Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER CLXXIV
- CHAPTER CLXXV
- CHAPTER CLXXVI
- CHAPTER CLXXVII
- CHAPTER CLXXVIII
- CHAPTER CLXXIX
- CHAPTER CLXXX
- CHAPTER CLXXXI
- CHAPTER CLXXXII
- CHAPTER CLXXXIII
- CHAPTER CLXXXIV
- CHAPTER CLXXXV
- CHAPTER CLXXXVI
- CHAPTER CLXXXVII
- CHAPTER CLXXXVIII
- CHAPTER CLXXXIX
- CHAPTER CXC
- CHAPTER CXCI
- CHAPTER CXCII
- CHAPTER CXCIII
- CHAPTER CXCIV
- CHAPTER CXCV
- CHAPTER CXCVI
- CHAPTER CXCVII
- CHAPTER CXCVIII
- CHAPTER CXCIX
- CHAPTER CC
- CHAPTER CCI
- CHAPTER CCII
- CHAPTER CCIII
- CHAPTER CCIV
- CHAPTER CCV
- CHAPTER CCVI
- CHAPTER CCVII
- CHAPTER CCVIII
- CHAPTER CCIX
- CHAPTER CCX
- CHAPTER CCXI
- CHAPTER CCXII
- CHAPTER CCXIII
- CHAPTER CCXIV
- APPENDIX A
- APPENDIX B
- FIFTH LETTER OF HERNANDO CORTES TO THE EMPEROR CHARLES V
- INDEX
- Plate section
CHAPTER CC
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER CLXXIV
- CHAPTER CLXXV
- CHAPTER CLXXVI
- CHAPTER CLXXVII
- CHAPTER CLXXVIII
- CHAPTER CLXXIX
- CHAPTER CLXXX
- CHAPTER CLXXXI
- CHAPTER CLXXXII
- CHAPTER CLXXXIII
- CHAPTER CLXXXIV
- CHAPTER CLXXXV
- CHAPTER CLXXXVI
- CHAPTER CLXXXVII
- CHAPTER CLXXXVIII
- CHAPTER CLXXXIX
- CHAPTER CXC
- CHAPTER CXCI
- CHAPTER CXCII
- CHAPTER CXCIII
- CHAPTER CXCIV
- CHAPTER CXCV
- CHAPTER CXCVI
- CHAPTER CXCVII
- CHAPTER CXCVIII
- CHAPTER CXCIX
- CHAPTER CC
- CHAPTER CCI
- CHAPTER CCII
- CHAPTER CCIII
- CHAPTER CCIV
- CHAPTER CCV
- CHAPTER CCVI
- CHAPTER CCVII
- CHAPTER CCVIII
- CHAPTER CCIX
- CHAPTER CCX
- CHAPTER CCXI
- CHAPTER CCXII
- CHAPTER CCXIII
- CHAPTER CCXIV
- APPENDIX A
- APPENDIX B
- FIFTH LETTER OF HERNANDO CORTES TO THE EMPEROR CHARLES V
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
It is necessary to go far back in my story so that what I shall now say may be quite clear. At the time when Marcos de Aguilar was governing New Spain by virtue of the authority which the Licentiate Luis Ponce de Leon had left him when he died, as I have already stated many times, before Cortés went to Castile, [he], the Marquis del Valle, himself despatched four ships which he had built in a province named Zacatula, well supplied with provisions and artillery, with good sailors and fifty soldiers and much merchandise and trifles from Castile for barter, and everything that was necessary for victuals, and biscuits for more than a year. And he sent with them as commander-in-chief a gentleman of birth named Álvaro de Sayavedra Zeron, with orders to lay his course for the Moluccas or Spice Islands or China, and this was by the command of His Majesty, which he had written to Cortés from the City of Granada on the twentysecond of June fifteen hundred and twenty-six, and because Cortés showed the letter itself to me and other Conquistadores, who were in his company, I say it and assert it here, and His Majesty even commanded Cortés to order the Captains whom he should send to go and search for a fleet which had sailed from Castile to China, with a certain Don Fray Garcia de Loayza, Knight Commander of the order of St. John of Rhodes, as Captain.
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- The True History of the Conquest of New Spain , pp. 178 - 188Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1916