(Redirected from Álvaro de Mendaña)
Álvaro de Mendaña de Neira.
'Álvaro de Mendaña de Neira' or 'Neyra' (
1541 -
November 1595) was a
Spanish navigator. Born in
Congosto, in
León, he was the nephew of
Lope García de Castro, viceroy of Peru. In 1567, he and
Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa sailed from
Callao, in Peru, on an expedition to the South Pacific in search of the legendary
Terra Australis. Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa was the "Master of the Route." The voyage discovered
Wake Island and the
Solomon Islands.
In order to take credit of the discoveries for himself Mendaña de Neira threw the journals and maps made by Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa overboard and abandoned him in
Mexico. A trial was held in
Lima, with the result giving Sarmiento credit for the discoveries. Sarmiento wrote to
Philip II of Spain asking the king to prohibit Mendaña de Neira from returning to the Solomon Islands.
The king ignored this request and Mendaña made a second voyage to the area (1595-96). On this voyage he discovered the
Marquesas Islands, named for the wife of the then viceroy of Peru,
García de Mendoza, marquis de Cañete.
Mendaña died on this voyage, but before his death he delegated his authority to his wife,
Isabel Barreto, who was accompanying him on the voyage. Her title was ''Adelantada''. She took charge and with resolution led the fleet into Manila in February 1596. She has become known as the only ''Lady Admiral of the Ocean Seas'' to ever command in the Spanish navy.
References
★ Miriam Estensen ''Terra Australis Incognita'' Allen & Unwin 2006
See also
Pedro Fernández de Quirós
External links
★
Appleton's Biography edited by Stanley L. Klos
★
''The First Discovery of Australia and New Guinea'' by George Collingridge, Chapter IX
★ (The article can be found here:
[1]