Sebastian de benalcazar biography samples

  • (born July 4, 1952, Medellín, Colombia) is a Colombian politician who served as president of Colombia (2002–10).
  • This article is a careful reflection of the treatment and choice that historians give to their sources in order to match their contents with their ideological.
  • Sebastián de Benalcázar (1479/1480 – 1551) was a Spanish conquistador, known as the founder of important early colonial cities in the northwestern part of South.
  • Sebastián de Belalcázar

    File:Sebastian de Belalcazar.jpg
    Personal details
    Born 1479 or 1480

    Córdoba, Crown of Castille

    Died 1551 (aged 70–71)
    Cartagena, New Kingdom of Granada, Viceroyalty of Peru
    Nationality Spaniard
    OccupationConquistador

    Sebastián de Belalcázar (1479 or 1480 – 1551) was a Spanish conquistador.

    Early life[]

    He was born Sebastián Moyano in the province of Córdoba, Spain, in either 1479 or 1480. He took the name Benalcázar as that was the name of the castle-town near to his birthplace in Córdoba. According to various sources, he may have left for the New World with Christopher Columbus as early as 1498, but Juan de Castellanos wrote that he killed a mule in 1507, and fled to Spain for the West Indies due to fear of punishment, and as a chance to escape the poverty in which he lived.

    Americas[]

    He entered Nicaragua with Francisco Hernández de Córdoba in 1524, and became the first mayor of the city of

    GKS 2232 4º: Guaman Poma, Nueva corónica y buen gobierno (1615)

    • Title page
    • 1. The first new chronicle (1-13)
    • 2. “How God ordained the writing of this book” (14-21)
    • 3. The chapter of the ages of the world (22-32)
    • 4. The chapter of the popes and their reigns (33-47)
    • 5. The chapter of the ages of the Indians (48-78)
    • 6. The chapter of the Inkas (79-119)
      • The first coat of arms of the Inka (p. 79)
      • The second coat of arms of the Inka (p. 83)
      • The first Inka, Manco Capac Inka (p. 86)
      • The second Inka, Sinchi Roca Inka (p. 88)
      • The birth of Jesus Christ in Bethlehem (p. 90) (See also p. 30.)
      • Saint Bartholomew in the province of Collao (p. 92)
      • The third Inka, Lloque Yupanqui Inka (p. 96)
      • The fourth Inka, Mayta Capac Inka (p. 98)
      • The fifth Inka, Capac Yupanqui Inka (p. 100)
      • The sixth Inka, Inka Roca, with his son (p. 102)
      • The seventh Inka, Yahuar Huaca Inka (p. 104)
      • The eighth Inka, Viracocha Inka (p. 106)
      • The ninth I

        History of Ecuador

        The History of Ecuador covers human habitation in the region reaching back 8,000 years

        During that period a diversity of cultures have influenced the people and the land that today make up the contemporary Republic of Ecuador. Indigenous tribes inhabited the area for millennia before being invaded and absorbed into the Inca Empire in the early fifteenth century.

        The Incas themselves were conquered shortly afterwards by the Spanish led by Francisco Pizarro in the early 16th century. The region fell under the Viceroyalty of Peru although it was granted certain autonomy through the Quito Audencia established in 1563. In 1720, it was joined to the Viceroyalty of New Granada.

        A rebellion in 1812 against the Quito Audencia was crushed early in the Spanish American wars of independence, but the struggle was revived in 1820 by a new rebellion originating in Guayaquil. The city was also the site of the Guayaquil Conference between Simon Bolivar and San Martin. E

      • sebastian de benalcazar biography samples