Juan (Francisco) de Céspedes | |
---|---|
Born | 1501 or 1505 |
Died | late 1573 or 1576 |
Nationality | Castilian |
Occupations | Conquistador |
Years active | 1521-1543 |
Employer | Spanish Crown |
Known for | Foundation of Santa Marta Conquest of the Tairona Conquest of the Muisca Conquest of the Panche Conquest of the Sutagao Mayor of Bogotá |
Spouse | Isabel Romero |
Partner | Isabel (indigenous) |
Children | unnamed indigenous (son) Antonio de Céspedes Romero (son) Lope Gutiérrez de Céspedes Romero (son) |
Parents |
|
Relatives | Diego de Céspedes Ruiz (brother) Hernando de Prado (half brother) María de Céspedes Romero (stepdaughter) |
Encomendero of Bogotá | |
In office 1542–1543 | |
Preceded by | Hernán Venegas Carrillo |
Succeeded by | Hernán Venegas Carrillo |
In office 1546–1546 | |
Preceded by | Gonzalo García Zorro |
Succeeded by | Juan Tafur |
Notes | |
Juan (Francisco) de Céspedes Ruiz (1501 or 1505[2] in Argamasilla de Calatrava, Castile – 1573 or 1576 in Bogotá, New Kingdom of Granada) was a Spanish conquistador who is known as the founder of the town of Pasca, Cundinamarca, in the south of the Bogotá savanna, Colombia. De Céspedes arrived in the Americas in 1521 and participated in the conquest of the Tairona and the foundation of Santa Marta under Rodrigo de Bastidas. From 1542 to 1543 and in 1546 he served as mayor of Bogotá and after that until 1570 as lieutenant general of the first president of Colombia. Juan de Céspedes married Isabel Romero, one of the first Spanish women who arrived at Colombian territories and had two legitimate sons and one daughter. His date of death is uncertain; in late 1573 or 1576.
Knowledge about Juan de Céspedes has been provided by chroniclers Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada in his memoirs (1576), Pedro Simón in 1626, Juan Rodríguez Freyle in his work El Carnero (written between 1636 and 1638) and Lucas Fernández de Piedrahita (1688).[2][4][5][6]
Biography
Juan de Céspedes was born in 1501 or 1505 in Argamasilla de Calatrava, Castile-La Mancha in a family of hidalgos from Toledo.[2] His parents were Lope de Céspedes and María (de) Ruiz and he had one brother; Diego.[1] In 1521, he left Spain for Santo Domingo, Hispaniola, the first stronghold of the Spanish in the Americas. De Céspedes accompanied Rodrigo de Bastidas in the conquest of the Tairona and foundation of Santa Marta in 1525. After the Spanish king Carlos V installed García de Lerma as governor of Santa Marta on December 20, 1527, the latter named Juan de Céspedes Captain of the Infantry and sent him on an expedition into the Valle-Dupar, Pocigüeyca, a village south of Santa Marta towards Ciénaga, and the Magdalena River. After this expedition that took two years, De Céspedes was sent by Pedro Fernández de Lugo into the interior of the province of Santa Marta.[7]
When in 1536 Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada organised the main expedition into the Colombian Andes, he named De Céspedes as one of eight captains; of cavalry. At this expedition also his brother Hernando de Prado joined.[8] In the lower parts of the Magdalena River, at the confluence with the San Jorge and Cauca Rivers, Juan de Céspedes and Juan de Sanct Martín reached first and were joined by the other troops of De Quesada.[9][10] After the journey of a year into the Muisca Confederation, the troops settled on the Bogotá savanna. De Céspedes was sent south, while the other troops went north, into the territories of the zaque of Hunza. De Céspedes reached Fusagasugá in May 1537 with forty infantry and 15 horses.[11] On July 15, 1537, Juan de Céspedes conquered and founded Pasca, Cundinamarca.[12] De Céspedes continued south and west from there through the Sumapaz Páramo into the territories of the Sutagao. He was accompanied by Juan López de Herrera and suffered from the cold climate.[13][14] As a result of his bravery during this harsh conquest, De Céspedes was awarded the encomiendas of Ubaque, Chipaque, Quetame and Subachoque, to the east of and on the Altiplano Cundiboyacense.[7] The encomiendas of Ubaque and Quetame were passed on to his son Lope de Céspedes.[15][16]
New Kingdom of Granada
In 1539, the brother of the founder of Bogotá, Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada, Hernán Pérez de Quesada had taken the governance of the New Kingdom of Granada. In this year, the conquistadors, among which De Céspedes, asked the King of Spain to construct a hospital in Bogotá.[17] Under the command of Pérez de Quesada, De Céspedes and Juan de Sanct Martín tortured the last zipa of the Muisca, Sagipa, by cutting and burning the soles of the feet of the Muisca ruler.[18] De Céspedes was sent westward into the terrain of the Panche, who were beaten in the Battle of Tocarema in August 1538. De Céspedes passed through San Antonio del Tequendama.[19] From 1542 to 1543, De Céspedes was mayor of Bogotá, the capital of New Kingdom of Granada. He succeeded Hernán Venegas Carrillo, who occupied this position after De Céspedes again.[3]
In 1543, Alonso Luis de Lugo sent De Céspedes back to Santa Marta to help rebuild the city that was destroyed and burned by the French pirate Roberto Baal.[7] From Santa Marta, De Céspedes participated in conquests in the interior. In 1546, De Céspedes returned to the capital in the Andes and served a second term as mayor of the city.[3] The first president of the New Kingdom of Granada, Andrés Díaz Venero de Leyva, named Juan de Céspedes his lieutenant general, a position he held until it was abolished in 1570.[7] In 1565, De Céspedes constructed the Santa Bárbara church in Bogotá, that still exists today. He constructed the chapel thanking the Saint of Thunder, as he escaped death of a lightning strike at that place. The lightning strike did kill one of his slaves.[20]
Juan de Céspedes had one son with an indigenous woman named Isabel.[1] De Céspedes married Isabel Romero, one of the first Spanish women who arrived at the Spanish colony in northern South America, the widow of soldier Juan Francisco Lorenzo, who drowned in the Opón River. The marriage of De Céspedes and Romero was the first wedding in the New Kingdom of Granada, together with Lope Rioja and Elvira Gutiérrez.[21] The couple had two sons, Antonio and Lope, and De Céspedes one stepdaughter; María, daughter of Isabel Romero and her first husband who was given the last name of Juan.[7][22][23] Lope (Gutiérrez) de Céspedes served as mayor of Bogotá from 1577 to 1578 and in 1605 and Antonio held the same position from 1591 to 1592 and 1596 to 1597.[3]
Juan de Céspedes died in late 1573 or 1576 in the New Kingdom of Granada.[2] The house of De Céspedes was discovered on the site of the first convent of San Águstin, when it was moved to the San Francisco church, the oldest remaining church in Bogotá.[7]
Conquest by Juan de Céspedes
Name bold is founded |
Department | Date | Year | Notes | Map |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Santa Marta Taganga with Rodrigo de Bastidas |
Magdalena | 29 July | 1525 | [7] | |
Valledupar | Cesar | 1527-29 | [7] | ||
Fusagasugá | Cundinamarca | May | 1537 | [11] | |
Pasca | Cundinamarca | 15 July | 1537 | [12] | |
Tibacuy | Cundinamarca | 1537 | [5] | ||
San Antonio del Tequendama | Cundinamarca | 1539 | [19] | ||
Encomiendas
See also
References
- 1 2 3 (in Spanish) Juan Francisco de Céspedes - Geni
- 1 2 3 4 5 Rodríguez Freyle, 1638, p.69
- 1 2 3 4 (in Spanish) List of mayors of Bogotá - 1538-1599
- ↑ Jiménez de Quesada, 1576
- 1 2 Simón, 1626, vol.5
- ↑ Fernández de Piedrahita, 1688
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 (in Spanish) Biography Juan de Céspedes - Banco de la República
- ↑ (in Spanish) List of conquistadors led by Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada Archived 2016-03-09 at the Wayback Machine - Banco de la República
- ↑ (in Spanish) Exploración y conquista de Nueva Granada
- ↑ (in Spanish) La expedición de Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada por el Río Magdalena y el origen del Nuevo Reino de Granada (1536-1537) - Jorge Gamboa Mendoza
- 1 2 (in Spanish) Historia de Fusagasugá Archived 2015-05-03 at the Wayback Machine
- 1 2 (in Spanish) Official website Pasca
- ↑ (in Spanish) Conquistadores de los Sutagaos
- ↑ (in Spanish) Historical summary of Pasca, Cundinamarca
- ↑ (in Spanish) Ubaque - "Falda cubierta de bosque"
- ↑ (in Spanish) Quetame - Apuntes de historia
- ↑ (in Spanish) Hospital in Bogotá
- ↑ (in Spanish) A Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada, creador del "alma" colombiana
- 1 2 (in Spanish) Official website San Antonio del Tequendama
- ↑ (in Spanish) Atlas histórico de Bogotá colonia - Guía historica y descriptiva de Bogotá colonial - Banco de la República
- ↑ (in Spanish) Andrés Mejía disertó en Argamasilla de Calatrava sobre la figura del conquistador Juan de Céspedes y su familia, en su libro "La Provincia de Ciudad Real en el Nuevo Mundo (siglos XVI y XVII)"
- ↑ (in Spanish) Genealogy Juan de Céspedes
- ↑ (in Spanish) Los caballeros de la conquista
Bibliography
- Fernández de Piedrahita, Lucas. 1688. VI. Historia general de las conquistas del Nuevo Reino de Granada. Accessed 2017-03-06. Archived 2016-11-13 at the Wayback Machine
- Jiménez de Quesada, Gonzalo. 1576. Memoria de los descubridores, que entraron conmigo a descubrir y conquistar el Reino de Granada. Accessed 2017-03-06.
- Rodríguez Freyle, Juan, and Darío Achury Valenzuela. 1979 (1859) (1638). El Carnero - Conquista i descubrimiento del nuevo reino de Granada de las Indias Occidentales del mar oceano, i fundacion de la ciudad de Santa Fe de Bogota, 1-592. Fundacion Biblioteca Ayacuch. Accessed 2017-03-06.
- Simón, Pedro. 1892 (1626). Noticias historiales de las conquistas de Tierra Firme en las Indias occidentales (1882-92) vol.1-5. Accessed 2017-03-06.
Further reading
- Acosta, Joaquín. 1848. Compendio histórico del descubrimiento y colonización de la Nueva Granada en el siglo décimo sexto - Historical overview of discovery and colonization of New Granada in the sixteenth century, 1-460. Beau Press. Accessed 2017-03-01.
- De Castellanos, Juan. 1857 (1589). Elegías de varones ilustres de Indias, 1–567. Accessed 2017-03-01.
- De Plaza, José Antonio. 1810. Memorias para la historia de la Nueva Granada desde su descubrimiento el 20 de julio de 1810, 1-464. Imprenta del Neo-Granadino. Accessed 2017-03-01.
- N, N. 1979 (1889) (1539). Epítome de la conquista del Nuevo Reino de Granada, 81-97. Banco de la República. Accessed 2017-03-01.