central America Yucatán is one of the 31 states of Mexico, located on the north of the Yucatán Peninsula. Pánfilo de Narváez (1470 &ndash 1528 was a Spanish conqueror and soldier in the Americas. La Florida ( Spanish for "flowery" is a commune of Chile located in Santiago Province, Santiago Metropolitan Region. Diego de Nicuesa was a Spanish Conquistador and explorer In 1506 he was given the job of governing Costa Rica, but ran aground off the coast of Panama Panama, officially the Republic of Panama (República de Panamá) is the southernmost country of Central America. Vasco Núñez de Balboa (1475&ndash January 15, 1519 was a Spanish Explorer, Governor, and Conquistador. Panama, officially the Republic of Panama (República de Panamá) is the southernmost country of Central America. Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca ( Jerez de la Frontera, Cádiz, ca Alonso de Ojeda (c 1465 &ndash 1515 was a Spanish explorer born of noble parentage in Cuenca. Venezuela (ˌvɛnəˈzweɪlə) officially the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela (Spanish República Bolivariana de Venezuela) is a country on the Colombia (kəˈlʌmbɪə officially the Republic of Colombia () is a country in northwestern South America. Guyana (ɡaɪˈænə or /ɡiːˈɑːnə/ officially the Co-operative Republic of Guyana and previously known as British Guiana, is the only Nation state Aruba is a -long island of the Lesser Antilles in the southern Caribbean Sea, north of the Paraguaná Peninsula, Falcón State, Venezuela Cristóbal de Olid (1487-1524 was a Spanish adventurer Conquistador and Rebel who played a part in the conquest of Mexico and Honduras Honduras in Spanish, República de Honduras) is a democratic republic in Central America. Francisco de Orellana ( Trujillo, Spain, 1511 - Amazon River, November 1546 was a Spanish Explorer and Conquistador. The Amazon River (Rio Amazonas Río Amazonas of South America is the largest river in the world by volume with a total river flow greater than the next top ten largest rivers Francisco Pizarro González 1st Marqués de los Atabillos (c 1471 or 1476 &ndash 26 June 1541 was a Spanish Conquistador, conqueror of the Incan Empire Peru (Perú Piruw Piruw officially the Republic of Peru ( reˈpuβlika del peˈɾu is a country in western South America. Gonzalo Pizarro y Alonso (1502 &ndash April 10, 1548) was a Spanish Conquistador and younger half-brother of Francisco Pizarro Peru (Perú Piruw Piruw officially the Republic of Peru ( reˈpuβlika del peˈɾu is a country in western South America. Peru (Perú Piruw Piruw officially the Republic of Peru ( reˈpuβlika del peˈɾu is a country in western South America. Peru (Perú Piruw Piruw officially the Republic of Peru ( reˈpuβlika del peˈɾu is a country in western South America. Juan Ponce de León ( IPA: /xwan'ponʒedele'on/ (1460 – July 1521 was a Spanish Conquistador. Puerto Rico (ˌpwertoˈriko officially the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico ("Estado Libre Asociado de Puerto Rico" {{lang-en|"Associated Free State of Puerto Rico"}} Florida ( is a state located in the southeastern region of the United States, bordering Alabama to the northwest and Georgia to the Rodrigo de Quiroga López de Ulloa ( San Juan de Boime; 1512 - Santiago; February 20, 1580) was a Spanish Conquistador of Chile, officially the Republic of Chile ( Spanish:) is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow Coastal strip wedged between the Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo (ca 1499 &ndash January 3 1543 was a Portuguese explorer known as João Rodrigues Cabrilho in Portuguese noted for his exploration Juan de Salcedo ( 1549 &ndash March 11, 1576) was a Spanish Conquistador. The Philippines ( Filipino: Pilipinas, officially known as the Republic of the Philippines (fil ''Republika ng Pilipinas'' RP For a topic outline on this subject see List of basic Argentina topics. Paraguay, officially the Republic of Paraguay ( Spanish: República del Paraguay; Guaraní: Tetã Paraguái) is one of the only Inés de Suárez (c 1507 - Santiago de Chile, 1580 was a Spanish conquistadora (female Conquistador) who participated in the Conquest Chile, officially the Republic of Chile ( Spanish:) is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow Coastal strip wedged between the Martin de Ursua was a Spanish Conquistador during the early colonial period of New Spain in Central America. Pedro de Valdivia (c 1500 - January 1, 1554) was a Conquistador and first royal governor of Chile. Chile, officially the Republic of Chile ( Spanish:) is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow Coastal strip wedged between the Lucas Vázquez de Ayllón (c 1475 probably Toledo Spain &ndash 18 October, 1526, (San Miguel de Guadalupe colony was a Spanish explorer Francisco Vázquez de Coronado y Luján (Born in 1510 &ndash Died on September 22 1554 was a Spanish Conquistador, who visited New Mexico and other For the Spanish painter see Diego Velázquez. Diego Velázquez de Cuéllar (1465 Cuéllar, The Republic of Cuba (ˈkjuːbə or) consists of the island of Cuba (the largest and second-most populous island of the Greater Antilles) Isla de la Sebastián Vizcaíno (1548-1624 was a Spanish soldier entrepreneur explorer and diplomat whose varied roles took him to New Spain, the Philippines, the Baja The Viceroyalty of New Spain (Virreinato de Nueva España was a name given to the Viceroy -ruled territories of the Spanish Empire in North America, The Philippines ( Filipino: Pilipinas, officially known as the Republic of the Philippines (fil ''Republika ng Pilipinas'' RP The Baja California peninsula ( English: Lower California peninsula) is a Peninsula in western Mexico. Alta California (Upper California was formed in 1804 when the Province of the Californias, then a part of the Commandancy General of the Provincias Internas in the For a topic outline on this subject see List of basic Japan topics. 1548-1624)
See also
References
- 1. The Spanish colonization of the Americas was Spain 's conquest settlement and rule over much of the Western hemisphere. Adelantado was a military title held by some Spanish Conquistadors of the 15th 16th and 17th centuries The encomienda system is a Trusteeship labor system that was employed by the Spanish crown during the Spanish colonization of the Americas and the The Repartimiento de Labor was a colonial forced labor system imposed upon the indigenous population of Spanish America and the Philippines. The New Laws (or Leyes Nuevas in Spanish) of 1542 were created to prevent the exploitation of the indigenous people by the encomenderos The Valladolid debate (1550 – 1551 concerned the treatment of natives of the New World. The Reconquista (a Spanish and Portuguese word for "Reconquest" Arabic: الاسترداد, "Recapturing" was a period Sahagún, Fray Bernardino de, Historia general de las cosas de Nueva España, TI, pag. ↑ Sahagún, Fray Bernardino, General History of the things New Spain, IT, pag. 29 29
- 2. Mann, Charles (2006). 1491 ; Madrid:Taurus, pag. ↑ Mann, Charles (2006). 1491; Madrid: Taurus, pag. 179-180
- 3. De las Casas, Bartolomé. ↑ De las Casas, Bartholomew. Brevísima relación de la destrucción de las Indias. (ver texto) Brevísima relation to the destruction of the Indies. (See text)
- 4. 5. Mann, Charles (2006). 1491 ; Madrid:Taurus, pag. Mann, Charles (2006). 1491; Madrid: Taurus, pag. 178
- 6. 7. Mann, Charles (2006). 1491 ; Madrid:Taurus, pag. Mann Charles (2006). 1491; Madrid: Taurus, pag. 123
- 8. Dobyns, HF (1983). Their number become thined: Native American population dynamics in Eastern North America , Knoxville (Tenn. ), University of Tennesee Press. Dobyns, HF (1983). Their number become thin: Native American population dynamics in Eastern North americas, Knoxville (Tenn. ), University of Tennesee Press.
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- 14. Jared Diamond, Guns, germs and steel , 1997, ISBN 0-09-930278-0 , pg. Jared Diamond, Guns, germs and steel, 1997, ISBN 0-09-930278-0, pg. 80.
Bibliography
- Conquistadores, Michael Wood (BBC Books, 2000). Pathfinder, Michael Wood (BBC Books, 2000).
- Los Conquistadores, Hammond Innes (Penguin, 2002). The Pathfinder, Hammond Innes (Penguin, 2002).
- Born In Blood And Fire: Concise History of Latin America Summary of the History of Latin America, John Charles Chasteen,
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