Ecuador
Discovery and Conquest Part One
The discovery and
conquest of Ecuador by Spanish forces in the early sixteenth
century are adjuncts to the history of the conquest of Peru,
the richest of the New World prizes won for the Spanish
crown. The central figure of that history is Pizarro, an
illiterate adventurer from Trujillo in the Spanish region of
Extremadura, who had accompanied Vasco Núñez de Balboa in
his crossing of the Isthmus of Panama to discover the
Pacific in 1513. Eleven years later, Panamanian governor
Pedro Arias de Avila ("Pedrarias") authorized
Pizarro, in partnership with an equally questionable
character, a Castilian named Diego de Almargo, and a priest
named Fernando de Luque, financing to explore southward down
the west coast of South America. Their first two voyages, in
1524 and 1526, ended in failure; not until the third voyage,
launched in 1531, would the Peruvian prize be won and the
Inca be conquered.
The first European to set
foot on the territory of modern-day Ecuador was probably
Bartolomé Ruiz de Estrada, the pilot for Pizarro on his
second voyage, who pushed southward while Pizarro explored
the Colombian coast and Almargo returned to Panama for
supplies. Pizarro himself landed on the Ecuadorian coast
later during his exploratory voyage and traveled as far as
Tumbes in the extreme north of present-day Peru, in defiance
of official orders to return to Panama.
Having thus lost the
favor of the king's representatives in Panama, Pizarro was
forced to return to the royal court in Spain to petition
King Charles I personally for authorization of a third
voyage. Flush with the success of Hernán Cortés in Mexico
and tantalized by the gold pieces brought by Pizarro from
Tumbes and growing fables of great wealth in the South
American interior, Charles granted Pizarro authorization and
much more: the titles of governor and captain-general of
Peru, a generous salary, and extensive territorial
concessions. Almargo was granted important, although less
generous, titles and privileges; his resentment of this
slight would affect relationships for the rest of the
conquest. At the time that Charles granted various titles to
Pizarro and Almargo, he named de Luque Bishop of Tumbes.
Before returning to Panama in 1530, Pizarro recruited for
the conquest several immediate family members, including two
full brothers named Gonzalo and Juan as well as two
half-brothers. The participation of so many of Pizarro's
relatives further strained relations between the two
partners in conquest.
Pizarro then embarked
from Panama with some 180 men while Almargo remained there
to gather additional recruits. After thirteen days at sea,
Pizarro landed once again on the coast of Ecuador, where he
procured some gold, silver, and emeralds, which were
dispatched to Panama and put to good use in Almargo's
efforts. Although the capture of the Inca stronghold of
Tumbes was Pizarro's first objective, he was forced to spend
several months in Ecuador, first nursing a rash of ulcers
and then fighting the fierce warriors of the island of Puná.
By the time the conquerors arrived in Tumbes, the Puná
warriors had destroyed it and its population was dispersed.
Just to the south, they founded the first Spanish settlement
in Peru, San Miguel de Tangarará. Upon their fateful
departure to Cajamarca on September 24, 1532, Pizarro left a
lieutenant, Sebastián de Benalcázar, in charge of
protecting and developing San Miguel as a Spanish base of
operations. Two years later, Benalcázar would lead the
conquering forces that moved northward into Ecuador.
Meanwhile, Atahualpa was
resting near Cajamarca, in the Sierra of northern Peru,
following the defeat and capture of his brother. He had
known of the arrival of foreign invaders for several months;
it is not clear why he did not order their obliteration
before they could penetrate into the heart of the empire.
After a march of almost two months, Pizarro arrived in
Cajamarca and summoned Atahualpa from the nearby thermal
baths known today as the Baños del Inca. Reluctantly,
accompanied by several thousands of his best troops,
Atahualpa went to Cajamarca's central plaza, where he was
met, not by the conquistadors, but by their chaplain, Fray
Vicente de Valverde, who called upon the Inca emperor to
submit to the representatives of the Spanish crown and the
Christian god. Atahualpa replied disparagingly and, upon his
throwing a Christian prayer book to the ground in contempt,
concealed Spanish soldiers opened fire, killing thousands of
Atahualpa's defenders and taking the Inca emperor captive.
This slaughter, called "the decisive battle" of
the conquest of Peru by historian Hubert Herring, took place
on November 16, 1532.
A panic-stricken
Atahualpa, fearing that Pizarro might be planning to depose
him in favor of his rival brother, summoned Huascar, at this
time imprisoned in Cuzco, to Cajamarca, then ordered him to
be executed along with hundreds of Huascar's nearest of kin.
It served the Spaniards' purposes to allow Atahualpa the
freedom, from his cell, to command his forces. Thus
continued the rapid annihilation, through a vicious civil
war that now overlapped with the Spanish conquest, of the
army and leadership of one of the great polities of modern
history. Pizarro was not planning to depose Atahualpa, of
course, but to execute him. First, however, he had Atahualpa
fill his cell, once with gold, then twice with silver
(estimated at 4,850 kilograms of gold and 9,700 kilograms of
silver) supposedly as ransom for his release. Instead the
Spaniards garrotted Atahualpa on August 29, 1533, following
a mock trial at which he was convicted of every charge that
Pizarro could invent for the occasion. Having deprived the
Inca empire of leadership, Pizarro and another conquistador,
Hernando de Soto, moved south to Cuzco, the heart of
Tawantinsuyu, which they captured in November 1533; they
then led their men in an orgy of looting, pillaging, and
torture in search of more precious metals.
Benalcázar,
Pizarro's lieutenant and fellow Extremaduran, had already
departed from San Miguel with 140 foot soldiers and a few
horses on his conquering mission to Ecuador. At the foot of
Mount Chimborazo, near the modern city of Riobamba, he met
and defeated the forces of the great Inca warrior Rumiñahui
with the aid of Cañari tribesmen who, happy to throw off
the yoke of their Inca...
|