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Francisco de Orellana

 Spanish explorer and soldier

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Spanish soldier and first European explorer of the Amazon River.

After participating with Francisco Pizarro in the conquest of Peru in 1535, Orellana moved to Guayaquil and was named governor of that area in 1538. When Pizarro’s half brother, Gonzalo, prepared an expedition to explore the regions east of Quito, Orellana was appointed his lieutenant. In April 1541 he was sent ahead of the main party to seek provisions, taking a brigantine with 50 soldiers. He reached the junction of the Napo and Marañón rivers, where his group persuaded him of the impossibility of returning to Pizarro. Instead, he entered upon an exploration of the Amazon system. Drifting with the current, he reached the mouth of the river in August 1542. Proceeding to Trinidad, he finally returned to Spain, where he told of hoards of gold and cinnamon and of encounters with tribes led by women resembling the Amazons of Greek mythology—a comparison that is presumed to have led him to name the river the Amazon.

Orellana sought the right to explore and exploit the lands that he had discovered. Because the Spanish crown was involved in controversy with Portugal over the ownership of the area, it could provide him with only some assistance but no official support. His return to the Amazon proved a disaster. Ships and men were lost on the passage to America, and Orellana’s vessel capsized near the mouth of the great river and he drowned.

Citations

MLA Style:

"Francisco de Orellana." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 03 May. 2009 <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/431769/Francisco-de-Orellana>.

APA Style:

Francisco de Orellana. (2009). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved May 03, 2009, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/431769/Francisco-de-Orellana

More from Britannica on "Francisco de Orellana (Spanish explorer and soldier)"...

Student Britannica Articles (Ages 11 and up) on "Francisco de Orellana (Spanish explorer and soldier)" from the Britannica Online Student Edition

Guayaquil
The original settlement was founded as a commercial link to Spain in the 1530s, but Indians destroyed it twice. The town was established in its present location in 1537 by the Spanish explorer Francisco de Orellana. He named it Santiago de Guayaquil in honor of Santiago (St. James), on whose day it was founded, and also for the local Indian chief Guaya and his wife, Quila, both who chose death over being captured by the Spaniards. Simon Bolivar and Jose de San Martin held a conference there in 1822, after which Bolivar emerged as sole leader of the South American liberation movement. A noticeable rivalry exists between Guayaquil and Quito that dates back to the colonial period and stems from cultural and political differences. The town was made a Roman Catholic diocese in 1838 and was elevated to an archdiocese in 1956. (See also Ecuador.) Population (2001), 1,985,379.
Amazon River
The Amazon River was discovered by Francisco de Orellana, a Spanish explorer, in 1541. After descending the river from Quito, Ecuador, to the Atlantic, Orellana claimed to have seen women tribal warriors, and he named the river Amazonas for the women warriors of Greek mythology. In 1637 Pedro Teixeira, a Portuguese explorer, ascended the Amazon with 2,000 men in 47 canoes.
Latin America
Christopher Columbus' arrival in the New World in 1492 introduced a colonial era during which Spain and Portugal brought almost all of Latin America under their control. The West Indies, where Columbus landed on his first voyage to the New World, offered the Spaniards little in wealth or a reliable labor supply. However, the islands served as footholds for explorations of the mainland. In 1519 Hernando Cortez set sail from Cuba for the coast of Mexico. He marched inland from what is now the city of Veracruz, conquering Indian tribes and gaining allies on the way to Tenochtitlan (now Mexico City), the capital of the Aztecs. Cortez finally defeated the Aztecs in 1521. Diseases brought by the Spaniards and superstitions associated with the arrival of the whites contributed to the collapse of the Indian empire.

Children's Encyclopedia Articles (Ages 8-11) on "Francisco de Orellana (Spanish explorer and soldier)" from the Britannica Online Student Edition

History(from the Amazon River article)
In 1541 the Spanish explorer Francisco de Orellana became the first European to explore the Amazon River. Afterward he told of encounters with tribes led by women resembling the Amazons of Greek mythology. This comparison is said to have led him to name the river the Amazon.
Spanish Colonies(from the Americas, Exploration and Settlement of the article)
The earliest Spanish settlements were in the West Indies. The Spanish set up Santo Domingo on the island of Hispaniola in 1496. It was the first capital of Spain's colonial empire, called New Spain.
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