Alonzo Alvarez De Pineda is a Spanish explorer and map creator who departed to Spain's Jamaican governor Francisco de Garay in 1517. The Spaniard believes that there is a sea route from the Gulf of Mexico to Asia. From 1517 to 1519, Pineda led several expeditions to the west coast of the Gulf of Mexico from the Yucatan Peninsula to the Punico River, north of Veracruz, Mexico. On June 2, 1519, he entered the bay with a pretty big native American settlement on the coast. He was 18 miles upstream and I saw 40 villages on the banks of a big river called Espíritu Santo. It was considered the first European report of the Mississippi estuary. De Pineda keeps traveling in the west, one of the areas he explores and draws is the area entering Corpus Christi Bay on the festival day, hence the name. Shortly after he sailed the river, he named Las Palmas (probably the Rio Grande River), where he spent more than 40 days to repair his boat. The expedition team established another Gulf and rejected the route to Asia. He called the Florida is a peninsula rather than an island, allowing Pineda to become the first European to explore the coastal areas of Western Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas. In the case of "Amichel" his map is the first historical document in Texas, the first map in the Gulf region of the United States. The following year, he was murdered in the fight between Panuco of Mexico and Huastec Indians.
Since 1519, Cortez established Spanish in Mexico, Alonzo Alvarez de Pineda painted the coastline of Texas. Shipwrecked Spaniards such as Alvar Nunez, Cabeza de Vaca, Coronado explorers occasionally found a vast wilderness, but Spain passed 100 before establishing the first settlement in Texas. Year: Ysleta Mission is now El Paso established with Mexico in 1681, other Spanish delegations, fortresses, and civic settlement gradually expanded until Mexico abandoned European governance and became independent in 1821 . The Spanish flag of red and yellow stripes after 1785 depicts Leo. There is a crown on the shield of Leon and Castilla castle.
Alonzo Alvarez De Pineda is a Spanish explorer and map creator who departed to Spain's Jamaican governor Francisco de Garay in 1517. The Spaniard believes that there is a sea route from the Gulf of Mexico to Asia. From 1517 to 1519, Pineda led several expeditions to the west coast of the Gulf of Mexico from the Yucatan Peninsula to the Punico River, north of Veracruz, Mexico. On June 2, 1519, he entered the bay with a pretty big native American settlement on the coast. He was 18 miles upstream and I saw 40 villages on the banks of a big river called Espíritu Santo. It was considered the first European report of the Mississippi estuary. De Pineda keeps traveling in the west, one of the areas he explores and draws is the area entering Corpus Christi Bay on the festival day, hence the name. The following year he lost his life in the fight against Wastec Indian in Mexican Punnico.
AlonzoÁlvarezde Pineda is leaving for the west. On June 24, 1519, at the Roman Catholic Festival of Corpus Christi, he departed for what is called Corpus Christi Bay. There is no reliable evidence that he landed on the Texas coast and landed, but shortly after Hernan Cortes left he left Villa Rica de la Veracruz. 132-134 Alvarezde Pineda wants to establish a border between the land that he claims to be Garay and the land Cortez asserts; Cortes does not want to negotiate, Alvarezde Pineda leaves and goes north He followed his route. Shortly thereafter he crossed a river called Las Palmas where he spent more than 40 days to repair his boat. Las Palmas is probably the Punuchi River, close to Tama Uri Starsta in Mexico.