- Juan de Cuéllar
Juan José Ruperto de Cuéllar y Villanueba (ca. 1739, probably Real Sitio de
Aranjuez ,Spain —1801,Iloco ,Philippines ) was a Spanish pharmacologist and botanist. From 1786 to 1797 he was the leader of a royal botanical expedition to thePhilippines .Early life
According to his biographer María Belén Bañas Llanos, Juan de Cuéllar was born in Aranjuez into a family employed in the care of plants in the royal gardens. His parents also ran a pharmacy. His father died when he was young, and his mother remarried, to a man the king had named regent of the pharmacy. When his mother also died (in 1760), he sold the olive groves that constituted his inheritance and moved to Madrid.
In December 1760 he bought a pharmacy on Atocha Street in Madrid, and entered the Royal College of Pharmacists. After completing the course, he continued his association with the College in various important capacities — first secretary, general solicitor, "fiscal", and second secretary, at different times. Around 1781 he was forced to give up his pharmacy for financial reasons.
In 1783 and 1784 he attended classes at the
Real Jardín Botánico de Madrid , in a program to impart scientific knowledge to pharmacists. In a letter datedDecember 17 ,1784 , Cuéllar wrote to Cristóbal Nieto de Piña, vice president of the Royal Medical Society of Seville, that he was compiling aherbarium based on the system ofCarolus Linnaeus and asking for Nieto's recommendation to fill the vacant position of botanist in Seville. The Royal Medical Society of Seville gave him the appointment onMay 2 ,1785 , but he was unable to accept immediately because he had also been named royal commissioner inCádiz .Work on Ruiz and Pavón specimens
The "El Peruano" had arrived in Cádiz on
February 21 ,1785 , carrying part of the scientific material sent back from Peru and Chile by the royal expedition underHipólito Ruiz andJosé Antonio Pavón . Also arriving on the "El Peruano" wasJoseph Dombey , a Frenchman who had served as second botanist on the Ruiz and Pavón expedition. Cuéllar was to catalogue and sort the material and prepare it for transfer to theCasa de Contratación . Dombey, however, wanted to transship the specimens to France rather than opening the boxes in Spain. This conflict was resolved, however, and onAugust 17 ,1785 the specimens were delivered to the Casa de Contratación. It may be because of this work that Ruiz and Pavón named the genus "Cuellaria" for him.On
March 10 ,1785 , King Charles III signed a royal order establishing theReal Compañía de Filipinas (Royal Philippine Company). This was a political-mercantile society intended to turn the Philippines into a hub of trade between Asia and America. (That would have meant the end of the monopoly of theManila galleon , and was opposed by many Spaniards in the Philippines.) The Company was also intended to investigate and exploit the natural resources of the Philippines themselves.The Company asked the minister of the Indies,
José de Gálvez to name a botanist to investigate the flora of the islands. Gálvez turned over the task to Casimiro Gómez Ortega, head of the Real Jardín Botánico de Madrid. Gómez named Cuéllar.Expedition to the Philippines
Cuéllar left the botanist position in Seville to take up the position in the Philippines. This was a scientific expedition at the same level as that of Ruiz and Pavón, and Cuéllar asked the king to give him the title of "botánico real" (royal botanist). This the king did, more or less, naming him "botánico real sin sueldo" (royal botanist without pay).
At the beginning of January 1786 Cuéllar sailed on the "Águila Imperial" for Manila by way of the Cape of Good Hope. He was accompanied by his second wife, María Borbón. On
August 9 ,1786 , after eight months at sea, the ship arrived atCavite , in the Philippines.On-going conflicts forced him to limit his initial explorations to the area around Manila. At first he concentrated on the cultivars in which the Compañía took special interest: indigo, black pepper, cotton, mulberries, coffee and cacao. In March and April he went a little farther afield, to
Batán .From his arrival, Cuéllar began collecting scientific materials to send back to Spain. The first specimens sent back were natural products of the Philippines, including seashells, seeds, resins, woods, drawings, minerals, and some living plants. These date from the beginning of 1787. Cuéllar assiduously continued the shipments until 1797, overcoming some difficulties to do so.
A royal order dated in January 1788 directed him to promote the cultivation of cinnamon and nutmeg, in a last attempt to break the Dutch commercial monopoly on these spices. However the varieties he was able to study were not suitable.
On
March 24 ,1792 , the corvettes "Descubierta" and "Atrevida" of the scientific expedition ofAlejandro Malaspina arrived in Cavite. Cuéllar met with the expedition, and showed its botanist, Antonio Pineda some of the plantations around Manila. The expedition sailed from Manila onNovember 15 ,1792 .End of the expedition
Cuéllar's attempts to produce commercial-grade spices came to naught, as did his proposal to lead a botanical expedition throughout the archipelago, and his plan to establish a botanical garden in
Malate, Manila . A royal order ofJune 19 ,1793 suspended the governing body of the Real Compañía de Filipinas in Manila and ordered the Company's Madrid headquarters to decide on the fate of the organization. This Madrid body closed down the Company. Cuéllar, along with the other employees in Manila, lost his position in June 1795.He remained in the Philippines until his death. The governor named him commissioner of public lighting in Manila, and later superintendent of the cloth factories in the province of
Iloco , where he was also provincial governor. He died there in late 1801.Other expeditions
The four expeditions authorized by King Carlos III to the Spanish colonies were those of
Hipólito Ruiz López andJosé Antonio Pavón to Peru and Chile (1777-88);José Celestino Mutis to New Granada (1783-1808); Cuéllar to the Philippines (1786-97); andMartín Sessé y Lacasta toNew Spain (1787-1803).References
*es icon Bañas Llanos, María Belén, "Una Historia Natural de Filipinas: Juan de Cuéllar". Ediciones del Serbal, S.A., 2000 (ISBN 84-7628-369-5).
*es icon "La expedición de Juan de Cuéllar a Filipinas". Real Jardín Botánico, 1997.External links
*es icon [http://www.sge.org/sge07/base.asp?id=34 Las Expediciones Botánicas de la Corona Juan de Cuellar: Filipinas] (1786), Sociedad Geográfica Español
*es icon [http://www.rjb.csic.es/historia_filipinas.php A short biography]
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