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Pinzón brothers

The Pinzón brothers were Spanish sailors, pirates, explorers and fishermen, natives of Palos de la Frontera, Huelva, Spain. Martín Alonso, Francisco Martín and Vicente Yáñez, participated in Christopher Columbus's first expedition to the New World[1] (generally considered to constitute the discovery of the Americas by Europeans) and in other voyages of discovery and exploration in the late 15th and early 16th centuries.[2][N. 1][N. 2]

Pinzón brothers
Statue of the Pinzón brothers in Palos de la Frontera
Names:Martín Alonso Pinzón
Francisco Martín Pinzón
Vicente Yáñez Pinzón
Origin:Palos de la Frontera, Huelva, Spain
Occupation:Sailors, explorers, fishermen
Era:15th–16th century

The brothers were sailors along the coast of Huelva, and thanks to their many commercial voyages and piracy along the coast, they were famous along the entire coast.[3] The strategic position offered by the historic Atlantic port of Palos, from which expeditions had set forth to the African coasts[4] as well as to the war against Portugal,[5] for which most of the armadas set forth from this town, organized, on many occasions, by this family.[clarification needed]

Martín Alonso and Vicente Yáñez, captains of the caravels La Pinta and La Niña, respectively on Columbus's first voyage, are the best known of the brothers, but the third brother, the lesser-known Francisco Martín, was aboard the Pinta as its master.

It was thanks to Martín Alonso that the seamen of the Tinto-Odiel were motivated to participate in Columbus's undertaking.[6] He also supported the project economically, supplying money from his personal fortune.[7]

Francisco, master of the Pinta, appears to have participated in Columbus's third and fourth voyages of discovery as well as in the first, but because his name was a common one, the facts of his life cannot be easily sorted out from those of contemporaries with the same name.[8][9]

Vicente Yáñez, the youngest of the three brothers, besides participating in Columbus's first voyage,[10] once Columbus's monopoly on transatlantic trade was ended, made several voyages to the Americas on his own account and is generally credited with the discovery of Brazil.[11]

Although they sometimes quarreled with Columbus, on several occasions the Pinzón brothers were instrumental in preventing mutiny against him, particularly during the first voyage. On 6 October, Martín intervened in a dispute between Columbus and the crew by proposing an altered course (which Columbus eventually accepted) and thus calmed simmering unrest. A few days later, on the night of 9 October 1492, the brothers were forced to intercede once again, and this time they proposed the compromise that if no land was sighted during the next three days, the expedition would return to Spain.[12] On the morning of the 12th, land (there is some question of the location: see Guanahani) was in fact sighted by Juan Rodriguez Bermejo (also known as Rodrigo de Triana).[12]

The port of Palos at the end of the 15th century

The Pinzón brothers lived in the era of the greatest splendor of the port town of Palos de la Frontera, participating in the majority of the activities undertaken by that port.

The historic port of Palos was a river port, protected from winds and from pirate attacks, both major hazards to the ports of the time. It was located on the lower portion of the Río Tinto known then as the Canal de Palos, about 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) from its mouth at the Atlantic and its confluence with the Odiel. The port probably grew simultaneously with the town, first as an anchorage for small vessels engaged almost exclusively in fishing on the beaches and estuaries and occasional commercial transactions to supply the small population.[13]

 
18th century topographic map, showing the location of the old port of Palos.

For many, the expression port of Palos brings to mind the present-day port with its old wharf, the muelle de la Calzadilla from which the Plus Ultra flying boat departed in 1926 to cross the Atlantic. This is not the 15th century port. The municipal ordinances of the era (Ordenanzas Municipales de Palos (1484–1521)), focused mainly on regulating the town's maritime activities never use the terms puerto (port) or muelle (wharf). The caravels of Palos "arrived at the riverbank" ("aportaban a la ribera"),[14] where they discharged their goods and auctioned their fish. That is to say, the activities of the port were not conducted in any single place, but along the length of the bank of the Río Tinto, because of the large number of ships and relatively high volume of merchandise they had to handle.[15]

Progressively, the river became Palos's principal means of connection to the outside world and the port the axis of its relation to the surrounding towns. This maritime orientation modified the shape of the town, previously a conical area centered around the church and castle. The Calle de la Ribera ("Riverbank Street") connecting the town center to the port became the town's principal artery, and the port the authentic heart of the local economy.[13]

On the eve of Columbus's first voyage, the entire riverbank between the present-day wharfs near the center of Palos and 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) away at La Rábida Monastery was an active port. The caravels anchored in the center of the river, where the depth was sufficient for their drafts, and paid for the rights to anchor there. From the caravels, boats and dinghies loaded or unloaded the goods "tying up to the shore" ("amarrando en la ribera").[16] The port had a population density similar to that to the town proper, from what we can deduce from the Ordenanza Municipal, which prohibited weapons on the riverbank because the people there were as tightly packed as in the town proper (the expression used is "tan aparejadas como en la Villa": aparejadas is nautical Spanish for something that has been furnished or supplied).[17] Beginning in the first third of the 15th century, the port of Palos experienced continual economic growth, obtaining an importance well beyond the local area and achieving even international dimensions, as is testified by the frequent presence of English, Breton, Flemish, and Italian ships.

Following in the wake of the Portuguese, the ships of Palos traveled to the Canary Islands and Guinea, with their rich fisheries and the commercial possibility of trade in gold, spices, and slaves. In the second half of the 15th century, Palos reaches a population of three thousand. The alota of Palos, a type of customs warehouse, paid the largest tribute of any such facility to the Duke of Medina Sidonia, its primacy being such that it fishermen were recruited from other towns along the coast and two residents of Palos. Juan Venegas and Pedro Alonso Cansino, were placed in charge of giving licenses to fish in the Afro-Atlantic waters from Cabo Bojador to the Río de Oro, which they leased from the Catholic Monarchs Isabella and Ferdinand.[18]

The Pinzón family of Palos

The Pinzón family were one of the leading families of 14th-century Palos. The family may have come originally from the Kingdom of Aragón, but arrived in Andalusia either from la Montaña (now Cantabria) or from Asturias.[19] According to some historians, this surname could have been a corruption of Espinzas or Pinzas ("tweezers"). Others say that the true family name was Martín, a widespread name with a long tradition in the area,[20] the name of their grandfather, a sailor and diver in Palos, who was dubbed Pinzón when he went blind; that, combined with his hobby of singing gave him the nickname Pinzón, the Spanish word for chaffinch, because owners of chaffinches sometimes blinded them, supposedly making them sing more beautifully.[3] His son, also a sailor named Martín Pinzón, was the father of the three Pinzón brothers. Their mother was named Mayor Vicente,[21] so the three were full brothers and bore the surnames Pinzón and Vicente[N. 3] (see Spanish naming customs).

Martín Alonso Pinzón

 
Pinzón family house in Palos, now Casa Museo de Martín Alonso Pinzón.

Martín Alonso Pinzón (c. 1441 – c. 31 March 1493) was the oldest of the brothers, and captain of the Pinta on Columbus's first voyage.

It appears that at quite a young age he shipped out on a locally based caravel as a grumete (cabin boy). His home, now the Casa Museo de Martín Alonso Pinzón, was on the old royal road to the Monastery of La Rábida.[22][23] Martín's family contracted a marriage with a resident of the locality named María Álvarez.[22][24] They had five children: two sons—Arias Pérez and Juan Pinzón, who participated in several expeditions to the Americas—and three daughters—Mayor, Catalina, and Leonor. Leonor, the youngest, suffered frequent attacks of what was then called "gota coral" and would now be called epilepsy.[25]

His nautical experience and his leadership remained patent in the 1508–1536 lawsuits known as the pleitos colombinos, where the witnesses indicated him as the leader of the comarca (a region comparable to a shire). He was also famous for his battles against the Portuguese in the War of the Castilian Succession.[N. 4] It is probable that even while in Portugal before coming to Spain, Columbus was aware of Martín Alonso, because he was known for his participation in the war, as well as for his incursions into the Canary Islands and Guinea.[26]

He was captain of the Pinta on Columbus's first voyage and supplied half a million ("medio cuento") maravedís in coin toward the cost of the voyage.[7][27] Thanks to his prestige as a shipowner and expert sailor and his fame throughout the Tinto-Odiel region, he was able to enlist the crew required for Columbus's first voyage.[28]

On 23 May 1492 the royal provision was read out to the residents of Palos,[29] by which the Catholic Monarchs ordered that certain residents deliver two caravels to Columbus and travel with him on his voyage that he was making "by command of Their Highnesses" ("por mandado de Sus Altezas") and that the town should respect the royal decision.[29] However, the locals did not comply. The sailors of Palos had no confidence in embarking on this adventure with Columbus, who was largely unknown to them. Independent of their greater or lesser credence in his ideas, the men of Palos found it difficult to support the Genovese sailor if he was not accompanied by a mariner known and respected in the town. The venture—risky and, above all, of uncertain profit—did not present great attractions. Opposition or indifference to Columbus's project was general.[30]

 
Statue of Martín Alonso Pinzón in Palos de la Frontera.

The Franciscans of the Monastery of La Rábida put Columbus in touch with Martín Alonso Pinzón. Pero Vázquez de la Frontera, an old mariner in the town—very respected for his experience, and a friend of Martín Alonso—also had an important influence on the oldest Pinzón brother deciding to support the undertaking,[31] not only morally but also economically.[7][27] Martín Alonso dismissed the vessels that Columbus had already seized based on the royal order[32] and also dismissed the men he had enrolled, supplying the enterprise with two caravels of his own,[33] the Pinta and the Niña, which he knew from his own experience would be better and more suitable boats.[34] Furthermore, he traveled through Palos, Moguer and Huelva, convincing his relatives and friends to enlist, composing of them the best crew possible.[32][35] He captained the caravel Pinta, from which Rodrigo de Triana was to be the first person to sight American soil.

Columbus, in his diary, spoke favorably of Pinzón on several occasions.[36] Nonetheless, after they had discovered the West Indies, the relationship between the two changed radically from 21 November 1492, when Martín Alonso separated from Columbus.[37] Admiral Columbus launched a series of accusations of desertion against Pinzón[N. 5] and his brothers, including Vicente who had saved him when the Santa María was shipwrecked.[N. 6][38] Nonetheless, much of the testimony in the pleitos colombinos, as well as part of the specialized historiography[39][40] and investigators,[41] does not agree that these things happened in this manner, nor is there any accusation against Pinzón in Columbus's Letter on the First Voyage, which Columbus wrote on his return.

For Martín Alonso the return voyage was lethal, as the ships suffered from a great storm, which resulted in great fatigue and exhaustion, accumulated over many days of sailing. Because of this, Martín's recurrent fevers from which he suffered reactivated and he died a few days after returning from the New World.[25] In fact, he was taken from his ship in a stretcher and, as Columbus arrived, his friends took him to a farm that was on the boundary between Palos and Moguer. It is possible that Martín's son, Arias Pérez Pinzón, did not bring him directly to his house in Palos in order to protect him, given that Columbus had threatened him earlier. Another possibility is that this was because Martín did not get along well with Catalina Alonso,[42] the woman who had been living with his father since he became a widower, and with whom the father would have two illegitimate children: Francisco and Inés Pinzón.[43] According to testimony, he was brought to the La Rábida Monastery, where he died; he was entombed there, as was his wish.[24][44]

Francisco Martín Pinzón

Francisco Martín Pinzón (c. 1445 – c. 1502)[N. 7] was the second of the brothers. On Columbus's first voyage he was the master (second only to the captain) of the Pinta, the first ship to sight land in the Americas. Although he was less known than his two brothers, he played a major role both in voyages of discovery and in service to the Crown.[45]

His personal and family story is confused, because several relatives shared this same name, frequently leading historians to confuse them. Nonetheless, he seems to have been married to Juana Martín and to have had at least one daughter, who we find documented as "an orphan" and "poor" ("huérfana y pobre").[45]

With his brother Vicente, he made several voyages to Italy and Africa in service to the Crown. In November 1493, together with Juan de Sevilla, Rodrigo de Quexo, and Fernando Quintero, he led an assault on the Algerian coast. In 1496 he brought money and supplies to the Spanish troops fighting in Naples. Later, he participated in Columbus's third and fourth voyages, on the last of which, according to his companion on many voyages, Rodrigo Álvarez, he died by drowning.[45]

Vicente Yáñez Pinzón

Vicente Yáñez Pinzón (c. 1462 – c. September 1514) was the youngest brother. He was captain of the Niña on the first voyage of discovery. He later made other discoveries on his own account; historians consider him the discoverer of Brazil along with his cousin Diego de Lepe.[46]

Considerably younger than his brothers, it is likely that his name Yáñez came from Rodrigo Yáñez, a bailiff (alguacil) of Palos who would then have been his godfather, according to the custom of the place.[10] Tradition in Palos indicates that he lived on the Calle de la Ribera. From a young age, he learned the art of navigation from his oldest brother, and from adolescence he participated in combat and in military assaults, as he happened to reach this age during the War of the Castilian Succession.

He married twice, first to Teresa Rodríguez, with whom he had two daughters, Ana Rodríguez and Juana González. After his final return from the Yucatán in 1509 he married Ana Núñez de Trujillo, with whom he lived in Triana (across the river from Seville), probably until his death.[47]

The first we hear of Vicente Yáñez is when he is denounced for assaults on Aragonese boats,[48][49] some with his oldest brother,[N. 8] when he was only 15 years old. This was between 1477 and 1479, during the War of the Castilian Succession (with Portugal) in which Palos participated actively and through which its habitual shortage of grain was aggravated: its residents complained of hunger. Royal orders to various places that were supposed to supply Palos with cereals[N. 9] were disobeyed.[50] The Pinzón brothers, taking on their responsibilities as natural leaders of the district, attacked caravels that were transporting mainly grain.[50]

Vicente immediately supported his brother, Martín Alonso, when Martin decided to back Columbus's undertaking. The two worked together to enlist men from the Tinto-Odiel for the risky voyage.[10] He was chosen as captain of the Niña and distinguished himself during the voyage. This involved, among other accomplishments, helping to put down several attempts at mutiny together with his older brother. He provided support, both to Columbus and the rest of the crew, after the Santa María was wrecked. With his flagship gone, the admiral made his return voyage in the Niña, captained by Vicente, who provided all the help necessary for a successful return voyage.

He made several more expeditions to the Americas, the most important being the voyage to the mouth of the Amazon which constituted the discovery of Brazil, in early 1500.[51] That expedition was an economic failure.[47] In 1505 he was made the governor of Puerto Rico.[51] Later, in 1506, he returned to the Caribbean to search for a passage to the Pacific Ocean. He explored all of the Caribbean coast of Central America and the Yucatan Peninsula.[11]

According to the chronicler Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés, Vicente Yáñez died in 1514, probably at the end of September. It is not known precisely where he is buried, but Oviedo states that it is somewhere in the cemetery of Triana.[11]

The Pinzón brothers and the discovery of America

 
Columbus and the Pinzón brothers arrive in America. Painting by Dióscoro Puebla (1862)

The participation of the Pinzón brothers was crucial to Columbus's first voyage, especially in that few were disposed to enlist with Columbus until Martín Alonso, a wealthy and famous shipbuilder in the Tinto-Odiel region, gave his support to the enterprise.[31] Once Martín Alonso gave his support, he undertook a veritable campaign on behalf of the undertaking. His support and that of his brothers and of other distinguished families of mariners in the region served to recruit the necessary crew: sailors from Palos, Huelva, and even from beyond Andalusia. The testimony in the pleitos colombinos indicates that the Pinzón brothers, above all Martín:

... brought such diligence to secure and animate the people as if what were discovered were for him and his sons.[52]

Among these other families, the Niño brothers of Moguer stand out: their prestige and influence brought the men of Moguer to unite around the enterprise.[28]

During the voyage of discovery, they demonstrated on several occasions their gifts as expert mariners and as leaders, in that they knew how to master the most diverse and difficult situations. For example, they were able to continue sailing, even after the damage that occurred to the Pinta when the tiller broke, before they reached the Canary Islands,[N. 10] and when, between 6 and 7 October 1492 Columbus was unable to reestablish discipline among the tired and discouraged crew of the Santa María, Martín Alonso with his gift of command managed to resolve the situation.[N. 11] Martín Alonso suggested to Columbus the change of course on 6 October 1492;[N. 12] A few days later, on 9 October he proposed a compromise that won a few more days from the restless crew.[12] The course he urged brought the expedition to landfall on Guanahani on 12 October 1492. When the Santa María wrecked on 25 December, Vicente Yáñez in command of the Niña went to the rescue of those left in this difficult situation.[N. 13]

For these and other acts, the Pinzón brothers have a very notable place in the history of the discovery of America, and are considered by historians as "co-discoverers of America",[53] in that without their help, support, and courage, Columbus probably could not have achieved his enterprise of discovery, at least not in that time and place.[54]

Other voyages

Although the oldest of the Pinzón brothers, Martín Alonso, died a few days after returning from Columbus's first voyage, that was by no means the end of the participation of the Pinzóns in voyages of discovery and other sea journeys.

Francisco and Vicente made various voyages to Italy and Africa in service to the Crown. As mentioned above, in November 1493, Francisco, along with Juan de Sevilla, Rodrigo de Quexo, and Fernando Quintero, led an assault on the Algerian coast. In 1496 they brought money and supplies to the Spanish troops fighting in Naples. In 1498 he participated in Columbus's third voyage, in which for the first time the Admiral arrived on the continent of South America.

Later in 1498, the Crown decided to end Columbus's monopoly on voyages of discovery. The series of voyages by other mariners are generally known as the "minor voyages" or the "Andalusian voyages" of discovery. After contracting with the crown, on 19 November 1499 Vicente left the port of Palos with four small caravels, crewed largely by his relatives and friends, among them his brother Francisco and also the famous physician of Palos Garcí Fernández, an early supporter of Columbus's first voyage. On this voyage, they discovered Brazil and the Amazon River.[55][56][57][58]

On 5 September 1501 the Crown signed an agreement with Vicente in which, among other things, he was named Captain and Governor of the Cabo de Santa María de la Consolación, later Cabo de Santo Agostinho.[59]

In 1502, Francisco traveled with Columbus on his fourth and final voyage; it is on this voyage he is believed to have died by drowning.

Vicente continued to travel back and forth across the Atlantic to fulfill his obligations as Captain General and Governor. He also participated as one of the experts brought together by the Crown in the Junta de Navegantes in Burgos in 1508 to take up anew the subject of the search for a passage to the Spice Islands. On his final voyage, along with captain Juan Díaz de Solís, he followed the coasts of Darién, Veragua and the Gulf of Paria, now Venezuela, Colombia, Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras and Guatemala. Not finding the desired passage, he rounded the Yucatan Peninsula and entered into the Gulf of Mexico to the extent of 23.5º north latitude, bringing about one of the first European contacts with the Aztec civilization.[60]

 
The Pinzón coat of arms.

Upon returning from this voyage, Vicente Yáñez married for the second time and settled in Triana. In 1513 he testified against Columbus in the pleitos colombinos. In 1514 he was ordered to accompany Pedrarias Dávila to Darién, but he was not well enough and begged to be excused. That was on 14 March 1514, and it is the last primary source document in which he is mentioned.

Coat of arms granted by Charles I of Spain

In 1519 a petition to Charles I of Spain, headed by Juan Rodríguez Mafra, requested the grant of a coat of arms to the Pinzóns and other mariners of Palos, exposing the lamentable situation of the descendants of those mariners who had offered such service to the Crown. The king finally conceded to the Pinzóns, their descendants and family members a coat of arms consisting of a shield with three caravels, natural, on the sea; from each a hand points to an island representing the first land discovered in the New World. Around that, a border with anchors and crowns.[N. 14]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ A document in the Archivo de Simancas in the Registro general del Sello, dated March 1505, gives the terms of the inheritance of the estate of the Pinzón brothers' mother. This document is the source for the parents of the brothers being Martín Alonso Pinzón (father) and Mayor Vicente (mother), who left them some houses in the Barrero neighborhood of Palos, indicating that the family had been in Palos for at least one generation before the brothers.
    Cited in:
  2. ^ Dentro del proceso de apelación de la sentencia de Dueñas -pleito iniciado por Diego Colón y que continuó Luis Colón- en probanza realizada en 1532 por Juan Martín Pinzón, hijo de Martín Alonso Pinzón, la primera pregunta del interrogatorio dice lo siguiente: Within the appeal trial against of the Dueñas lawsuit filed by Columbus's son Diego Colón continued by Diego's son Luis Colón in testimony made in 1532 by John Martin Pinzon, son of Martin Alonso Pinzon, the first question reads:

    First, if they knew Martin Alonso Pinçon, now deceased, resident of and born in the town of Palos, and Maria Alvares, his legitimage wife, who dies in the street of Nuestra Señora de la Rabida, and if they knew said Martin Alonso Pinçon and said Maria Alvares, his wife, were husband and wife under the order of the Church of the Santa Madre, and in the course of their marriage procreated and produced their legitimate and natural son Juan Martin Pinçon who now lives in the town of Huelva, and in having had him they were taken and commonly reputed, and that is the said Juan Martin.

    Lo primero, si conosçieron a Martin Alonso Pinçon, ya difunto, vezino e natural que fue desta villa de Palos, e a Maria Alvares, su legitima muger, los quales moravan en la calle de Nuestra Señora de la Rabida, e si saben que el dicho Martin Alonso Pinçon e la dicha Maria Alvares, su muger, fueron casados y velados segund horden de la Santa Madre Yglesia, e constante su matrymonio ovieron e procrearon por su hijo legitimo e natural a Juan Martin Pinçon que agora vive en la villa de Huelva, e en tal posesion fueron habidos e tenidos e comunmente reputados, e lo es el tal dicho Juan Martin.

    To all of this. the response was affirmative.
    The testimony is reproduced in:

    • Muro Orejón, Antonio; Pérez-Ebid, Florentino; Morales Padrón, Francisco (1964). Pleitos colombinos: rollo del proceso sobre la apelación de la sentencia de Dueñas, 1534-1536. Sevilla: Escuela de Estudios Hispanoamericanos de Sevilla.
      Cited in:
    • Fernández Duro, Cesáreo (1883). Colón y Pinzón: informe relativo a los pormenores de descubrimiento del Nuevo Mundo presentado a la Real Academia de la Historia. Madrid: Imprenta y Fundación de Manuel Tello. p. 230. The link is to archive.org.
    • Ortega 1980, Tomo III, p. 152-153
    • Manzano Manzano & Manzano Fernández-Heredia 1988, Vol. I, p. 6
  3. ^ Often, their middle names—Alonso, Yáñez, and Martín, which they would have taken from their godfathers at their baptism—have been confused with surnames leading to the misconception that they were half-brothers.
  4. ^ Testimony in the pleitos colombinos:

    Gonzalo Martín, vecino of Huelva.
    ... [M. A. Pinzón] ... was famous during his lifetime, and neither on sea nor land the King had no other man so valiant nor brave as him, and in the time that there was a war with Portugal all the Portuguese feared him because every day he took them and he lit them [set their boats on fire] and he made much war upon them ....

    Gonzalo Martín, vecino de Huelva.
    ... [M. A. Pinzón] ... tenía fama en el tiempo que era vivo, y que por la mar ni por la tierra no tenía el Rey otro hombre tan valiente ni tan esforzado como el, e que en el tiempo que había guerra con Portugal todos los portugueses lo temían porque cada día los tomaba e los prendía e les facia mucha guerra ....

    Francisco Medel.
    ... He was very knowledgeable in the art of navigation on all the seas, and no other man in all the Kingdom was so ardent for the things of war as he, nor as determined nor whose person had so much credit to do whatever thing ...

    Francisco Medel.
    ... era hombre muy sabido en el arte de navegar por todos os mares, e era hombre que en todo el Reyno no había otro tan ardido para las cosas de la guerra como el, ni tan determinado ni que tanto crédito tuviese su persona para facer cualquiera cosa ...

    Cited in:
  5. ^ Ship's Diary:

    Wednesday, 21 November [1492]
    ...This day Martín Alonso Pinzón departed with the caravel Pinta, without the obedience and will of the Admiral, out of greed, he says that an Indian that the Admiral had ordered to be put in that caravel had told him where to get much gold [the Spanish here, le había de dar mucho oro, is a bit obscure, but this seems to be the sense], and so he went away without waiting, without cause of bad weather, just because he wanted to. And here the Admiral says: «He did and said many other [things] to me».

    Miércoles, 21 de noviembre
    ... Este día se apartó Martín Alonso Pinzón con la carabela Pinta, sin obediencia y voluntad del Almirante, por codicia, dice que pensando que un indio que el Almirante había mandado poner en aquella carabela le había de dar mucho oro, y así se fue sin esperar, sin causa de mal tiempo, sino porque quiso. Y dice aquí el Almirante: «otras muchas me tiene hecho y dicho».

    — Diario de la primera navegación, Narrative assembled by Fray Bartolomé de las Casas.
  6. ^ Ship's Diary:

    Tuesday, 8 January [1493]
    With such strong winds from the east and southeast he did not leave that day, because of which he ordered that that caravel be supplied with water and firewood and all that was necessary for the entire voyage, because although he intended to travel by ship along that whole Hispaniola coast as far as he could, but, because those he put in the caravels for commanders were brothers, to wit Martín Alonso Pinzón and Vicente Yáñez, and others who followed him with arrogance and greed estimating that everything was already theirs, not looking at the honor the Admiral had given them, they had not obeyed and did not obey his commands, before they had said and done many unmerited things against him, and this Martín Alonso left him from 21 November until 6 January without any cause or reason except disobedience, all of which the Admiral had suffered and been silent to bring a good end to his voyage, so that, to leave behind such bad company, with whom he says that it was necessary to dissimulate, although they were lawless people, and though he had to say while with them that they were good men*, because it was not the time to speak of punishment, he agreed to return and stop no more, as quickly as was possible ...

     * An effort to make sense of a rather obscure phrase, "y aunque tenía dice que consigo muchos hombres de bien"; possibly alternatively "and though he had to say that they had many good men with them".

    Martes, 8 de enero
    Por el viento Este y Sudeste mucho que ventaba no partió este día, por lo cual mandó que se guarneciese la carabela de agua y leña y de todo lo necesario para todo el viaje, porque, aunque tenía voluntad de costear toda la costa de aquella Española que andando el camino pudiese, pero, porque los que puso en las carabelas por capitanes eran hermanos, conviene a saber Martín Alonso Pinzón y Vicente Yáñez, y otros que le seguían con soberbia y codicia estimando que todo era ya suyo, no mirando la honra que el Almirante les había hecho y dado, no habían obedecido ni obedecían sus mandamientos, antes hacían y decían muchas cosas no debidas contra él, y el Martín Alonso lo dejó desde el 21 de noviembre hasta el 6 de enero sin causa alguna ni razón sino por su desobediencia, todo lo cual el Almirante había sufrido y callado por dar buen fin a su viaje, así que, por salir de tan mala compañía, con los cuales dice que cumplía disimular, aunque eran gente desmandada, y aunque tenía dice que consigo muchos hombres de bien, pero no era tiempo de entender en castigo, acordó volverse y no parar más, con la mayor prisa que le fue posible ...

    — Diario de la primera navegación, Narrative assembled by Bartolomé de las Casas.
  7. ^ Fernández-Carrión says Francisco Martín Pinzón was born entre 1445 y 1450 and that Rodrigo Álvarez testified in 1514 in the Pleitos Colombinos that he had died in 1502.
  8. ^ PARES.
    • Comisión al asistente de Sevilla a petición de Bernaldo Galamo y consortes, vecinos de Ibiza, sobre la presa de un ballener que les fué tomado por Martín Alonso y Vicente Yáñez Pinzón, vecinos de Palos.
      Archivo General de Simancas. Unidad: Cancillería. Registro del Sello de Corte. RGS,148001,54.
  9. ^ PARES.
    • 1477: "Letter to the councils and residents of the cities of Seville and Jerez de la Frontera, at the petition of the council and residents of the town of Palos, ordering them to allow them to take from said cities all the bread they need for their." "Carta a los concejos y vecinos de las ciudades de Sevilla y de Jerez de la Frontera, a petición del concejo y vecinos de la villa de Palos, ordenándoles que dejen a éstos sacar de dichas ciudades todo el pan que necesitaren para su provision."
      Archivo General de Simancas. Unidad: Cancillería. Registro del Sello de Corte. Signatura: RGS,147705,194.
    • 1478: "Provision to the petition of the town of Palos to be given a letter allowing it to take bread from certain cities in Andalusia, given in virtue of laws by the court of Burgos of 1453 and Córdoba of 1455 that are inserted." "Provisión a petición de la villa de Palos para que le sea guardada una carta facultándole la saca de pan de ciertas ciudades de Andalucía, dada en virtud de leyes de cortes de Burgos de 1453 y Córdoba de 1455 que se insertan."
      Archivo General de Simancas. Unidad: Cancillería. Registro del Sello de Corte. Signatura: RGS,147808,95.
  10. ^ Ship's Diary:

    Monday, 6 August [1492]
    The tiller of the caravel Pinta, [the caravel] where Martín Alonso Pinzón was, snapped or was put out of joint, of which the work of one Gómez Rascón and Cristóbal Quintero, who owned the caravel, was believed and suspected, because they regretted going on this voyage and the Admiral said that before leaving there had been a certain amount of hesitation and hubbub about them. Seeing it there, the Admiral was quite perturbed not to be able to help that caravel without danger to his own, but that he was a bit less worried knowing that Martín Alonso Pinzón was a vigorous and ingenious person. Finally, they went between day and night twenty-nine leagues. During the crossing, he showed his abilities as a sailor when he resolved the problem of the broken tiller of the Pinta and was able to continue sailing.

    Lunes, 6 de agosto
    Saltó o desencajóse el gobernario a la carabela Pinta, donde iba Martín Alonso Pinzón, a lo que se creyó y sospechó por industria de un Gómez Rascón y Cristóbal Quintero, cuya era la carabela, porque le pesaba ir en aquel viaje; y dice el Almirante que antes de que partiese habían hallado en ciertos reveses y grisquetas como dicen, a los dichos. Viose allí el Almirante en gran turbación por no poder ayudar a la dicha carabela sin su peligro, y dice que alguna pena perdía con saber que Martín Alonso Pinzón era persona esforzada y de buen ingenio. En fin, anduvieron entre día y noche veintinueve leguas. Durante la travesía, demostró sus habilidades de marinero cuando resolvió el problema de la rotura del timón de La Pinta y pudo seguir navegando.

    — Diario de la primera navegación. Narrative assembled by Bartolomé de las Casas.
  11. ^ Testimony in the pleitos colombinos by Hernán Pérez Mateos, former pilot of Palos, age 80, given in Santo Domingo 26 January 1536. Archivo General de Indias. Sección: Patronato. Signatura: PATRONATO,12,N.2,R.14.

    ... as they did not discover land, those who went with the said Columbus wanted to mutiny and rise against him, saying they were lost, and then the said Columbus had said to Martín Alonso what was going on among these people, and what it seemed to him they ought to do; and that the said Martín Alonso Pinzón had responded to him; «Sir; hang half a dozen of them and throw them into the sea, and if you dare not, I and my brothers will get up close to them and do it, that an armada that left with the mandate of such high princes not have to return without good news.» And that he knew that with that they would regain their spirits; and the said Columbus had said; «Martin Alonso; lets make things good with these gentlemen and travel another eight days, and if in that time we don't find land, we will give another order on what we ought to do.» ...

    ... como no descubrían tierra, los que venían con el dicho Colón se querían amotinar y alzar contra el, diciendo que iban perdidos, y entonces el dicho Colón había dicho a Martín Alonso lo que pasaba con aquella gente, y que qué le parescía que debían hacer; e que el dicho Martín Alonso Pinzón le había respondido; «Señor; ahorque vuesa merced a media docena dellos e échelos al mar, y si no se atreve, yo e mis hermanos barloaremos sobre ellos y lo haremos, que armada que salio con mandato de tan altos principes no ha de volver atras sin buenas nuevas.» Y que sabe que con esto se animaron; y el dicho Colón había dicho; «Martin Alonso; con estos hidalgos hayamonos bien y andemos otros ocho días, e si en estos no hayamos tierra, daremos otra orden en lo que debemos hacer.» ...

    Cited in:

  12. ^ Ship's Diary:

    Saturday, 6 October [1492].
    He navigated his way to the west. Then went forty leagues between day and night; he told the people thirty-three leagues. That night Martín Alonso said it would be set course southwest by west; and to the Admiral it seemed that this Martín Alonso said this because of the island of Cipango (Japan), and the Admiral saw that if they missed it they could not soon find land quickly and that it would be better off to go first to the mainland and later to the islands.

    Sábado, 6 de octubre.
    Navegó su camino al Oeste o Güeste, que es lo mismo. Anduvieron cuarenta leguas entre día y noche; contó a la gente treinta y tres leguas. Esta noche dijo Martín Alonso que sería bien navegar a la cuarta del Oeste, a la parte del Sudoeste; y al Almirante pareció que no decía esto Martín Alonso por la isla de Cipango, y el Almirante veía que si la erraban que no pudieran tan presto tomar tierra y que era mejor una vez ir a la tierra firme y después a las islas.

    — Diario de la primera navegación. Narrative assembled by Bartolomé de las Casas.
  13. ^ Ship's Diary.

    Tuesday 25 December, Christmas Day. ... When he saw that it was his people who were fleeing [they had been put in a boat to assist the grounded Santa María, but instead tried to run away], and that the waters were dwindling and that the ship was already crosswise to the sea, not seeing any other way, he ordered that the mast be cut and to lighten the ship by getting rid of everything they could to see if they could get her out; and as the waters [over the bank on which they were grounded] were still dwindling there was no remedy, and she was listing toward the cross sea, given that there was little or no sea [under them], and then the planking opened up, but not the ship [that is, the ship did not yet break up]. The Admiral went to the caravel that is, the ''Niña'' to put in safety the men from the ship in the caravel and, as there was now a light breeze from the land and also much of the night remained, and they did not know how far the banks extended, he kept getting on and off until daytime, and later went to the ship from within the shoal of the bank...

    Martes 25 de diciembre, día de Navidad.
    ... Cuando el Almirante vio que se huían y que era su gente, y las aguas menguaban y estaba ya la nao la mar de través, no viendo otro medio, mandó cortar el mástil y alijar de la nao todo cuanto pudieron para ver si podían sacarla; y como todavía las aguas menguasen no se pudo remediar, y tomó lado hacia la mar traviesa, puesto que la mar era poco o nada, y entonces se abrieron los conventos y no la nao. El Almirante fue a la carabela para poner en cobro la gente de la nao en la carabela y, como ventase ya vientecillo de la tierra y también aún quedaba mucho de la noche, ni supiesen cuánto duraban los bancos, temporejó a la corda hasta que fue de día, y luego fue a la nao por de dentro de la restinga del banco...

    — Diario de la primera navegación. Narrative assembled by Bartolomé de las Casas.
  14. ^ Archivo General de Indias Sección Indiferente General. Signatura: INDIFERENTE,420,L.8,F.146R-147V.

    Royal Provision of King Don Carlos conceded to Juan Rodríguez Mafra, pilot, Gómez Muñoz, chaplain, Diego Martín Pinzón, Alvaro Alonso, notaries, Juan Pinzón and Alonso González, residents and naturals of the town of Palos, the mercy of the power to use a coat of arms with three caravels, from each of them a hand reaches out, and on the border, some anchors and some crowns, doing to them said mercy in reward for the services performed in the discovery of the Indies by their respective ancestors: Martín Alonso Pinzón, Vicente Yáñez Pinzón, Andrés González Pinzón, Diego de Lepe, and Miguel Alonso.

    Real Provisión del Rey D. Carlos concediendo a Juan Rodríguez Mafra, piloto, Gómez Muñoz, capellán, Diego Martín Pinzón, Alvaro Alonso, notarios, Juan Pinzón y Alonso González, vecinos y naturales de la villa de Palos, la merced de poder usar un escudo de armas con tres carabelas, de cada una de las cuales salga una mano, y por orlas, unas áncoras y unos corazones, haciéndoles dicha merced en premio a los servicios que en el descubrimiento de las Indias hicieron sus antepasados respectivos: Martín Alonso Pinzón, Vicente Yáñez Pinzón, Andrés González Pinzón, Diego de Lepe y Miguel Alonso.


  1. ^ de Navarette, Martin Fernadez (1829). Viages menores, y los de Vespucio; Poblaciones en el Darien, suplemento al tomo II (in Spanish). pp. 428–.
  2. ^ Fernández de Oviedo, Gonzalo (1535). Historia general y natural de las Indias, islas y tierra-firme del mar océano. Real Academia de la Historia (1851). p. 21. Online on Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes.
    • de las Casas, Bartolomé. Historia de las Indias. Madrid. Edición del Marqués de la Fuensanta del Valle: Imprenta de Miguel Ginesta. pp. 255–256.
      Cited in:
    • Gould 1984, p. 252-260
    • Verdera, Nito (1994). (PDF). Butlletí del Centre d'Estudis Colombins (in Catalan). Barcelona: CEC, Òmnium Cultural (14): 8–10. D.L. B-16689 - 1993. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 4 June 2009.
  3. ^ a b Izquierdo Labrado, Julio (2003). . Archived from the original on 27 December 2007. Retrieved 3 October 2008.
  4. ^ de Palencia, Alfonso. Década III, libro 26, capítulo 6.
  5. ^ Álvarez de Toledo 2000, Cap. «El combate por el trono.»
  6. ^ Ortega 1980, Tomo III, p. 37-110
  7. ^ a b c de las Casas, Bartolomé (1875). "Tomo I. Capítulo XXXIV, pág. 256". Historia de las Indias. Retrieved 18 October 2008. On the website of the Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes.
  8. ^ Ortega 1980, Tomo III, págs. 135-137
  9. ^ Gould 1984, p. 132 et. seq.
  10. ^ a b c Ortega 1980, Tomo III, p. 111-112
  11. ^ a b c Izquierdo Labrado, Julio (1999). . Archived from the original on 19 October 2007. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  12. ^ a b c José Manuel Azcona Pastor, Possible paradises: Basque emigration to Latin America, University of Nevada Press, 2004, pg. 14, [1]
  13. ^ a b Izquierdo Labrado, Julio (1993). "Relaciones de Palos de la Frontera con el Algarve a finales del siglo XV". mgar.net. Retrieved 18 May 2009.
  14. ^ Ladero Quesada, Miguel Ángel (July–December 1978). "Palos en vísperas del Descubrimiento" (153–154). Revista de Indias: 477. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  15. ^ Álvarez de Toledo 2000, Cap. «El Palos del Descubrimiento.»
  16. ^ Julio Izquierdo Labrado. Palos de la Frontera en el Antiguo Régimen (1380-1830). Huelva, 1986.
  17. ^ González Gómez, Antonio. «Las Ordenanzas Municipales de Palos de la Frontera (1484-1521).» University of Sevilla, 1976.
  18. ^ Archivo General de Simancas, Registro General del Sello, 1491-VIII, fol. 78
  19. ^ Gould, Alice B. (1927). "Documentos inéditos sobre la hidalguía y genealogía de la familia Pinzón". tomo 91. Madrid: Boletín de la Real Academia de la Historia: 319. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
    Cited in:
  20. ^ Ortega 1980, Tomo III, p. 31
  21. ^ Archivo General de Simancas, Registro General del Sello, March 1505.
    Cited in:
  22. ^ a b Fernández Duro 1892, Pág. 28
  23. ^ Instituto Andaluz del Patrimonio Histórico, Junta de Andalucía. "Casa de Martín Alonso Pinzón". Retrieved 26 October 2008. {{cite web}}: External link in |author= (help)
    • www.elpais.com. "Descubrir el hogar de Pinzón". El País. Retrieved 5 May 2009.
  24. ^ a b Álvarez de Toledo 2000, Cap. «El primer viaje.»
  25. ^ a b Izquierdo Labrado, Julio (1985). . Archived from the original on 3 August 2004. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  26. ^ Pulido Robio, José (1952). "Algunas consideraciones sobre unos documentos referentes a Palos, inmediatos al descubrimiento". IX. Anuario de Estudios Americanos.: Art. 2, p. 45. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  27. ^ a b Asensio 1892, p. 66-68.
  28. ^ a b Diputación de Huelva. . Archived from the original on 10 August 2009. Retrieved 18 October 2008.
  29. ^ a b Provisión de los Reyes Católicos que mandaron a Diego Rodríguez Prieto y a otros compañeros, vecinos de la villa de Palos, para que tuvieran preparadas dos carabelas al servicio de Cristóbal Colón. Texto completo[permanent dead link], Granada, 30 April 1492. Archivo General de Indias. Sección: Patronato. Signatura: PATRONATO, 295, N.3. (Castellano antiguo)
  30. ^ Ibarra y Rodríguez, Eduardo (1892). Don Fernando el Católico y el descubrimiento de América. Imprenta de Fortaner, Madrid. pp. 180–184. The link is to archive.org.
  31. ^ a b Fernández Duro, Cesáreo (22 January 1892). "Pinzón, en el descubrimiento de las Índias" (PDF) (Año XXXVI. Núm. III). Madrid: La Ilustración Española y Americana.: 46–47. Retrieved 4 June 2009. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help) Online on Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes.
  32. ^ a b Ibarra y Rodríguez, Eduardo (1892). "Cap. VIII". Don Fernando el Católico y el descubrimiento de América. Madrid: Imprenta de Fortaner. p. 184.
  33. ^ Menéndez-Pidal, Gonzalo (June 2003). "Tres puntos finales, Cristóbal Colón". Hacia una nueva imagen del mundo. Centro de Estudios Políticos y Constitucionales, 2003. ISBN 978-84-259-1245-0.
  34. ^ Gould 1984. The actual ownership of the Niña is in some question; quite possibly Pinzón had a lease on it, rather than outright ownership.
  35. ^ Arranz Márquez 2006, p. 207-208
  36. ^ Diario de a bordo del primer viaje de Cristóbal Colón: texto completo (complete text of the Ship's diary of Columbus's first voyage, as assembled by Fray Bartolomé de las Casas. Hereafter, "Ship's Diary"). Monday 6 August, Thursday 9 August.
  37. ^ Arranz Márquez 2006, p. 217
  38. ^ Manzano Manzano & Manzano Fernández-Heredia 1988, Vol. I. p. 136-138
  39. ^ Fernández Duro 1892, p. 66-108.
  40. ^ Díaz-Trechulo, Spínola, Maria Lourdes (2006). Cristóbal Colón (Segunda ed.). Ediciones Palabra. p. 91. ISBN 978-84-9840-020-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  41. ^ Manuel López Flores (1964). Colón no descubrió América. Madrid: Editorial Clásica. pp. 253–262. DL: M. 7.245-1964.
  42. ^ Archivo General de Simancas, Registro General del Sello, 12 October 1493.
    Cited in:
  43. ^ Martín Alonso Pinzón, Festa de Arribada, Ayuntamiento de Baiona. Accessed online 2010-01-12.
  44. ^ Testimony in the pleitos colombinos by Francisco Medel and Hernán Pérez Mateos, cited in:
  45. ^ a b c Fernández-Carrión, Miguel-Héctor, Biografía de Francisco Martín Pinzón 20 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Biblioteca Digital de la Asociación Española de Americanistas. This is an expanded version of a biography for the Diccionario Biográfico Español published by the Real Academia de Historia de España. Accessed online 2010-01-14.
  46. ^ Emilio Soler Pascual, Exploradores y viajeros por España: 1492, Vicente Yáñez Pinzón 12 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes. Of Brazil, Soler Pascual concludes "Pinzón, con toda seguridad, había descubierto tierra brasileña meses antes de que lo hiciera el portugués Alvares Cabral, en abril de 1500.": "Pinzón, in all certainty, had discovered Brazilian territory months before the same was done by the Portuguese Alvares Cabral in April 1500."
  47. ^ a b Gil, Juan (September–December 1987). "Sobre la Vida Familiar de Vicente Yáñez Pinzón". Revista de Indias. XLVII (181): 645:754.
  48. ^ Coll y Juliá, Núria (1950). "Vicente Yáñez Pinzón, descubridor del Brasil corsario en Cataluña". Hispania, revista española de historia. Madrid: Instituto Jerónimo Zurita, CSIC (Nº 40 vol. 10): 594–597.
  49. ^ Manzano Manzano & Manzano Fernández-Heredia 1988, Vol. III, p. 1-2
  50. ^ a b Manzano Manzano & Manzano Fernández-Heredia 1988, Vol. I. p. 21-25
  51. ^ a b Marshall Cavendish Corporation, "Explorers and Exploration, Volume 7", pg. 551, [2]
  52. ^ Fernández Duro, Cesáreo (22 January 1892). "Pinzón, en el descubrimiento de las Índias" (PDF) (Año XXXVI. Núm. III). Madrid: La ilustración española y americana.: 46–47. Retrieved 4 June 2009. ... traía tanta diligencia en allegar la gente é animalia, como si para él y para sus hijos hobiera de ser lo que se descubriese. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help) Online on Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes.
  53. ^ Manzano Manzano & Manzano Fernández-Heredia 1988, Vol. III. p. 5, Arranz Márquez 2006, p. 208
  54. ^ Gould 1984, p. 93
  55. ^ dialnet.unirioja.es. "El descubrimiento del Brasil por Vicente Yáñez Pinzón: el cabo de Santo Agostinho". University of La Rioja. Retrieved 25 December 2007.
  56. ^ ibge.gov.br. (in Portuguese). Ministério do Planejamento, Orçamento e Gestão. Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística. Archived from the original on 5 June 2008. Retrieved 25 December 2007.
  57. ^ amerispan.com. "¿Los españoles descubrieron Brasil?". AmeriSpan Study Abroad. Retrieved 25 December 2007.
  58. ^ Brasilalacarta.com. . Archived from the original on 30 December 2007. Retrieved 25 December 2007.
  59. ^ Izquierdo Labrado, Julio. . Transcription of the original. Archived from the original on 27 October 2009. Retrieved 23 December 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  60. ^ cervantesvirtual.com. . Biblioteca virtual Cervantes. Archived from the original on 12 February 2008. Retrieved 23 December 2007.

References

  • Álvarez de Toledo, Luisa Isabel (2000), , Junta Islámica. Centro de Documentación y Publicaciones, ISBN 978-84-607-1135-3, archived from the original on 15 December 2009
  • Arranz Márquez, Luis (2006), Cristóbal Colón: misterio y grandeza, Marcial Pons Historia, ISBN 978-84-96467-23-1
  • Asensio, José María (1892), Martín Alonso Pinzón: estudio histórico, La España Moderna Online at archive.org
  • Fernández Duro, Cesáreo (1892), Pinzón en el descubrimiento de las Indias, Madrid: Sucesores de Rivadeneyra
  • Gould, Alice B. (1984), Nueva lista documentada de los tripulantes de Colón en 1492, Real Academia de la Historia., ISBN 978-84-600-3829-0 The link is to an abridged copy on Google Books.
  • Íñiguez Sánchez-Arjona, Benito (1991), Martín Alonso Pinzón, el calumniado, Seville: Haro, ISBN 978-84-604-1012-6
  • Manzano Manzano, Juan; Manzano Fernández-Heredia, Ana Maria (1988), Los Pinzones y el Descubrimiento de América, Ediciones de Cultura Hispánica, ISBN 978-84-7232-442-8
  • Ortega, Ángel (1980) [1925], La Rábida. Historia documental crítica. 4 vol. (facsimile ed.), Diputación Provincial de Huelva. Servicio de Publicaciones, ISBN 978-84-500-3860-6
  • Rivera, Carlos (1945), Martín Alonso Pinzón, Ayamonte (Huelva): Imprenta Asilo Provincial

Further reading

  • Begaud, Louis-Théodule (1944). Le premier Capitaine au long cours, Martín Alonso Pinzón, associé de Christophe Colomb; Organisateur et animateur de l'expédition de 1492 (in French). Paris.
  • Fernández de Navarrete, Martín (1829). Colección de los viages y descubrimientos que hicieron por mar los españoles desde fines del siglo XV: Con varios documentos inéditos concernientes á la historia de la Marina Castellana y de los establecimientos españoles en indias. Imprenta real.
  • Fernández Vial, Ignacio (2004). Los marinos descubridores onubenses. Huelva: Diputación Provincial de Huelva. ISBN 84-8163-352-6.
  • Gómez, Domingo (1968). "Vindicación del piloto de la carabela "Pinta", Martín Alonso Pinzón". Mundi hispánico. Madrid. Año 21 (241).
  • Izquierdo Labrado, Julio (1987). Palos de la Frontera en el Antiguo Régimen.(1380-1830). Huelva: Instituto de Cooperación Iberoamericana y Ayuntamiento de Palos de la Frontera. DL H-110/87.
  • Izquierdo Labrado, Julio (2004). Palermos ilustres. Huelva: Ayuntamiento de Palos de la Frontera. ISBN 84-606-3612-7.
  • López de Gómara, Francisco (March 2006). Historia general de las Indias. Linkgua Ediciones, S.L. ISBN 978-84-96290-13-6.
  • Morales Padrón, Francisco (1961). "Las relaciones entre Colón y Martín Alonso Pinzón". Actas. Lisbon. 3: 433–442.
  • Szászdi, Adám (1985). "El descubrimiento de Puerto Rico en 1492 por Martín Alonso Pinzón". Revista de historia. San Juan. Año 1 (2): 9–45.
  • Varela Marcos, Jesús (2005). Colón y Pinzón: descubridores de América. Universidad de Valladolid. ISBN 978-84-933938-0-9.

pinzón, brothers, were, spanish, sailors, pirates, explorers, fishermen, natives, palos, frontera, huelva, spain, martín, alonso, francisco, martín, vicente, yáñez, participated, christopher, columbus, first, expedition, world, generally, considered, constitut. The Pinzon brothers were Spanish sailors pirates explorers and fishermen natives of Palos de la Frontera Huelva Spain Martin Alonso Francisco Martin and Vicente Yanez participated in Christopher Columbus s first expedition to the New World 1 generally considered to constitute the discovery of the Americas by Europeans and in other voyages of discovery and exploration in the late 15th and early 16th centuries 2 N 1 N 2 Pinzon brothersStatue of the Pinzon brothers in Palos de la FronteraNames Martin Alonso PinzonFrancisco Martin PinzonVicente Yanez PinzonOrigin Palos de la Frontera Huelva SpainOccupation Sailors explorers fishermenEra 15th 16th centuryThe brothers were sailors along the coast of Huelva and thanks to their many commercial voyages and piracy along the coast they were famous along the entire coast 3 The strategic position offered by the historic Atlantic port of Palos from which expeditions had set forth to the African coasts 4 as well as to the war against Portugal 5 for which most of the armadas set forth from this town organized on many occasions by this family clarification needed Martin Alonso and Vicente Yanez captains of the caravels La Pinta and La Nina respectively on Columbus s first voyage are the best known of the brothers but the third brother the lesser known Francisco Martin was aboard the Pinta as its master It was thanks to Martin Alonso that the seamen of the Tinto Odiel were motivated to participate in Columbus s undertaking 6 He also supported the project economically supplying money from his personal fortune 7 Francisco master of the Pinta appears to have participated in Columbus s third and fourth voyages of discovery as well as in the first but because his name was a common one the facts of his life cannot be easily sorted out from those of contemporaries with the same name 8 9 Vicente Yanez the youngest of the three brothers besides participating in Columbus s first voyage 10 once Columbus s monopoly on transatlantic trade was ended made several voyages to the Americas on his own account and is generally credited with the discovery of Brazil 11 Although they sometimes quarreled with Columbus on several occasions the Pinzon brothers were instrumental in preventing mutiny against him particularly during the first voyage On 6 October Martin intervened in a dispute between Columbus and the crew by proposing an altered course which Columbus eventually accepted and thus calmed simmering unrest A few days later on the night of 9 October 1492 the brothers were forced to intercede once again and this time they proposed the compromise that if no land was sighted during the next three days the expedition would return to Spain 12 On the morning of the 12th land there is some question of the location see Guanahani was in fact sighted by Juan Rodriguez Bermejo also known as Rodrigo de Triana 12 Contents 1 The port of Palos at the end of the 15th century 2 The Pinzon family of Palos 2 1 Martin Alonso Pinzon 2 2 Francisco Martin Pinzon 2 3 Vicente Yanez Pinzon 3 The Pinzon brothers and the discovery of America 4 Other voyages 5 Coat of arms granted by Charles I of Spain 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further readingThe port of Palos at the end of the 15th century EditThe Pinzon brothers lived in the era of the greatest splendor of the port town of Palos de la Frontera participating in the majority of the activities undertaken by that port The historic port of Palos was a river port protected from winds and from pirate attacks both major hazards to the ports of the time It was located on the lower portion of the Rio Tinto known then as the Canal de Palos about 4 kilometres 2 5 mi from its mouth at the Atlantic and its confluence with the Odiel The port probably grew simultaneously with the town first as an anchorage for small vessels engaged almost exclusively in fishing on the beaches and estuaries and occasional commercial transactions to supply the small population 13 18th century topographic map showing the location of the old port of Palos For many the expression port of Palos brings to mind the present day port with its old wharf the muelle de la Calzadilla from which the Plus Ultra flying boat departed in 1926 to cross the Atlantic This is not the 15th century port The municipal ordinances of the era Ordenanzas Municipales de Palos 1484 1521 focused mainly on regulating the town s maritime activities never use the terms puerto port or muelle wharf The caravels of Palos arrived at the riverbank aportaban a la ribera 14 where they discharged their goods and auctioned their fish That is to say the activities of the port were not conducted in any single place but along the length of the bank of the Rio Tinto because of the large number of ships and relatively high volume of merchandise they had to handle 15 Progressively the river became Palos s principal means of connection to the outside world and the port the axis of its relation to the surrounding towns This maritime orientation modified the shape of the town previously a conical area centered around the church and castle The Calle de la Ribera Riverbank Street connecting the town center to the port became the town s principal artery and the port the authentic heart of the local economy 13 On the eve of Columbus s first voyage the entire riverbank between the present day wharfs near the center of Palos and 3 kilometres 1 9 mi away at La Rabida Monastery was an active port The caravels anchored in the center of the river where the depth was sufficient for their drafts and paid for the rights to anchor there From the caravels boats and dinghies loaded or unloaded the goods tying up to the shore amarrando en la ribera 16 The port had a population density similar to that to the town proper from what we can deduce from the Ordenanza Municipal which prohibited weapons on the riverbank because the people there were as tightly packed as in the town proper the expression used is tan aparejadas como en la Villa aparejadas is nautical Spanish for something that has been furnished or supplied 17 Beginning in the first third of the 15th century the port of Palos experienced continual economic growth obtaining an importance well beyond the local area and achieving even international dimensions as is testified by the frequent presence of English Breton Flemish and Italian ships Following in the wake of the Portuguese the ships of Palos traveled to the Canary Islands and Guinea with their rich fisheries and the commercial possibility of trade in gold spices and slaves In the second half of the 15th century Palos reaches a population of three thousand The alota of Palos a type of customs warehouse paid the largest tribute of any such facility to the Duke of Medina Sidonia its primacy being such that it fishermen were recruited from other towns along the coast and two residents of Palos Juan Venegas and Pedro Alonso Cansino were placed in charge of giving licenses to fish in the Afro Atlantic waters from Cabo Bojador to the Rio de Oro which they leased from the Catholic Monarchs Isabella and Ferdinand 18 The Pinzon family of Palos EditThe Pinzon family were one of the leading families of 14th century Palos The family may have come originally from the Kingdom of Aragon but arrived in Andalusia either from la Montana now Cantabria or from Asturias 19 According to some historians this surname could have been a corruption of Espinzas or Pinzas tweezers Others say that the true family name was Martin a widespread name with a long tradition in the area 20 the name of their grandfather a sailor and diver in Palos who was dubbed Pinzon when he went blind that combined with his hobby of singing gave him the nickname Pinzon the Spanish word for chaffinch because owners of chaffinches sometimes blinded them supposedly making them sing more beautifully 3 His son also a sailor named Martin Pinzon was the father of the three Pinzon brothers Their mother was named Mayor Vicente 21 so the three were full brothers and bore the surnames Pinzon and Vicente N 3 see Spanish naming customs Martin Alonso Pinzon Edit Pinzon family house in Palos now Casa Museo de Martin Alonso Pinzon Main article Martin Alonso Pinzon Martin Alonso Pinzon c 1441 c 31 March 1493 was the oldest of the brothers and captain of the Pinta on Columbus s first voyage It appears that at quite a young age he shipped out on a locally based caravel as a grumete cabin boy His home now the Casa Museo de Martin Alonso Pinzon was on the old royal road to the Monastery of La Rabida 22 23 Martin s family contracted a marriage with a resident of the locality named Maria Alvarez 22 24 They had five children two sons Arias Perez and Juan Pinzon who participated in several expeditions to the Americas and three daughters Mayor Catalina and Leonor Leonor the youngest suffered frequent attacks of what was then called gota coral and would now be called epilepsy 25 His nautical experience and his leadership remained patent in the 1508 1536 lawsuits known as the pleitos colombinos where the witnesses indicated him as the leader of the comarca a region comparable to a shire He was also famous for his battles against the Portuguese in the War of the Castilian Succession N 4 It is probable that even while in Portugal before coming to Spain Columbus was aware of Martin Alonso because he was known for his participation in the war as well as for his incursions into the Canary Islands and Guinea 26 He was captain of the Pinta on Columbus s first voyage and supplied half a million medio cuento maravedis in coin toward the cost of the voyage 7 27 Thanks to his prestige as a shipowner and expert sailor and his fame throughout the Tinto Odiel region he was able to enlist the crew required for Columbus s first voyage 28 On 23 May 1492 the royal provision was read out to the residents of Palos 29 by which the Catholic Monarchs ordered that certain residents deliver two caravels to Columbus and travel with him on his voyage that he was making by command of Their Highnesses por mandado de Sus Altezas and that the town should respect the royal decision 29 However the locals did not comply The sailors of Palos had no confidence in embarking on this adventure with Columbus who was largely unknown to them Independent of their greater or lesser credence in his ideas the men of Palos found it difficult to support the Genovese sailor if he was not accompanied by a mariner known and respected in the town The venture risky and above all of uncertain profit did not present great attractions Opposition or indifference to Columbus s project was general 30 Statue of Martin Alonso Pinzon in Palos de la Frontera The Franciscans of the Monastery of La Rabida put Columbus in touch with Martin Alonso Pinzon Pero Vazquez de la Frontera an old mariner in the town very respected for his experience and a friend of Martin Alonso also had an important influence on the oldest Pinzon brother deciding to support the undertaking 31 not only morally but also economically 7 27 Martin Alonso dismissed the vessels that Columbus had already seized based on the royal order 32 and also dismissed the men he had enrolled supplying the enterprise with two caravels of his own 33 the Pinta and the Nina which he knew from his own experience would be better and more suitable boats 34 Furthermore he traveled through Palos Moguer and Huelva convincing his relatives and friends to enlist composing of them the best crew possible 32 35 He captained the caravel Pinta from which Rodrigo de Triana was to be the first person to sight American soil Columbus in his diary spoke favorably of Pinzon on several occasions 36 Nonetheless after they had discovered the West Indies the relationship between the two changed radically from 21 November 1492 when Martin Alonso separated from Columbus 37 Admiral Columbus launched a series of accusations of desertion against Pinzon N 5 and his brothers including Vicente who had saved him when the Santa Maria was shipwrecked N 6 38 Nonetheless much of the testimony in the pleitos colombinos as well as part of the specialized historiography 39 40 and investigators 41 does not agree that these things happened in this manner nor is there any accusation against Pinzon in Columbus s Letter on the First Voyage which Columbus wrote on his return For Martin Alonso the return voyage was lethal as the ships suffered from a great storm which resulted in great fatigue and exhaustion accumulated over many days of sailing Because of this Martin s recurrent fevers from which he suffered reactivated and he died a few days after returning from the New World 25 In fact he was taken from his ship in a stretcher and as Columbus arrived his friends took him to a farm that was on the boundary between Palos and Moguer It is possible that Martin s son Arias Perez Pinzon did not bring him directly to his house in Palos in order to protect him given that Columbus had threatened him earlier Another possibility is that this was because Martin did not get along well with Catalina Alonso 42 the woman who had been living with his father since he became a widower and with whom the father would have two illegitimate children Francisco and Ines Pinzon 43 According to testimony he was brought to the La Rabida Monastery where he died he was entombed there as was his wish 24 44 Francisco Martin Pinzon Edit Francisco Martin Pinzon c 1445 c 1502 N 7 was the second of the brothers On Columbus s first voyage he was the master second only to the captain of the Pinta the first ship to sight land in the Americas Although he was less known than his two brothers he played a major role both in voyages of discovery and in service to the Crown 45 His personal and family story is confused because several relatives shared this same name frequently leading historians to confuse them Nonetheless he seems to have been married to Juana Martin and to have had at least one daughter who we find documented as an orphan and poor huerfana y pobre 45 With his brother Vicente he made several voyages to Italy and Africa in service to the Crown In November 1493 together with Juan de Sevilla Rodrigo de Quexo and Fernando Quintero he led an assault on the Algerian coast In 1496 he brought money and supplies to the Spanish troops fighting in Naples Later he participated in Columbus s third and fourth voyages on the last of which according to his companion on many voyages Rodrigo Alvarez he died by drowning 45 Vicente Yanez Pinzon Edit Main article Vicente Yanez Pinzon Vicente Yanez Pinzon c 1462 c September 1514 was the youngest brother He was captain of the Nina on the first voyage of discovery He later made other discoveries on his own account historians consider him the discoverer of Brazil along with his cousin Diego de Lepe 46 Considerably younger than his brothers it is likely that his name Yanez came from Rodrigo Yanez a bailiff alguacil of Palos who would then have been his godfather according to the custom of the place 10 Tradition in Palos indicates that he lived on the Calle de la Ribera From a young age he learned the art of navigation from his oldest brother and from adolescence he participated in combat and in military assaults as he happened to reach this age during the War of the Castilian Succession He married twice first to Teresa Rodriguez with whom he had two daughters Ana Rodriguez and Juana Gonzalez After his final return from the Yucatan in 1509 he married Ana Nunez de Trujillo with whom he lived in Triana across the river from Seville probably until his death 47 The first we hear of Vicente Yanez is when he is denounced for assaults on Aragonese boats 48 49 some with his oldest brother N 8 when he was only 15 years old This was between 1477 and 1479 during the War of the Castilian Succession with Portugal in which Palos participated actively and through which its habitual shortage of grain was aggravated its residents complained of hunger Royal orders to various places that were supposed to supply Palos with cereals N 9 were disobeyed 50 The Pinzon brothers taking on their responsibilities as natural leaders of the district attacked caravels that were transporting mainly grain 50 Vicente immediately supported his brother Martin Alonso when Martin decided to back Columbus s undertaking The two worked together to enlist men from the Tinto Odiel for the risky voyage 10 He was chosen as captain of the Nina and distinguished himself during the voyage This involved among other accomplishments helping to put down several attempts at mutiny together with his older brother He provided support both to Columbus and the rest of the crew after the Santa Maria was wrecked With his flagship gone the admiral made his return voyage in the Nina captained by Vicente who provided all the help necessary for a successful return voyage He made several more expeditions to the Americas the most important being the voyage to the mouth of the Amazon which constituted the discovery of Brazil in early 1500 51 That expedition was an economic failure 47 In 1505 he was made the governor of Puerto Rico 51 Later in 1506 he returned to the Caribbean to search for a passage to the Pacific Ocean He explored all of the Caribbean coast of Central America and the Yucatan Peninsula 11 According to the chronicler Gonzalo Fernandez de Oviedo y Valdes Vicente Yanez died in 1514 probably at the end of September It is not known precisely where he is buried but Oviedo states that it is somewhere in the cemetery of Triana 11 The Pinzon brothers and the discovery of America Edit Columbus and the Pinzon brothers arrive in America Painting by Dioscoro Puebla 1862 The participation of the Pinzon brothers was crucial to Columbus s first voyage especially in that few were disposed to enlist with Columbus until Martin Alonso a wealthy and famous shipbuilder in the Tinto Odiel region gave his support to the enterprise 31 Once Martin Alonso gave his support he undertook a veritable campaign on behalf of the undertaking His support and that of his brothers and of other distinguished families of mariners in the region served to recruit the necessary crew sailors from Palos Huelva and even from beyond Andalusia The testimony in the pleitos colombinos indicates that the Pinzon brothers above all Martin brought such diligence to secure and animate the people as if what were discovered were for him and his sons 52 Among these other families the Nino brothers of Moguer stand out their prestige and influence brought the men of Moguer to unite around the enterprise 28 During the voyage of discovery they demonstrated on several occasions their gifts as expert mariners and as leaders in that they knew how to master the most diverse and difficult situations For example they were able to continue sailing even after the damage that occurred to the Pinta when the tiller broke before they reached the Canary Islands N 10 and when between 6 and 7 October 1492 Columbus was unable to reestablish discipline among the tired and discouraged crew of the Santa Maria Martin Alonso with his gift of command managed to resolve the situation N 11 Martin Alonso suggested to Columbus the change of course on 6 October 1492 N 12 A few days later on 9 October he proposed a compromise that won a few more days from the restless crew 12 The course he urged brought the expedition to landfall on Guanahani on 12 October 1492 When the Santa Maria wrecked on 25 December Vicente Yanez in command of the Nina went to the rescue of those left in this difficult situation N 13 For these and other acts the Pinzon brothers have a very notable place in the history of the discovery of America and are considered by historians as co discoverers of America 53 in that without their help support and courage Columbus probably could not have achieved his enterprise of discovery at least not in that time and place 54 Other voyages EditAlthough the oldest of the Pinzon brothers Martin Alonso died a few days after returning from Columbus s first voyage that was by no means the end of the participation of the Pinzons in voyages of discovery and other sea journeys Francisco and Vicente made various voyages to Italy and Africa in service to the Crown As mentioned above in November 1493 Francisco along with Juan de Sevilla Rodrigo de Quexo and Fernando Quintero led an assault on the Algerian coast In 1496 they brought money and supplies to the Spanish troops fighting in Naples In 1498 he participated in Columbus s third voyage in which for the first time the Admiral arrived on the continent of South America Later in 1498 the Crown decided to end Columbus s monopoly on voyages of discovery The series of voyages by other mariners are generally known as the minor voyages or the Andalusian voyages of discovery After contracting with the crown on 19 November 1499 Vicente left the port of Palos with four small caravels crewed largely by his relatives and friends among them his brother Francisco and also the famous physician of Palos Garci Fernandez an early supporter of Columbus s first voyage On this voyage they discovered Brazil and the Amazon River 55 56 57 58 On 5 September 1501 the Crown signed an agreement with Vicente in which among other things he was named Captain and Governor of the Cabo de Santa Maria de la Consolacion later Cabo de Santo Agostinho 59 In 1502 Francisco traveled with Columbus on his fourth and final voyage it is on this voyage he is believed to have died by drowning Vicente continued to travel back and forth across the Atlantic to fulfill his obligations as Captain General and Governor He also participated as one of the experts brought together by the Crown in the Junta de Navegantes in Burgos in 1508 to take up anew the subject of the search for a passage to the Spice Islands On his final voyage along with captain Juan Diaz de Solis he followed the coasts of Darien Veragua and the Gulf of Paria now Venezuela Colombia Panama Costa Rica Nicaragua Honduras and Guatemala Not finding the desired passage he rounded the Yucatan Peninsula and entered into the Gulf of Mexico to the extent of 23 5º north latitude bringing about one of the first European contacts with the Aztec civilization 60 The Pinzon coat of arms Upon returning from this voyage Vicente Yanez married for the second time and settled in Triana In 1513 he testified against Columbus in the pleitos colombinos In 1514 he was ordered to accompany Pedrarias Davila to Darien but he was not well enough and begged to be excused That was on 14 March 1514 and it is the last primary source document in which he is mentioned Coat of arms granted by Charles I of Spain EditIn 1519 a petition to Charles I of Spain headed by Juan Rodriguez Mafra requested the grant of a coat of arms to the Pinzons and other mariners of Palos exposing the lamentable situation of the descendants of those mariners who had offered such service to the Crown The king finally conceded to the Pinzons their descendants and family members a coat of arms consisting of a shield with three caravels natural on the sea from each a hand points to an island representing the first land discovered in the New World Around that a border with anchors and crowns N 14 See also EditLugares colombinos List of explorers Juan de la Cosa Columbian Exchange or The Grand ExchangeNotes Edit A document in the Archivo de Simancas in the Registro general del Sello dated March 1505 gives the terms of the inheritance of the estate of the Pinzon brothers mother This document is the source for the parents of the brothers being Martin Alonso Pinzon father and Mayor Vicente mother who left them some houses in the Barrero neighborhood of Palos indicating that the family had been in Palos for at least one generation before the brothers Cited in Gould 1984 p 496 497 Manzano Manzano amp Manzano Fernandez Heredia 1988 Vol I p 5 6 Dentro del proceso de apelacion de la sentencia de Duenas pleito iniciado por Diego Colon y que continuo Luis Colon en probanza realizada en 1532 por Juan Martin Pinzon hijo de Martin Alonso Pinzon la primera pregunta del interrogatorio dice lo siguiente Within the appeal trial against of the Duenas lawsuit filed by Columbus s son Diego Colon continued by Diego s son Luis Colon in testimony made in 1532 by John Martin Pinzon son of Martin Alonso Pinzon the first question reads First if they knew Martin Alonso Pincon now deceased resident of and born in the town of Palos and Maria Alvares his legitimage wife who dies in the street of Nuestra Senora de la Rabida and if they knew said Martin Alonso Pincon and said Maria Alvares his wife were husband and wife under the order of the Church of the Santa Madre and in the course of their marriage procreated and produced their legitimate and natural son Juan Martin Pincon who now lives in the town of Huelva and in having had him they were taken and commonly reputed and that is the said Juan Martin Lo primero si conoscieron a Martin Alonso Pincon ya difunto vezino e natural que fue desta villa de Palos e a Maria Alvares su legitima muger los quales moravan en la calle de Nuestra Senora de la Rabida e si saben que el dicho Martin Alonso Pincon e la dicha Maria Alvares su muger fueron casados y velados segund horden de la Santa Madre Yglesia e constante su matrymonio ovieron e procrearon por su hijo legitimo e natural a Juan Martin Pincon que agora vive en la villa de Huelva e en tal posesion fueron habidos e tenidos e comunmente reputados e lo es el tal dicho Juan Martin To all of this the response was affirmative The testimony is reproduced in Muro Orejon Antonio Perez Ebid Florentino Morales Padron Francisco 1964 Pleitos colombinos rollo del proceso sobre la apelacion de la sentencia de Duenas 1534 1536 Sevilla Escuela de Estudios Hispanoamericanos de Sevilla Cited in Fernandez Duro Cesareo 1883 Colon y Pinzon informe relativo a los pormenores de descubrimiento del Nuevo Mundo presentado a la Real Academia de la Historia Madrid Imprenta y Fundacion de Manuel Tello p 230 The link is to archive org Ortega 1980 Tomo III p 152 153 Manzano Manzano amp Manzano Fernandez Heredia 1988 Vol I p 6 Often their middle names Alonso Yanez and Martin which they would have taken from their godfathers at their baptism have been confused with surnames leading to the misconception that they were half brothers Testimony in the pleitos colombinos Gonzalo Martin vecino of Huelva M A Pinzon was famous during his lifetime and neither on sea nor land the King had no other man so valiant nor brave as him and in the time that there was a war with Portugal all the Portuguese feared him because every day he took them and he lit them set their boats on fire and he made much war upon them Gonzalo Martin vecino de Huelva M A Pinzon tenia fama en el tiempo que era vivo y que por la mar ni por la tierra no tenia el Rey otro hombre tan valiente ni tan esforzado como el e que en el tiempo que habia guerra con Portugal todos los portugueses lo temian porque cada dia los tomaba e los prendia e les facia mucha guerra Francisco Medel He was very knowledgeable in the art of navigation on all the seas and no other man in all the Kingdom was so ardent for the things of war as he nor as determined nor whose person had so much credit to do whatever thing Francisco Medel era hombre muy sabido en el arte de navegar por todos os mares e era hombre que en todo el Reyno no habia otro tan ardido para las cosas de la guerra como el ni tan determinado ni que tanto credito tuviese su persona para facer cualquiera cosa Cited in Ortega 1980 Tomo III p 47 Ship s Diary Wednesday 21 November 1492 This day Martin Alonso Pinzon departed with the caravel Pinta without the obedience and will of the Admiral out of greed he says that an Indian that the Admiral had ordered to be put in that caravel had told him where to get much gold the Spanish here le habia de dar mucho oro is a bit obscure but this seems to be the sense and so he went away without waiting without cause of bad weather just because he wanted to And here the Admiral says He did and said many other things to me Miercoles 21 de noviembre Este dia se aparto Martin Alonso Pinzon con la carabela Pinta sin obediencia y voluntad del Almirante por codicia dice que pensando que un indio que el Almirante habia mandado poner en aquella carabela le habia de dar mucho oro y asi se fue sin esperar sin causa de mal tiempo sino porque quiso Y dice aqui el Almirante otras muchas me tiene hecho y dicho Diario de la primera navegacion Narrative assembled by Fray Bartolome de las Casas Ship s Diary Tuesday 8 January 1493 With such strong winds from the east and southeast he did not leave that day because of which he ordered that that caravel be supplied with water and firewood and all that was necessary for the entire voyage because although he intended to travel by ship along that whole Hispaniola coast as far as he could but because those he put in the caravels for commanders were brothers to wit Martin Alonso Pinzon and Vicente Yanez and others who followed him with arrogance and greed estimating that everything was already theirs not looking at the honor the Admiral had given them they had not obeyed and did not obey his commands before they had said and done many unmerited things against him and this Martin Alonso left him from 21 November until 6 January without any cause or reason except disobedience all of which the Admiral had suffered and been silent to bring a good end to his voyage so that to leave behind such bad company with whom he says that it was necessary to dissimulate although they were lawless people and though he had to say while with them that they were good men because it was not the time to speak of punishment he agreed to return and stop no more as quickly as was possible An effort to make sense of a rather obscure phrase y aunque tenia dice que consigo muchos hombres de bien possibly alternatively and though he had to say that they had many good men with them Martes 8 de eneroPor el viento Este y Sudeste mucho que ventaba no partio este dia por lo cual mando que se guarneciese la carabela de agua y lena y de todo lo necesario para todo el viaje porque aunque tenia voluntad de costear toda la costa de aquella Espanola que andando el camino pudiese pero porque los que puso en las carabelas por capitanes eran hermanos conviene a saber Martin Alonso Pinzon y Vicente Yanez y otros que le seguian con soberbia y codicia estimando que todo era ya suyo no mirando la honra que el Almirante les habia hecho y dado no habian obedecido ni obedecian sus mandamientos antes hacian y decian muchas cosas no debidas contra el y el Martin Alonso lo dejo desde el 21 de noviembre hasta el 6 de enero sin causa alguna ni razon sino por su desobediencia todo lo cual el Almirante habia sufrido y callado por dar buen fin a su viaje asi que por salir de tan mala compania con los cuales dice que cumplia disimular aunque eran gente desmandada y aunque tenia dice que consigo muchos hombres de bien pero no era tiempo de entender en castigo acordo volverse y no parar mas con la mayor prisa que le fue posible Diario de la primera navegacion Narrative assembled by Bartolome de las Casas Fernandez Carrion says Francisco Martin Pinzon was born entre 1445 y 1450 and that Rodrigo Alvarez testified in 1514 in the Pleitos Colombinos that he had died in 1502 PARES Comision al asistente de Sevilla a peticion de Bernaldo Galamo y consortes vecinos de Ibiza sobre la presa de un ballener que les fue tomado por Martin Alonso y Vicente Yanez Pinzon vecinos de Palos Archivo General de Simancas Unidad Cancilleria Registro del Sello de Corte RGS 148001 54 PARES 1477 Letter to the councils and residents of the cities of Seville and Jerez de la Frontera at the petition of the council and residents of the town of Palos ordering them to allow them to take from said cities all the bread they need for their Carta a los concejos y vecinos de las ciudades de Sevilla y de Jerez de la Frontera a peticion del concejo y vecinos de la villa de Palos ordenandoles que dejen a estos sacar de dichas ciudades todo el pan que necesitaren para su provision Archivo General de Simancas Unidad Cancilleria Registro del Sello de Corte Signatura RGS 147705 194 1478 Provision to the petition of the town of Palos to be given a letter allowing it to take bread from certain cities in Andalusia given in virtue of laws by the court of Burgos of 1453 and Cordoba of 1455 that are inserted Provision a peticion de la villa de Palos para que le sea guardada una carta facultandole la saca de pan de ciertas ciudades de Andalucia dada en virtud de leyes de cortes de Burgos de 1453 y Cordoba de 1455 que se insertan Archivo General de Simancas Unidad Cancilleria Registro del Sello de Corte Signatura RGS 147808 95 Ship s Diary Monday 6 August 1492 The tiller of the caravel Pinta the caravel where Martin Alonso Pinzon was snapped or was put out of joint of which the work of one Gomez Rascon and Cristobal Quintero who owned the caravel was believed and suspected because they regretted going on this voyage and the Admiral said that before leaving there had been a certain amount of hesitation and hubbub about them Seeing it there the Admiral was quite perturbed not to be able to help that caravel without danger to his own but that he was a bit less worried knowing that Martin Alonso Pinzon was a vigorous and ingenious person Finally they went between day and night twenty nine leagues During the crossing he showed his abilities as a sailor when he resolved the problem of the broken tiller of the Pinta and was able to continue sailing Lunes 6 de agostoSalto o desencajose el gobernario a la carabela Pinta donde iba Martin Alonso Pinzon a lo que se creyo y sospecho por industria de un Gomez Rascon y Cristobal Quintero cuya era la carabela porque le pesaba ir en aquel viaje y dice el Almirante que antes de que partiese habian hallado en ciertos reveses y grisquetas como dicen a los dichos Viose alli el Almirante en gran turbacion por no poder ayudar a la dicha carabela sin su peligro y dice que alguna pena perdia con saber que Martin Alonso Pinzon era persona esforzada y de buen ingenio En fin anduvieron entre dia y noche veintinueve leguas Durante la travesia demostro sus habilidades de marinero cuando resolvio el problema de la rotura del timon de La Pinta y pudo seguir navegando Diario de la primera navegacion Narrative assembled by Bartolome de las Casas Testimony in the pleitos colombinos by Hernan Perez Mateos former pilot of Palos age 80 given in Santo Domingo 26 January 1536 Archivo General de Indias Seccion Patronato Signatura PATRONATO 12 N 2 R 14 as they did not discover land those who went with the said Columbus wanted to mutiny and rise against him saying they were lost and then the said Columbus had said to Martin Alonso what was going on among these people and what it seemed to him they ought to do and that the said Martin Alonso Pinzon had responded to him Sir hang half a dozen of them and throw them into the sea and if you dare not I and my brothers will get up close to them and do it that an armada that left with the mandate of such high princes not have to return without good news And that he knew that with that they would regain their spirits and the said Columbus had said Martin Alonso lets make things good with these gentlemen and travel another eight days and if in that time we don t find land we will give another order on what we ought to do como no descubrian tierra los que venian con el dicho Colon se querian amotinar y alzar contra el diciendo que iban perdidos y entonces el dicho Colon habia dicho a Martin Alonso lo que pasaba con aquella gente y que que le parescia que debian hacer e que el dicho Martin Alonso Pinzon le habia respondido Senor ahorque vuesa merced a media docena dellos e echelos al mar y si no se atreve yo e mis hermanos barloaremos sobre ellos y lo haremos que armada que salio con mandato de tan altos principes no ha de volver atras sin buenas nuevas Y que sabe que con esto se animaron y el dicho Colon habia dicho Martin Alonso con estos hidalgos hayamonos bien y andemos otros ocho dias e si en estos no hayamos tierra daremos otra orden en lo que debemos hacer Cited in Ortega 1980 Tomo II p 213 Ship s Diary Saturday 6 October 1492 He navigated his way to the west Then went forty leagues between day and night he told the people thirty three leagues That night Martin Alonso said it would be set course southwest by west and to the Admiral it seemed that this Martin Alonso said this because of the island of Cipango Japan and the Admiral saw that if they missed it they could not soon find land quickly and that it would be better off to go first to the mainland and later to the islands Sabado 6 de octubre Navego su camino al Oeste o Gueste que es lo mismo Anduvieron cuarenta leguas entre dia y noche conto a la gente treinta y tres leguas Esta noche dijo Martin Alonso que seria bien navegar a la cuarta del Oeste a la parte del Sudoeste y al Almirante parecio que no decia esto Martin Alonso por la isla de Cipango y el Almirante veia que si la erraban que no pudieran tan presto tomar tierra y que era mejor una vez ir a la tierra firme y despues a las islas Diario de la primera navegacion Narrative assembled by Bartolome de las Casas Ship s Diary Tuesday 25 December Christmas Day When he saw that it was his people who were fleeing they had been put in a boat to assist the grounded Santa Maria but instead tried to run away and that the waters were dwindling and that the ship was already crosswise to the sea not seeing any other way he ordered that the mast be cut and to lighten the ship by getting rid of everything they could to see if they could get her out and as the waters over the bank on which they were grounded were still dwindling there was no remedy and she was listing toward the cross sea given that there was little or no sea under them and then the planking opened up but not the ship that is the ship did not yet break up The Admiral went to the caravel that is the Nina to put in safety the men from the ship in the caravel and as there was now a light breeze from the land and also much of the night remained and they did not know how far the banks extended he kept getting on and off until daytime and later went to the ship from within the shoal of the bank Martes 25 de diciembre dia de Navidad Cuando el Almirante vio que se huian y que era su gente y las aguas menguaban y estaba ya la nao la mar de traves no viendo otro medio mando cortar el mastil y alijar de la nao todo cuanto pudieron para ver si podian sacarla y como todavia las aguas menguasen no se pudo remediar y tomo lado hacia la mar traviesa puesto que la mar era poco o nada y entonces se abrieron los conventos y no la nao El Almirante fue a la carabela para poner en cobro la gente de la nao en la carabela y como ventase ya vientecillo de la tierra y tambien aun quedaba mucho de la noche ni supiesen cuanto duraban los bancos temporejo a la corda hasta que fue de dia y luego fue a la nao por de dentro de la restinga del banco Diario de la primera navegacion Narrative assembled by Bartolome de las Casas Archivo General de Indias Seccion Indiferente General Signatura INDIFERENTE 420 L 8 F 146R 147V Royal Provision of King Don Carlos conceded to Juan Rodriguez Mafra pilot Gomez Munoz chaplain Diego Martin Pinzon Alvaro Alonso notaries Juan Pinzon and Alonso Gonzalez residents and naturals of the town of Palos the mercy of the power to use a coat of arms with three caravels from each of them a hand reaches out and on the border some anchors and some crowns doing to them said mercy in reward for the services performed in the discovery of the Indies by their respective ancestors Martin Alonso Pinzon Vicente Yanez Pinzon Andres Gonzalez Pinzon Diego de Lepe and Miguel Alonso Real Provision del Rey D Carlos concediendo a Juan Rodriguez Mafra piloto Gomez Munoz capellan Diego Martin Pinzon Alvaro Alonso notarios Juan Pinzon y Alonso Gonzalez vecinos y naturales de la villa de Palos la merced de poder usar un escudo de armas con tres carabelas de cada una de las cuales salga una mano y por orlas unas ancoras y unos corazones haciendoles dicha merced en premio a los servicios que en el descubrimiento de las Indias hicieron sus antepasados respectivos Martin Alonso Pinzon Vicente Yanez Pinzon Andres Gonzalez Pinzon Diego de Lepe y Miguel Alonso Iniguez Sanchez Arjona 1991 p 105 106 de Navarette Martin Fernadez 1829 Viages menores y los de Vespucio Poblaciones en el Darien suplemento al tomo II in Spanish pp 428 Fernandez de Oviedo Gonzalo 1535 Historia general y natural de las Indias islas y tierra firme del mar oceano Real Academia de la Historia 1851 p 21 Online on Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes de las Casas Bartolome Historia de las Indias Madrid Edicion del Marques de la Fuensanta del Valle Imprenta de Miguel Ginesta pp 255 256 Cited in Gould 1984 p 252 260 Verdera Nito 1994 Sobre els Pinzon y Palos PDF Butlleti del Centre d Estudis Colombins in Catalan Barcelona CEC Omnium Cultural 14 8 10 D L B 16689 1993 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 4 June 2009 a b Izquierdo Labrado Julio 2003 Breve historia de Palos de la Frontera Archived from the original on 27 December 2007 Retrieved 3 October 2008 de Palencia Alfonso Decada III libro 26 capitulo 6 Alvarez de Toledo 2000 Cap El combate por el trono Ortega 1980 Tomo III p 37 110 a b c de las Casas Bartolome 1875 Tomo I Capitulo XXXIV pag 256 Historia de las Indias Retrieved 18 October 2008 On the website of the Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes Ortega 1980 Tomo III pags 135 137 Gould 1984 p 132 et seq a b c Ortega 1980 Tomo III p 111 112 a b c Izquierdo Labrado Julio 1999 Vicente Yanez Pinzon Archived from the original on 19 October 2007 Retrieved 18 October 2008 a b c Jose Manuel Azcona Pastor Possible paradises Basque emigration to Latin America University of Nevada Press 2004 pg 14 1 a b Izquierdo Labrado Julio 1993 Relaciones de Palos de la Frontera con el Algarve a finales del siglo XV mgar net Retrieved 18 May 2009 Ladero Quesada Miguel Angel July December 1978 Palos en visperas del Descubrimiento 153 154 Revista de Indias 477 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Alvarez de Toledo 2000 Cap El Palos del Descubrimiento Julio Izquierdo Labrado Palos de la Frontera en el Antiguo Regimen 1380 1830 Huelva 1986 Gonzalez Gomez Antonio Las Ordenanzas Municipales de Palos de la Frontera 1484 1521 Historia Instituciones Documentos Numero 3 University of Sevilla 1976 Archivo General de Simancas Registro General del Sello 1491 VIII fol 78 Gould Alice B 1927 Documentos ineditos sobre la hidalguia y genealogia de la familia Pinzon tomo 91 Madrid Boletin de la Real Academia de la Historia 319 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Cited in Manzano Manzano amp Manzano Fernandez Heredia 1988 Vol I p 5 Ortega 1980 Tomo III p 31 Archivo General de Simancas Registro General del Sello March 1505 Cited in Gould 1984 Pags 496 497 a b Fernandez Duro 1892 Pag 28 Instituto Andaluz del Patrimonio Historico Junta de Andalucia Casa de Martin Alonso Pinzon Retrieved 26 October 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code author code help www elpais com Descubrir el hogar de Pinzon El Pais Retrieved 5 May 2009 a b Alvarez de Toledo 2000 Cap El primer viaje a b Izquierdo Labrado Julio 1985 Martin Alonso Pinzon Archived from the original on 3 August 2004 Retrieved 18 October 2008 Pulido Robio Jose 1952 Algunas consideraciones sobre unos documentos referentes a Palos inmediatos al descubrimiento IX Anuario de Estudios Americanos Art 2 p 45 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Asensio 1892 p 66 68 Fernandez Duro 1892 p 50 56 Ortega 1980 pg 37 110 Historia de la navegacion Martin Alonso Pinzon mgar net Retrieved 28 August 2009 Izquierdo Labrado Julio Martin Alonso Pinzon es geocites com Archived from the original on 27 July 2009 Retrieved 28 August 2009 a b Diputacion de Huelva Los marineros de Huelva Archived from the original on 10 August 2009 Retrieved 18 October 2008 a b Provision de los Reyes Catolicos que mandaron a Diego Rodriguez Prieto y a otros companeros vecinos de la villa de Palos para que tuvieran preparadas dos carabelas al servicio de Cristobal Colon Texto completo permanent dead link Granada 30 April 1492 Archivo General de Indias Seccion Patronato Signatura PATRONATO 295 N 3 Castellano antiguo Ibarra y Rodriguez Eduardo 1892 Don Fernando el Catolico y el descubrimiento de America Imprenta de Fortaner Madrid pp 180 184 The link is to archive org a b Fernandez Duro Cesareo 22 January 1892 Pinzon en el descubrimiento de las Indias PDF Ano XXXVI Num III Madrid La Ilustracion Espanola y Americana 46 47 Retrieved 4 June 2009 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Online on Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes a b Ibarra y Rodriguez Eduardo 1892 Cap VIII Don Fernando el Catolico y el descubrimiento de America Madrid Imprenta de Fortaner p 184 Menendez Pidal Gonzalo June 2003 Tres puntos finales Cristobal Colon Hacia una nueva imagen del mundo Centro de Estudios Politicos y Constitucionales 2003 ISBN 978 84 259 1245 0 Gould 1984 The actual ownership of the Nina is in some question quite possibly Pinzon had a lease on it rather than outright ownership Arranz Marquez 2006 p 207 208 Diario de a bordo del primer viaje de Cristobal Colon texto completo complete text of the Ship s diary of Columbus s first voyage as assembled by Fray Bartolome de las Casas Hereafter Ship s Diary Monday 6 August Thursday 9 August Arranz Marquez 2006 p 217 Manzano Manzano amp Manzano Fernandez Heredia 1988 Vol I p 136 138 Fernandez Duro 1892 p 66 108 Rivera 1945 Cap X La isla de la discordia p 121 136 Iniguez Sanchez Arjona 1991 p 65 67 Diaz Trechulo Spinola Maria Lourdes 2006 Cristobal Colon Segunda ed Ediciones Palabra p 91 ISBN 978 84 9840 020 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Manuel Lopez Flores 1964 Colon no descubrio America Madrid Editorial Clasica pp 253 262 DL M 7 245 1964 Archivo General de Simancas Registro General del Sello 12 October 1493 Cited in Gould 1984 p 254 Martin Alonso Pinzon Festa de Arribada Ayuntamiento de Baiona Accessed online 2010 01 12 Testimony in the pleitos colombinos by Francisco Medel and Hernan Perez Mateos cited in Ortega 1980 Tomo III p 94 103 a b c Fernandez Carrion Miguel Hector Biografia de Francisco Martin Pinzon Archived 20 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Biblioteca Digital de la Asociacion Espanola de Americanistas This is an expanded version of a biography for the Diccionario Biografico Espanol published by the Real Academia de Historia de Espana Accessed online 2010 01 14 Emilio Soler Pascual Exploradores y viajeros por Espana 1492 Vicente Yanez Pinzon Archived 12 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes Of Brazil Soler Pascual concludes Pinzon con toda seguridad habia descubierto tierra brasilena meses antes de que lo hiciera el portugues Alvares Cabral en abril de 1500 Pinzon in all certainty had discovered Brazilian territory months before the same was done by the Portuguese Alvares Cabral in April 1500 a b Gil Juan September December 1987 Sobre la Vida Familiar de Vicente Yanez Pinzon Revista de Indias XLVII 181 645 754 Coll y Julia Nuria 1950 Vicente Yanez Pinzon descubridor del Brasil corsario en Cataluna Hispania revista espanola de historia Madrid Instituto Jeronimo Zurita CSIC Nº 40 vol 10 594 597 Manzano Manzano amp Manzano Fernandez Heredia 1988 Vol III p 1 2 a b Manzano Manzano amp Manzano Fernandez Heredia 1988 Vol I p 21 25 a b Marshall Cavendish Corporation Explorers and Exploration Volume 7 pg 551 2 Fernandez Duro Cesareo 22 January 1892 Pinzon en el descubrimiento de las Indias PDF Ano XXXVI Num III Madrid La ilustracion espanola y americana 46 47 Retrieved 4 June 2009 traia tanta diligencia en allegar la gente e animalia como si para el y para sus hijos hobiera de ser lo que se descubriese a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Online on Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes Manzano Manzano amp Manzano Fernandez Heredia 1988 Vol III p 5 Arranz Marquez 2006 p 208 Gould 1984 p 93 dialnet unirioja es El descubrimiento del Brasil por Vicente Yanez Pinzon el cabo de Santo Agostinho University of La Rioja Retrieved 25 December 2007 ibge gov br Os espanhois no Brasil seculos XV e XVI in Portuguese Ministerio do Planejamento Orcamento e Gestao Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatistica Archived from the original on 5 June 2008 Retrieved 25 December 2007 amerispan com Los espanoles descubrieron Brasil AmeriSpan Study Abroad Retrieved 25 December 2007 Brasilalacarta com Historia de Brasil Desde los antecedentes indigenas hasta la actualidad Archived from the original on 30 December 2007 Retrieved 25 December 2007 Izquierdo Labrado Julio Capitulacion otorgada a Vicente Yanez Pinzon Transcription of the original Archived from the original on 27 October 2009 Retrieved 23 December 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link cervantesvirtual com 1492 Vicente Yanez Pinzon Biblioteca virtual Cervantes Archived from the original on 12 February 2008 Retrieved 23 December 2007 References EditAlvarez de Toledo Luisa Isabel 2000 Africa versus America la fuerza del paradigma Junta Islamica Centro de Documentacion y Publicaciones ISBN 978 84 607 1135 3 archived from the original on 15 December 2009 Arranz Marquez Luis 2006 Cristobal Colon misterio y grandeza Marcial Pons Historia ISBN 978 84 96467 23 1 Asensio Jose Maria 1892 Martin Alonso Pinzon estudio historico La Espana Moderna Online at archive org Fernandez Duro Cesareo 1892 Pinzon en el descubrimiento de las Indias Madrid Sucesores de Rivadeneyra Gould Alice B 1984 Nueva lista documentada de los tripulantes de Colon en 1492 Real Academia de la Historia ISBN 978 84 600 3829 0 The link is to an abridged copy on Google Books Iniguez Sanchez Arjona Benito 1991 Martin Alonso Pinzon el calumniado Seville Haro ISBN 978 84 604 1012 6 Manzano Manzano Juan Manzano Fernandez Heredia Ana Maria 1988 Los Pinzones y el Descubrimiento de America Ediciones de Cultura Hispanica ISBN 978 84 7232 442 8 Ortega Angel 1980 1925 La Rabida Historia documental critica 4 vol facsimile ed Diputacion Provincial de Huelva Servicio de Publicaciones ISBN 978 84 500 3860 6 Rivera Carlos 1945 Martin Alonso Pinzon Ayamonte Huelva Imprenta Asilo ProvincialFurther reading EditBegaud Louis Theodule 1944 Le premier Capitaine au long cours Martin Alonso Pinzon associe de Christophe Colomb Organisateur et animateur de l expedition de 1492 in French Paris Fernandez de Navarrete Martin 1829 Coleccion de los viages y descubrimientos que hicieron por mar los espanoles desde fines del siglo XV Con varios documentos ineditos concernientes a la historia de la Marina Castellana y de los establecimientos espanoles en indias Imprenta real Fernandez Vial Ignacio 2004 Los marinos descubridores onubenses Huelva Diputacion Provincial de Huelva ISBN 84 8163 352 6 Gomez Domingo 1968 Vindicacion del piloto de la carabela Pinta Martin Alonso Pinzon Mundi hispanico Madrid Ano 21 241 Izquierdo Labrado Julio 1987 Palos de la Frontera en el Antiguo Regimen 1380 1830 Huelva Instituto de Cooperacion Iberoamericana y Ayuntamiento de Palos de la Frontera DL H 110 87 Izquierdo Labrado Julio 2004 Palermos ilustres Huelva Ayuntamiento de Palos de la Frontera ISBN 84 606 3612 7 Lopez de Gomara Francisco March 2006 Historia general de las Indias Linkgua Ediciones S L ISBN 978 84 96290 13 6 Morales Padron Francisco 1961 Las relaciones entre Colon y Martin Alonso Pinzon Actas Lisbon 3 433 442 Szaszdi Adam 1985 El descubrimiento de Puerto Rico en 1492 por Martin Alonso Pinzon Revista de historia San Juan Ano 1 2 9 45 Varela Marcos Jesus 2005 Colon y Pinzon descubridores de America Universidad de Valladolid ISBN 978 84 933938 0 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pinzon brothers amp oldid 1122721831, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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