The
Spanish Conquest of Nicaragua
Spanish explorers first
saw Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast in 1508. It was not until
1522, however, that a formal military expedition, under Gil
González Dávila, led to the Spanish conquest of Nicaraguan
territory. González launched an expedition from Panama,
arriving in Nicaragua through Costa Rica. After suffering
both illness and torrential rains, he reached the land
governed by the powerful chief Nicoya, who gave González
and his men a warm welcome. Soon thereafter, Nicoya and
6,000 of his people embraced the Roman Catholic faith. González
continued his exploration and arrived in the next
settlement, which was governed by a chief named Nicaragua,
or Nicarao, after whom the country was named. Chief
Nicaragua received González as a friend and gave him large
quantities of gold. Perhaps to placate the Spanish,
Nicaragua also converted to Roman Catholicism, as did more
than 9,000 members of his tribe. All were baptized within
eight days. Confident of further success, González moved on
to the interior, where he encountered resistance from an
army of 3,000 Niquiranos, led by their chief, Diriagén.
González retreated and traveled south to the coast,
returning to Panama with large quantities of gold and
pearls.
In 1523 the governor of
Panama, Pedro Arias Dávila (Pedrarias), appointed Francisco
Hernández de Córdoba to lead the Nicaraguan conquest
effort. Hernández de Córdoba led an expedition in 1524
that succeeded in establishing the first permanent Spanish
settlement in Nicaragua. He quickly overcame the resistance
of the native peoples and named the land Nicaragua. To deny
González's claims of settlement rights and prevent his
eventual control of the region, Hernández de Córdoba
founded the cities of León and Granada, which later became
the centers of colonial Nicaragua. From León, he launched
expeditions to explore other parts of the territory. While
the rivalry between Hernández de Córdoba and González
raged, Pedrarias charged Hernández de Córdoba with
mismanagement and sentenced him to death. González died
soon thereafter, and the Spanish crown awarded Pedrarias the
governorship of Nicaragua in 1528. Pedrarias stayed in
Nicaragua until his death in July 1531.
Spain showed little
interest in Nicaragua throughout this period, mostly because
it was more interested in exploiting the vast riches found
in Mexico and Peru. By 1531 many Spanish settlers in
Nicaragua had left for South America to join Francisco
Pizarro's efforts to conquer the wealthy regions of the Inca
Empire. Native Nicaraguans settlements also decreased in
size because the indigenous inhabitants were exported to
work in Peruvian mines; an estimated 200,000 native
Nicaraguans were exported as slaves to South America from
1528 to 1540. Many Spanish towns founded in Nicaragua during
the first years of the conquest disappeared. The end of the
1500s reduced Nicaragua reduced to the cities of León,
located west of Lago de León (today Lago de Managua), and
Granada, located on Lago de Nicaragua.
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