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Ruy López de Villalobos

Ruy López de Villalobos (Spanish pronunciation: [ruj ˈlopeθ ðe βiʝaˈloβos]; c. 1500 – 23 April 1546) was a Spanish explorer who led a failed attempt to colonize the Philippines in 1543, attempting to assert Spanish control there under the terms of the treaties of Tordesillas and Zaragoza. Unable to feed his men through barter, raiding, or farming and unable to request resupply from Mexico due to poor knowledge of the Pacific's winds and currents, Villalobos abandoned his mission and fled to the Portuguese-held Moluccas, where he died in prison. He is chiefly remembered for some sources crediting him with naming Leyte the "Philippine Island" in honor of the Spanish crown prince Philip (later King Philip II). The name was later extended across the entire Philippine Archipelago and its nation. (Other sources credit the name to one of his captains, Bernardo de la Torre.)

Ruy López de Villalobos
Bornc. 1500
DiedApril 23, 1546 (aged 45–46)
Known forSometimes credited with naming the Philippines

Background Edit

Ruy López de Villalobos was born in Málaga, Spain sometime between 1505 and 1510. He was a member of a distinguished family and his father was a close associate of the king, Ferdinand II of Aragon. He was well educated and may have studied law. At some point he became an experienced mariner and Pedro de Alvarado referred to him as "a very expert and practical gentleman in things of the sea."[1]

Philippine Expedition Edit

 
The plaque in Málaga, Spain, Villalobos's home town, commemorating his naming of the Philippines.

Villalobos was commissioned in 1541 by Antonio de Mendoza, the viceroy of New Spain and first colonial administrator in the New World, to send an expedition to the Philippines, then known to the Spanish as the "Islands of the West" (Islas del Poniente). They lay at the far western frontier of the division of the world between Spain and Portugal established by the treaties of Tordesillas and Zaragoza—in fact they lay over the line within the Portuguese area—and there was a need to establish a larger Spanish presence there as a base for trade with the Spice Islands and China. If possible, the goal was to extend Spanish control over the Moluccas in the Portuguese East Indies.[2][3] Villalobos was chosen for the command because he was related to De Mendoza by marriage.[2]

Villalobos's fleet of six ships left Barra de Navidad, Jalisco, in New Spain (now Mexico) with 370–400 men on 1 November 1542.[2] His flagship (capitana) was the Santiago of 150–200 toneladas, formerly owned by Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo. He chose Gaspar Rico as the expedition's chief pilot (piloto mayor).[4] The second ship—the fleet's almiranta—was the 120-tonelada galleon San Jorge, equipped with a cutwater (espolón) and under the command of Bernardo de la Torre and his pilot Alonso Fernández Tarifeño.[4] The third ship of 90–100 toneladas is variously referenced as the San Anton, the San Antonio, the San Felipe, and the Siete Galigos ("Seven Greyhounds"). It was captained by Francisco Merino and piloted by Francisco Ruiz.[4] The fourth ship of 70 toneladas was the San Juan de Letrán under Alonso Manrique, piloted by Ginés de Mafra,[4] who had been a member of the 1519–1522 Magellan expedition. The fifth was the galley San Cristóbal under Pedro Ortíz de Rueda, piloted by Antonio Corço and powered by sails and 20 pairs of oars.[4] The last was the fusta San Martín under Juan Martel, piloted by Cristóbal de Pareja and powered by sails and 14 pairs of oars.[4][a] The large number of passengers included a unit of soldiers and a number of gentlemen, who brought black slaves and about 40 Indian men and women as servants.[4] Martín de Islares acted as factor and interpreter; Guido de Lavezaris, later governor of the Philippines, as treasurer; Maestre Anes ("Master Hans"), previously part of both the Magellan and Loaísa expeditions, as chief gunner; and Gerónimo de Santisteban as head of the voyage's clergy, which included 3 other Augustinian priests and 4 or 5 deacons.[4]

The fleet first encountered the Revilla Gigedo Islands off the west coast of Mexico, among which the sighting of Roca Partida was reported for the first time. On 26 December 1542 they sighted a group of islands in the Marshalls that they called the Corals (Corales), which most probably are those of the Wotje Atoll. They thought these to be the Islands of the Kings (Los Reyes) previously charted by Álvaro de Saavedra in his 1528 expedition. They anchored at one of the islets, which they named San or Santo Esteban ("St. Stephen").[2] They left on 6 January 1543 and that same day they sighted several small islands on the same latitude as the Corals, which they named the Garden Islands (Los Jardines),[2] now the Kwajalein Atoll. On 23 January 1543,[2] the expedition found Fais in the Carolines, which they charted as the Sailors (Matelotes).[b] On 26 January 1543, they charted some new islands as the Reefs (Los Arrecifes) which have since been identified as the Yaps, also part of the Carolines.[5][6]

According to Spate, Villalobos's crew included the pilot Juan Gaetan, credited by La Perouse for the discovery of Hawaii.[7] Gaetan's voyage was described in similar terms in 1753 with the same sequence of islands and no identification of any others known by the time of the account.[8] In 1825, the Portuguese geographer Casado Giraldes stated that the "Sandwich Islands"—i.e. the Hawaiian Islands—were discovered by Gaetan in 1542 and did not even mention James Cook.[9]

From 6–23 January 1543, the galley San Cristóbal—now piloted by De Mafra—was separated from the other ships after a severe storm. It eventually reached the island of Mazaua, where Magellan had anchored in 1521. The area has since been identified as Limasawa in southern Leyte. Its history was subsequently recorded in 1667 by the Jesuit priest Francisco Combés.[10][failed verification]

Although he was attempting to reach Cebu, Villalobos ignored the advice of his pilot to lead the ships north of Mindanao.[3] Instead, on February 2, the fleet reached northeastern Mindanao, exposed to the weather coming from the open ocean and separated from any Chinese or Malay traders.[11] Stuck in place, they repaired their ships after the voyage.[2] Bernardo de la Torre[12] or Villalobos[11] named Mindanao Cesarea Karoli (Latin: Caesarea Caroli) in honor of the Habsburg emperor Charles V, who was also king of Spain as Carlos I. The fleet stayed there for 32 days while suffering extreme hunger and attempting to find supplies.[citation needed] They resorted to eating grubs, unknown plants, land crabs that sickened the crew, and a phosphorescent gray lizard which killed most of those who ate it.[11] Villalobos ordered his men to plant corn[which?] but it failed.[citation needed] On March 31, the fleet left for Mazaua in search of food but could not make progress due to the lack of wind.[citation needed] After several days, they reached Sarangani, where they lost six men while raiding a local village for supplies. During this period, either Bernardo de la Torre[13][14] or Villalobos[11] named Leyte and Samar the Philippines (Felipinas) in honor of Charles's son the crown prince Philip (later King Philip II).

On August 7, a Portuguese ship arrived with a letter from Jorge de Castro, governor of the Moluccas. De Castro demanded an explanation for the presence of the Spaniards in Portuguese territory, in response to which Villalobos drafted a letter dated August 9. His letter repeated the Spanish claims to the islands, saying they were within the Demarcation Line of the Crown of Castile under the relevant treaties.[15]

On August 27, the San Juan left for New Spain under De la Torre, directed to explain the expedition's difficulties and request additional supplies and reinforcements. A second letter from De Castro arrived in the first week of September; Villalobos's reply dated September 12 repeated the same claims as before. The San Juan—having passed the Volcano Islands and possibly the Bonins without being able to replenish its water—returned in mid-October without completing its mission.[c] (No attempt to cross the Pacific from west to east would be successful for another two decades.) Villalobos again attempted to depart for Cebu[11] or Abuyog on Leyte[citation needed] with the San Juan and San Cristóbal, his two remaining ships,[citation needed] but again failed to make headway against unfavorable winds. The natives refused to provide any supplies even for sail, fearing Portuguese retribution.[11]

In April of 1544,[citation needed] he sailed for Ambon Island and then Samar and Leyte. De la Torre having died, the San Juan was refitted for another attempt to reach New Spain under Yñigo Ortiz de Retez using a southerly route instead.[11] This left on 16 May 1545 and hugged the coast of New Guinea—which Ortiz de Retez named—until August 12, when the ship was forced to turn back once again.[11] It reached Tidore in October.[11] Repulsed by hunger, hostile natives, and further shipwreck, Villalobos finally abandoned the remaining goals of the expedition. He and his crew members sought refuge in the Moluccas but, quarrelling with the Portuguese, were imprisoned.

Villalobos died of a tropical fever on Good Friday 23 April 1546,[11] in his prison cell on Ambon Island. The Portuguese described him dying "of a broken heart".[18] Popular legend made his deathbed nurse the Jesuit missionary and later saint Francis Xavier.[2][11]

Some 117 of the crew survived, including De Mafra, Juan Gaetan, and Guido de Lavezaris. Juan Gaetan's account of the Villalobos voyage was published in 1550–1559 by Giovanni Battista Ramusio, an Italian historian, in his Navigations and Travels (Navigationi et Viaggi).[19] De Mafra produced a manuscript on Magellan's voyage and had this delivered to Spain by a friend. They[who?] sailed for Malacca, where the Portuguese put them on a ship for Lisbon. Thirty—including De Mafra—elected to remain instead. His manuscript remained unrecognized for many centuries until being rediscovered in the early 20th century. It was published in 1920.[citation needed] The survivors who had left Spain or Portugal and returned home were individually circumnavigators of the world, although the expedition itself did not accomplish that.

The inaccurate accounts of Villalobos and his men led Spain to believe that the Pacific was much smaller than it actually was for the rest of the 16th century.[20]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ At some places in the surviving accounts, the name Santiago is also used for both the San Cristóbal and the San Martín. Similarly, the San Martín is sometimes confused with the San Cristóbal.[4]
  2. ^ Quite surprisingly for the Spaniards, upon their arrival to Fais the local people approached the ships in canoes making the sign of the cross and saying "Buenos días, matelotes!" ("Good day, sailors!") in Spanish or Portuguese, probably due to missionaries sent by António Galvão.[3]
  3. ^ Villalobos is sometimes—entirely incorrectly—credited with the discovery of Iwo Jima, the other Volcano Islands, and/or the Bonin Islands[16][17] but was not part of the San Juan's voyage.

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Shaw.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Dunmore (1991), s.v. "Villalobos".
  3. ^ a b c Spate (1979), p. 97.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Kelsey (2016), p. 63.
  5. ^ Coello (1885), pp. 82–87.
  6. ^ Sharp (1960), pp. 26 & 29.
  7. ^ Spate (1979).
  8. ^ De Hondt (1753).
  9. ^ Giraldes (1825), p. 26.
  10. ^ Bernad (2004).
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Spate (1979), p. 98.
  12. ^ Villamor & al. (1920), p. 260.
  13. ^ Agoncillo & al. (1975), p. 78.
  14. ^ Nuval & al. (1986), p. 18.
  15. ^ Scott (1985), p. 51.
  16. ^ Cholmondeley (1915), p. 5.
  17. ^ Dobson (1998).
  18. ^ Scott (1985), p. 54.
  19. ^ Quanchi (2005), p. 247.
  20. ^ Spate (1979), p. 100.

Bibliography Edit

  • Agoncillo, Teodoro A.; et al. (1975), History of the Filipino People, Quezon City: R.P. Garcia.
  • Bernad, Miguel Anselmo (2004), The Great Island—Studies in the Exploration and Evangelization of Mindanao, ISBN 9789715504690.
  • Blair, Emma Helen, ed. (1903). The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803, Volume 02 of 55, 1521-1569. The Arthur H. Clark Company.
  • Cholmondeley, Lionel Berners (1915), The History of the Bonin Islands..., London: Constable & Co.
  • Coello, Francisco (1885), La Cuestión de las Carolinas: Discursos Pronunciados en la Sociedad Geográfica de Madrid... (in Spanish), Madrid: Imprenta Fontanet.
  • De Hondt, Peter (1753), Histoire Generale des Voyages... (in French), vol. 16.
  • Dobson, Sebastian (June 1998), "A Chronology of the Bonin Islands", Nihongo Kenkyu Sentaa Hokoku [Reports of the Japanese Language Research Center], vol. 6, p. 21.
  • Dunmore, John (1991), Who's Who in Pacific Navigation, Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press, ISBN 9780824883942.
  • Giraldes, Joaquim Casado (1825), Tratado Completo de Cosmographia e Geographia (in Portuguese), vol. 1.
  • Kelsey, Harry (1986). "Finding the Way Home: Spanish Exploration of the Round-Trip Route across the Pacific Ocean". The Western Historical Quarterly. 17 (2): 145–164. doi:10.2307/969278. ISSN 0043-3810.
  • Kelsey, Harry (2016), The First Circumnavigators: Unsung Heroes of the Age of Discovery, New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Noone, Martin J. (1986). The discovery and conquest of the Philippines: 1521 - 1581. General history of the Philippines. Manila: Historical Conservation Society. ISBN 978-971-10-2410-9.
  • Nuval, Leonard Q.; et al. (1986), The Claretians in the Philippines, 1946–1986, Claret Seminary Foundation.
  • Quanchi, Max (2005), Historical Dictionary of the Discovery and Exploration of the Pacific Islands, Scarecrow Press, ISBN 0810853957.
  • Scott, William Henry (1985), Cracks in the Parchment Curtain, ISBN 971-10-0073-3.
  • Sharp, Andrew (1960), The Discovery of the Pacific Islands, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Shaw, Carlos Martinez. "Ruy Lopez de Villalobos". Real Academia de la Historia (in Spanish).
  • Spate, Oskar Hermann Khristian (1979), The Spanish Lake, Canberra: Australian National University Press, ISBN 9781920942168.
  • Villamor, Ignacio; et al., eds. (1920), Census of the Philippine Islands..., Vol. I: Geography, History, and Climatology, Manila: Census Office of the Philippine Islands.

External links Edit

  • The First Discovery of Australia and New Guinea by Roque Santacruz, Chapter IV
  • Pacific Maritime History Mazaua: Magellan's Lost Harbour

lópez, villalobos, priest, early, chess, master, lópez, segura, spanish, pronunciation, ˈlopeθ, βiʝaˈloβos, 1500, april, 1546, spanish, explorer, failed, attempt, colonize, philippines, 1543, attempting, assert, spanish, control, there, under, terms, treaties,. For the priest and early chess master see Ruy Lopez de Segura Ruy Lopez de Villalobos Spanish pronunciation ruj ˈlope8 de biʝaˈlobos c 1500 23 April 1546 was a Spanish explorer who led a failed attempt to colonize the Philippines in 1543 attempting to assert Spanish control there under the terms of the treaties of Tordesillas and Zaragoza Unable to feed his men through barter raiding or farming and unable to request resupply from Mexico due to poor knowledge of the Pacific s winds and currents Villalobos abandoned his mission and fled to the Portuguese held Moluccas where he died in prison He is chiefly remembered for some sources crediting him with naming Leyte the Philippine Island in honor of the Spanish crown prince Philip later King Philip II The name was later extended across the entire Philippine Archipelago and its nation Other sources credit the name to one of his captains Bernardo de la Torre Ruy Lopez de VillalobosBornc 1500 Malaga Crown of CastileDiedApril 23 1546 aged 45 46 Ambon Moluccas Portuguese East IndiesKnown forSometimes credited with naming the Philippines Contents 1 Background 2 Philippine Expedition 3 Notes 4 References 4 1 Citations 4 2 Bibliography 5 External linksBackground EditRuy Lopez de Villalobos was born in Malaga Spain sometime between 1505 and 1510 He was a member of a distinguished family and his father was a close associate of the king Ferdinand II of Aragon He was well educated and may have studied law At some point he became an experienced mariner and Pedro de Alvarado referred to him as a very expert and practical gentleman in things of the sea 1 Philippine Expedition Edit nbsp The plaque in Malaga Spain Villalobos s home town commemorating his naming of the Philippines Villalobos was commissioned in 1541 by Antonio de Mendoza the viceroy of New Spain and first colonial administrator in the New World to send an expedition to the Philippines then known to the Spanish as the Islands of the West Islas del Poniente They lay at the far western frontier of the division of the world between Spain and Portugal established by the treaties of Tordesillas and Zaragoza in fact they lay over the line within the Portuguese area and there was a need to establish a larger Spanish presence there as a base for trade with the Spice Islands and China If possible the goal was to extend Spanish control over the Moluccas in the Portuguese East Indies 2 3 Villalobos was chosen for the command because he was related to De Mendoza by marriage 2 Villalobos s fleet of six ships left Barra de Navidad Jalisco in New Spain now Mexico with 370 400 men on 1 November 1542 2 His flagship capitana was the Santiago of 150 200 toneladas formerly owned by Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo He chose Gaspar Rico as the expedition s chief pilot piloto mayor 4 The second ship the fleet s almiranta was the 120 tonelada galleon San Jorge equipped with a cutwater espolon and under the command of Bernardo de la Torre and his pilot Alonso Fernandez Tarifeno 4 The third ship of 90 100 toneladas is variously referenced as the San Anton the San Antonio the San Felipe and the Siete Galigos Seven Greyhounds It was captained by Francisco Merino and piloted by Francisco Ruiz 4 The fourth ship of 70 toneladas was the San Juan de Letran under Alonso Manrique piloted by Gines de Mafra 4 who had been a member of the 1519 1522 Magellan expedition The fifth was the galley San Cristobal under Pedro Ortiz de Rueda piloted by Antonio Corco and powered by sails and 20 pairs of oars 4 The last was the fusta San Martin under Juan Martel piloted by Cristobal de Pareja and powered by sails and 14 pairs of oars 4 a The large number of passengers included a unit of soldiers and a number of gentlemen who brought black slaves and about 40 Indian men and women as servants 4 Martin de Islares acted as factor and interpreter Guido de Lavezaris later governor of the Philippines as treasurer Maestre Anes Master Hans previously part of both the Magellan and Loaisa expeditions as chief gunner and Geronimo de Santisteban as head of the voyage s clergy which included 3 other Augustinian priests and 4 or 5 deacons 4 The fleet first encountered the Revilla Gigedo Islands off the west coast of Mexico among which the sighting of Roca Partida was reported for the first time On 26 December 1542 they sighted a group of islands in the Marshalls that they called the Corals Corales which most probably are those of the Wotje Atoll They thought these to be the Islands of the Kings Los Reyes previously charted by Alvaro de Saavedra in his 1528 expedition They anchored at one of the islets which they named San or Santo Esteban St Stephen 2 They left on 6 January 1543 and that same day they sighted several small islands on the same latitude as the Corals which they named the Garden Islands Los Jardines 2 now the Kwajalein Atoll On 23 January 1543 2 the expedition found Fais in the Carolines which they charted as the Sailors Matelotes b On 26 January 1543 they charted some new islands as the Reefs Los Arrecifes which have since been identified as the Yaps also part of the Carolines 5 6 According to Spate Villalobos s crew included the pilot Juan Gaetan credited by La Perouse for the discovery of Hawaii 7 Gaetan s voyage was described in similar terms in 1753 with the same sequence of islands and no identification of any others known by the time of the account 8 In 1825 the Portuguese geographer Casado Giraldes stated that the Sandwich Islands i e the Hawaiian Islands were discovered by Gaetan in 1542 and did not even mention James Cook 9 From 6 23 January 1543 the galley San Cristobal now piloted by De Mafra was separated from the other ships after a severe storm It eventually reached the island of Mazaua where Magellan had anchored in 1521 The area has since been identified as Limasawa in southern Leyte Its history was subsequently recorded in 1667 by the Jesuit priest Francisco Combes 10 failed verification Although he was attempting to reach Cebu Villalobos ignored the advice of his pilot to lead the ships north of Mindanao 3 Instead on February 2 the fleet reached northeastern Mindanao exposed to the weather coming from the open ocean and separated from any Chinese or Malay traders 11 Stuck in place they repaired their ships after the voyage 2 Bernardo de la Torre 12 or Villalobos 11 named Mindanao Cesarea Karoli Latin Caesarea Caroli in honor of the Habsburg emperor Charles V who was also king of Spain as Carlos I The fleet stayed there for 32 days while suffering extreme hunger and attempting to find supplies citation needed They resorted to eating grubs unknown plants land crabs that sickened the crew and a phosphorescent gray lizard which killed most of those who ate it 11 Villalobos ordered his men to plant corn which but it failed citation needed On March 31 the fleet left for Mazaua in search of food but could not make progress due to the lack of wind citation needed After several days they reached Sarangani where they lost six men while raiding a local village for supplies During this period either Bernardo de la Torre 13 14 or Villalobos 11 named Leyte and Samar the Philippines Felipinas in honor of Charles s son the crown prince Philip later King Philip II On August 7 a Portuguese ship arrived with a letter from Jorge de Castro governor of the Moluccas De Castro demanded an explanation for the presence of the Spaniards in Portuguese territory in response to which Villalobos drafted a letter dated August 9 His letter repeated the Spanish claims to the islands saying they were within the Demarcation Line of the Crown of Castile under the relevant treaties 15 On August 27 the San Juan left for New Spain under De la Torre directed to explain the expedition s difficulties and request additional supplies and reinforcements A second letter from De Castro arrived in the first week of September Villalobos s reply dated September 12 repeated the same claims as before The San Juan having passed the Volcano Islands and possibly the Bonins without being able to replenish its water returned in mid October without completing its mission c No attempt to cross the Pacific from west to east would be successful for another two decades Villalobos again attempted to depart for Cebu 11 or Abuyog on Leyte citation needed with the San Juan and San Cristobal his two remaining ships citation needed but again failed to make headway against unfavorable winds The natives refused to provide any supplies even for sail fearing Portuguese retribution 11 In April of 1544 citation needed he sailed for Ambon Island and then Samar and Leyte De la Torre having died the San Juan was refitted for another attempt to reach New Spain under Ynigo Ortiz de Retez using a southerly route instead 11 This left on 16 May 1545 and hugged the coast of New Guinea which Ortiz de Retez named until August 12 when the ship was forced to turn back once again 11 It reached Tidore in October 11 Repulsed by hunger hostile natives and further shipwreck Villalobos finally abandoned the remaining goals of the expedition He and his crew members sought refuge in the Moluccas but quarrelling with the Portuguese were imprisoned Villalobos died of a tropical fever on Good Friday 23 April 1546 11 in his prison cell on Ambon Island The Portuguese described him dying of a broken heart 18 Popular legend made his deathbed nurse the Jesuit missionary and later saint Francis Xavier 2 11 Some 117 of the crew survived including De Mafra Juan Gaetan and Guido de Lavezaris Juan Gaetan s account of the Villalobos voyage was published in 1550 1559 by Giovanni Battista Ramusio an Italian historian in his Navigations and Travels Navigationi et Viaggi 19 De Mafra produced a manuscript on Magellan s voyage and had this delivered to Spain by a friend They who sailed for Malacca where the Portuguese put them on a ship for Lisbon Thirty including De Mafra elected to remain instead His manuscript remained unrecognized for many centuries until being rediscovered in the early 20th century It was published in 1920 citation needed The survivors who had left Spain or Portugal and returned home were individually circumnavigators of the world although the expedition itself did not accomplish that The inaccurate accounts of Villalobos and his men led Spain to believe that the Pacific was much smaller than it actually was for the rest of the 16th century 20 Notes Edit At some places in the surviving accounts the name Santiago is also used for both the San Cristobal and the San Martin Similarly the San Martin is sometimes confused with the San Cristobal 4 Quite surprisingly for the Spaniards upon their arrival to Fais the local people approached the ships in canoes making the sign of the cross and saying Buenos dias matelotes Good day sailors in Spanish or Portuguese probably due to missionaries sent by Antonio Galvao 3 Villalobos is sometimes entirely incorrectly credited with the discovery of Iwo Jima the other Volcano Islands and or the Bonin Islands 16 17 but was not part of the San Juan s voyage References EditCitations Edit Shaw a b c d e f g h Dunmore 1991 s v Villalobos a b c Spate 1979 p 97 a b c d e f g h i Kelsey 2016 p 63 Coello 1885 pp 82 87 Sharp 1960 pp 26 amp 29 Spate 1979 De Hondt 1753 Giraldes 1825 p 26 Bernad 2004 a b c d e f g h i j k Spate 1979 p 98 Villamor amp al 1920 p 260 Agoncillo amp al 1975 p 78 Nuval amp al 1986 p 18 Scott 1985 p 51 Cholmondeley 1915 p 5 Dobson 1998 Scott 1985 p 54 Quanchi 2005 p 247 Spate 1979 p 100 Bibliography Edit Agoncillo Teodoro A et al 1975 History of the Filipino People Quezon City R P Garcia Bernad Miguel Anselmo 2004 The Great Island Studies in the Exploration and Evangelization of Mindanao ISBN 9789715504690 Blair Emma Helen ed 1903 The Philippine Islands 1493 1803 Volume 02 of 55 1521 1569 The Arthur H Clark Company Cholmondeley Lionel Berners 1915 The History of the Bonin Islands London Constable amp Co Coello Francisco 1885 La Cuestion de las Carolinas Discursos Pronunciados en la Sociedad Geografica de Madrid in Spanish Madrid Imprenta Fontanet De Hondt Peter 1753 Histoire Generale des Voyages in French vol 16 Dobson Sebastian June 1998 A Chronology of the Bonin Islands Nihongo Kenkyu Sentaa Hokoku Reports of the Japanese Language Research Center vol 6 p 21 Dunmore John 1991 Who s Who in Pacific Navigation Honolulu University of Hawaiʻi Press ISBN 9780824883942 Giraldes Joaquim Casado 1825 Tratado Completo de Cosmographia e Geographia in Portuguese vol 1 Kelsey Harry 1986 Finding the Way Home Spanish Exploration of the Round Trip Route across the Pacific Ocean The Western Historical Quarterly 17 2 145 164 doi 10 2307 969278 ISSN 0043 3810 Kelsey Harry 2016 The First Circumnavigators Unsung Heroes of the Age of Discovery New Haven Yale University Press Noone Martin J 1986 The discovery and conquest of the Philippines 1521 1581 General history of the Philippines Manila Historical Conservation Society ISBN 978 971 10 2410 9 Nuval Leonard Q et al 1986 The Claretians in the Philippines 1946 1986 Claret Seminary Foundation Quanchi Max 2005 Historical Dictionary of the Discovery and Exploration of the Pacific Islands Scarecrow Press ISBN 0810853957 Scott William Henry 1985 Cracks in the Parchment Curtain ISBN 971 10 0073 3 Sharp Andrew 1960 The Discovery of the Pacific Islands Oxford Oxford University Press Shaw Carlos Martinez Ruy Lopez de Villalobos Real Academia de la Historia in Spanish Spate Oskar Hermann Khristian 1979 The Spanish Lake Canberra Australian National University Press ISBN 9781920942168 Villamor Ignacio et al eds 1920 Census of the Philippine Islands Vol I Geography History and Climatology Manila Census Office of the Philippine Islands External links EditThe First Discovery of Australia and New Guinea by Roque Santacruz Chapter IV Pacific Maritime History Mazaua Magellan s Lost Harbour Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ruy Lopez de Villalobos amp oldid 1173862307, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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