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Manila galleon

The Manila galleons (Spanish: Galeón de Manila; Filipino: Galyon ng Maynila) were Spanish trading ships which for two and a half centuries linked the Spanish Crown’s Viceroyalty of New Spain, based in Mexico City, with the Asian territories, collectively known as the Spanish East Indies, across the Pacific Ocean. The ships made one or two round-trip voyages per year between the ports of Acapulco and Manila. The name of the galleon changed to reflect the city that the ship sailed from.[1] The term Manila galleon can also refer to the trade route itself between Acapulco and Manila, which lasted from 1565 to 1815.

Galeón de Manila
Manila galleon (c. 1590 Boxer Codex)
Native name Spanish: Galeón de Manila Filipino: Galyon ng Maynila
English nameManila Galleon
DurationFrom 1565 to 1815 (250 years)
VenueBetween Manila and Acapulco
LocationNew Spain (Spanish Empire)
(Current Mexico)
Also known asNao de China or Galeón de Acapulco
MotiveTrading maritime route from East Indies to the Americas
Organised bySpanish Crown

The Manila galleons sailed the Pacific for 250 years, bringing to the Americas cargoes of luxury goods such as spices and porcelain in exchange for New World silver. The route also fostered cultural exchanges that shaped the identities and culture of the countries involved.

The Manila galleons were also known in New Spain as La Nao de la China ("The China Ship") on their voyages from the Philippines because they carried mostly Chinese goods, shipped from Manila.[2][3] The Manila Galleon route was the first instance of Globalization as it marked the earliest period in history when a trade route from Asia crossed to the Americas, thereby connecting all the world's continents in one Global Silver Trade.[4]

The Spanish inaugurated the Manila galleon trade route in 1565 after the Augustinian friar and navigator Andrés de Urdaneta pioneered the tornaviaje or return route from the Philippines to Mexico. Urdaneta and Alonso de Arellano made the first successful round trips that year. The trade using "Urdaneta's route" lasted until 1815, when the Mexican War of Independence broke out.

In 2015 the Philippines and Mexico began preparations for the nomination of the Manila-Acapulco Galleon Trade Route in the UNESCO World Heritage List, with backing from Spain. Spain has also suggested the tri-national nomination of the Archives on the Manila-Acapulco Galleons in the UNESCO Memory of the World Register.

History

 
Manila-Accapulco galleon trade route, showing onward route to Spain

Discovery of the route

 
Iberian mare clausum claims during the Age of Discovery

In 1521, a Spanish expedition led by Ferdinand Magellan sailed west across the Pacific using the westward trade winds. The expedition discovered the Mariana Islands and the Philippines and claimed them for Spain. Although Magellan was killed by natives commanded by Lapulapu during the battle of Mactan, one of his ships, the Victoria, made it back to Spain by continuing westward.

 
Acapulco in 1628, Mexican terminus of the Manila galleon
 
Northerly trade route as used by eastbound Manila galleons

In order to settle and trade with these islands from the Americas, an eastward maritime return path was necessary. The Trinidad, which tried this a few years later, failed. In 1529, Álvaro de Saavedra Cerón also tried sailing east from the Philippines, but could not find the eastward-blowing winds ("westerlies") across the Pacific. In 1543, Bernardo de la Torre also failed. In 1542, however, Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo helped pave the way by sailing north from Mexico to explore the Pacific coast, reaching as far north as the Russian River, just north of the 38th parallel. The frustration of these failures is shown in a letter sent in 1552 from Portuguese Goa by the Spanish missionary Francis Xavier to Simão Rodrigues asking that no more fleets attempt the New Spain–East Asia route, lest they be lost.[5]

The Manila–Acapulco galleon trade finally began when Spanish navigators Alonso de Arellano and Andrés de Urdaneta discovered the eastward return route in 1565. Sailing as part of the expedition commanded by Miguel López de Legazpi to conquer the Philippines in 1564, Urdaneta was given the task of finding a return route.[6] Reasoning that the trade winds of the Pacific might move in a gyre as the Atlantic winds did, they sailed north, going all the way to the 38th parallel north, off the east coast of Japan, before catching the westerlies that would take them back across the Pacific. He commanded a vessel which completed the eastward voyage in 129 days; this marked the opening of the Manila galleon trade.[7]

Reaching the west coast of North America, Urdaneta's ship, the San Pedro, hit the coast near Santa Catalina Island, California, then followed the shoreline south to San Blas and later to Acapulco, arriving on October 8, 1565.[8] Most of his crew died on the long initial voyage, for which they had not sufficiently provisioned. Arellano, who had taken a more southerly route, had already arrived.

The English privateer Francis Drake also reached the California coast, in 1579. After capturing a Spanish ship heading for Manila, Drake turned north, hoping to meet another Spanish treasure ship coming south on its return from Manila to Acapulco. He failed in that regard, but staked an English claim somewhere on the northern California coast. Although the ship's log and other records were lost, the officially accepted location is now called Drakes Bay, on Point Reyes south of Cape Mendocino.[a][17]

By the 18th century, it was understood that a less northerly track was sufficient when nearing the North American coast, and galleon navigators steered well clear of the rocky and often fogbound northern and central California coast. According to historian William Lytle Schurz, "They generally made their landfall well down the coast, somewhere between Point Conception and Cape San Lucas ... After all, these were preeminently merchant ships, and the business of exploration lay outside their field, though chance discoveries were welcomed".[18]

The first motivation for land exploration of present-day California was to scout out possible way stations for the seaworn Manila galleons on the last leg of their journey. Early proposals came to little, but in 1769, the Portola expedition established ports at San Diego and Monterey (which became the administrative center of Alta California), providing safe harbors for returning Manila galleons.

The Manila galleon and California

Monterey, California was about two months and three weeks out from Manila in the 18th century, and the galleon tended to stop there 40 days before arriving in Acapulco. Galleons stopped in Monterey prior to California's settlement by the Spanish in 1769; however visits became regular between 1777 and 1794 because the Crown ordered the galleon to stop in Monterey.[19]

Trade

 
White represents the route of the Manila Galleons in the Pacific and the flota in the Atlantic. (Blue represents Portuguese routes.)

Trade with Ming China via Manila served a major source of revenue for the Spanish Empire and as a fundamental source of income for Spanish colonists in the Philippine Islands. Galleons used for the trade between East and West were crafted by Filipino artisans.[20] Until 1593, two or more ships would set sail annually from each port.[21] The Manila trade became so lucrative that Seville merchants petitioned king Philip II of Spain to protect the monopoly of the Casa de Contratación based in Seville. This led to the passing of a decree in 1593 that set a limit of two ships sailing each year from either port, with one kept in reserve in Acapulco and one in Manila. An "armada", or armed escort of galleons, was also approved. Due to official attempts at controlling the galleon trade, contraband and understating of ships' cargoes became widespread.[22]

 
The Selden Map, a merchant map showing trade routes with its epicenter from Quanzhou to Manila and across the Spanish Philippines and across the Far East

The galleon trade was supplied by merchants largely from port areas of Fujian, such as Quanzhou, as depicted in the Selden Map, and Yuegang (the old port of Haicheng in Zhangzhou, Fujian),[23][24] who traveled to Manila to sell the Spaniards spices, porcelain, ivory, lacquerware, processed silk cloth and other valuable commodities. Cargoes varied from one voyage to another but often included goods from all over Asia: jade, wax, gunpowder and silk from China; amber, cotton and rugs from India; spices from Indonesia and Malaysia; and a variety of goods from Japan, the Spanish part of the so-called Namban trade, including fans, chests, screens, porcelain and lacquerware.[25]

Galleons transported the goods to be sold in the Americas, namely in New Spain and Peru, as well as in European markets. East Asia trading primarily functioned on a silver standard due to Ming China's use of silver ingots as a medium of exchange. As such, goods were mostly bought by silver mined from New Spain and Potosí.[22] In addition, slaves from various origins were transported from Manila.[26]

The cargoes arrived in Acapulco and were transported by land across Mexico. Mule trains would carry the goods along the China Road from Acapulco first to the administrative center of Mexico City, then on to the port of Veracruz on the Gulf of Mexico, where they were loaded onto the Spanish treasure fleet bound for Spain. The transport of goods overland by porters, the housing of travelers and sailors at inns by innkeepers, and the stocking of long voyages with food and supplies provided by haciendas before departing Acapulco helped to stimulate the economy of New Spain.[27]

The trade of goods and exchanges of people were not limited to Mexico and the Philippines since Guatemala, Panama, Ecuador, and Peru also served as supplementary streams to the main one between Mexico and Philippines.[28]

 
Sample of goods brought via Manila galleon in Acapulco

Around 80% of the goods shipped back from Acapulco to Manila were from the Americas — silver, cochineal, seeds, sweet potato, corn, tomato, tobacco, chickpeas, chocolate and cocoa, watermelon seeds, vines, and fig trees. The remaining 20% were goods transshipped from Europe and North Africa such as wine and olive oil, and metal goods such as weapons, knobs and spurs.[25]

This Pacific route was the alternative to the trip west across the Indian Ocean, and around the Cape of Good Hope, which was reserved to Portugal according to the Treaty of Tordesillas. It also avoided stopping over at ports controlled by competing powers, such as Portugal and the Netherlands. From the early days of exploration, the Spanish knew that the American continent was much narrower across the Panamanian isthmus than across Mexico. They tried to establish a regular land crossing there, but the thick jungle and tropical diseases such as yellow fever and malaria made it impractical.

It took at least four months to sail across the Pacific Ocean from Manila to Acapulco, and the galleons were the main link between the Philippines and the viceregal capital at Mexico City and thence to Spain itself. Many of the so-called "Kastilas" or Spaniards in the Philippines were actually of Mexican descent, and the Hispanic culture of the Philippines is influenced by Spanish and Mexican culture in particular. [29] Soldiers and settlers recruited from Mexico and Peru were also gathered in Acapulco before they were sent to settle at the presidios of the Philippines.[30] Even after the galleon era, and at the time when Mexico finally gained its independence, the two nations still continued to trade, except for a brief lull during the Spanish–American War.

In Manila, the safety of ocean crossings was commended to the virgin Nuestra Señora de la Soledad de Porta Vaga in masses held by the Archbishop of Manila. If the expedition was successful the voyagers would go to La Ermita (the church) to pay homage, and offer gold and other precious gems or jewelries from Hispanic countries to the image of the virgin. So it came to be that the virgin was named the "Queen of the Galleons".

Economic shocks due to the arrival of Spanish-American silver in China were among the factors that led to the end of the Ming dynasty.

End of the Galleons

In 1740, as part of the administrative changes of the Bourbon Reforms, the Spanish crown began allowing the use of registered ships or navíos de registro in the Pacific. These ships traveled solo, outside the convoy system of the galleons. While these solo voyages would not immediately replace the galleon system, they were more efficient and better able to avoid being captured by the Royal Navy of Great Britain.[31]

The Manila-Acapulco galleon trade ended in 1815, a few years before Mexico gained independence from Spain in 1821. After this, the Spanish Crown took direct control of the Philippines, and governed directly from Madrid. Sea transport became easier in the mid-19th century after the invention of steam powered ships and the opening of the Suez Canal, which reduced the travel time from Spain to the Philippines to 40 days.

Galleons

Construction

 
Spanish galleon

Between 1609 and 1616, 9 galleons and 6 galleys were constructed in Philippine shipyards. The average cost was 78,000 pesos per galleon and at least 2,000 trees. The galleons constructed included the San Juan Bautista, San Marcos, Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe, Angel de la Guardia, San Felipe, Santiago, Salbador, Espiritu Santo, and San Miguel. "From 1729 to 1739, the main purpose of the Cavite shipyard was the construction and outfitting of the galleons for the Manila to Acapulco trade run."[32]

Due to the route's high profitability but long voyage time, it was essential to build the largest possible galleons, which were the largest class of European ships known to have been built until then.[33][34] In the 16th century, they averaged from 1,700 to 2,000 tons[which?][clarification needed], were built of Philippine hardwoods and could carry 300–500 passengers. The Concepción, wrecked in 1638, was 43 to 49 m (141 ft 1 in to 160 ft 9 in) long and displacing some 2,000 tons. The Santísima Trinidad was 51.5 m (169 ft 0 in) long. Most of the ships were built in the Philippines and only eight in Mexico.

Crews

Sailors averaged age 28 or 29 while the oldest were between 40 and 50. Ships pages were children who entered service mostly at age 8, many orphans or poor taken from the streets of Seville, Mexico and Manila. Apprentices were older than the pages and if successful would be certified a sailor at age 20. Because mortality rates were high with ships arriving in Manila with a majority of their crew often dead from starvation, disease and scurvy, especially in the early years, Spanish officials in Manila found it difficult to find men to crew their ships to return to Acapulco. Many indios of Filipino and Southeast Asian origin made up the majority of the crew. Other crew were made up of deportees and criminals from Spain and the colonies. Many criminals were sentenced to serve as crew on royal ships. Less than a third of the crew was Spanish and they usually held key positions aboard the galleon.[35]

At port, goods were unloaded by dockworkers, and food was often supplied locally. In Acapulco, the arrival of the galleons provided seasonal work, as for dockworkers who were typically free black men highly paid for their back breaking labor, and for farmers and haciendas across Mexico who helped stock the ships with food before voyages. On land, travelers were often housed at inns or mesones, and had goods transported by muleteers, which provided opportunities for Indigenous people in Mexico. By providing for the galleons, Spanish colonial America was tied into the broader global economy.[27]

Shipwrecks

The wrecks of the Manila galleons are legends second only to the wrecks of treasure ships in the Caribbean. In 1568, Miguel López de Legazpi's own ship, the San Pablo (300 tons), was the first Manila galleon to be wrecked en route to Mexico. Between the years 1576 when the Espiritu Santo was lost and 1798 when the San Cristobal (2) was lost there were twenty Manila galleons[36] wrecked within the Philippine archipelago. In 1596 the San Felipe was wrecked in Japan. The cargo was seized by the Japanese authorities and the behavior of the crew prompted persecution against the Christians.

At least one galleon, probably the Santo Cristo de Burgos, is believed to have wrecked on the coast of Oregon in 1693. Known as the Beeswax wreck, the event is described in the oral histories of the Tillamook and Clatsop, which suggest that some of the crew survived.[37][38][39]

Between 1565 and 1815, 108 ships operated as Manila galleons, of which 26 were lost at sea for various reasons, including four captured by the enemy (English or British) in wartime: the Santa Anna captured in 1587 by Thomas Cavendish , the Encarnacion captured by the British 1709, the Nuestra Senora de la Covadonga captured in 1743 by George Anson, and the Nuestra Senora de la Santisima Trinidad captured in 1762 by HMS Panther and HMS Argo.[32]

Possible contact with Hawaii

Over 250 years, there were hundreds of Manila galleon crossings of the Pacific Ocean between present-day Mexico and the Philippines, with their route taking them just south of the Hawaiian Islands on the westward leg of their round trip and yet there are no records of contact with the Hawaiians. British historian Henry Kamen maintains that the Spanish did not have the ability to properly explore the Pacific Ocean and were not capable of finding the islands which lay at a latitude 20° north of the westbound galleon route and its currents.[40] However, Spanish exploration in the Pacific was paramount until the late 18th century. Spanish navigators discovered many islands including Guam, the Marianas, the Carolines and the Philippines in the North Pacific, as well as Tuvalu, the Marquesas, the Solomon Islands, New Guinea, and Easter Island in the South Pacific. Spanish navigators also discovered the Pitcairn and Vanuatu archipelagos during their search for Terra Australis in the 17th century.

 
Pacific Ocean with Mauna Kea highlighted

This navigational activity poses the question as to whether Spanish explorers did arrive in the Hawaiian Islands two centuries before Captain James Cook's first visit in 1778. Ruy López de Villalobos commanded a fleet of six ships that left Acapulco in 1542 with a Spanish sailor named Ivan Gaetan or Juan Gaetano aboard as pilot. Depending on the interpretation, Gaetano's reports seem to describe either the discovery of Hawaii or the Marshall Islands in 1555.[41] If it was Hawaii, Gaetano would have been one of the first Europeans to find the islands.

 
The Manila-Acapulco Galleon Memorial at Plaza Mexico in Intramuros, Manila.

The westward route from Mexico passed south of Hawaii, making a short stopover in Guam before heading for Manila. The exact route was kept secret to protect the Spanish trade monopoly against competing powers, and to avoid Dutch and English pirates. Due to this policy of discretion, if the Spanish did find Hawaii during their voyages, they would not have published their findings and the discovery would have remained unknown. From Gaetano's account, the Hawaiian islands were not known to have any valuable resources, so the Spanish would not have made an effort to settle them.[41] This happened in the case of the Marianas and the Carolines, which were not effectively settled until the second half of the 17th century. Spanish archives[when?] contain a chart that depicts islands in the latitude of Hawaii but with the longitude ten degrees east of the Islands (reliable methods of determining longitude were not developed until the mid-eighteenth century). In this manuscript, the Island of Maui is named "La Desgraciada" (the unhappy, or unfortunate), and what appears to be the Island of Hawaii is named "La Mesa" (the table). Islands resembling Kahoolawe, Lanai, and Molokai are named "Los Monjes" (the monks).[42]

The theory that the first European visitors to Hawaii were Spanish is reinforced by the findings of William Ellis, a writer and missionary who lived in early 19th century Hawaii, and recorded several folk stories about foreigners who had visited Hawaii prior to first contact with Cook. According to Hawaiian writer Herb Kawainui Kane, one of these stories:

concerned seven foreigners who landed eight generations earlier at Kealakekua Bay in a painted boat with an awning or canopy over the stern. They were dressed in clothing of white and yellow, and one wore a sword at his side and a feather in his hat. On landing, they kneeled down in prayer. The Hawaiians, most helpful to those who were most helpless, received them kindly. The strangers ultimately married into the families of chiefs, but their names could not be included in genealogies".[41]

Some scholars, particularly American, have dismissed these claims as lacking credibility.[43][44] Debate continues as to whether the Hawaiian Islands were actually visited by the Spanish in the 16th century[45] with researchers like Richard W. Rogers looking for evidence of Spanish shipwrecks.[46][47]

Preparations for UNESCO nominations

In 2010, the Philippines foreign affairs secretary organized a diplomatic reception attended by at least 32 countries, for discussions about the historic galleon trade and the possible establishment of a galleon museum. Various Mexican and Filipino institutions and politicians also made discussions about the importance of the galleon trade in their shared history.[48]

In 2013, the Philippines released a documentary regarding the Manila galleon trade route.[49]

In 2014, the idea to nominate the Manila-Acapulco Galleon Trade Route as a World Heritage Site was initiated by the Mexican and Filipino ambassadors to UNESCO. Spain has also backed the nomination and suggested that the archives related to the route under the possession of the Philippines, Mexico, and Spain be nominated as part of another UNESCO list, the Memory of the World Register.[50]

In 2015, the Unesco National Commission of the Philippines (Unacom) and the Department of Foreign Affairs organized an expert's meeting to discuss the trade route's nomination. Some of the topics presented include the Spanish colonial shipyards in Sorsogon, underwater archaeology in the Philippines, the route's influences on Filipino textile, the galleon's eastward trip from the Philippines to Mexico called tornaviaje, and the historical dimension of the galleon trade focusing on important and rare archival documents.[51]

In 2017, the Philippines established the Manila-Acapulco Galleon Museum in Metro Manila, one of the necessary steps in nominating the trade route to UNESCO.[52]

In 2018, Mexico reopened its Manila galleon gallery at the Archaeological Museum of Puerto Vallarta, Cuale.[53]

In 2020, Mexico released a documentary regarding the Manila galleon trade route.[54]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The Drakes Cove site began its review by the National Park Service (NPS) in 1994, thus starting an 18-year study of the suggested Drake sites. The first formal Nomination to mark the Nova Albion site at Drake's Cove as a National Historic Landmark was provided to NPS on January 1, 1996. As part of its review, NPS obtained independent, confidential comments from professional historians. The NPS staff concluded that the Drake's Cove site is the "most probable"[9] and "most likely"[10][11][12][13] Drake landing site. The National Park System Advisory Board Landmarks Committee sought public comments on the Port of Nova Albion Historic and Archaeological District Nomination [14] and received more than two dozen letters of support and none in opposition. At the Committee's meeting of November 9, 2011, in Washington, DC, representatives of the government of Spain, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and Congresswoman Lynn Wolsey all spoke in favor of the nomination: there was no opposition. Staff and the Drake Navigators Guild’s president, Edward Von der Porten, gave the presentation. The Nomination was strongly endorsed by Committee Member Dr. James M. Allan, Archaeologist, and the Committee as a whole which approved the nomination unanimously. The National Park System Advisory Board sought further public comments on the Nomination,[15] but no additional comments were received. At the Board's meeting on December 1, 2011, in Florida, the Nomination was further reviewed: the Board approved the nomination unanimously. On October 16, 2012, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar signed the nomination and on October 17, 2012, The Drakes Bay Historic and Archaeological District was formally announced as a new National Historic Landmark.[16]

References

  1. ^ Williams, Glyn (1999). The Prize of All the Oceans. New York: Viking. p. 4. ISBN 0-670-89197-5.
  2. ^ "La Nao de China: The Spanish Treasure Fleet System". Guampedia. Retrieved September 14, 2020.
  3. ^ Stampa, Manuel Carrera (1959). "La Nao de la China". Historia Mexicana. 9 (1): 97–118. JSTOR 25134990.
  4. ^ China and the Birth of Globalization in the 16th Century, by Dennis O. Flynn and Arturo Giráldez
  5. ^ Pereira Fernández, José Manuel (Third Quarter 2008). "Andrés de Urdaneta: In memoriam en el quinto centenario de su nacimiento" [Andrés de Urdaneta: In memoriam in the fifth centenary of his birthday] (PDF). Revista de Historia Naval (in Spanish). Spain: Ministry of Defence (Spain) (102): 16. ISSN 0212-467X. Retrieved November 19, 2020. The letter is referenced as Rodríguez Rodríguez, I.; Álvarez Fernández, J. (1991). Andrés de Urdaneta, agustino. En carreta sobre el Pacífico [Andrés de Urdaneta, Augustinian. By cart over the Pacific] (in Spanish). Zamora. p. 181.
  6. ^ Osborne 2013, pp. 30–31.
  7. ^ Osborne 2013, p. 31.
  8. ^ Derek Hayes (2001). Historical atlas of the North Pacific Ocean: maps of discovery and scientific exploration, 1500–2000. Douglas & McIntyre. p. 18. ISBN 9781550548655.
  9. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on February 22, 2014. Retrieved September 28, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on February 22, 2014. Retrieved September 28, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  11. ^ . Winepi.com. Archived from the original (DOC) on May 25, 2017. Retrieved February 23, 2019.
  12. ^ . Winepi.com. Archived from the original (DOC) on May 25, 2017. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  13. ^ . Winepi.com. Archived from the original (DOC) on May 25, 2017. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  14. ^ "Landmarks Committee of the National Park System Advisory Board Meeting". Federal Register. September 8, 2011. Retrieved February 23, 2019.
  15. ^ "Federal Register, Volume 76 Issue 189 (Thursday, September 29, 2011)". Govinfo.gov. Retrieved February 23, 2019.
  16. ^ "Interior Designates 27 New National Landmarks". Doi.gov. October 17, 2012. Retrieved February 23, 2019.
  17. ^ . Winepi.com. Archived from the original on October 17, 2016. Retrieved February 21, 2013.
  18. ^ Schurz 1917, p.107-108
  19. ^ https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Manila_Galleon/4YRDAAAAIAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=%20california%20monterey[clarification needed]
  20. ^ "Forgotten history? The polistas of the Galleon Trade". Rappler.
  21. ^ Schurz, William Lytle. The Manila Galleon, 1939. P 193.
  22. ^ a b Charles C. Mann (2011), 1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created, Random House Digital, pp. 123–163, ISBN 9780307596727
  23. ^ Brook, Timothy (1998), The Confusions of Pleasure: Commerce and Culture in Ming China, Berkeley: University of California Press, p. 205, ISBN 0-520-21091-3
  24. ^ Charles C. Mann (2011), 1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created, Random House Digital, pp. 149–150, ISBN 978-0-307-59672-7
  25. ^ a b Mejia, Javier. "The Economics of the Manila Galleon". New York University, Abu Dhabi. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  26. ^ Tatiana Seijas (June 23, 2014). Asian Slaves in Colonial Mexico: From Chinos to Indians. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-95285-9.
    Rose, Christopher (January 13, 2016). "Episode 76: The Trans-Pacific Slave Trade". 15 Minute History. University of Texas at Austin. Retrieved January 13, 2016.
  27. ^ a b Seijas, Tatiana (January 2, 2016). "Inns, mules, and hardtack for the voyage: the local economy of the Manila Galleon in Mexico". Colonial Latin American Review. 25 (1): 56–76. doi:10.1080/10609164.2016.1180787. ISSN 1060-9164. S2CID 163214741.
  28. ^ Connecting China with the Pacific World By Angela Schottenhammer (2019)(Pages 144–145)
  29. ^ Guevarra, Rudy P. (2007). Mexipino: A History of Multiethnic Identity and the Formation of the Mexican and Filipino Communities of San Diego, 1900–1965. University of California, Santa Barbara. ISBN 0549122869
  30. ^ "Forced Migration in the Spanish Pacific World" By Eva Maria Mehl, page 235.
  31. ^ Burkholder, Mark A., 1943- (2019). Colonial Latin America. Johnson, Lyman L. (Tenth ed.). New York. ISBN 978-0-19-064240-2. OCLC 1015274908.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  32. ^ a b Fish, Shirley (2011). The Manila-Acapulco Galleons: The Treasure Ships of the Pacific. AuthorHouse. pp. 128–130. ISBN 9781456775421.
  33. ^ See Chinese treasure ship for Chinese vessels that might have been larger.
  34. ^ "Crown, trade, church and indigenous societies: The functioning of the Spanish shipbuilding industry in the Philippines, 1571-1816 | Ivan Valdez-Bubnov - Academia.edu". www.academia.edu.
  35. ^ Leon-Guerrero, Jillette. "Manila Galleon Crew Members". Guampedia. Retrieved October 18, 2019.
  36. ^ . Archived from the original on January 10, 2016. Retrieved March 24, 2020.
  37. ^ Williams, Scott S. (2016). "Chapter 8: The Beeswax Wreck, A Manila Galleon in Oregon, USA". In Wu, Chunming (ed.). Early Navigation in the Asia-Pacific Region: A Maritime Archaeological Perspective. Springer. pp. 146–168. ISBN 978-981-10-0904-4. Retrieved October 23, 2019.
  38. ^ La Follette, Cameron; Deur, Douglas (July 2018). "Views Across the Pacific: The Galleon Trade and Its Traces in Oregon". Oregon Historical Quarterly. Oregon Historical Society. 119 (2): 160–191. doi:10.5403/oregonhistq.119.2.0160. S2CID 165790449. Retrieved October 23, 2019.
  39. ^ La Follette, Cameron; Deur, Douglas; Griffin, Dennis; Williams, Scott S. (July 2018). "Oregon's Manila Galleon". Oregon Historical Quarterly. Oregon Historical Society. 119 (2): 150–159. doi:10.5403/oregonhistq.119.2.0150. S2CID 165403120.
  40. ^ Kamen, Henry (2004). Empire: How Spain Became a World Power, 1492–1763. HarperCollins. ISBN 0060932643.
  41. ^ a b c Kane, Herb Kawainui (1996). "The Manila Galleons". In Bob Dye (ed.). Hawaiʻ Chronicles: Island History from the Pages of Honolulu Magazine. Vol. I. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. pp. 25–32. ISBN 0-8248-1829-6.
  42. ^ . The Publication of the Naturalist Division, Hawaii National Park, and the Hawaii Natural History Association. June 1959. Archived from the original on February 1, 2014.
  43. ^ By Oliver, Douglas L. (1989). The Pacific Islands. University of Hawaii Press. p. 45. ISBN 0824812336
  44. ^ Coulter, John Wesley. (Jun 1964) "Great Britain in Hawaii: The Captain Cook Monument". The Geographical Journal, Vol. 130, No. 2. doi:10.2307/1794586
  45. ^ Horwitz, Tony. (2003). Blue Latitudes: Boldly Going Where Captain Cook Has Gone Before. p.452. ISBN 0-312-42260-1
  46. ^ Rogers, Richard W. (1999). Shipwrecks of Hawaii: A Maritime History of the Big Island. Pilialoha Press
  47. ^ "Perhaps the leading authority on Hawaiian shipwrecks today", writes Peter von Buol, referring to Richard W. Rogers in the Fall 2006, Vol. 38, No. 3 issue of Prologue, published by the NARA.
  48. ^ Angara, Edgardo (October 18, 2014). "A Galleon Museum in Manila". Manila Bulletin. Retrieved January 21, 2016.
  49. ^ Rodis, Rodel (October 26, 2013). "The Second Coming of Filipinos to America". INQUIRER.net.
  50. ^ . The Philippine STAR. Archived from the original on December 14, 2017. Retrieved December 14, 2017.
  51. ^ "Historic Manila-Acapulco Galleon Trade set for nomination to Unesco World Heritage List". Inquirer Lifestyle. April 26, 2015.
  52. ^ "Manila-Acapulco Galleon Museum rises in SM MOA". Bbusinessmirror.com.ph. August 8, 2017.
  53. ^ "'El Galeón de Manila: The Spice Route' reopens museum in Puerto Vallarta". Vallarta Daily News. June 3, 2018.
  54. ^ "En búsqueda del Galeón de Manila". ContraRéplica.

Sources

  • Osborne, Thomas J. (2013). Pacific Eldorado: A History of Greater California. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-4051-9454-9.

Further reading

  • Bjork, Katharine. "The Link that Kept the Philippines Spanish: Mexican Merchant Interests and the Manila Trade, 1571–1815." Journal of World History vol. 9, no. 1, (1998) 25–50.
  • Carrera Stampa, Manuel. "La Nao de la China." Historia Mexicana 9 no. 33 (1959) 97-118.
  • Fish, Shirley. The Manila-Acapulco Galleons: The Treasure Ships of the Pacific, with an Annotated List of the Transpacific Galleons 1565–1815. Central Milton Keynes, England: Authorhouse 2011.
  • Gasch-Tomás, José Luis. The Atlantic World and the Manila Galleon: Circulation, Market, and Consumption of Asian Goods in the Spanish Empires, 1565-1650. Leiden: Brill, 2018.
  • Giraldez, Arturo. The Age of Trade: The Manila Galleons and the Dawn of the Global Economy. Lanham, MA: Rowman & Littlefield, 2015.
  • Luengo, Josemaria Salutan. A History of the Manila-Acapulco Slave Trade, 1565–1815. Tubigon, Bohol: Mater Dei Publications 1996.
  • McCarthy, William J. "Between Policy and Prerogative: Malfeasance in the Inspection of the Manila Galleons at Acapulco, 1637." Colonial Latin American Historical Review 2, no. 2 (1993) 163–83.
  • Oropeza Keresey, Deborah. "Los 'indios chinos' en la Nueva España: la inmigración de la Nao de China, 1565–1700." PhD dissertation, El Colegio de México, Centro de Estudios Históricos, 2007.
  • Rogers, R. (1999). Shipwreck of Hawai'i: a maritime history of the Big Island. Haleiwa, Hawaii: Pilialoha Publishing. ISBN 0967346703
  • Schurz, William Lytle. (1917) "The Manila Galleon and California", Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Vol. 21, No. 2, pp. 107–126
  • Schurz, William Lytle. The Manila Galleon. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc., 1939.

External links

  • Metropolitan Museum: Manila Galleon
  • Asociación Cultural Galeón de Manila, Spanish-Philippine research group based in Madrid (in Spanish)

manila, galleon, spanish, galeón, manila, filipino, galyon, maynila, were, spanish, trading, ships, which, half, centuries, linked, spanish, crown, viceroyalty, spain, based, mexico, city, with, asian, territories, collectively, known, spanish, east, indies, a. The Manila galleons Spanish Galeon de Manila Filipino Galyon ng Maynila were Spanish trading ships which for two and a half centuries linked the Spanish Crown s Viceroyalty of New Spain based in Mexico City with the Asian territories collectively known as the Spanish East Indies across the Pacific Ocean The ships made one or two round trip voyages per year between the ports of Acapulco and Manila The name of the galleon changed to reflect the city that the ship sailed from 1 The term Manila galleon can also refer to the trade route itself between Acapulco and Manila which lasted from 1565 to 1815 Galeon de ManilaManila galleon c 1590 Boxer Codex Native nameSpanish Galeon de Manila Filipino Galyon ng MaynilaEnglish nameManila GalleonDurationFrom 1565 to 1815 250 years VenueBetween Manila and AcapulcoLocationNew Spain Spanish Empire Current Mexico Also known asNao de China or Galeon de AcapulcoMotiveTrading maritime route from East Indies to the AmericasOrganised bySpanish CrownThe Manila galleons sailed the Pacific for 250 years bringing to the Americas cargoes of luxury goods such as spices and porcelain in exchange for New World silver The route also fostered cultural exchanges that shaped the identities and culture of the countries involved The Manila galleons were also known in New Spain as La Nao de la China The China Ship on their voyages from the Philippines because they carried mostly Chinese goods shipped from Manila 2 3 The Manila Galleon route was the first instance of Globalization as it marked the earliest period in history when a trade route from Asia crossed to the Americas thereby connecting all the world s continents in one Global Silver Trade 4 The Spanish inaugurated the Manila galleon trade route in 1565 after the Augustinian friar and navigator Andres de Urdaneta pioneered the tornaviaje or return route from the Philippines to Mexico Urdaneta and Alonso de Arellano made the first successful round trips that year The trade using Urdaneta s route lasted until 1815 when the Mexican War of Independence broke out In 2015 the Philippines and Mexico began preparations for the nomination of the Manila Acapulco Galleon Trade Route in the UNESCO World Heritage List with backing from Spain Spain has also suggested the tri national nomination of the Archives on the Manila Acapulco Galleons in the UNESCO Memory of the World Register Contents 1 History 1 1 Discovery of the route 1 2 The Manila galleon and California 1 3 Trade 1 4 End of the Galleons 2 Galleons 2 1 Construction 2 2 Crews 2 3 Shipwrecks 3 Possible contact with Hawaii 4 Preparations for UNESCO nominations 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory Edit Manila Accapulco galleon trade route showing onward route to Spain Discovery of the route Edit Iberian mare clausum claims during the Age of Discovery In 1521 a Spanish expedition led by Ferdinand Magellan sailed west across the Pacific using the westward trade winds The expedition discovered the Mariana Islands and the Philippines and claimed them for Spain Although Magellan was killed by natives commanded by Lapulapu during the battle of Mactan one of his ships the Victoria made it back to Spain by continuing westward Acapulco in 1628 Mexican terminus of the Manila galleon Northerly trade route as used by eastbound Manila galleons In order to settle and trade with these islands from the Americas an eastward maritime return path was necessary The Trinidad which tried this a few years later failed In 1529 Alvaro de Saavedra Ceron also tried sailing east from the Philippines but could not find the eastward blowing winds westerlies across the Pacific In 1543 Bernardo de la Torre also failed In 1542 however Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo helped pave the way by sailing north from Mexico to explore the Pacific coast reaching as far north as the Russian River just north of the 38th parallel The frustration of these failures is shown in a letter sent in 1552 from Portuguese Goa by the Spanish missionary Francis Xavier to Simao Rodrigues asking that no more fleets attempt the New Spain East Asia route lest they be lost 5 The Manila Acapulco galleon trade finally began when Spanish navigators Alonso de Arellano and Andres de Urdaneta discovered the eastward return route in 1565 Sailing as part of the expedition commanded by Miguel Lopez de Legazpi to conquer the Philippines in 1564 Urdaneta was given the task of finding a return route 6 Reasoning that the trade winds of the Pacific might move in a gyre as the Atlantic winds did they sailed north going all the way to the 38th parallel north off the east coast of Japan before catching the westerlies that would take them back across the Pacific He commanded a vessel which completed the eastward voyage in 129 days this marked the opening of the Manila galleon trade 7 Reaching the west coast of North America Urdaneta s ship the San Pedro hit the coast near Santa Catalina Island California then followed the shoreline south to San Blas and later to Acapulco arriving on October 8 1565 8 Most of his crew died on the long initial voyage for which they had not sufficiently provisioned Arellano who had taken a more southerly route had already arrived The English privateer Francis Drake also reached the California coast in 1579 After capturing a Spanish ship heading for Manila Drake turned north hoping to meet another Spanish treasure ship coming south on its return from Manila to Acapulco He failed in that regard but staked an English claim somewhere on the northern California coast Although the ship s log and other records were lost the officially accepted location is now called Drakes Bay on Point Reyes south of Cape Mendocino a 17 By the 18th century it was understood that a less northerly track was sufficient when nearing the North American coast and galleon navigators steered well clear of the rocky and often fogbound northern and central California coast According to historian William Lytle Schurz They generally made their landfall well down the coast somewhere between Point Conception and Cape San Lucas After all these were preeminently merchant ships and the business of exploration lay outside their field though chance discoveries were welcomed 18 The first motivation for land exploration of present day California was to scout out possible way stations for the seaworn Manila galleons on the last leg of their journey Early proposals came to little but in 1769 the Portola expedition established ports at San Diego and Monterey which became the administrative center of Alta California providing safe harbors for returning Manila galleons The Manila galleon and California Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Monterey California was about two months and three weeks out from Manila in the 18th century and the galleon tended to stop there 40 days before arriving in Acapulco Galleons stopped in Monterey prior to California s settlement by the Spanish in 1769 however visits became regular between 1777 and 1794 because the Crown ordered the galleon to stop in Monterey 19 Trade Edit White represents the route of the Manila Galleons in the Pacific and the flota in the Atlantic Blue represents Portuguese routes Trade with Ming China via Manila served a major source of revenue for the Spanish Empire and as a fundamental source of income for Spanish colonists in the Philippine Islands Galleons used for the trade between East and West were crafted by Filipino artisans 20 Until 1593 two or more ships would set sail annually from each port 21 The Manila trade became so lucrative that Seville merchants petitioned king Philip II of Spain to protect the monopoly of the Casa de Contratacion based in Seville This led to the passing of a decree in 1593 that set a limit of two ships sailing each year from either port with one kept in reserve in Acapulco and one in Manila An armada or armed escort of galleons was also approved Due to official attempts at controlling the galleon trade contraband and understating of ships cargoes became widespread 22 The Selden Map a merchant map showing trade routes with its epicenter from Quanzhou to Manila and across the Spanish Philippines and across the Far East The galleon trade was supplied by merchants largely from port areas of Fujian such as Quanzhou as depicted in the Selden Map and Yuegang the old port of Haicheng in Zhangzhou Fujian 23 24 who traveled to Manila to sell the Spaniards spices porcelain ivory lacquerware processed silk cloth and other valuable commodities Cargoes varied from one voyage to another but often included goods from all over Asia jade wax gunpowder and silk from China amber cotton and rugs from India spices from Indonesia and Malaysia and a variety of goods from Japan the Spanish part of the so called Namban trade including fans chests screens porcelain and lacquerware 25 Galleons transported the goods to be sold in the Americas namely in New Spain and Peru as well as in European markets East Asia trading primarily functioned on a silver standard due to Ming China s use of silver ingots as a medium of exchange As such goods were mostly bought by silver mined from New Spain and Potosi 22 In addition slaves from various origins were transported from Manila 26 The cargoes arrived in Acapulco and were transported by land across Mexico Mule trains would carry the goods along the China Road from Acapulco first to the administrative center of Mexico City then on to the port of Veracruz on the Gulf of Mexico where they were loaded onto the Spanish treasure fleet bound for Spain The transport of goods overland by porters the housing of travelers and sailors at inns by innkeepers and the stocking of long voyages with food and supplies provided by haciendas before departing Acapulco helped to stimulate the economy of New Spain 27 The trade of goods and exchanges of people were not limited to Mexico and the Philippines since Guatemala Panama Ecuador and Peru also served as supplementary streams to the main one between Mexico and Philippines 28 Sample of goods brought via Manila galleon in Acapulco Around 80 of the goods shipped back from Acapulco to Manila were from the Americas silver cochineal seeds sweet potato corn tomato tobacco chickpeas chocolate and cocoa watermelon seeds vines and fig trees The remaining 20 were goods transshipped from Europe and North Africa such as wine and olive oil and metal goods such as weapons knobs and spurs 25 This Pacific route was the alternative to the trip west across the Indian Ocean and around the Cape of Good Hope which was reserved to Portugal according to the Treaty of Tordesillas It also avoided stopping over at ports controlled by competing powers such as Portugal and the Netherlands From the early days of exploration the Spanish knew that the American continent was much narrower across the Panamanian isthmus than across Mexico They tried to establish a regular land crossing there but the thick jungle and tropical diseases such as yellow fever and malaria made it impractical It took at least four months to sail across the Pacific Ocean from Manila to Acapulco and the galleons were the main link between the Philippines and the viceregal capital at Mexico City and thence to Spain itself Many of the so called Kastilas or Spaniards in the Philippines were actually of Mexican descent and the Hispanic culture of the Philippines is influenced by Spanish and Mexican culture in particular 29 Soldiers and settlers recruited from Mexico and Peru were also gathered in Acapulco before they were sent to settle at the presidios of the Philippines 30 Even after the galleon era and at the time when Mexico finally gained its independence the two nations still continued to trade except for a brief lull during the Spanish American War In Manila the safety of ocean crossings was commended to the virgin Nuestra Senora de la Soledad de Porta Vaga in masses held by the Archbishop of Manila If the expedition was successful the voyagers would go to La Ermita the church to pay homage and offer gold and other precious gems or jewelries from Hispanic countries to the image of the virgin So it came to be that the virgin was named the Queen of the Galleons Economic shocks due to the arrival of Spanish American silver in China were among the factors that led to the end of the Ming dynasty End of the Galleons Edit In 1740 as part of the administrative changes of the Bourbon Reforms the Spanish crown began allowing the use of registered ships or navios de registro in the Pacific These ships traveled solo outside the convoy system of the galleons While these solo voyages would not immediately replace the galleon system they were more efficient and better able to avoid being captured by the Royal Navy of Great Britain 31 The Manila Acapulco galleon trade ended in 1815 a few years before Mexico gained independence from Spain in 1821 After this the Spanish Crown took direct control of the Philippines and governed directly from Madrid Sea transport became easier in the mid 19th century after the invention of steam powered ships and the opening of the Suez Canal which reduced the travel time from Spain to the Philippines to 40 days Galleons EditConstruction Edit Spanish galleon Between 1609 and 1616 9 galleons and 6 galleys were constructed in Philippine shipyards The average cost was 78 000 pesos per galleon and at least 2 000 trees The galleons constructed included the San Juan Bautista San Marcos Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe Angel de la Guardia San Felipe Santiago Salbador Espiritu Santo and San Miguel From 1729 to 1739 the main purpose of the Cavite shipyard was the construction and outfitting of the galleons for the Manila to Acapulco trade run 32 Due to the route s high profitability but long voyage time it was essential to build the largest possible galleons which were the largest class of European ships known to have been built until then 33 34 In the 16th century they averaged from 1 700 to 2 000 tons which clarification needed were built of Philippine hardwoods and could carry 300 500 passengers The Concepcion wrecked in 1638 was 43 to 49 m 141 ft 1 in to 160 ft 9 in long and displacing some 2 000 tons The Santisima Trinidad was 51 5 m 169 ft 0 in long Most of the ships were built in the Philippines and only eight in Mexico Crews Edit Sailors averaged age 28 or 29 while the oldest were between 40 and 50 Ships pages were children who entered service mostly at age 8 many orphans or poor taken from the streets of Seville Mexico and Manila Apprentices were older than the pages and if successful would be certified a sailor at age 20 Because mortality rates were high with ships arriving in Manila with a majority of their crew often dead from starvation disease and scurvy especially in the early years Spanish officials in Manila found it difficult to find men to crew their ships to return to Acapulco Many indios of Filipino and Southeast Asian origin made up the majority of the crew Other crew were made up of deportees and criminals from Spain and the colonies Many criminals were sentenced to serve as crew on royal ships Less than a third of the crew was Spanish and they usually held key positions aboard the galleon 35 At port goods were unloaded by dockworkers and food was often supplied locally In Acapulco the arrival of the galleons provided seasonal work as for dockworkers who were typically free black men highly paid for their back breaking labor and for farmers and haciendas across Mexico who helped stock the ships with food before voyages On land travelers were often housed at inns or mesones and had goods transported by muleteers which provided opportunities for Indigenous people in Mexico By providing for the galleons Spanish colonial America was tied into the broader global economy 27 Shipwrecks Edit The wrecks of the Manila galleons are legends second only to the wrecks of treasure ships in the Caribbean In 1568 Miguel Lopez de Legazpi s own ship the San Pablo 300 tons was the first Manila galleon to be wrecked en route to Mexico Between the years 1576 when the Espiritu Santo was lost and 1798 when the San Cristobal 2 was lost there were twenty Manila galleons 36 wrecked within the Philippine archipelago In 1596 the San Felipe was wrecked in Japan The cargo was seized by the Japanese authorities and the behavior of the crew prompted persecution against the Christians At least one galleon probably the Santo Cristo de Burgos is believed to have wrecked on the coast of Oregon in 1693 Known as the Beeswax wreck the event is described in the oral histories of the Tillamook and Clatsop which suggest that some of the crew survived 37 38 39 Between 1565 and 1815 108 ships operated as Manila galleons of which 26 were lost at sea for various reasons including four captured by the enemy English or British in wartime the Santa Anna captured in 1587 by Thomas Cavendish the Encarnacion captured by the British 1709 the Nuestra Senora de la Covadonga captured in 1743 by George Anson and the Nuestra Senora de la Santisima Trinidad captured in 1762 by HMS Panther and HMS Argo 32 Possible contact with Hawaii EditOver 250 years there were hundreds of Manila galleon crossings of the Pacific Ocean between present day Mexico and the Philippines with their route taking them just south of the Hawaiian Islands on the westward leg of their round trip and yet there are no records of contact with the Hawaiians British historian Henry Kamen maintains that the Spanish did not have the ability to properly explore the Pacific Ocean and were not capable of finding the islands which lay at a latitude 20 north of the westbound galleon route and its currents 40 However Spanish exploration in the Pacific was paramount until the late 18th century Spanish navigators discovered many islands including Guam the Marianas the Carolines and the Philippines in the North Pacific as well as Tuvalu the Marquesas the Solomon Islands New Guinea and Easter Island in the South Pacific Spanish navigators also discovered the Pitcairn and Vanuatu archipelagos during their search for Terra Australis in the 17th century Pacific Ocean with Mauna Kea highlighted This navigational activity poses the question as to whether Spanish explorers did arrive in the Hawaiian Islands two centuries before Captain James Cook s first visit in 1778 Ruy Lopez de Villalobos commanded a fleet of six ships that left Acapulco in 1542 with a Spanish sailor named Ivan Gaetan or Juan Gaetano aboard as pilot Depending on the interpretation Gaetano s reports seem to describe either the discovery of Hawaii or the Marshall Islands in 1555 41 If it was Hawaii Gaetano would have been one of the first Europeans to find the islands The Manila Acapulco Galleon Memorial at Plaza Mexico in Intramuros Manila The westward route from Mexico passed south of Hawaii making a short stopover in Guam before heading for Manila The exact route was kept secret to protect the Spanish trade monopoly against competing powers and to avoid Dutch and English pirates Due to this policy of discretion if the Spanish did find Hawaii during their voyages they would not have published their findings and the discovery would have remained unknown From Gaetano s account the Hawaiian islands were not known to have any valuable resources so the Spanish would not have made an effort to settle them 41 This happened in the case of the Marianas and the Carolines which were not effectively settled until the second half of the 17th century Spanish archives when contain a chart that depicts islands in the latitude of Hawaii but with the longitude ten degrees east of the Islands reliable methods of determining longitude were not developed until the mid eighteenth century In this manuscript the Island of Maui is named La Desgraciada the unhappy or unfortunate and what appears to be the Island of Hawaii is named La Mesa the table Islands resembling Kahoolawe Lanai and Molokai are named Los Monjes the monks 42 The theory that the first European visitors to Hawaii were Spanish is reinforced by the findings of William Ellis a writer and missionary who lived in early 19th century Hawaii and recorded several folk stories about foreigners who had visited Hawaii prior to first contact with Cook According to Hawaiian writer Herb Kawainui Kane one of these stories concerned seven foreigners who landed eight generations earlier at Kealakekua Bay in a painted boat with an awning or canopy over the stern They were dressed in clothing of white and yellow and one wore a sword at his side and a feather in his hat On landing they kneeled down in prayer The Hawaiians most helpful to those who were most helpless received them kindly The strangers ultimately married into the families of chiefs but their names could not be included in genealogies 41 Some scholars particularly American have dismissed these claims as lacking credibility 43 44 Debate continues as to whether the Hawaiian Islands were actually visited by the Spanish in the 16th century 45 with researchers like Richard W Rogers looking for evidence of Spanish shipwrecks 46 47 Preparations for UNESCO nominations EditIn 2010 the Philippines foreign affairs secretary organized a diplomatic reception attended by at least 32 countries for discussions about the historic galleon trade and the possible establishment of a galleon museum Various Mexican and Filipino institutions and politicians also made discussions about the importance of the galleon trade in their shared history 48 In 2013 the Philippines released a documentary regarding the Manila galleon trade route 49 In 2014 the idea to nominate the Manila Acapulco Galleon Trade Route as a World Heritage Site was initiated by the Mexican and Filipino ambassadors to UNESCO Spain has also backed the nomination and suggested that the archives related to the route under the possession of the Philippines Mexico and Spain be nominated as part of another UNESCO list the Memory of the World Register 50 In 2015 the Unesco National Commission of the Philippines Unacom and the Department of Foreign Affairs organized an expert s meeting to discuss the trade route s nomination Some of the topics presented include the Spanish colonial shipyards in Sorsogon underwater archaeology in the Philippines the route s influences on Filipino textile the galleon s eastward trip from the Philippines to Mexico called tornaviaje and the historical dimension of the galleon trade focusing on important and rare archival documents 51 In 2017 the Philippines established the Manila Acapulco Galleon Museum in Metro Manila one of the necessary steps in nominating the trade route to UNESCO 52 In 2018 Mexico reopened its Manila galleon gallery at the Archaeological Museum of Puerto Vallarta Cuale 53 In 2020 Mexico released a documentary regarding the Manila galleon trade route 54 See also Edit Piracy portal Philippines portal Mexico portalAsian Mexicans ethnic group Mexicans of Asian descent Pages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Battles of La Naval de Manila Naval battle of the Eighty Years War Bernardo de la Torre Spanish navigator d 1545 credited with the sighting and naming of the Volcano Islands sometimes credited with naming the Philippines and sometimes miscredited with discovery of the BoninsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Chamorro people Indigenous people of the Mariana Islands Filipino immigration to Mexico Overview of immigration along the Galleon Route Global silver trade from the 16th to 19th centuries International trade route carrying silver History of the Philippines 1521 1898 Spanish period of the PhilippinesPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets History of the west coast of North America Aspect of history Landing of the first Filipinos Arrival of Filipinos to the current United States in 1587 Maria de Lajara Spanish noblePages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Mexican settlement in the Philippines Mesoamerican peoples in the Southeast Asian country Pedro Cubero Spanish missionaryPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Pedro de Unamuno Spanish soldier and explorer Spanish East Indies Spanish territory in Asia Pacific from 1565 until 1898 Spanish Main Historical region known as the Spanish West Indies Spanish treasure fleet Convoy system used by the Spanish Empire from 1566 to 1790Notes Edit The Drakes Cove site began its review by the National Park Service NPS in 1994 thus starting an 18 year study of the suggested Drake sites The first formal Nomination to mark the Nova Albion site at Drake s Cove as a National Historic Landmark was provided to NPS on January 1 1996 As part of its review NPS obtained independent confidential comments from professional historians The NPS staff concluded that the Drake s Cove site is the most probable 9 and most likely 10 11 12 13 Drake landing site The National Park System Advisory Board Landmarks Committee sought public comments on the Port of Nova Albion Historic and Archaeological District Nomination 14 and received more than two dozen letters of support and none in opposition At the Committee s meeting of November 9 2011 in Washington DC representatives of the government of Spain the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and Congresswoman Lynn Wolsey all spoke in favor of the nomination there was no opposition Staff and the Drake Navigators Guild s president Edward Von der Porten gave the presentation The Nomination was strongly endorsed by Committee Member Dr James M Allan Archaeologist and the Committee as a whole which approved the nomination unanimously The National Park System Advisory Board sought further public comments on the Nomination 15 but no additional comments were received At the Board s meeting on December 1 2011 in Florida the Nomination was further reviewed the Board approved the nomination unanimously On October 16 2012 Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar signed the nomination and on October 17 2012 The Drakes Bay Historic and Archaeological District was formally announced as a new National Historic Landmark 16 References Edit Williams Glyn 1999 The Prize of All the Oceans New York Viking p 4 ISBN 0 670 89197 5 La Nao de China The Spanish Treasure Fleet System Guampedia Retrieved September 14 2020 Stampa Manuel Carrera 1959 La Nao de la China Historia Mexicana 9 1 97 118 JSTOR 25134990 China and the Birth of Globalization in the 16th Century by Dennis O Flynn and Arturo Giraldez Pereira Fernandez Jose Manuel Third Quarter 2008 Andres de Urdaneta In memoriam en el quinto centenario de su nacimiento Andres de Urdaneta In memoriam in the fifth centenary of his birthday PDF Revista de Historia Naval in Spanish Spain Ministry of Defence Spain 102 16 ISSN 0212 467X Retrieved November 19 2020 The letter is referenced as Rodriguez Rodriguez I Alvarez Fernandez J 1991 Andres de Urdaneta agustino En carreta sobre el Pacifico Andres de Urdaneta Augustinian By cart over the Pacific in Spanish Zamora p 181 Osborne 2013 pp 30 31 Osborne 2013 p 31 Derek Hayes 2001 Historical atlas of the North Pacific Ocean maps of discovery and scientific exploration 1500 2000 Douglas amp McIntyre p 18 ISBN 9781550548655 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on February 22 2014 Retrieved September 28 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on February 22 2014 Retrieved September 28 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link University of California Archaeological Site Survey Record Mrn 230 Winepi com Archived from the original DOC on May 25 2017 Retrieved February 23 2019 A Brief History of Scholarship Relating to Drake s Port of Nova Albion Winepi com Archived from the original DOC on May 25 2017 Retrieved February 24 2019 National Historic Landmarks Property Name Drakes Bay Historic and Archeological District Winepi com Archived from the original DOC on May 25 2017 Retrieved February 24 2019 Landmarks Committee of the National Park System Advisory Board Meeting Federal Register September 8 2011 Retrieved February 23 2019 Federal Register Volume 76 Issue 189 Thursday September 29 2011 Govinfo gov Retrieved February 23 2019 Interior Designates 27 New National Landmarks Doi gov October 17 2012 Retrieved February 23 2019 The Drake Navigators Guild Press Release Winepi com Archived from the original on October 17 2016 Retrieved February 21 2013 Schurz 1917 p 107 108 https www google com books edition The Manila Galleon 4YRDAAAAIAAJ hl en amp gbpv 1 amp bsq 20california 20monterey clarification needed Forgotten history The polistas of the Galleon Trade Rappler Schurz William Lytle The Manila Galleon 1939 P 193 a b Charles C Mann 2011 1493 Uncovering the New World Columbus Created Random House Digital pp 123 163 ISBN 9780307596727 Brook Timothy 1998 The Confusions of Pleasure Commerce and Culture in Ming China Berkeley University of California Press p 205 ISBN 0 520 21091 3 Charles C Mann 2011 1493 Uncovering the New World Columbus Created Random House Digital pp 149 150 ISBN 978 0 307 59672 7 a b Mejia Javier The Economics of the Manila Galleon New York University Abu Dhabi a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Tatiana Seijas June 23 2014 Asian Slaves in Colonial Mexico From Chinos to Indians Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 95285 9 Rose Christopher January 13 2016 Episode 76 The Trans Pacific Slave Trade 15 Minute History University of Texas at Austin Retrieved January 13 2016 a b Seijas Tatiana January 2 2016 Inns mules and hardtack for the voyage the local economy of the Manila Galleon in Mexico Colonial Latin American Review 25 1 56 76 doi 10 1080 10609164 2016 1180787 ISSN 1060 9164 S2CID 163214741 Connecting China with the Pacific World By Angela Schottenhammer 2019 Pages 144 145 Guevarra Rudy P 2007 Mexipino A History of Multiethnic Identity and the Formation of the Mexican and Filipino Communities of San Diego 1900 1965 University of California Santa Barbara ISBN 0549122869 Forced Migration in the Spanish Pacific World By Eva Maria Mehl page 235 Burkholder Mark A 1943 2019 Colonial Latin America Johnson Lyman L Tenth ed New York ISBN 978 0 19 064240 2 OCLC 1015274908 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Fish Shirley 2011 The Manila Acapulco Galleons The Treasure Ships of the Pacific AuthorHouse pp 128 130 ISBN 9781456775421 See Chinese treasure ship for Chinese vessels that might have been larger Crown trade church and indigenous societies The functioning of the Spanish shipbuilding industry in the Philippines 1571 1816 Ivan Valdez Bubnov Academia edu www academia edu Leon Guerrero Jillette Manila Galleon Crew Members Guampedia Retrieved October 18 2019 Shipwrecks of the Philippines Archived from the original on January 10 2016 Retrieved March 24 2020 Williams Scott S 2016 Chapter 8 The Beeswax Wreck A Manila Galleon in Oregon USA In Wu Chunming ed Early Navigation in the Asia Pacific Region A Maritime Archaeological Perspective Springer pp 146 168 ISBN 978 981 10 0904 4 Retrieved October 23 2019 La Follette Cameron Deur Douglas July 2018 Views Across the Pacific The Galleon Trade and Its Traces in Oregon Oregon Historical Quarterly Oregon Historical Society 119 2 160 191 doi 10 5403 oregonhistq 119 2 0160 S2CID 165790449 Retrieved October 23 2019 La Follette Cameron Deur Douglas Griffin Dennis Williams Scott S July 2018 Oregon s Manila Galleon Oregon Historical Quarterly Oregon Historical Society 119 2 150 159 doi 10 5403 oregonhistq 119 2 0150 S2CID 165403120 Kamen Henry 2004 Empire How Spain Became a World Power 1492 1763 HarperCollins ISBN 0060932643 a b c Kane Herb Kawainui 1996 The Manila Galleons In Bob Dye ed Hawaiʻ Chronicles Island History from the Pages of Honolulu Magazine Vol I Honolulu University of Hawaii Press pp 25 32 ISBN 0 8248 1829 6 HAWAII NATURE NOTES THE PUBLICATION OF THE NATURALIST DIVISION HAWAII NATIONAL PARK AND THE HAWAII NATURAL HISTORY ASSOCIATION The Publication of the Naturalist Division Hawaii National Park and the Hawaii Natural History Association June 1959 Archived from the original on February 1 2014 By Oliver Douglas L 1989 The Pacific Islands University of Hawaii Press p 45 ISBN 0824812336 Coulter John Wesley Jun 1964 Great Britain in Hawaii The Captain Cook Monument The Geographical Journal Vol 130 No 2 doi 10 2307 1794586 Horwitz Tony 2003 Blue Latitudes Boldly Going Where Captain Cook Has Gone Before p 452 ISBN 0 312 42260 1 Rogers Richard W 1999 Shipwrecks of Hawaii A Maritime History of the Big Island Pilialoha Press Perhaps the leading authority on Hawaiian shipwrecks today writes Peter von Buol referring to Richard W Rogers in the Fall 2006 Vol 38 No 3 issue of Prologue published by the NARA Angara Edgardo October 18 2014 A Galleon Museum in Manila Manila Bulletin Retrieved January 21 2016 Rodis Rodel October 26 2013 The Second Coming of Filipinos to America INQUIRER net Spain backs inclusion of galleon trade route to World Heritage List Headlines News the Philippine Star philstar com The Philippine STAR Archived from the original on December 14 2017 Retrieved December 14 2017 Historic Manila Acapulco Galleon Trade set for nomination to Unesco World Heritage List Inquirer Lifestyle April 26 2015 Manila Acapulco Galleon Museum rises in SM MOA Bbusinessmirror com ph August 8 2017 El Galeon de Manila The Spice Route reopens museum in Puerto Vallarta Vallarta Daily News June 3 2018 En busqueda del Galeon de Manila ContraReplica Sources Edit Osborne Thomas J 2013 Pacific Eldorado A History of Greater California John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 4051 9454 9 Further reading EditBjork Katharine The Link that Kept the Philippines Spanish Mexican Merchant Interests and the Manila Trade 1571 1815 Journal of World History vol 9 no 1 1998 25 50 Carrera Stampa Manuel La Nao de la China Historia Mexicana 9 no 33 1959 97 118 Fish Shirley The Manila Acapulco Galleons The Treasure Ships of the Pacific with an Annotated List of the Transpacific Galleons 1565 1815 Central Milton Keynes England Authorhouse 2011 Gasch Tomas Jose Luis The Atlantic World and the Manila Galleon Circulation Market and Consumption of Asian Goods in the Spanish Empires 1565 1650 Leiden Brill 2018 Giraldez Arturo The Age of Trade The Manila Galleons and the Dawn of the Global Economy Lanham MA Rowman amp Littlefield 2015 Luengo Josemaria Salutan A History of the Manila Acapulco Slave Trade 1565 1815 Tubigon Bohol Mater Dei Publications 1996 McCarthy William J Between Policy and Prerogative Malfeasance in the Inspection of the Manila Galleons at Acapulco 1637 Colonial Latin American Historical Review 2 no 2 1993 163 83 Oropeza Keresey Deborah Los indios chinos en la Nueva Espana la inmigracion de la Nao de China 1565 1700 PhD dissertation El Colegio de Mexico Centro de Estudios Historicos 2007 Rogers R 1999 Shipwreck of Hawai i a maritime history of the Big Island Haleiwa Hawaii Pilialoha Publishing ISBN 0967346703 Schurz William Lytle 1917 The Manila Galleon and California Southwestern Historical Quarterly Vol 21 No 2 pp 107 126 Schurz William Lytle The Manila Galleon New York E P Dutton amp Co Inc 1939 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Manila galleon Findings from the wreck of Nuestra Senora de la Concepcion in the Marianas 1638 Metropolitan Museum Manila Galleon Manila Galleons along the Californian coasts Asociacion Cultural Galeon de Manila Spanish Philippine research group based in Madrid in Spanish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Manila galleon amp oldid 1145633009, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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