The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803 — Volume 02 of 55 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 316 pages of information about The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803 — Volume 02 of 55.

The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803 — Volume 02 of 55 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 316 pages of information about The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803 — Volume 02 of 55.

Letters and documents follow which give details of the voyage of Loaisa, and events in the Moluccas until the year 1535.  From a letter written (May 3, 1529) by Hernando de Bustamante and Diego de Salivas it is learned that Jorge Manrique, captain of the “Santa Maria del Parral,” had been killed by his own men; and that sixty-one of those sailing in the fleet died a natural death, nine were drowned when the “Santi Spiritus” was wrecked, nine were killed by the Portuguese, and four were hanged.  A writ handed to the king from the Council of the Indies says that German factors denied the report of the death of Loaisa; and it is advised that one or two caravels be sent from New Spain—­from Colima, or Guatemala, or Nicaragua—­to find out the truth of this report.

A letter from Hernando de la Torre states that “Juan Sebastian del Cano, who was captain of the ship wrecked in the strait,” became captain-general at Loaisa’s death and “died a few days afterwards;” and that of the one hundred and twenty-three men of the “Victoria,” and twenty-five others who came with Saavedra, only twenty-five men were left.  In an investigation concerning matters connected with Loaisa’s expedition, Juan de Mazuecos declares (September 7, 1534) that Loaisa had died of sickness, four hundred leagues from the Strait of Magellan; and that all who ate at his table had died within the space of forty days.  Like depositions concerning this expedition are taken from several others, among them being Fray Andres Urdaneta.  A document made up from the above investigations says that Loaisa’s death was in the last of July, 1526, and that the Ladrones number in all thirteen islands, “in which there are no flocks, fowls, or animals.” (Nos. xvi-xxv, pp. 323-400.  These documents are much alike.)

The noted Augustinian Urdaneta [6] wrote an account of this disastrous enterprise, and of subsequent events, covering the years 1525-1535; this relation is the best and most succinct of all the early documents regarding Loaisa’s expedition.  It bears date, Valladolid, February 26, 1537; and the original is preserved, as are the majority of the Loaisa documents, in the Archivo general de Indias in Seville.  Urdaneta, as befits an actor in the events, uses the first person, and gives a very readable and interesting account of the expedition.  He describes a Patagonian thus:  “He was huge of body, and ugly.  He was clad in a zebra skin, and on his head he bore a plume made of ostrich feathers; [7] he carried a bow, and on his feet had fastened some bits of leather.”  He describes, briefly and graphically, the storms that scattered the ships and caused the foundering of the “Santi Spiritus.”  Shortly after entering the strait, “a pot of pitch took fire on the commander’s ship, and the ship began to burn, and little was lacking that we did not burn in it, but by God’s help, and the great care exercised, we put out the fire.”  “We left the strait in the month of May, five hundred

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The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803 — Volume 02 of 55 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.