- Fortún Ximénez
Fortún Ximénez (died 1533) was Spanish sailor who led a mutiny during an early expedition along the coast of
Mexico and founded the first knownEurope an settlement in Baja California.Ximénez was the pilot of a ship sent by
Hernán Cortés and captained by Diego de Becerra in 1533 to travel north along the coast ofNew Spain from present-dayManzanillo, Colima , in search of two ships that had been lost without a trace on a similar voyage the previous year. The previous voyages had been in search of the "Strait of Anián" (the much-hoped-forNorthwest Passage ) and theIsland of California , named for the mythical places in the romance novel, "Las sergas de Esplandián " previously published in Spain and popular among theconquistador s. The fictional California was a terrestrial paradise populated only by dark-skinned women. During the voyage, Ximénez lead a revolt in the which captain was killed. The mutineers then landed near present day La Paz, on the southern tip of theBaja California peninsula , which the mutineers believed to be the Island of California.Ximénez was killed in a clash with the local Natives. The survivors returned to New Spain with the story of having black
pearl s, which prompted further exploration of the "Island" of Santa Cruz, as Cortez named the peninsula.The stories of the survivors prompted several follow-up expeditions by Cortés in the following years, which resulted in very short-lived pearl fisheries.
ee also
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Francisco de Ulloa ources
*Caughey, John W. "California", second edition (Englewood: Prentice-Hall, 1953), 45-46.
*Chapman, Charles E. "A History of California: The Spanish Period" (New York: The MacMillan Co., 1921), 50-51.
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