When people think of revolutionary fighters in the Americas they often think of George Washington, Toussaint Louverture, or Simón Bolívar. However, the first revolutionary fighter attempting to liberate the New World from European colonialism did not live in the 18th or 19th century but instead lived almost 200 years before. Here, Nick Bobertz explains the story of Lope de Aguirre.

A depiction of Lope de Aguirre.

In the year 1561 a group of Spanish conquistadors set out on an expedition to discover the lost city of El Dorado somewhere in the Amazon jungle. One of these conquistadors was a man named Lope de Aguirre who would go insane in the jungles of the Amazon, seize power over the Spanish expedition, and attempt to liberate all Spanish colonies in the new world.

This is the story of how one conquistador became mad with power and attempted to seize complete power over the Spanish colonies in the Americas. Much of what we know about Aguirre comes from a handful of sources, the primary of which is a letter he sent to King Phillip II renouncing his reign and declaring war on Spain.

Lope de Aguirre In Spain

As historians we know very little about the youth and upbringing of Lope de Aguirre. He was born in northern Spain sometime around the year 1510. More than likely his family was of lower noble birth in the Kingdom of Navarre. We believe this is the case because Lope de Aguirre was fairly literate for his time and his family name indicates a heritage from Northern Spain.

Sometime in his 20s Aguirre would migrate south to Seville. It is perhaps that Aguirre decided to move here in search of riches and adventure in the Spanish Reconquista which ended in 1492 with the fall of the Nasrid kingdom of Granada.

It is assumed that while living in Seville Aguirre would have seen Hernando Pizarro returning on January 9th, 1534 to a hero's welcome after having conquered the Inca Kingdom. Aguirre would have seen Pizarro being given substantial land in the new world by King Charles of Spain. This undoubtedly had an impact upon the young conquistador as only 3 years later Aguirre was somehow in the former Inca capital Peru.

Lope de Aguirre In The New World

While in the New World Lope de Aguirre became known for both his violence against the natives as well as his hatred for the Spanish Crown. On top of this Aguirre was known to be a person who acted before thinking, which led to a series of ill thought out plans. One of which was that in 1544 Aguirre attempted to free the new Spanish viceroy of South America from imprisonment with a handful of men but failed drastically.

In 1551 when Lope de Aguirre was arrested in Potosi on charges of excessive violence against the natives. In court Aguirre stated that he was a member of the Spanish gentry and that as such he was immune by law to public humiliation. The judge didn't agree with Aguirre and had him publicly whipped in the city streets.

Lope de Aguirre was a man driven by greed, ambition, and most of all pride. This became apparent after his public humiliation by Judge Esquivel. After Aguirre was flogged in the streets of Potosi he would track Judge Esquivel across the Spanish colonies in the new world for 3 years before finally killing him.

Because of this stunt Aguirre became known as a mad man who would stop at nothing to accomplish his goals. In 1559 Spanish conquistador Pedro de Ursua began to assemble a group of explorers to go into the Amazon rainforest in search of the legendary city of El Dorado. Lope de Aguirre was of course going to be a part of this.

1560 Expedition

Sometime in 1560 a now middle aged Lope de Aguirre would set out on an expedition with around 300 conquistadors and hundreds of natives to serve as cooks, guides, and a baggage train. Besides himself Aguirre would bring a few conquistadors loyal to him and his daughter on this expedition.

The Voyage That Ended In Two Mutinies, Hundreds Dead, and Aguirre The Crazed Conquistador In Charge

This expedition left Lima and crossed the Andes mountain range. Their initial plan was to make rafts on the Maranon River and float down into the Amazon River and out into the Atlantic. However, something happened after they crossed the Andes mountain range.

The story is that the expedition leader Pedro de Ursua refused to allow Lope de Aguirre to bring his mistress on the expedition. Further, it appears that Pedro de Ursa noticed that the expedition was not prepared properly for the harsh climate of the Amazon basin and wanted to turn around. This gave Aguirre the pretext to begin to plot an assassination and mutiny against Pedro de Ursua on the grounds that he was leading the expedition astray.

After the death of Pedro de Ursa the conquistadors built a series of makeshift rafts and elected a young noble from Seville called Fernando de Guzman. Over the next month Aguirre and Guzman would argue over the course of the voyage and Aguirre would then assassinate Guzman. After this Aguirre was in charge and would start to remove people who did not agree with him. All together Lope de Aguirre claimed to have killed 15 people in order to seize power over the expedition.

After successfully taking control over the expedition Lope de Aguirre was in charge of only a handful of conquistadors. Over the next year they would wander around the Amazon River Basin completely lost and looking for the mythical city of gold, El Dorado. The river, disease, and famine ended up causing the expedition to dwindle to only a few men along with Aguirre.

After about 100 days of drifting Aguirre and his crew made it to the Atlantic ocean. In all they had managed to survive on rafts for 100 days and covering more than 1,300 miles.

War On Spain

Aguirre would come out of the Amazon river basin in the delta of the Orinoco river. Something happened on this voyage that made Aguirre believe that his enemy was none other than the king of Spain.

With his ragtag group of conquistadors Aguirre would then turn north and sail another 300 miles on his rafts to the nearest European settled Island. This was the Spanish held Island of Margarita which is on the coast of modern Venezuela.

On the northwest side of the Island there was the port city of Pampatar which was founded in 1536. This is where Aguirre would attack in 1561. We don't have much details of the event but in the end Aguirre would seize control over the island and have his men declare him the Prince of the new world.

While on this island Aguirre would institute a series of changes. The governor of the Island spoke out against these changes and was killed. On top of this Aguirre had a man from Germany executed because he was a Protestant. That is all we know of Aguirre's couple of months as ruler of the island as he would immediately leave to attempt to start a revolution in Panama.

In the winter months of 1561/62 Lope de Aguirre would die after being surrounded and defeated at Barquisimeto, Venezuela. However, in this time he had begun to gain a following across the population as a revolutionary who was fighting against Spain.

So how do we as historians know all of this happened?

Aguirre's Letter

After taking control over the Island of Margarita Lope de Aguirre would write a letter and send it to King Phillip II of Spain. In this letter Aguirre outlines exactly what he did on his voyage, what the king did to him, and how he was going to free the Spanish colonies from European possession. (I highly suggest you read the letter that you can find by clicking here.)

As historians we can piece together exactly what happened in the mad mind of Aguirre. He seized the expedition, killed all those who opposed him, promised his men freedom, and then captured the Island of Margarita.

What is interesting is Aguirre's justification for declaring war against King Phillip of Spain. There is one passage from this letter that presents Aguirre's justification for rebelling against the King of Spain. The important thing to remember when reading this passage is that kings were divinely mandated, and as such simply better then the average person.

"Illustrious King, we do not ask for grants in Cordoba or Valladolid, nor in any part of Spain, which is your patrimony. Deign to feed the weary and poor with the fruits and proceeds from this land. Remember, King and Lord, that God is the same for all, and the same justice, reward, heaven, and hell."

This passage demonstrates that Aguirre is rebelling because he feels as though the King of Spain and his servants have been unfair to the common person in the New World. They take nearly all of the resources and leave nothing for the lower conquistadors and natives.

The most telling part here however is the end. That "god is the same for all, and the same justice, reward, heaven, and hell." This is very interesting because at this point in history people were taught that the nobility of the land was born with a divine reason for being better.

Aguirre here is destroying this idea and presenting libertas or that all people are created equal. This idea of liberty and the creation of equality among people regardless of birth can be seen in other revolutionary documents, namely the Declaration of Independence.

As such, we can look at Aguirre as a revolutionary fighter. In 1561 a man and a group of men attempted to seize control over the colonies of New Spain. These revolutionary fighters had the idea of liberty and self-governance long before the revolutionary wars of the 19th century.

Conclusion

Aguirre’s is a fascinating story. Many people are not aware of him and his ill fated voyage which turned into a revolution.

For much of history people have thought of Aguirre as a mad man who committed horrendous acts to seek personal glory and wealth. While this is the case he also can be considered the first revolutionary fighter in the Americas.

What do you think of Lope de Aguirre? Let us know below.

I hope you enjoyed this article. My name is Nicklaus Bobertz and I hold a master's degree in History from the University of Central Florida, have published in Cambridge University Press, and presented research at The University of Toronto.

I also run, write, and manage my own history blog where I give simple answers to history's hard questions. You can find me at TheHistoryAce.com.

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AuthorGeorge Levrier-Jones
CategoriesBlog Post

Born to a Protestant family in Devon, England in 1552, Sir Walter Raleigh was not only a prolific writer, poet and courtier of the Virgin Queen, but also a commendable explorer. Knighted by Queen Elizabeth I in the year 1585 and recognized nation-wide for his numerous talents, Raleigh is now mockingly remembered as the man who laid his cloak across a muddy pool so that Her Majesty could cross it without getting her feet dirty! Prapti Panda explains all.

Sir Walter Raleigh and his son Walter. 1602.

Sir Walter Raleigh and his son Walter. 1602.

Raleigh had to face extreme difficulties right from his childhood. When he was a boy, his family suffered greatly, trying to outrun the Roman Catholic Church that flourished under the rule of Mary I of England. In 1569, he joined troops in subduing civil uprisings in France but eventually returned to pursue his education as an undergraduate in the well-known Oriel College, Oxford. Many such events, such as his successful abortion of the Irish rebellion, followed that showed his ambition and skills that ultimately culminated in him gaining favor with the Virgin Queen.

 

THE FIRST HINT OF A LIFELONG CAREER

Sailing with his half-brother Humphrey Gilbert to America in 1578 turned out to be the first of many expeditions he would undertake. Therein, after two attempts, he managed to set up a British colony on Roanoke Island under the governance of John White. But after he sailed back to England and got delayed in returning, the colonists disappeared, and today their settlement is known popularly as the ‘Lost City of Roanoke Island’, but the people of America honored him by naming the state capital of North Carolina as Raleigh. Moreover, Raleigh County, West Virginia and Mount Raleigh in British Columbia are also named after him.

But all of this hard work and gallantness of his was thrown to the wind when Queen Elizabeth found out that he had secretly married one of her ladies-in-waiting, Elizabeth Throckmorton, and imprisoned them both in the Tower of London. He regained his reputation by capturing the incredible treasure-laden ship Madre de Deus and presenting it to the Queen. Some historians believe that that was when his obsession with gold started.

 

THE LURE OF GOLD

In the year 1594, the first hint of the existence of a ‘City of Gold’ reached him. He read the accounts of several people including Gonzalo Pizarro, Francisco Lopez and Francisco de Orellana that described the exploration of the Amazon basin and the Lower Orinoco.  By the time he decided to embark on a voyage to Guiana, he had become sure of the existence of El Dorado, the city that contained immeasurable wealth and which he dubbed Manoa. In his book, Discovery of Guiana, Raleigh recounts that it was the account of a Spaniard by the name of Juan Martinez, who was serving at the time as master of munitions to Diego Ordas, a Knight of the Order of Santiago, which provided the final proof that he needed.

Martinez, Raleigh believed, was the first European to ‘find’ El Dorado. The story was that Martinez, fearing execution due to mismanagement of some armaments that he was supposed to be in charge of, set out in a canoe down the Orinoco and was rescued by natives who took him to Manoa, the seat of their emperor. After several months of living there, Martinez was sent back to his land, laden heavily with gifts of gold which were eventually robbed off of him.

But Raleigh was not too dogmatic in his beliefs either. He reached out to various people connected with the story and was told with solid proof that left absolutely no room for doubts - in his mind at least. Then, he set sail to the New World in 1595 in search of Manoa. In reality, he had another, more significant objective - he wanted to weaken Spanish colonization of South America and build British influence there. If there was one thing that Raleigh had no qualms about stating, it was his contempt towards the Spanish. In the Discovery of Guiana, he never forgets to insert a jab or a wry comparison to his Spanish ‘friends’.

Although he gave exaggerated reports of the gold he found in Guiana when he went back to England, he was not successful in finding Manoa. Yet, silently, his belief in its existence was not shaken. In 1600, he was appointed governor of the Channel Island in Jersey and focused on improving defenses and administration.

Once again, Raleigh was struck by a bout of bad luck when Queen Elizabeth died in 1603. Her successor, King James I, son of Mary, Queen of Scots, was not quite ready to be favorably disposed towards him. In fact, King James was of a platonic nature, eager to amend relations with the Spanish. His first step was accusing Raleigh of treason and throwing him once more into the Tower of London - his only concession being that he was spared his life. During his imprisonment, Raleigh penned the popular Historie of the World.

A ray of hope appeared for Raleigh in 1616, when King James allowed him to travel a second time to Guiana in search of El Dorado in exchange for a massive fortune and strict orders to not attack the Spanish. But as ill luck would have it, one of his long-time friends and confidante Lawrence Keymis’ troops attacked a Spanish outpost on the banks of the Orinoco River, defying Raleigh’s orders and resulting in the untimely death of his son Walter.

On his return to England, again empty-handed, the Spanish Ambassador was angry, wanting King James to punish Raleigh for breaking the peace treaty. With no other way out, King James ordered Raleigh’s execution. So it was that on October 29, 1618, the world saw the last of a valiant man who traversed dangerous waters and explored uncharted lands, a man who was not afraid of going after what he believed in. Now he lies in a grave in St Margaret’s Church, Westminster, London, known mainly as a name that history students remember. 

 

Did you find this article interesting? If so, tell the world by sharing it, tweeting it or liking it!

The author: Prapti Panda has a deep interest in history - especially colonization and the Industrial Revolution. She spends her days researching and reading about the Royal Family and is a compulsive writer. Her first book, based on the European colonization of Latin America, will be out soon.

 

REFERENCES

The Discovery of Guiana, Walter Raleigh- 1595

BBC UK - http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/raleigh_walter.shtml

WEB- https://www.awesomestories.com/asset/view/THE-DEATH-OF-RALEIGH-Elizabeth-I-The-Golden-Age

Posted
AuthorGeorge Levrier-Jones
CategoriesBlog Post