Alonso del Castillo Maldonado

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Alonso del Castillo Maldonado
Born Unknown
Salamanca, Spain
Died 1540s
New Spain
Nationality Castillan
Occupation Explorer and Treasurer (1547)

Alonso del Castillo Maldonado (died c. 1540) was one of the first Spanish explorers in the Americas. He was one of the last four survivors of the Panfilo de Narváez expedition in Texas, along with Alvar Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca, an Estevanico slave, and Andrés Dorantes de Carranza. Castillo Maldonado lived with a Native American tribe in Texas in 1527 and 1528.

Biography[edit]

Travel in New Spain[edit]

Alonso del Castillo Maldonado was born in Salamanca, Spain, the son of Castillo and Aldonza Maldonado.[1][2] He was a close cousin of the Alcalde Mayor of Santo Domingo, Alonso Maldonado, and of Martín de Guzmán.[3] Raised in the poor noble family of Hidalgos, Castillo travelled to the Americas in search of wealth. He was the part of the Panfilo de Narvaez expedition in 1527 to Florida.[1]

On 17th June 1527, a fleet of five ships consisting of 600 men led by Narvaez set sail from the coast of Sanlucar de Barrameda. After several weeks, they arrived at the island of La Española where they were provisioned and stayed for a time. When leaving the island and entering the waters of the Gulf of Mexico, the ship Panfilo de Narvaez was put under the joint command of Captains Del Castillo and Andrés Dorantes de Carranza.

In early November, the ship captained by Andrés Dorantes de Carranza and manned by Castillo, Cabeza de Vaca, the slave Estevanico, and about 40 other men, was wrecked by storms[1][4] on or near the western end of Galveston Island, Texas. The fifteen survivors, who had no clothing, food, or weapons, suffered heavy privations and were forced to feed on the cadavers of their peers. Through the good grace of the Native Americans that were present on the island, Castillo and the group managed to survive up until the following spring and took up positions among the natives as spiritual healers.

In the spring of 1528, thirteen of the fifteen survivors decided to leave the island, abandoning Cabeza de Vaca (because he was sick and almost unable to move) and two other members of the expedition. In April 1529, this group, led by Dorantes and Castillo, reached the coast and landed at Matagorda Bay. However, most of the members of this expedition were killed by Native Americans. Only three survived: Dorantes de Carranza, Castillo, and Estevanico.

For almost seven years they lived in poverty among hostile Native Americans, until the three men managed to reunite with Cabeza de Vaca in September 1534, somewhere west of the Sabine River. Cabeza de Vaca taught his companions the Native American art of medicine. In August 1535, the men fled from the Avavare tribe, with whom they were living as medicine men. They fled inland,[4] crossing Texas (being, apparently, the first Europeans to do so)[1] until they arrived in El Paso in late 1535.[note 1]Finally, they headed south, and in late 1535 they entered the territory of the Mexican state of Chihuahua,[1] crossing through the territory of the Mexican state of Sonora.[1][4] They temporarily settled in the land of the Pimas and the Sierra Madre,[4] where they lived with a Native tribe for three days. After hearing the natives speak of a Spanish village located further south,[1] they travelled to the state of Sinaloa in 1536.[1][4] They were accompanied by hundreds of Native Americans, and despite encountering a party of slave hunters led by Diego de Alcaraz, managed to ensure their safe passage.[4] Later, Castillo and his companions reunited with other Spanish groups residing in north Culiacan - included among them the future explorer Melchor Díaz, who received him.[4] From there, they traveled to Compostela, the Nueva Galicia's capital.[4]

Last years[edit]

When the governor of New Galicia, Nuño de Guzman, received news that Spanish castaways had reached land under his jurisdiction, he provided them with horses and clothing and sent them to Mexico City to provide accounts to the viceroy of New Spain, Antonio de Mendoza.[1] Their story was already known in the city, and they were received with great honors.[4] Nunez Cabeza de Vaca recounted his experiences in his book Naufragios (in Spanish: Shipwrecks), on which he recounts the period of slavery with the natives and the long march to find his way back to the Spanish.

Alonso del Castillo married in Mexico and was the beneficiary of the encomienda of his wife in Tehuacan, Puebla. So, as "comendero" he was awarded a quarter of the income of Tehuacan.

In 1541, he traveled to Spain to claim his inheritance because his father had died while he traveled across North America and some relatives had already inherited. He was stayed briefly in Spain before returning to the Americas, living the rest of his life in New Spain. In 1545, Castillo served as treasurer at Guatemala. In 1547, Alonso del Castillo was listed as a witness in a trial [1] and presented information of his labor service or any pension from the crown, because he lived in poverty. It is believed that he died in the late 1540s.[1]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Although for a long time it was believed that they also had come to New Mexico, it is now known that this was not the case.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Donald E. Chipman (August 6, 2003). "Handbook of Texas Online: Alonso Castillo Maldonado". Retrieved April 22, 2013. 
  2. ^ LOS NAUFRAGIOS DE ALVAR NUÑEZ CABEZA DE VACA: O EL ARTE DE LA AUTOMITIFICACION (in Spanish: THE WRECKS OF ALVAR Nunez Cabeza de Vaca: O THE ART OF AUTOMITIFICACION). page 17.
  3. ^ Vallejo García-Hevia,José María; Martín Blasco, Julio (2008). Juicio a un conquistador, Pedro de Alvarado (in Spanish: Trial of a conqueror, Pedro de Alvarado). Volume I. Page 215. S.A. Ediciones de Historia.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Martínez Laínez, Fernando and Canales Torres, Carlos. Banderas lejanas: La exploración, conquista y defensa por parte de España del Territorio de los actuales Estados Unidos (Flags far: The exploration, conquest and defense by Spain of the Territory of the present United States). Page 31-33. Fourth edition: September 2009.

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