INDEX

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A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, X, Y, Z

Abancay, artillery placed in, 101
Acosta, Juan de, in command of troops, 155;
career of, 155 (n.)
AcuÑa, DoÑa Brianda de, wife of the Viceroy, 115, 115 (n.)
Aguero, Diego de, Captain, appointed to meet the Viceroy, 16;
career of, 16 (n.), 17 (n.);
receives despatches from the Viceroy, 17;
sets out for the city of Truxillo, 22, 23;
informs the Viceroy of events in Lima, 45;
returns to the municipality of Lima, 54;
takes part in receiving the Viceroy, 56, 57
Alamos, Diego Maldonado de, signs the document appointing Gonzalo Pizarro Chief Justice, 68, 69
Aldana, Lorenzo de, Captain, writes to the Viceroy, 74, 75;
career and death of, 74 (n.);
goes to see the Viceroy, 86;
his imprisonment on board a ship, 86, 145;
released, 86
Alexander, King of Greece, account of his treatment of Parmenion, 84, 84 (n.)
Almagro, Diego de, supporters of, favoured by the Viceroy, 18;
defeated by Vaca de Castro at Chupas, 36
Almagro, Diego de, the lad, 23, 124, 178 (n.)
Almao, Luis de, a servant of Gonzalo Pizarro, 35
Almendras, Diego de, joins Gonzalo Pizarro, 41
Almendras, Francisco de, Captain, joins Gonzalo Pizarro, 40;
his career, 40 (n.);
acts as witness to a proposal with regard to Gonzalo Pizarro, 67;
is sent to Guamanga for artillery, 79, 80, 81;
ordered to seize despatches, 101;
intercepts Francisco de Ampuero and Pero Lopez, 102;
his further treatment of them, 103, 104;
prevents Bishop Don Jeronimo de Loaysa from proceeding further on his mission, 108;
sent to Chuquisaca as Lieutenant of the Governor, 140 (n.);
murder of, 156
Almendras, Martin de, joins Gonzalo Pizarro, 41
Altamirano, Antonio de, Alcalde, 8;
accompanies Vaca de Castro on his journey to the city of the Kings, 13;
career and death of, 13 (n.);
in favour of Gonzalo Pizarro being made Chief Justice, 68;
leaves the meeting to avoid voting, 69;
but afterwards signs, 70;
named as Ensign General, 79
Alvarado, Alonso de, Captain, 111
Alvarado, Hernando de, Captain, sent to Truxillo, 111
Alvarez, the Licentiate, sails with Blasco NuÑez, 1 (n.);
one of the four Judges appointed to carry out the new laws in Peru, 4 (n.);
opposes the Viceroy, 7;
attends a meeting of Alcaldes and perpetual magistrates, 37;
summoned to meet the Viceroy, 94
Alzate, Simon de, Public Notary, goes with despatches, 90;
Captain Francisco de Almendras wishes him to be killed, 103, 104
Amaibamba, 171, 172, 173, 187, 188, 191, 196, 199
Amendariz, Diaz, Licentiate, Commissary General, 78
Ampuero, Francisco de, at the city of the Kings, 18;
takes part in receiving the Viceroy, 56, 57;
to accompany Pero Lopez to Cuzco, 89, 90;
his career, 89 (n.), 90 (n.);
arrives at Guamanga, 93;
intercepted by Francisco de Almendras, 102;
allowed to return, 104
AÑaquito, 51, 98;
death of Blasco NuÑez at, 2;
Hernando Bachicao at, 13 (n.);
the Licentiate Benito Suarez de Carbajal at, 26 (n.);
Diego de Mora at, 34 (n.)
Anaya, Atilano de, 167
Andahuaylas, province of, 47;
letters from, to Cuzco, 65;
letter to, from Gonzalo Pizarro, 65;
Bishop Don Jeronimo de Loaysa in, 109
Anti Indians, 165, 180, 189, 194
Apurimac, 124, 170
Arancalla, 175, 177, 196
Arauco, Martin de, takes part in destroying four ships, 151
Arbieto, Martin Hurtado de, 187 (n.)
Arequipa, 9 (n.), 10 (n.), 29, 37 (n.), 48, 73, 98, 147;
discontent in, at the ordinances, 30
Arevalo, 9 (n.)
Arrian, 84
ArvÉs, Juan de, goes to the city of Leon, 112
Asdrubal, 49
Atahualpa, 17 (n.), 28 (n.), 40 (n.), 70 (n.), 188
Aurelio, Antonio de, chosen to accompany the royal ordinances, 93
Avila, Alonso de, 126
Avila, Juan Vazquez de, 16
Aviles, 45
Aviles, Alonso de, disloyalty of, 116
Ayavire, town of, 42, 42 (n.)
Bachicao, Hernando, 11;
accompanies Vaca de Castro on his journey to the city of the Kings, 13;
career of, 13 (n.);
resolves to go to Cuzco, 34;
desires to leave Lima, 45, 46;
arrives in Huarochiri, 47;
departure from Lima, 59;
the Cuzco citizens disturbed by his news, 64;
is interviewed with others by Pedro de los Rios, 65;
signs in favour of Gonzalo Pizarro being made Chief Justice, 68, 69;
in charge of the artillery, 79, 140 (n.), 156
Badajos, 19
Balsa, Juan, 42 (n.)
Bambacona, 178
Banba, 165
Barba, Francisco, with King Manco Inca, 124
Barbaran, Juan de, appointed to meet the Viceroy, 17;
receives despatches from the Viceroy, 17;
returns to the city of the Kings with the news of the Viceroy’s coming, 18;
receives the rod of office, 19
Barcelona, 2 (n.)
Barco, Pedro del, hanged, 139 (n.)
Barrionuevo, Alonso de, supports Vela NuÑez, 126, 127
Bazan, a soldier, sent to Arequipa by Gonzalo Pizarro, 40
Beatriz, DoÑa, 191
Belalcazar, Sebastian de, Adelantado, 13 (n.), 74 (n.), 156;
ordered to execute and enforce the new laws, 77, 78
Berrio, Juan de, at Guamanga, 80;
chosen to accompany the royal ordinances, 93
Buenaventura, port of, 77
Bustillo, servant of Comendador Hernando Pizarro, carries letters to Gonzalo Pizarro, 35
Cabrera, Juan, arrival of, at the town of Timana, 77
Caceres, Alonso de, Captain, 105, 106, 139 (n.);
quiets the tumult at Arequipa, 30
Caceres, Juan de, the Accountant, 7, 92 (n.)
Caciques and the new laws, 15
Cadiz, the isle of, 49
Cali, town of, 77, 129
Callao, 16, 40, 42, 43
Camargo, Alonso de, plot of, 156;
receives pardon, 159
Camporedondo, Gaspar Rodriguez de, 11;
accompanies Vaca de Castro to the city of the Kings, 13;
career of, 13 (n.);
great friendship for Vaca de Castro, 46;
departs from Lima, 46, 59;
Gonzalo Pizarro converses with, 66;
seeks pardon of the Viceroy, 92;
action of Francisco de Carbajal against, 92 (n.);
beheaded, 136 (n.)
CaÑari Indians, 196
Canary Islands, 70 (n.)
Canela, 38, 49
Canelos, Gonzalo Diaz de Pineda sent to explore, 115 (n.)
CaÑete, Marquis of, 42 (n.)
Caravaya, mines of, 42
Carbajal, Benito Suarez de, the Licentiate, accompanies Vaca de Castro on his journey to the city of the Kings, 13;
receives a letter of advice from his brother the Factor, 26;
his career and death, 26 (n.);
his arrival at Cuzco, 48
Carbajal, Diego de, 136 (n.)
Carbajal, Francisco de, departs from Cuzco, 8;
his arrival at the city of the Kings, 8;
lodges at the house of Antonio Riquelme, 8;
receives an insult from the members of the municipality, 9;
date and place of birth, 9 (n.);
his career, 9 (n.), 10 (n.);
wishes to return to Spain, 30;
departs from Lima, 31;
summoned to come to Cuzco with arms and troops, 73;
action against Gaspar Rodriguez de Camporedondo, 92 (n.);
appointed as Master of the Camp, 118;
gives advice to Gonzalo Pizarro, 118, 119;
deserts the Viceroy, 135 (n.);
copy of letter to Gonzalo Pizarro, 160, 161
Carbajal, Jeronimo de, 26, 136 (n.)
Carbajal, Rodrigo de, 26
Carbajal, Yllan Suarez de, the Factor, 13 (n.);
appointed to meet the Viceroy, 16;
career of, 16 (n.);
receives despatches from the Viceroy, 17;
sets out for the city of Truxillo, 22, 23;
returns to Lima, 24;
is induced to make friends with Vaca de Castro, 33;
goes to meet the Viceroy, 54;
converses with the Viceroy, 55;
takes part in receiving the Viceroy, 56, 57;
cypher letter of, to Benito Suarez de Carbajal, 72;
secret proceedings in the house of, 131;
death of, 136, 149;
character of, 149
Cardenas, Francisco de, 89, 94;
sends news to Gonzalo Pizarro, 100
Carrasco, Pero Alonso, Procurator, does not fall in with Gonzalo Pizarro’s suggestion, 70;
badly wounded, 71
Carrero, Puerto, 140 (n.)
Cartagena, 106
Carthage, 49
Carvajal, the Licentiate, leaves Cuzco, 106
Carveo, Hernando, father of Diego Centeno, 61
Castilla, Baltasar de, career of, 135 (n.);
the Viceroy desires to kill, 146;
flight of, from Lima, 149
Castilla, Jeronimo, excuses himself from going with Gonzalo Pizarro, 106;
flight of, from Cuzco, 116
Castilla, Sebastian de, the murderer of Hinojosa, 38 (n.), 135 (n.)44;
flight of citizens of, from Lima, 46;
anger of the citizens at the new laws, 64;
proposal of the municipal officers, 67;
many citizens of, hesitate to take up arms, and write to the Viceroy for pardon, 91, 92;
movements in, on behalf of the Viceroy, 121, 122, 123;
Manco Inca advances on, with an armed force, 123;
the Viceroy not received in, 147
Diminus, 84
Diogenes Laertius, quoted, 97
Dionysius of Halicarnassus, quoted, 97
Encomenderos and the new laws, 5,

15, 30
Enriquez, Juan, the common crier, ordered to proclaim the new laws publicly, 83
Escobar, Francisco de, 137 (n.)
Escobar, Maria de, 145, 151
Escobedo, Francisco de, 136 (n.)
Esidoro, Friar, appointed to meet the Viceroy, 17
Espinal, Manuel de, Treasurer, ordered to go to Arequipa, 112
Espinosa, a soldier, 43
Espinosa, Francisco de, leaves Huanuco, 113
Esquivel, Pantoja Alonso Perez de, the Licentiate, 19;
proceeds to Truxillo to join the Viceroy, 19;
flight of, from Cuzco, 116;
takes part in a plot to murder Francisco de Almendras, 156
Estacio, Manuel de, discontent of, 131
EstopiÑan, Lorenzo de, appointed to meet the Viceroy, 17;
negotiations with the Licentiate de la Gama, 28;
is sent to Vaca de Castro with documents to sign, 33;
goes to meet the Viceroy, 56;
mission of, 60
Estremadura, 37 (n.)
Felipe, Don, orders the new laws to be enforced, 77
Felix, a servant of the Viceroy, 114
Figueroa, Diego Rodriguez de, report of, on his mission to Titu Cusi Yupanqui Inca, 168, 169;
narrative of the route and journey made by, 170 ff.
Florencia, Martin de, hanged, 139 (n.)
Frederick Barbarossa, 98
Fuentes, Pedro de, sent to Arequipa as Lieutenant of the Governor, 140 (n.)
Gama, Antonio de la, the Licentiate, sets out to meet Vaca de Castro, 19;
career of, 19 (n.);
meets Vaca de Castro, 22;
precedes Vaca de Castro’s entering Lima, 27, 28;
departs from Lima, 47, 48;
letters from, 66;
is ordered to the bridge of the Apurimac, 124
Garay, Antonio, remains at Huanuco, 114
Garcia, Marcos, the narrative of Titu Cusi Yupanqui dictated to, 164, 166, 167, 168
Garcilasso, the Inca, 13 (n.)
Gasca, 17 (n.), 26 (n.), 31 (n.), 34 (n.), 37 (n.), 38 (n.), 53 (n.), 71 (n.), 74 (n.), 76
Gavilan, Diego, at Guamanga, 80
Gil, Gaspar, Captain, accompanies Vaca de Castro on his journey to the city of the Kings, 13;
put to death, 155
Giron, 17 (n.), 31 (n.), 34 (n.), 53 (n.), 71 (n.), 74 (n.)
Gomera, Conde de, 135 (n.)
Gonzalez, Diego, kills Alonso de Toro, 42 (n.)
Grado, leaves Huanuco, 113
Gran Canaria, island of, Blasco NuÑez reaches, 1
Griego, Jorge, 126
Guadachevi, 26
Gualle, town of, 89
Guamanga, city of, Vaca de Castro at, 22;
artillery sent for from, 79, 80;
Pero Lopez and Francisco de Ampuero arrive at, 93
Guayaquil, the Viceroy’s letter to, 10
Guelpone, Count of Angleria, 98
Guevara, Anton Ruiz de, 139 (n.)
Guevara, Juan Velez de, Captain, says that Vaca de Castro was the Royal Governor, 11;
is interviewed with others by Pedro de los Rios, 65;
votes in favour of Gonzalo Pizarro being made Chief Justice, 68, 69;
Captain of infantry, 79;
ordered to Xaquixaguana, 106;
in charge of arquebusiers, 140 (n.)
Guevara, Vasco de, Captain, at Guamanga, 80, 81;
arrives at Lima, 100
Gumiel, Diego, Captain of infantry, 79;
pardon granted to, 92 (n.);
execution of, 140 (n.)
Gutierrez, Felipe, 105, 136 (n.)
Hannibal, 49
Hector, son of Parmenion, 84, 84 (n.)
Henao, 200
Henriquez, Martin, 169
Heredia, Nicolas de, executed, 159
Hernandez, Garcia, leaves Huanuco, 113
Hinojosa, Pedro Alonso de, 17 (n.);
nominated as Procurator, 37;
career of, 37 (n.);
murder of, 38 (n.);
sets out for Lima, 38, 59;
returns to Cuzco, 60;
sent to Arequipa for arms and troops, 73
Hojeda, Juan Julio de, signs the document appointing Gonzalo Pizarro Chief Justice, 69
Holguin, Alonso, Indians taken away from, 34, 64
HontivÉros, 79
Huacho, 53 (n.)
Huanuco, 23, 75, 102, 147
Huara, a town of Indians, 22
Huarina, battle of, 10 (n.), 13 (n.), 37 (n.), 64, 98
Huarochiri, province of, 47, 116, 126
Huascar Inca, 188
Huayna Ceapac, palace of, 13 (n.)
Huaytara, 100
Hurtado, 187
Illanes, Juan de, 162
Indians, new laws regarding, 2 (n.), 3, 11, 14, 15, 64;
liberation of, at Truxillo and San Miguel, 23;
conflict between, and Spaniards, 125
Josephus, 98
Julius CÆsar, 49, 63
La Barranca, town of, 22;
the motto at, 24;
the Viceroy arrives at, 50
La Gasca, President, 12
La Gasca, account of the voyage of, 162, 163
La Plata, 172, 173
Lartoun, Sebastian de, Bishop of Cuzco, 200
Las Casas, new laws advocated by, 2 (n.)
Las Perdrices,” near the city of the Kings, 17
Lentulus, Consul, 63
Leon, Antonio de, goes to receive the Viceroy, 26, 50
Leon, Cieza de, 10 (n.)
Leon, Francisco de, 41
Leon, Gomez de, 41
Leon, Juan de, at the city of the Kings, 18;
takes part in receiving the Viceroy, 26, 50, 56, 57
Leon, Luis de, 139 (n.), 140 (n.)
Leon, the Licentiate, leaves Lima, 48;
arrives at Cuzco, 66;
the ordinances discussed at the house of, 92
Leon y Ramirez, Luis de, joins those who fled from Cuzco, 116
Lerma, Alonso de, Ensign to the General Vela NuÑez, 149 (n.)
Leyton, Catalina, wife of Francisco de Carbajal, 9 (n.)
Leyva, 9 (n.)
Lima, ancient name of the city of the Kings, 4, 9 (n.), 10 (n.), 16 (n.), 17 (n.);
the Viceroy to be received at, 17;
happenings at, 28;
Vaca de Castro’s procedure at, 32, 33;
commotion at, on hearing of the Viceroy’s coming, 45;
the Viceroy’s approach to, 50, 51;
tumult in, 52;
reception of Viceroy at, 56, 57;
news received at, of Gonzalo Pizarro’s being made Procurator, 75;
unsettled feeling at, 81, 82;
the citizens of, greatly disturbed at the proclamation of the new laws, write letters to Gonzalo Pizarro, 85;
the arrival of the Judges at, 90;
the Court of Justice founded at, 91;
great excitement in, at the news of the flight of Gonzalo Diaz de Pineda, 129
Llaches, 17 (n.)
Loaysa, Father Baltasar de, departs from Lima, 47;
statement of, 52;
seeks pardon of the Viceroy, 92;
sets out from Cuzco to Lima, 92
Loaysa, Jeronimo de, Bishop of the city of the Kings, 17, 29, 31;
career and death of, 31 (n.);
his action at Lima, 33;
asked to meet the Viceroy, 52;
goes to meet, and discourses with him, 54, 55;
distressed at the imprisonment of Vaca de Castro, secures his release, 86;
sets out for Cuzco to try to avert a civil war, 87, 88;
arrives at Guamanga, 93;
receives letters from the Viceroy, 94;
his answer, 94;
reaches Cochacaxa, 107;
is advised to return to Lima, 107;
meets Francisco de Almendras, 107;
is prevented from proceeding further, 108;
writes to Gonzalo Pizarro, 108;
Gonzalo Pizarro’s answer to, 108;
departs to Curamba, thence to Andahuaylas and Uramarca, 109
Lopez, Pero, Secretary, 12;
is sent by Vaca de Castro to welcome the Viceroy, 22;
informs Vaca de Castro of the Viceroy’s action, 23;
bears a message to the Viceroy from Vaca de Castro, 50;
despatched to Cuzco with the ordinances, 58;
sent with orders from the Viceroy to Gonzalo Pizarro, 89;
arrives at Guamanga, 93;
intercepted by Francisco de Almendras, 102;
allowed to return, 104
Losa, Father Juan de, accompanies Bishop Don Jeronimo de Loaysa on his journey to Cuzco, 88;
sends a letter to Gonzalo Pizarro, 100;
well received by Gonzalo Pizarro, 110
Lucuma, 176
Lucumaes, a camp ordered to be made at, 106, 118
Luna, Gomez de, imprisoned and strangled, 156
Lunahuana, 17 (n.)
Mala, conference at, 13 (n.), 16 (n.)
Malaga, 79
Maldonado, Arias de, 136 (n.)
Maldonado, Diego, Alcalde, the rich, 53 (n.);
accompanies Vaca de Castro on his journey to the city of the Kings, 13;
resolves to go to Cuzco, 34;
departs from Lima, 46;
interviews held by, concerning Gonzalo Pizarro, 65;
Gonzalo Pizarro asks him to come to Cuzco, 65;
on the election of Gonzalo Pizarro as Chief Justice, 68;
leaves the meeting to avoid voting, 70;
Gonzalo Pizarro forces him to sign, 70;
declines to be Ensign General, 79;
seeks pardon of the Viceroy, 92;
does not approve of Gonzalo Pizarro’s enterprise, 121;
raises the King’s banner at Cuzco, 123;
musters all the Spaniards there, 124
Maldonado, Francisco, is interviewed with others by Pedro de los Rios, 65;
signs in favour of Gonzalo Pizarro’s election as Chief Justice, 68, 69;
sent to represent Gonzalo Pizarro, 153
Manco Inca, 90 (n.), 122;
Gonzalo Pizarro appointed C >89;
sends Pero Lopez with orders to Gonzalo Pizarro, 89;
writes letters to the King and the Council, 91;
summons the Judges to meet him, 94;
his speech to them, 95;
revokes the new laws, 97;
appoints captains, 99;
his address to them, 99;
active preparations of, 109, 110;
sends Captain Hernando de Alvarado to Truxillo, 111;

orders Manuel de Espinal to go to Arequipa, 112;
sends Jeronimo de Villegas to Huanuco, 112;
his complaints on receiving news of Pedro de Puelles’ disloyalty and treachery of Jeronimo de Villegas, 114;
sends Captain Gonzalo Diaz de Pineda and General Vela NuÑez to intercept the traitors, 115;
his three sons, 115 (n.);
deeply moved at the great treason of Gonzalo Diaz de Pineda, 129;
seeks the advice of the assembly of the Judges and others, 130;
arrest and imprisonment of, 137;
faults of, 138;
indictment of the judges against, 143;
his proceedings at Panama, 143;
violent conduct at Tumbez, San Miguel and Truxillo, 144;
unpopularity of, 146;
misgovernment of, 147, 148;
causes the death of the Factor Yllan Suarez de Carbajal, 149;
takes refuge in the house of the Licentiate Cepeda, 151;
release of, 153;
marches to Quito with a force, 154;
is pursued by Gonzalo Pizarro, 155;
collects arms and assembles troops at Popayan, 157;
names of the officers of, 158;
is wounded and afterwards beheaded, 158;
is honourably buried, 158
Ñusta, Inez Yupanqui, Princess, 90 (n.)
Ocampo, Diego de, 154;
put to death, 155
Ochoa, carries despatches for the Viceroy, 17
Ocllo, DoÑa Angelina Zica, 168
Octavius, 49
Olave, Fortun Sanchez de, gets possession of certain provisions of the Viceroy, 121
Olea, a soldier, 47
OÑate, Francisco de, 164, 164 (n.)
Oran, 53 (n.)
Orellana, 115 (n.)
OrgoÑez, Rodrigo, 53 (n.), 198
Ortiz, Father Friar Diego, 166
Pablo, Vicente, 102
Paez, the Licentiate, 2
Palcocon, 35
Palomino, Alonso, Alcalde, 18;
arrives at Cuzco with news of the ordinances, 29;
sends letter to Gonzalo Pizarro, 35;
goes to induce Bishop Don Jeronimo de Loaysa to receive the Viceroy, 52;
takes part in receiving the Viceroy, 56, 57;
sends news to Gonzalo Pizarro, 100
Palomino, Diego, Lieutenant to the Governor, 15, 23;
deprived of his Indians, 64
Palomino, Juan Alonso, leaves Cuzco, 106;
stationed at Andahuaylas, 109
Panama, the city of, 37 (n.);
Blasco NuÑez arrives at, 2;
Indians brought from Peru to, 3 (n.);
consternation at the introduction of the new laws, 5;
Gasca at, 31 (n.)
Pando, a mestizo, 175
Pando, Martin de, clerk, declaration of, 166, 167
Pardomo, Luis, pardoned, 159
Paredas, Diego Garcia de, 162
Pariacaca, 28, 127, 128
Parmenion, account of Alexander’s treatment of, 84, 84 (n.)
Paucar-colla, 53 (n.)
Paulo Inca, brother of Manco Inca, 125
Pavia, battle of, 9 (n.)
Payta, 90
Pedrarias, 42 (n.)
PeÑalosa, Pero OrdoÑez de, accompanies Bishop Don Jeronimo de Loaysa on his journey to Cuzco, 88
Peranzules, Captain, 61
Perez, Diego, kills King Manco Inca, 125
Perez, Gomez, with King Manco Inca, 124
Peru, kingdoms of, Blasco NuÑez ordered to set out for, 1;
new laws with regard to the natives of, 3, 4, 5
Philip, King, 167
Philotas, son of Parmenion, 84, 84 (n.)
Piedrahita, disloyalty of, 116, 126
Pineda, Gonzalo Diaz de, appointed Captain of arquebusiers, 99;
desires to join Gonzalo Pizarro, 113;
is sent by the Viceroy with a force to intercept the traitors, 115;
his career and death, 115 (n.);
arrives at the rebel camp, 119;
his intention to murder Vela NuÑez, 126;
enters Guamanga, 128
Pineda, Rodrigo de, gives information about Gonzalo Pizarro to Bishop Don Jeronimo de Loaysa, 88
Piura, ancient name of San Miguel, 15 (n.), 23
Pizarro, Hernando, war between, and Almagro, 2 (n.), 200;
besieged by Indians in Lima, 9 (n.);
murder of, 10 (n.), 16 (n.);
his servant carries letters to Gonzalo Pizarro, 35
Pizarro, Gonzalo, Captain, letter of Governor Vaca de Castro to, 12;
plot of Gaspar Rodriguez de Camporedondo against, 13 (n.);
Altamirano put to death by order of, 13 (n.);
receives many letters offering him support, 25;
his departure from Cuzco and arrival at Plata, 34;
at Chaqui, 35;
letters to, 35;
greatly concerned at the new laws, 35, 36;
collects money at the mines of Porco, 36;
desires to go to Cuzco, 39;
despatches Bazan to Arequipa, 40;
arrives at the lake of Titicaca, 40;
joined by many soldiers, 41;
reaches the town of Ayavire, 42;
arrival at Cuzco, 44;
coolly received by the citizens, 47, 48;
many people join him, 48;
chosen Procurator, 49;
elected Procurator-General, 62, 63;
made Captain against the Inca, 65;
sends a letter to the province of Andahuaylas, 65;
is given authority to march to Lima, 66;
wishes to be made Chief Justice, 67;
is elected to the office, 69;
is enraged with Pero Alonso Carrasco, 70, 71;
sends to Arequipa for arms and troops, 73;
nominates captains and officers for the war, 78, 79;
sends to Guamanga for artillery, 79, 80;
presses forward his preparations for war, 101;
orders Captain Francisco de Almendras to seize despatches, 101;
sends letters to Pedro de Puelles, 101, 102;
prepares to set out from Cuzco, 105;
letter of, to Bishop Don Jeronimo de Loaysa, and to Francisco de Almendras, 108;
pitches his camp at Xaquixaguana, 116;
is informed of the flight of Graviel de Rojas and others from Cuzco, 117;
his anger thereat, 117;
marches on to Lucumaes, 118;
appoints Francisco de Carbajal Master of the Camp, 118;
conspiracy against, 118;
seeks advice from Francisco de Carbajal, 118;
advances very cautiously, 120;
plot against, 121;
enters the city of Lima, 139, 140 (n.);
popularity of, 142;
sends envoys to Spain, 152;
marches against the Viceroy, 154, 155;
continues to pursue the Viceroy, 156;
names of the officers of, 156;
complete victory of, at Quito, 158;
at the height of his power, 158;
is urged to assume the kingship of Peru, 159
Pizarro, Juan, 198
Pizarro, Marquis Don Francisco, 27, 90;
the Viceroy at the house of, 57, 58
Plata, town of, Captain Gonzalo Pizarro’s arrival at, 34;
consternation at, on hearing of the new laws, 36, 37;
appointment of Procurators at, 37
Plutarch’s life of Catullus, 76
Polidamas and Alexander the Great, 84, 84 (n.)
Pompey the Great, 49, 63
Popayan, 74 (n.), 77;
execution of the new laws at, postponed, 78
Porco, mines of, 36
Porras, the mestizo, 197
Portocarrero, pardon granted to, 92 (n.)
Potosi, silver mines at, 35
Prado, Rodrigo NuÑez de, appointed to meet the Viceroy, 17
Pucara, 92 (n.)
Puelles, Pedro de, Governor of Huanuco, 53 (n.);
letters to, from Gonzalo Pizarro, 101;
his career and death, 101 (n.);
replies to Gonzalo Pizarro, 102;
conduct of, at the city of Leon, 112, 113;
arrives at the rebel camp, 119;
beheads the traitors, 136 (n.);
enters Lima with Gonzalo Pizarro, 140
Puerto Viejo, the Viceroy’s letter to, 10
Puertocarrero, Pedro de, commands the cavalry, 79;
leaves Cuzco, 106
Quichua, 53 (n.)
Quijos, 115 (n.)
Quilca, port of, 21, 31, 117
Quimbaya, 63
QuiÑones, Antonio de, accompanies Vaca de Castro on his journey to the city of the Kings, 13
QuiÑones, Pedro Ramirez de, the Licentiate, 2
Quintus Curtius, 84
Quiquijana, town called, 43
Quito, conquest of, 13 (n.), 28, 98;
former prosperity of the citizens of, 51;
the Viceroy not received in, 147;
the Viceroy meets Pizarro’s army at, 157;
desperate battle at, 158
Ragana, birthplace of Francisco de Carbajal, 9 (n.)
Ramirez, Juan, sent by Gonzalo Pizarro to Arequipa, 36
Ravenna, battle of, 9 (n.)
Rayangalla, 167, 168
Rebdona, a soldier, sentenced to be hanged, 122
Retamoso, Francisco de, 37
Ribas, Juan de, hanged, 104
Ribera, Antonio de, 12;
arrives at Cuzco with news of the ordinances, 29;
letter to Gonzalo Pizarro, 35;
sends news to Gonzalo Pizarro, 100;
sent to meet Gonzalo Pizarro, 139 (n.)
Ribera, Luis de, Alcalde, Lieutenant-Governor of the town of Plata, 36, 37;
addresses the townspeople, 38
Ribera, Nicolas de, Alcalde, 17, (n.), 18;
takes part in receiving the Viceroy, 56
Ribera, Nicolas de (Junior), the lad, 18;
takes part in receiving the Viceroy, 56, 57
Rimachi Yupanqui, 165, 166
Rios, Pedro de los, accompanies Vaca de Castro on his journey to the city of the Kings, 13;
resolves to go to Cuzco, 34;
departs from Lima, 46;
is asked by Gonzalo Pizarro to go to Cuzco, 65;
objects to serving with Gonzalo Pizarro, 70;
seeks pardon of the Viceroy, 92
Riquelme, Alonso, the Treasurer, 18, 28;
career of, 28 (n.);
is induced to make friends with Vaca de Castro, 33;
goes to induce Bishop Don Jeronimo de Loaysa to receive the Viceroy, 52;
has an interview with the Viceroy, 58, 59
Riquelme, Antonio, the Treasurer, 8
class="pginternal">34
Tumbez, 5;
the Viceroy arrives at, 10, 14
Tumibamba, 155
Tupac Amaru Inca, 31 (n.), 187 (n.)
Tuscany, Countess Matilda of, 98 (n.)

Ulloa, Francisco Noguerol de, 112
Ulloa, Noguerol de, 41
Uramarca, Bishop Don Jeronimo de Loaysa at, 109
Urbina, Diego de, appointed Captain of arquebusiers, afterwards Camp Master, 99, 109;
the Viceroy desires to kill, 145
Urute, discovery of, 106
Vadillo, Juan de, expedition of, 106
Vadillo, Martin de, flight of, from Cuzco, 106;
is hanged by Alonso de Toro, 106
Valverde, Ana de, wife of Diego de Mora, 34 (n.)
Valverde, Maria, wife of the Licentiate Rodrigo NiÑo, 53 (n.)
Vargas, Alonso de, 140 (n.)
Vargas, Hernando de, appointed to meet the Viceroy, 17
Vasquez, Tomas, sent to Arequipa by Vaca de Castro with a letter, 29, 30;
his career, 42 (n.);
disinclined to comply with Gonzalo Pizarro’s wishes, 61;
Gonzalo Pizarro converses with, 66;
pardon granted to, 92 (n.);
leaves Cuzco, 106
Vega, Garcilasso de la, Captain, 71;
does not approve of Gonzalo Pizarro’s election as Chief Justice, 72, 73;
excuses himself from going with Gonzalo Pizarro, 106;
flight of, from Cuzco, 116;
seized as a fugitive, 139 (n.);
escape of, 140 (n.)
Vela, Hernan, loyalty of, 126
Vera, Maria de, 61
Verdugo, Melchor, seized as a fugitive, 139 (n.);
Indians of, heavily rated by the Viceroy, 147
Vilcamayu, 170
Vilcapampa, 164, 166, 167, 169, 170, 190, 195
Vilcapaniguana, 177
Vilcapari Guaman, 180
Vilcas, bridge of, 102
Villacastin, Francisco de, letter of, to Gonzalo Pizarro, 42;
his career, 42 (n.);
disinclined to comply with the wishes of Gonzalo Pizarro, 61;
is sent for by Gonzalo Pizarro, 62;
pardon granted to, 92 (n.)
Villacorta, letter of, to Gonzalo Pizarro, 35
Villadiego, 79
Villalobos, Dr, 2
Villegas, Jeronimo de, sent to Huanuco, 112;
treachery of, 113;
arrives at the rebel camp, 119
Viticos, province of, 123, 124
Viticos, town of, 164, 165, 175, 178
Vivero, Gonzalo Perez de, 167, 168
Vivero, Juan de, 168
Xaguey, the Viceroy at, 55
Xaquixaguana, Captains Juan Velez de Guevara and Pedro CermeÑo, ordered to go to, 106;
Gonzalo Pizarro pitches his camp at, 116
Xauxa, province of, 22, 74, 75, 139
Yamqui Mayta, 179, 181, 192, 194, 195
Yanamachi, 171
Yca, town of, 88
Ylave, town of, 41
Yucay, 172
Zaragoza, 104
Zarate, Agustin de, an Accountant, sails with Blasco NuÑez, 1 (n.);
publishes a book dealing with the events which led to the expulsion of the Viceroy, 4 (n.);
sent to meet Gonzalo Pizarro, 139 (n.)
Zarate, Juan Ortiz de, is asked by Gonzalo Pizarro to accompany him, 43;
his share in the plot to murder Francisco de Almendras, 156
Zarate, Pedro Ortiz de, the Licentiate, sails with Blasco NuÑez, 1 (n.);
one of the four Judges appointed to enforce the new laws in Peru, 4 (n.);
offers his advice to the Viceroy, 7;
summoned to meet the Viceroy, 94
ZuÑiga y Velasco, Diego de, Count of Nieva, Viceroy of Peru, 169, 174, 187
Zurbano, Geronimo de, appointed Captain of the fleet, 86;
takes part in destroying four ships, 151

CAMBRIDGE: PRINTED BY JOHN CLAY, M.A. AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS.


The Hakluyt Society.
(Founded 1846.)
1913.
========
President.
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WORKS ALREADY ISSUED.

FIRST SERIES.

1847-1898.

1—The Observations of Sir Richard Hawkins, Knt.,

In his Voyage into the South Sea in 1593. Reprinted from the edition of 1622, and edited by Admiral Charles Ramsay Drinkwater Bethune, C.B. pp. xvi. 246. Index.

(First Edition out of print. See No. 57.) Issued for 1847.

2—Select Letters of Christopher Columbus,

With Original Documents relating to the Discovery of the New World. Translated and Edited by Richard Henry Major, F.S.A., Keeper of Maps, British Museum, Sec. R.G.S. pp. xc. 240. Index.

(First Edition out of print. See No. 43. Two copies only were printed on vellum, one of which is in the British Museum, C. 29. k. 14.)

Issued for 1847.

3—The Discovery of the Large, Rich, & Beautiful Empire of Guiana,

With a relation of the great and golden City of Manoa (which the Spaniards call El Dorado), &c., performed in the year 1595 by Sir Walter Raleigh, Knt.... Reprinted from the edition of 1596. With some unpublished Documents relative to that country. Edited with copious explanatory Notes and a biographical Memoir by Sir Robert Hermann Schomburgk, Ph. D. pp. lxxv. xv. 1 Map. Index.

(Out of print. Second Edition in preparation.) Issued for 1848.

4—Sir Francis Drake his Voyage, 1595,

By Thomas Maynarde, together with the Spanish Account of Drake’s attack on Puerto Rico. Edited from the original MSS. by William Desborough Cooley. pp. viii. 65.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1848.

5—Narratives of Voyages towards the North-West,

In search of a Passage to Cathay & India, 1496 to 1631. With selections from the early Records of ... the East India Company and from MSS. in the British Museum. Edited by Thomas Rundall. pp. xx. 259. 2 Maps.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1849.

6—The Historie of Travaile into Virginia Britannia,

Expressing the Cosmographie and Commodities of the Country, together with the manners and customs of the people, gathered and observed as well by those who went first thither as collected by William Strachey, Gent., the first Secretary of the Colony. Now first edited from the original MS. in the British Museum by Richard Henry Major, F.S.A., Keeper of Maps, British Museum, Sec. R.G.S. pp. xxxvi. 203. 1 Map. 6 Illus. Glossary. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1849.

7—Divers Voyages touching the Discovery of America.

And the Islands adjacent, collected and published by Richard Hakluyt, Prebendary of Bristol, in the year 1582. Edited, with notes & an introduction by John Winter Jones, Principal Librarian of the British Museum. pp. xci. 171. 6. 2 Maps, 1 Illus. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1850.

12—The Countries round the Bay of Bengal.

Edited, from an unpublished MS., 1669-79, by Thomas Bowrey, by Col. Sir Richard Carnac Temple, Bart., C.I.E. pp. lvi. 387. 19 Illus. & 1 Chart. Bibliography. Index.

Issued for 1903.

8—Memorials of the Empire of Japon,

In the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. (The Kingdome of Japonia. Harl. MSS. 6249.—The Letters of Wm. Adams, 1611 to 1617.) With a Commentary by Thomas Rundall. pp. xxxviii. 186. 1 Map. 5 Illus.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1850.

9—The Discovery and Conquest of Terra Florida,

By Don Ferdinando de Soto, & six hundred Spaniards his followers. Written by a Gentleman of Elvas, employed in all the action, and translated out of Portuguese by Richard Hakluyt. Reprinted from the edition of 1611. Edited with Notes & an Introduction, & a Translation of a Narrative of the Expedition by Luis Hernandez de Biedma, Factor to the same, by William Brenchley Rye, Keeper of Printed Books, British Museum. pp. lxvii. 200. v. 1 Map. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1851.

10—Notes upon Russia,

Being a Translation from the Earliest Account of that Country, entitled Rerum Muscoviticarum Commentarii, by the Baron Sigismund von Herberstein, Ambassador from the Court of Germany to the Grand Prince Vasiley Ivanovich, in the years 1517 and 1526. Translated and Edited with Notes & an Introduction, by Richard Henry Major, F.S.A., Keeper of Maps, British Museum, Sec. R.G.S. Vol. 1. pp. clxii. 116. 2 Illus.

(Vol. 2 = No. 12.)

(Out of print.) Issued for 1851.

11—The Geography of Hudson’s Bay,

Being the Remarks of Captain W. Coats, in many Voyages to that locality, between the years 1727 and 1751. With an Appendix containing Extracts from the Log of Captain Middleton on his Voyage for the Discovery of the North-west Passage, in H.M.S. “Furnace,” in 1741-3. Edited by John Barrow, F.R.S., F.S.A. pp. x. 147. Index.

Issued for 1852.

12—Notes upon Russia,

(Vol. 1. = No. 10.) Vol. 2. pp. iv. 266. 2 Maps. 1 Illus. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1852.

13 A True Description of Three Voyages by the North-East,

Towards Cathay and China, undertaken by the Dutch in the years 1594, 1595 and 1596, with their Discovery of Spitzbergen, their residence of ten months in Novaya Zemlya, and their safe return in two open boats. By Gerrit de Veer. Published at Amsterdam in 1598, & in 1609 translated into English by William Philip. Edited by Charles Tilstone Beke, Ph. D., F.S.A. pp. cxlii. 291. 4 Maps. 12 Illus. Index.

(Out of print. See also No. 54.) Issued for 1853.

14-15—The History of the Great and Mighty Kingdom of China and the Situation Thereof.

Compiled by the Padre Juan Gonzalez de Mendoza, & now reprinted from the Early Translation of R. Parke. Edited by Sir George Thomas Staunton, Bart., M.P., F.R.S. With an Introduction by Richard Henry Major, F.S.A., Keeper of Maps, British Museum, Sec. R.G.S., 2 vols. Index.

(Vol. 14 out of print.) Issued for 1854.

16—The World Encompassed by Sir Francis Drake.

Being his next Voyage to that to Nombre de Dios. [By Sir Francis Drake, the younger] Collated with an unpublished Manuscript of Francis Fletcher, Chaplain to the Expedition. With Appendices illustrative of the same Voyage, and Introduction, by William Sandys Wright Vaux, F.R.S., Keeper of Coins, British Museum. pp. xl. 295. 1 Map. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1855.

17—The History of the Two Tartar Conquerors of China,

Including the two Journeys into Tartary of Father Ferdinand Verbiest, in the suite of the Emperor Kang-Hi. From the French of PÈre Pierre Joseph d’OrlÉans, of the Company of Jesus, 1688. To which is added Father Pereira’s Journey into Tartary in the suite of the same Emperor. From the Dutch of Nicolaas Witsen. Translated and Edited by the Earl of Ellesmere. With an Introduction by Richard Henry Major, F.S.A., Keeper of Maps, British Museum, Sec. R.G.S. pp. xv. vi. 153. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1855.

18—A Collection of Documents on Spitzbergen and Greenland,

Comprising a Translation from F. Martens’ Voyage to Spitzbergen, 1671; a Translation from Isaac de la PeyrÈre’s Histoire du Groenland, 1663, and God’s Power and Providence in the Preservation of Eight Men in Greenland Nine Moneths and Twelve Dayes. 1630. Edited by Adam White, of the British Museum. pp. xvi. 288. 2 Maps. Index.

Issued for 1856.

19—The Voyage of Sir Henry Middleton to Bantam and the Maluco Islands,

Being the Second Voyage set forth by the Governor and Company of Merchants of London trading into the East Indies. From the (rare) Edition of 1606. Annotated and Edited by Bolton Corney. M.R.S.L. pp. xi. 83. 52. viii. 3 Maps. 3 Illus. Bibliography. Index.

(Out of print). Issued for 1856.

20—Russia at the Close of the Sixteenth Century.

Comprising the Treatise, “The Russe Commonwealth” by Dr. Giles Fletcher, and the Travels of Sir Jerome Horsey, Knt., now for the first time printed entire from his own MS. Edited by Sir Edward Augustus Bond, K.C.B., Principal Librarian of the British Museum. pp. cxxxiv. 392. Index.

Issued for 1857.

21—History of the New World. By Girolamo Benzoni, of Milan.

Showing his Travels in America, from A.D. 1541 to 1556, with some particulars of the Island of Canary. Now first Translated and Edited by Admiral William Henry Smyth, K.S.F., F.R.S., D.C.L. pp. iv. 280. 19 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1857.

22—India in the Fifteenth Century.

Being a Collection of Narratives of Voyages to India in the century preceding the Portuguese discovery of the Cape of Good Hope; from Latin, Persian, Russian, and Italian Sources. Now first Translated into English. Edited with an Introduction by Richard Henry Major, F.S.A., Keeper of Maps, British Museum. pp. xc. 49. 39. 32. 10. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1858.

23—Narrative of a Voyage to the West Indies and Mexico,

In the years 1599-1602, with 4 Maps and 5 Illustrations. By Samuel Champlain. Translated from the original and unpublished Manuscript, with a Biographical Notice and Notes by Alice Wilmere. Edited by Norton Shaw. pp. xcix. 48.

Issued for 1858.

24—Expeditions into the Valley of the Amazons, 1539, 1540, 1639,

Containing the Journey of Gonzalo Pizarro, from the Royal Commentaries of Garcilasso Inca de la Vega; the Voyage of Francisco de Orellana, from the General History of Herrera; and the Voyage of Cristoval de AcuÑa. Translated and Edited by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.R., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. lxiv. 190. 1 Map. List of Tribes in the Valley of the Amazons.

Issued for 1859.

25—Early Voyages to Terra Australis,

Now called Australia. A Collection of documents, and extracts from early MS. Maps, illustrative of the history of discovery on the coasts of that vast Island, from the beginning of the Sixteenth Century to the time of Captain Cook. Edited with an Introduction by Richard Henry Major, F.S.A., Keeper of Maps, British Museum, Sec. R.G.S. pp. cxix. 200. 13. 5 Maps. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1859.

26—Narrative of the Embassy of Ruy Gonzalez de Clavijo to the Court of Timour, at Samarcand, A.D., 1403-6.

Translated for the first time with Notes, a Preface, & an introductory Life of Timour Beg, by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. lvi. 200. 1 Map.

Issued for 1860.

27—Henry Hudson the Navigator, 1607-13.

The Original Documents in which his career is recorded. Collected, partly Translated, & annotated with an Introduction by George Michael Asher, LL.D. pp. ccxviii. 292. 2 Maps. Bibliography. Index.

Issued for 1860.

28—The Expedition of Pedro de Ursua and Lope de Aguirre,

In search of El Dorado and Omagua, in 1560-61. Translated from Fray Pedro Simon’s “Sixth Historical Notice of the Conquest of Tierra Firme,” 1627, by William Bollaert, F.R.G.S. With an Introduction by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. lii. 237. 1 Map.

Issued for 1861.

29—The Life and Acts of Don Alonzo Enriquez de Guzman.

A Knight of Seville, of the Order of Santiago, A.D. 1518 to 1543. Translated from an original & inedited MS. in the National Library at Madrid. With Notes and an Introduction by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. xxxv. 168. 1 Illus.

Issued for 1862.

30—The Discoveries of the World,

From their first original unto the year of our Lord 1555. By Antonio Galvano, Governor of Ternate. [Edited by F. de Sousa Tavares.] Corrected, quoted, & published in England by Richard Hakluyt, 1601. Now reprinted, with the original Portuguese text (1563), and edited by Admiral Charles Ramsay Drinkwater Bethune, C.B. pp. iv. viiii. 242.

Issued for 1862.

31—Mirabilia Descripta. The Wonders of the East.

By Friar Jordanus, of the Order of Preachers & Bishop of Columbum in India the Greater, circa 1330. Translated from the Latin Original, as published at Paris in 1839, in the Recueil de Voyages et de MÉmoires, of the SocietÉ de GÉographie. With the addition of a Commentary, by Col. Sir Henry Yule, K.C.S.I., R.E., C.B. pp. iv. xviii. 68. Index.

Issued for 1863.

32—The Travels of Ludovico di Varthema,

In Egypt, Syria, Arabia, Persia, India, & Ethiopia, A.D. 1503 to 1508. Translated from the original Italian edition of 1510, with a Preface, by John Winter Jones, F.S.A., Principal Librarian of the British Museum, & Edited, with Notes & an Introduction, by the Rev. George Percy Badger. pp. cxxi. 321. 1 Map. Index.

Issued for 1863.

33—The Travels of Pedro de Cieza de Leon, A.D. 1532-50,

From the Gulf of Darien to the City of La Plata, contained in the first part of his Chronicle of Peru (Antwerp, 1554). Translated & Edited, with Notes & an Introduction, by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. xvi. lvii. 438. Index.

(Vol. 2 = No. 68.)

Issued for 1864.

34—Narrative of the Proceedings of Pedrarias Davila,

In the Provinces of Tierra Firme or Castilla del Oro, & of the discovery of the South Sea and the Coasts of Peru and Nicaragua. Written by the Adelantado Pascual de Andagoya. Translated and Edited, with Notes & an Introduction, by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. xxix. 88. 1 Map. Index.

Issued for 1865.

35—A Description of the Coasts of East Africa and Malabar,

In the beginning of the Sixteenth Century, by Duarte Barbosa, a Portuguese. Translated from an early Spanish manuscript in the Barcelona Library, with Notes & a Preface, by Lord Stanley of Alderley. pp. xi. 336. 2 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1865.

36-37 Cathay and the Way Thither.

Being a Collection of mediÆval notices of China, previous to the Sixteenth Century. Translated and Edited by Colonel Sir Henry Yule, K.C.S.I., R.E., C.B. With a preliminary Essay on the intercourse between China & the Western Nations previous to the discovery of the Cape Route. 2 vols. 3 Maps. 2 Illus. Bibliography. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1866.

38—The Three Voyages of Sir Martin Frobisher,

In search of a Passage to Cathaia and India by the North-West, A.D. 1576-8. By George Best. Reprinted from the First Edition of Hakluyt’s Voyages. With Selections from MS. Documents in the British Museum & State Paper Office. Edited by Admiral Sir Richard Collinson, K.C.B. pp. xxvi. 376. 2 Maps. 1 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1867.

39—The Philippine Islands,

Moluccas, Siam, Cambodia, Japan, and China, at the close of the 16th Century. By Antonio de Morga, 1609. Translated from the Spanish, with Notes & a Preface, and a Letter from Luis Vaez de Torres, describing his Voyage through the Torres Straits, by Lord Stanley of Alderley. pp. xxiv. 431. 2 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1868.

40—The Fifth Letter of Hernan CortÉs,

To the Emperor Charles V., containing an Account of his Expedition to Honduras in 1525-26. Translated from the original Spanish by Don Pascual de Gayangos. pp. xvi. 156. Index.

Issued for 1868.

41—The Royal Commentaries of the Yncas.

By the Ynca Garcilasso de la Vega. Translated and Edited, with Notes & an Introduction, by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. Vol. 1. (Books I.-IV.) pp. xi. 359. 1 Map. Index.

(Vol. 2. = No. 45.)

Issued for 1869.

42—The Three Voyages of Vasco da Gama,

And his Viceroyalty, from the Lendas da India of Gaspar Correa; accompanied by original documents. Translated from the Portuguese, with Notes & an Introduction, by Lord Stanley of Alderley. pp. lxxvii. 430. XXXV. 3 Illus. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1869.

43—Select Letters of Christopher Columbus.

With other Original Documents relating to his Four Voyages to the New World. Translated and Edited by Richard Henry Major, F.S.A., Keeper of Maps, British Museum, Sec. R.G.S. Second Edition. pp. iv. 142. 3 Maps. 1 Illus. Index.

(First Edition = No. 2.)

Issued for 1870.

44—History of the ImÂms and Seyyids of ’OmÂn,

By SatÎl-Ibn-RazÎk, from A.D. 661-1856. Translated from the original Arabic, and Edited, with a continuation of the History down to 1870, by the Rev. George Percy Badger, F.R.G.S. pp. cxxviii. 435. 1 Map. Bibliography. Index.

Issued for 1870.

45—The Royal Commentaries of the Yncas.

By the Ynca Garcilasso de la Vega. Translated & Edited with Notes, an Introduction, & an Analytical Index, by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. Vol. II. (Books V.-IX.) pp. 553.

(Vol. 1. = No. 41.)

Issued for 1871.

46—The Canarian,

Or Book of the Conquest and Conversion of the Canarians in the year 1402, by Messire Jean de BÉthencourt, Kt. Composed by Pierre Bontier and Jean le Verrier. Translated and Edited by Richard Henry Major, F.S.A., Keeper of Maps, British Museum, Sec. R.G.S. pp. lv. 229. 1 Map. 2 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1871.

47—Reports on the Discovery of Peru,

I. Report of Francisco de Xeres, Secretary to Francisco Pizarro. II. Report of Miguel de Astete on the Expedition to Pachacamac. III. Letter of Hernando Pizarro to the Royal Audience of Santo Domingo. IV. Report of Pedro Sancho on the Partition of the Ransom of Atahuallpa. Translated and Edited, with Notes & an Introduction, by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B, F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. xxii. 143. 1 Map.

Issued for 1872.

48—Narratives of the Rites and Laws of the Yncas.

Translated from the original Spanish MSS., & Edited, with Notes and an Introduction, by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. xx. 220. Index.

Issued for 1872.

49—Travels to Tana and Persia,

By Josafa Barbaro and Ambrogio Contarini. Translated from the Italian by William Thomas, Clerk of the Council to Edward VI., and by E. A. Roy, and Edited, with an Introduction, by Lord Stanley of Alderley. pp. xi. 175. Index. A Narrative of Italian Travels in Persia, in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth centuries. Translated and Edited by Charles Grey. pp. xvii. 231. Index.

Issued for 1873.

50—The Voyages of the Venetian Brothers, Nicolo & Antonio Zeno,

To the Northern Seas in the Fourteenth century. Comprising the latest known accounts of the Lost Colony of Greenland, & of the Northmen in America before Columbus. Translated & Edited, with Notes and Introduction, by Richard Henry Major, F.S A., Keeper of Maps, British Museum, Sec. R.G.S. pp. ciii. 64. 2 Maps. Index.

Issued for 1873.

51—The Captivity of Hans Stade of Hesse in 1547-55,

Among the Wild Tribes of Eastern Brazil. Translated by Albert Tootal, of Rio de Janiero, and annotated by Sir Richard Francis Burton, K.C.M.G. pp. xcvi. 169. Bibliography.

Issued for 1874.

52—The First Voyage Round the World by Magellan. 1518-1521.

Translated from the Accounts of Pigafetta and other contemporary writers. Accompanied by original Documents, with Notes & an Introduction, by Lord Stanley of Alderley. pp. lx. 257. xx. 2 Maps. 5 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1874.

53—The Commentaries of the Great Afonso Dalboquerque,

Second Viceroy of India. Translated from the Portuguese Edition of 1774, and Edited by Walter de Gray Birch, F.R.S.L., of the British Museum. Vol. 1. pp. lx. 256. 2 Maps. 1 Illus. (Index in No. 69.)

(Vol. 2 = No. 55. Vol. 3 = No. 62. Vol. 4 = No. 69.)

Issued for 1875.

54—The Three Voyages of William Barents to the Arctic Regions, in 1594, 1595, & 1596.

By Gerrit de Veer. Edited, with an Introduction, by Lieut. Koolemans Beynen, of the Royal Netherlands Navy. Second Edition, pp. clxxiv. 289. 2 Maps. 12 Illus.

(First Edition = No. 13.)

Issued for 1875.

55—The Commentaries of the Great Afonso Dalboquerque,

Second Viceroy of India. Translated from the Portuguese Edition of 1774, with Notes and an Introduction, by Walter de Gray Birch, F.R.S.L., of the British Museum. Vol. 2. pp. cxxxiv. 242. 2 Maps. 2 Illus. (Index in No. 69.)

(Vol. 1 = No. 53. Vol. 3 = No. 62. Vol. 4 = No. 69.)

Issued for 1875.

56—The Voyages of Sir James Lancaster, Knt., to the East Indies,

With Abstracts of Journals of Voyages to the East Indies, during the Seventeenth century, preserved in the India Office & the Voyage of Captain John Knight, 1606, to seek the North-West Passage. Edited by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. xxii. 314. Index.

Issued for 1877.

57—The Hawkins’ Voyages,

During the reigns of Henry VIII, Queen Elizabeth, and James I. [Second edition of No. 1] Edited by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. lii. 453. 1 Illus. Index.

(First Edition = No. 1).

Issued for 1877.

58—The Bondage and Travels of Johann Schiltberger, a Native of Bavaria, in Europe, Asia, & Africa.

From his capture at the battle of Nicopolis in 1396 to his escape and return to Europe in 1427. Translated from the Heidelberg MS., Edited in 1859 by Professor Karl Fr. Neumann, by Commander John Buchan Telfer, R.N.; F.S.A. With Notes by Professor P. Bruun, & a Preface, Introduction, & Notes by the Translator & Editor. pp. xxxii. 263. 1 Map. Bibliography. Index.

Issued for 1878.

59—The Voyages and Works of John Davis the Navigator.

Edited by Admiral Sir Albert Hastings Markham. K.C.B. pp. xcv. 392. 2 Maps. 15 Illus. Bibliography. Index.

Issued for 1878.

The Map of the World, A.D. 1600.

Called by Shakspere “The New Map, with the Augmentation of the Indies.”

To illustrate the Voyages of John Davis. Issued for 1878.

60-61—The Natural & Moral History of the Indies,

By Father Joseph de Acosta. Reprinted from the English Translated Edition of Edward Grimston, 1604; and Edited by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. Vol. 1, The Natural History Books, I.-IV. pp. xlv. 295. Vol. 2, The Moral History Books, V.-VII. pp. xiii. 295-551. Index.

Issued for 1879.

Map of Peru.

To Illustrate Nos. 33, 41, 45, 60, and 61.

Issued for 1879.

62—The Commentaries of the Great Afonso Dalboquerque,

Second Viceroy of India. Translated from the Portuguese Edition of 1774, with Notes & an Introduction, by Walter de Gray Birch, F.S.A., of the British Museum. Vol. 3. pp. xliv. 308. 3 Maps. 3 Illus. (Index in No. 69.)

Issued for 1880.

63—The Voyages of William Baffin, 1612-1622,

Edited, with Notes & an Introduction, by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. lix. 192. 8 Maps, 1 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1880.

64—Narrative of the Portuguese Embassy to Abyssinia,

During the years 1520-1527. By Father Francisco Alvarez. Translated from the Portuguese & Edited, with Notes & an Introduction, by Lord Stanley of Alderley. pp. xxvii. 416. Index.

Issued for 1881.

65—The History of the Bermudas or Summer Islands,

Attributed to Captain Nathaniel Butler. Edited from a MS. in the Sloane Collection, British Museum, by General Sir John Henry Lefroy, R.A., K.C.M.G., C.B., F.R.S. pp. xii. 327. 1 Map. 3 Illus. Glossary. Index.

Issued for 1881.

66-67—The Diary of Richard Cocks,

Cape-Merchant in the English Factory in Japan, 1615-1622, with Correspondence (Add. MSS. 31.300-1, British Museum). Edited by Sr Edward Maunde Thompson, K.C.B., Director of the British Museum. Vol. 1. pp. liv. 349. Vol. 2. pp. 368. Index.

Issued for 1882.

68—The Second Part of the Chronicle of Peru, 1532-1550,

By Pedro de Cieza de Leon. 1554. Translated and Edited, with Notes & an Introduction, by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. lx. 247. Index.

(Vol. 1 = No. 33.)

Issued for 1883.

69—The Commentaries of the Great Afonso Dalboquerque,

Second Viceroy of India. Translated from the Portuguese Edition of 1774, with Notes & an Introduction, by Walter de Gray Birch, F.S.A., of the British Museum. Vol. 4. pp. xxxv. 324. 2 Maps. 2 Illus. Index to the 4 vols.

(Vol. 1 = No. 53. Vol. 2 = No. 55. Vol. 3 = No. 62.)

Issued for 1883.

70-71—The Voyage of John Huyghen van Linschoten to the East Indies.

From the Old English Translation of 1598. The First Book, containing his Description of the East. In Two Volumes, Edited, the First Volume, by the late Arthur Coke Burnell, Ph.D., C.I.E., Madras C. S.; the Second Volume, by Pieter Anton Tiele, of Utrecht. Vol. 1. pp. lii. 307. Vol. 2. pp. xv. 341. Index.

Issued for 1884.

72-73—Early Voyages and Travels to Russia and Persia,

By Anthony Jenkinson and other Englishmen, with some account of the first Intercourse of the English with Russia and Central Asia by way of the Caspian Sea. Edited by Edward Delmar Morgan, and Charles Henry Coote, of the British Museum. Vol. 1. pp. clxii. 176. 2 Maps. 2 Illus. Vol. 2. pp. 177-496. 2 Maps. 1 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1885.

74-75—The Diary of William Hedges, Esq.,

Afterwards Sir William Hedges, during his Agency in Bengal; as well as on his Voyage out and Return Overland (1681-1687). Transcribed for the Press, with Introductory Notes, etc., by R. Barlow, and Illustrated by copious Extracts from Unpublished Records, etc., by Col. Sir Henry Yule, K.C.S.I., R.E., C.B., LL.D. Vol. 1. The Diary, with Index. pp. xii. 265. Vol. 2. Notices regarding Sir William Hedges, Documentary Memoirs of Job Charnock, and other Biographical & Miscellaneous Illustrations of the time in India. pp. ccclx. 287. 18 Illus.

(Vol. 3 = No. 78.)

Issued for 1886.

76-77—The Voyage of FranÇois Pyrard, of Laval, to the East Indies,

The Maldives, the Moluccas and Brazil. Translated into English from the Third French Edition of 1619, and Edited, with Notes, by Albert Gray, K.C., assisted by Harry Charles Purvis Bell, Ceylon C. S. Vol. 1. pp. lviii. 1 Map. 11 Illus. Vol. 2. Part 1. pp. xlvii. 287. 7 Illus.

(Vol. 2. Part II. = No. 80.)

Issued for 1887.

78—The Diary of William Hedges, Esq.

Vol. 3. Documentary Contributions to a Biography of Thomas Pitt, Governor of Fort St. George, with Collections on the Early History of the Company’s Settlement in Bengal, & on Early Charts and Topography of the HÚglÍ River. pp. cclxii. 1 Map. 8 Illus. Index to Vols. 2, 3.

(Vols. 1, 2 = Nos. 74, 75.)

Issued for 1888.

79—Tractatus de Globis, et eorum usu.

A Treatise descriptive of the Globes constructed by Emery Molyneux, and Published in 1592. By Robert Hues. Edited, with annotated Indices & an Introduction, by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres.

R.G.S. To which is appended,

Sailing Directions for the Circumnavigation of England,

And for a Voyage to the Straits of Gibraltar. From a Fifteenth Century MS. Edited, with an Account of the MS., by James Gairdner, of the Public Record Office; with a Glossary by Edward Delmar Morgan. pp. l. 229. 37. 1 Illus. 1 Map.

Issued for 1888.

80—The Voyage of FranÇois Pyrard, of Laval, to the East Indies, the Maldives, the Moluccas, and Brazil.

Translated into English from the Third French Edition of 1619, and Edited, with Notes, by Albert Gray, K.C., assisted by Harry Charles Purvis Bell, Ceylon Civil Service. Vol 2. Pt. II. pp. xii. 289-572. 2 Maps. Index.

(Vol 1. Vol. 2. Pt. I. = Nos. 76, 77.)

Issued for 1889.

81—The Conquest of La Plata, 1535-1555.

I.—Voyage of Ulrich Schmidt to the Rivers La Plata and Paraguai, from the original German edition, 1567. II. The Commentaries of Alvar NuÑez Cabeza de Vaca. From the original Spanish Edition, 1555. Translated, with Notes and an Introduction, by H. E. Don Luis L. Dominguez, Minister Plenipotentiary of the Argentine Republic. pp. xlvi. 282. 1 Map, Bibliography. Index.

Issued for 1889.

82-83—The Voyage of FranÇois Leguat, of Bresse, 1690-98.

To Rodriguez, Mauritius, Java, and the Cape of Good Hope. Transcribed from the First English Edition, 1708. Edited and Annotated by Capt. Samuel Pasfield Oliver, (late) R.A. Vol 1. pp. lxxxviii. 137. 1 Illus. 6 Maps. Bibliography. Vol. 2. pp. xviii. 433. 5 Illus. 5 Maps. Index.

Issued for 1890.

84-85—The Travels of Pietro della Valle to India,

From the Old English Translation of 1664, by G. Havers. Edited, with a Life of the Author, an Introduction & Notes by Edward Grey, late Bengal C. S. Vol. 1. pp. lvi. 192. 2 Maps. 2 Illus. Bibliography. Vol. 2. pp. xii. 193-456. Index.

Issued for 1891.

86—The Journal of Christopher Columbus,

During his First Voyage (1492-93), and Documents relating to the Voyages John Cabot and Gaspar Corte Real. Translated, with Notes & an Introduction, by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. liv. 259. 3 Maps. 1 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1892.

87—Early Voyages and Travels in the Levant,

I.—The Diary of Master Thomas Dallam, 1599-1600. II.—Extracts from the Diaries of Dr. John Covel, 1670-1679. With some Account of the Levant Company of Turkey Merchants. Edited by James Theodore Bent, F.S.A., F.R.G.S. pp. xlv. 305. Illus. Index.

Issued for 1892.

88-89—The Voyages of Captain Luke Foxe, of Hull, and Captain Thomas James, of Bristol,

In Search of a N.-W. Passage, 1631-32; with Narratives of the Earlier North-West Voyages of Frobisher, Davis, Weymouth, Hall, Knight, Hudson, Button, Gibbons, Bylot, Baffin, Hawkridge, & others. Edited, with Notes & an Introduction, by Robert Miller Christy, F.L.S. Vol. 1. pp. ccxxxi. 259. 2 Maps. 2 Illus. Vol. 2. pp. viii. 261-681. 3 Maps. 1 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1893.

90—The Letters of Amerigo Vespucci,

And other Documents illustrative of his Career. Translated, with Notes & an Introduction, by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. xliv. 121. 1 Map. Index.

Issued for 1894.

91—Narratives of the Voyages of Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa to the Straits of Magellan, 1579-80.

Translated and Edited, with Illustrative Documents and Introduction, by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B., F.R.S., ex-Pres. R.G.S. pp. xxx. 401. 1 Map. Index.

Issued for 1894.

92-93-94—The History and Description of Africa,

And of the Notable Things Therein Contained. Written by Al-Hassan Ibn-Mohammed Al-Wezaz Al-Fasi, a Moor, baptized as Giovanni Leone, but better known as Leo Africanus. Done into English in the year 1600 by John Pory, and now edited with an Introduction & Notes, by Dr. Robert Brown. In 3 Vols. Vol. 1. pp. viii. cxi. 224. 4 Maps. Vol. 2. pp. 225-698. Vol. 3. pp. 699-1119. Index.

Issued for 1895.

95—The Chronicle of the Discovery and Conquest of Guinea.

Written by Gomes Eannes de Azurara. Now first done into English and Edited by Charles Raymond Beazley, M.A., F.R.G.S., and Edgar Prestage, B.A. Vol. 1. (Ch. i.—xl.) With Introduction on the Life & Writings of the Chronicler. pp. lxvii. 127. 3 Maps. 1 Illus.

(Vol. 2 = No. 100.)

Issued for 1896.

96-97—Danish Arctic Expeditions, 1605 to 1620. In Two Books.

Book 1. The Danish Expeditions to Greenland, 1605-07; to which is added Captain James Hall’s Voyage to Greenland in 1612. Edited by Christian Carl August Gosch. pp. xvi. cxvii. 205. 10 Maps. Index.

Issued for 1896.

Book 2. The Expedition of Captain Jens Munk to Hudson’s Bay in search of a North-West Passage in 1619-20. Edited by Christian Carl August Gosch. pp. cxviii. 187. 4 Maps. 2 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1897.

98—The Topographia Christiana of Cosmas Indicopleustes, an Egyptian Monk.

Translated from the Greek and Edited by John Watson McCrindle, LL.D., M.R.A.S. pp. xii. xxvii. 398. 4 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1897.

99—A Journal of the First Voyage of Vasco da Gama, 1497-1499.

By an unknown writer. Translated from the Portuguese, with an Introduction and Notes, by Ernest George Ravenstein, F.R.G.S. pp. xxxvi. 250. 8 Maps. 23 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1898.

100—The Chronicle of the Discovery and Conquest of Guinea.

Written by Gomes Eannes de Azurara. Now first done into English and Edited by Charles Raymond Beazley, M.A., F.R.G.S., and Edgar Prestage, B.A. Vol. 2. (Ch. xli.—xcvii.) With an Introduction on the Early History of African Exploration, Cartography, &c. pp. cl. 362. 3 Maps. 2 Illus. Index.

(Vol. 1 = No. 95.)

Issued for 1898.


WORKS ALREADY ISSUED.

SECOND SERIES.

1899, etc.

1-2—The Embassy of Sir Thomas Roe to the Court of the Great Mogul, 1615-19.

Edited from Contemporary Records by William Foster, B.A., of the India Office. 2 vols. Portrait, 2 Maps, & 6 Illus. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1899.

3—The Voyage of Sir Robert Dudley to the West Indies and Guiana in 1594.

Edited by George Frederic Warner, Litt.D., F.S.A., Keeper of Manuscripts, British Museum. pp. lxvi. 104. Portrait, Map, & 1 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1899.

4—The Journeys of William of Rubruck and John of Pian de Carpine.

To Tartary in the 13th century. Translated and Edited by H. E. the Hon. Wm. Woodville Rockhill. pp. lvi. 304. Bibliography. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1900.

5—The Voyage of Captain John Saris to Japan in 1613.

Edited by H. E. Sir Ernest Mason Satow, G.C.M.G. pp. lxxxvii. 242. Map, & 5 Illus. Index.

Issued for 1900.

6—The Strange Adventures of Andrew Battell of Leigh in Essex.

Edited by Ernest George Ravenstein, F.R.G.S. pp. xx. 210. 2 Maps. Bibliography. Index.

Issued for 1900.

7-8—The Voyage of MendaÑa to the Solomon Islands in 1568.

Edited by the Lord Amherst of Hackney and Basil Thomson. 2 vols. 5 Maps, & 33 Illus. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1901.

9—The Journey of Pedro Teixeira from India to Italy by land, 1604-05;

With his Chronicle of the Kings of Ormus. Translated and Edited by William Frederic Sinclair, late Bombay C. S., with additional Notes, &c., by Donald William Ferguson. pp. cvii. 292. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1901.

10—The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541, as narrated by

Castanhoso and Bermudez. Edited by Richard Stephen Whiteway, late I.C.S. With a Bibliography, by Basil H. Soulsby, F.S.A., Superintendent of the Map Department, British Museum. pp. cxxxii. 296. Map, & 2 Illus. Bibliography. Index.

(Out of print.) Issued for 1902.

11—Early Dutch and English Voyages to Spitzbergen in the Seventeenth Century,

Including Hessel Gerritsz. “Histoire du Pays nommÉ Spitsberghe,” 1613, translated into English, for the first time, by Basil H. Soulsby, F.S.A., of the British Museum: and Jacob Segersz. van der Brugge, “Journael of Dagh Register,” Amsterdam, 1634, translated into English, for the first time, by J. A. J. de Villiers, of the British Museum. Edited, with introductions and notes by Sir Martin Conway. pp. xvi. 191. 3 Maps, & 3 Illus. Bibliography. Index.

Issued for 1902.

13—The Voyage of Captain Don Felipe Gonzalez,

In the Ship of the Line San Lorenzo, with the Frigate Santa Rosalia in company, to Easter Island, in 1770-1771. Preceded by an Extract from Mynheer Jacob Roggeveen’s Official Log of his Discovery of and Visit to Easter Island in 1722. Translated, Annotated, and Edited by Bolton Glanvill Corney, Companion of the Imperial Service Order. With a Preface by Admiral Sir Cyprian Bridge, G.C.B. 3 Maps & 4 Illus. Bibliography. Index, pp. lxxvii. 176.

Issued for 1903.

14, 15—The Voyages of Pedro Fernandez de Quiros, 1595 to 1606.

Translated and Edited by Sir Clements Markham, K.C.B., Pres. R.G.S., President of the Hakluyt Society. With a Note on the Cartography of the Southern Continent, and a Bibliography, by Basil H. Soulsby, F.S.A., Superintendent of the Map Department, British Museum. 2 vols. 3 Maps. Bibliography. Index.

Issued for 1904.

16—John Jourdain’s Journal of a Voyage to the East Indies, 1608-1617.

(Sloane MS. 858, British Museum). Edited by William Foster, B.A., of the India Office, pp. lxxxii. 394. With Appendices, A-F, and a Bibliography, by Basil H. Soulsby, F.S.A. 4 Maps. Index.

Issued for 1905.

17—The Travels of Peter Mundy in Europe and Asia, 1608-1667.

(Bodleian Library. Rawl. MSS. A. 315.) Vol. I. Travels in Europe, 1608-1628. Edited by Lieut.-Col. Sr Richard Carnac Temple, Bart., C.I.E., Editor of “A Geographical Account of Countries round the Bay of Bengal.” 3 Maps & 3 Illus. With a Bibliography, alphabetically arranged. Index. pp. lxiii. 284.

Issued for 1905.

18—East and West Indian Mirror.

By Joris van Speilbergen. An Account of his Voyage Round the World in the years 1614 to 1617, including the Australian Navigations of Jacob le Maire. Translated from the Dutch edition, “Oost ende West-Indische Spiegel, &c.,” Nicolaes van Geelkercken: Leyden, 1619, with Notes and an Introduction, by John A. J. de Villiers, of the British Museum. With a Bibliography & Index by Basil H. Soulsby, F.S.A. 26 Illus. & Maps. Index. pp. lxi. 272.

Issued for 1906.

19, 20.—A New Account of East India and Persia.

In eight Letters, being Nine Years’ Travels, begun 1672, and finished 1681. By John Fryer, M.D., Cantabrig., and Fellow of the Royal Society. Printed by R. R. for Ri. Chiswell; at the Rose and Crown in St. Paul’s Churchyard, London, 1688. Fol. Edited, with Notes and an Introduction, by William Crooke, B.A., Bengal Civil Service (retired), Editor of “Hobson Jobson,” &c., &c. Vol. I-II.

Issued for 1909 and 1912.

21—The Guanches of Tenerife, The Holy Image of Our Lady of Candelaria.

With the Spanish Conquest and Settlement. By the Friar Alonso de Espinosa, of the Order of Preachers, 1594. Translated and Edited, with Notes and an Introduction, by Sir Clements Markham, K.C.B., President of the Hakluyt Society. With a Bibliography of the Canary Islands, A.D. 1341-1907, chronologically arranged, with the British Museum press-marks, and an alphabetical list of authors, editors, and titles. 2 Maps, by Sir Clements Markham, and 4 Illus. Index. pp. xxvi. 221.

Issued for 1907.

22—History of the Incas.

By Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa. 1572. From the MS. sent to King Philip II. of Spain, and now in the GÖttingen University Library. And The Execution of the Inca Tupac Amaru. 1571. By Captain Baltasar de Ocampo, 1610. (British Museum Add. MSS. 17, 585.) Translated and Edited, with Notes and an Introduction, by Sir Clements Markham, K.C.B. 2 Maps, by Graham Mackay, R.G.S., and 10 Illus. Index, pp. xxii. 395.

—Supplement. A Narrative of the Vice-Regal Embassy to Vilcabambal 1571, and of the Execution of the Inca Tupac Amaru, Dec. 1571. By Friar Gabriel de Oviedo, of Cuzco, 1573. Translated by Sir Clements Markham, K.C.B. Index. pp. 397-412.

Issued for 1907.

23, 24, 25—Conquest of New Spain.

The True History of the Conquest of New Spain. By Bernal DÍaz del Castillo, one of its Conquerors. From the only exact copy made of the Original Manuscript. Edited and published in Mexico, by Genaro GarcÍa, 1904. Translated into English, with Introduction and Notes, by Alfred Percival Maudslay, M.A., Hon. Professor of ArchÆology, National Museum, Mexico. Vols. I-III.

Issued for 1908 and 1910.

26, 27.—Storm van’s Gravesande.

The Rise of British Guiana, compiled from his despatches, by C. A. Harris, C.B., C.M.G., Chief Clerk, Colonial Office, and J. A. J. de Villiers, of the British Museum. 2 vols.

Issued for 1911.

28.—Magellan’s Strait.

Early Spanish Voyages, edited, with Notes and Introduction, by Sir Clements R. Markham, K.C.B. pp. viii. 288.

Issued for 1911.

29.—Book of the Knowledge.

Book of the Knowledge of all the Kingdoms, Lands and Lordships that are in the World.... Written by a Spanish Franciscan in the Middle of the XIV Century; published for the first time, with Notes, by Marcos Jimenez de la Espada. Translated and Edited by Sir Clements Markham, K.C.B. With 20 Coloured Plates. pp. xiii. 85.

Issued for 1912.

30.—Conquest of New Spain.

The True History of the Conquest of New Spain. By Bernal DÍaz Castillo.... Edited by Genaro GarcÍa. Translated, with Notes, by Alfred P. Maudslay, M.A., Hon. Professor of ArchÆology. Vol. IV.

Issued for 1912.

EXTRA SERIES

1-12—The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, & Discoveries of the English Nation,

Made by Sea or Over-land to the remote and farthest distant quarters of the earth at any time within the compasse of these 1600 yeeres. By Richard Hakluyt, Preacher, and sometime Student of Christ Church in Oxford. With an Essay on the English Voyages of the Sixteenth Century, by Walter Raleigh, Professor of the English Language in the University of Oxford. Index by Madame Marie Michon and Miss Elizabeth Carmont. 12 vols. James MacLehose & Sons: Glasgow, 1903-5.

(Out of print.)

13—The Texts & Versions of John de Plano Carpini and William de Rubruquis.

As printed for the first time by Hakluyt in 1598, together with some shorter pieces. Edited by Charles Raymond Beazley, M.A., F.R.G.S. pp. xx. 345. Index. University Press: Cambridge, 1903.

(Out of print.)

14-33—Hakluytus Posthumus or Purchas His Pilgrimes.

Contayning a History of the World in Sea Voyages and Lande Travells by Englishmen and others. By Samuel Purchas, B.D. 20 vols. Maps & Illus. With an Index by Madame Marie Michon. James MacLehose and Sons: Glasgow, 1905-7.

THE ISSUES FOR 1913 WILL BE:

1. The War of Quito, by Cieza de Leon. Translated and Edited by Sir Clements Markham, K.C.B.

2. New Light on Drake. Spanish and Portuguese Documents relating to the circumnavigation voyage. Discovered, translated and annotated by Mrs. Zelia Nuttall.

3. The Quest and Occupation of Tahiti by Emissaries of Spain. Edited by B. Glanvill Corney, I.S.O. Vol. I.

OTHER VOLUMES IN ACTIVE PREPARATION ARE:

The Quest and Occupation of Tahiti. Edited by B. Glanvill Corney, I.S.O. Vol. II.

In Press.

Cathay and the Way Thither. Being a collection of MediÆval Notices of China previous to the XVI Century. Translated and Edited by Colonel Sir Henry Yule, K.C.S.I., R.E., C.B. A new Edition by Professor Henri Cordier, de l’Institut de France. 3 Vols.

In Press.

The Travels of Peter Mundy in Europe and Asia, 1608-1667. Edited by Sir Richard Carnac Temple, Bart., C.I.E. Vol. II.

The True History of the Conquest of New Spain. By Bernal Diaz del Castillo. Translated, with Notes, by A. P. Maudslay. Vol. V. and last.

Jons Olafssonar Indiafara. An English translation, Edited by Sigfus BlÖndal and Sir R. C. Temple, Bart., C.I.E. 2 Vols.


INDEX TO THE FIRST AND SECOND SERIES OF THE SOCIETY’S PUBLICATIONS, 1847-1912.

Abd-er-Razzak, i. 22
Abyssinia, i. 32, 64; ii. 10
Acosta, Joseph de, i. 60, 61
AcuÑa, Cristoval de, i. 24; ii. 22
Adams, Will., i. 8, 66, 67; ii. 5
Africa, i. 21, 58, 82, 83, 92-94, 95, 100
Africa, East, i. 32, 35, 64; ii. 10
Africa, West, ii. 6
Aguirre, Lope de, i. 28, 47
Alaminos, Anton de, ii. 23
Albuquerque, Affonso de, i. 53, 55, 62, 69
Alcock, Thomas, i. 72, 73
Alessandri, Vincentio d’, i. 49
Al Hassan Ibn Muhammad. See Hasan.
Alvarado, Pedro de, ii. 23
Alvarez, Francisco, i. 64
Alvo, Francisco, i. 52
Amapaia, i. 3
Amat y Junient, Manuel de, Viceroy of Peru, ii. 13
Amazon, i. 24
America, Central, i. 40
America, North, i. 2, 4, 6, 7, 9, 11, 18, 21, 23, 43, 50, 65, 96, 97
America, South, i. 3, 21, 24, 28, 33, 34, 41, 43, 45, 47, 51, 60, 61, 68, 76, 77, 80, 81, 91; ii. 3, 13, 14, 15, 22
Amherst of Hackney, Lord, ii. 7, 8
Andagoya, Pascual de, i. 34; ii. 22
Angiolello, Giovanni Maria, i. 49
Angola, ii. 6
Aquines, Juan. See Hawkins, Sir John.
Arabia, i. 32; ii. 16
Arctic Regions, i. 13, 54, 88, 89, 96, 97
Arias, Dr. Juan Luis, i. 25; ii. 14, 15
Arias d’Avila, Pedro, i. 21, 34, 47; ii. 22, 23
Arriaga y Rivera, Julian de, ii. 13
Arromaia, i. 3
Asher, George Michael, i. 27
Asia, i. 5, 8, 13-15, 17, 19, 22, 26, 35-39, 42, 44, 49, 53-55, 58, 62, 66, 67, 69-78, 80, 82, 83, 87; ii. 1, 2, 4, 5, 12, 16, 17
Astete, Miguel de, i. 47; ii. 22
Atahualpa, i. 47, 68; ii. 22
Australasia, i. 25; ii. 7, 8, 14, 15, 18
Avila, Francisco de, i. 48; ii. 22
Avila, Pedro Arias d’. See Arias d’Avila.
Azov, i. 49
Azurara, Gomes Eannes de. See Eannes.
Badger, George Percy, i. 32, 44
Baffin, William, i. 5, 63, 88, 89
Balak, John, i. 13, 54
Bantam, i. 19
Barbaro, Giosafat, i. 49
Barbosa, Duarte, i. 35, 52
Barcelona MSS., i. 35
Bardsen, Ivar, i. 50
Barentsz., William, i. 13, 27, 54
Barker, Edmund, i. 56
Barlow, R., i. 74, 75, 78
Barrow, John, F.R.S., i. 11
Battell, Andrew, ii. 6
Beazley, Charles Raymond, i. 95, 100; Extra Ser. 13
Behrens, Carl Friedrich, ii. 13
Beke, Charles Tilstone, i. 13, 54
Bell, Harry Charles Purvis, i. 76, 77, 80
Belmonte y Bermudez, Luis de, ii. 14, 15
Bengal, i. 74, 75, 78; ii. 12
Bent, James Theodore, i. 87
Benzoni, Girolamo, i. 21
Bermudas, i. 65, 86
Bermudez, JoÃo, ii. 10
Beste, George, i. 38
BÉthencourt, Jean de, i. 46; ii. 21
Bethune, Charles Ramsay Drinkwater, i. 1, 30
Beynen, Koolemans, i. 54
Biedma, Luis Hernandez de, i. 9
Bilot, Robert, i. 88, 89
Birch, Walter de Gray, i. 53, 55, 62, 69
Bollaert, William, i. 28
Bond, Sir Edward Augustus, K.C.B., i. 20
Bontier, Pierre, i. 16; ii. 21
Boty, Iver, i. 13
Bowrey, Thomas, ii. 12
Bracciolini, Poggio, i. 22
Brazil, i. 51, 76, 77, 80
Bridge, Admiral Sir Cyprian Arthur George, G.C.B., ii. 13
British Guiana, ii. 26, 27
British Museum MSS., i. 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 16, 20, 25, 38, 52, 53, 55, 62, 65-67, 69; ii. 13, 16, 22
Brown, Dr. Robert, i. 92-94
Brugge, Jacob Segersz, van der. See Segersz, Jacob.
Bruun, Philip, i. 58
Burnell, Arthur Coke, C.I.E., i. 70, 71
Burre, Walter, i. 19
Burrough, Christopher, i. 72, 73
Burrough, William, i. 72, 73
Burton, Sir Richard Francis, K.C.M.G., i. 51
Butler, Nathaniel, i. 65, 86
Button, Sir Thomas, i. 5, 88, 89
Bylot, Robert, i. 5, 63, 88, 89
CabeÇa de Vaca, Alvar NuÑez. See NuÑez CabeÇa de Vaca.
Cabot, John, i. 86
Cabot, Sebastian, i. 5, 12
Cambodia, i. 39
Canarian, The, i. 46; ii. 21
Canary Islands, i. 21, 46; ii. 21
Candelaria, Our Lady of, ii. 21
Cape of Good Hope, i. 22, 36, 37, 82, 83
Carmont, Elizabeth, Extra Ser. 12
Carpino Joannes, de Plano. See Joannes.
Caspian Sea, i. 72, 73
Cassano, Ussan, i. 49
Castanhoso, Miguel de, ii. 10
Castilla del Oro, i. 34, 47
Cathay, i. 5, 13, 36-38, 54; ii. 19, 20
Champlain, Samuel, i. 23
Chanca, Dr., i. 2, 43
Charles V., Emperor, i. 40, 47; ii. 22, 23, 24
Charnock, Job, i. 74, 75, 78
Cheinie, Richard, i. 72, 73
China, i. 5, 13-15, 17, 36, 37, 39, 54; ii. 19, 20
Christy, Robert Miller, i. 88, 89
Cieza de Leon, Pedro de, i. 33, 68; ii. 22
Cinnamon, Land of, i. 24
Clavigo, Ruy Gonzalez de. See Gonzalez de Clavigo.
Cliffe, Edward, i. 16
Clifford, George, i. 59
Coats, William, i. 11
Cocks, Richard, i. 8, 66, 67
Cogswell, Joseph G., i. 27
Collinson, Sir Richard, K.C.B., i. 38
Columbus, Christopher:
Journal, i. 86
Letters, i. 2, 43
Congo, ii. 6
Contarini, Ambrogio, i. 49
Conti, NicolÒ, i. 22
Conway, Sir William Martin, ii. 11
Cooley, William Desborough, i. 4
Cook, Captain James, i. 25
Coote, Charles Henry, i. 72, 73
Corney, Bolton, i. 19
Corney, Bolton Glanvill, I.S.O., ii. 13
Correa, Gaspar, i. 42
Corte Real, Gaspar, i. 86
CortÉs, Hernando, i., 21, 40; ii. 23, 24, 25
Cosmas Indicopleustes, i. 98
Covel, John, i. 87
Crosse, Ralph, i. 56
Crooke, William, ii. 19, 20
Cumberland, Earl of, i. 59
Cuzco, i. 47; ii. 22
Dalboquerque, Afonso. See Albuquerque.
Dallam, Thomas, i. 87
Dalrymple, Alexander, i. 25; ii. 14, 15
Dampier, William, i. 25
Danish Arctic Expeditions, i. 96, 97
Darien, Gulf of, i. 33
Dati, Giuliano, i. 2, 43
Davila, Pedrarias. See Arias d’Avila.
Davis, Edward, ii. 13
Davis, John, i. 5, 59, 88, 89
De Villiers, John Abraham Jacob, ii. 11, 18, 26, 27
DÍaz, Juan, Clerigo, ii. 23
DÍaz del Castillo, Bernal, ii. 23, 24, 25, 30
Digges, Sir Dudley, i. 63
Dominguez, Don Luis L., i. 81
Donck, Adrian van der, i. 27
Dorado, El, i. 3, 28; ii. 26, 27
Doughty, Thomas, i. 16
Downton, Nicholas, i. 56
Drake, Sir Francis, i. 4, 16
Drake, Sir Francis, the Younger, i. 16
Dryandri, Joh., i. 51
Ducket, Jeffrey, i. 72, 73
Dudley, Sir Robert, ii. 3
Dutch Voyages, i. 13; ii. 11, 13, 18
East India, ii. 19, 20
East India Company, i. 5, 19
East Indies. See India.
Easter Island, ii. 13
Eannes, Gomes, de Zurara, i. 95, 100
Egerton MSS., ii. 13
Eden, Richard, i. 12
Edwards, Arthur, i. 72, 73
Egypt, i. 32
El Dorado, i. 3, 28; ii. 26, 27
Ellesmere, Earl of, i. 17
Elvas, Gentleman of, i. 9
Emeria, i. 3
England, Circumnavigation of, i. 79
Engronelanda, i. 50
Enriquez de Guzman, Alonzo, i. 29
Eslanda, i. 50
Espinosa, Alonso de, ii. 21
Estotilanda, i. 50
Ethiopia. See Abyssinia.
Europe, i. 10, 12, 13, 18, 20, 49, 54, 58, 64, 72, 73, 79; ii. 9, 11, 17
Ferguson, Donald William, ii. 9
Fernandez de Quires, Pedro de. See Quiros.
Figueroa, Christoval Suarez de. See Suarez de Figueroa.
Fletcher, Francis, i. 16
Fletcher, Giles, i. 20
Florida, i. 7, 9
Fort St. George, i. 74, 75, 78
Foster, William, B.A., ii. 1, 2, 16
Fotherby, Robert, i. 63
Fox, Luke, i. 5, 88, 89
Foxe, Luke. See Fox.
Frislanda, i. 50
Frobisher, Sir Martin, i. 5, 38, 88, 89
Fryer, John, ii. 19, 20
Furnace, H.M.S., i. 11
Gairdner, James, i. 79
GalvÃo, Antonio, i. 30
Gama, ChristvoÃo da, ii. 10
Gama, Vasco da, i. 42, 99
Gamboa, Pedro Sarmiento de. See Sarmiento de Gamboa.
Garcia, Genaro, ii. 23, 24, 25, 30
Garcilasso de la Vega, el Inca, i. 24, 41, 45; ii. 22
Gastaldi, Jacopo, i. 12
Gatonbe, John, i. 63
Gayangos, Pascual de, i. 40; ii. 22
Gerritsz., Hessel, i. 27, 54; ii. 11
Gibbons, William, i. 5, 88, 89
Gibraltar, Straits of, i. 79
Globes, i. 79
God’s Power & Providence, i. 18
Gonzalez de Clavijo. Ruy, i. 26; ii. 21
GonzÁlez y Haedo, Felipe, ii. 13
Gosch, Christian Carl August, i. 96, 97
Gray, Albert, K.C., i. 76, 77, 80
Great Mogul, ii. 1, 2
Greenland, i. 18, 50, 96, 97
Grey, Charles, i. 49
Grey, Edward, i. 84, 85
Grijalva, Juan de, ii. 23
Grimston, Edward. See Grimstone.
Grimstone, Edward, i. 60, 61
Guanches, ii. 21
Guiana, i. 3; ii. 3
Guinea, i. 95, 100; ii. 6
Hackit, Thomas, i. 7
Hakluyt, Richard:
Divers Voyages, i. 7
Galvano, i. 30
Principall Navigations, i. 16, 20, 38, 59; Extra Ser. 1-12
Terra Florida, i. 9
Will of, i. 7
Hall, James, i. 5, 88, 89, 96, 97
Harleian MSS., i. 8
Harris, C. A., ii. 26, 27
Hasan Ibn Muhammad, al Wazzan, al Fasi, i. 92-94
Havers, George, i. 84, 85
Hawkins, Sir John, i. 1, 57
Hawkins, Sir Richard, i. 1, 57
Hawkins, William, i. 57
Hawkridge, William, i. 88, 89
Hedges, Sir William, i. 74, 75, 78
Heidelberg MS., i. 58
Herberstein, Sigismund von, i. 10, 12
Hernandez de Biedma, Luis, i. 9
Herrera, Antonio de, i. 24; ii. 22, 23
HervÉ, Juan, ii. 13
Honduras, i. 40
Horsey, Sir Jerome, i. 20
Houtman’s Abrolhos, i. 25
Howard, Eliot, ii. 12
Hudson, Henry, i. 13, 27, 88, 89
Hudson’s Bay, i. 11, 96, 97
Hues, Robert, i. 79
Hugli River, i. 78; ii. 12
Icaria, i. 50
ImÂms and Seyyids of OmÂn, i. 44
Incas, i. 41, 45, 47, 48; ii. 22
Incas, Rites and Laws, i. 48; ii. 22
Incas, Royal Commentaries, i. 41, 45; ii. 22
India, i. 5, 22, 32, 38, 42, 53, 55, 56, 69, 62, 70, 71, 74-78, 80, 84, 85; ii. 1, 2, 9, 12, 16, 17
India Office MSS., i. 5, 56, 66, 67
Indian Language, Dictionarie of the, i. 6
Italy, ii. 9
James I., i. 19
James, Thomas, i. 5, 88, 89
Janes, John, i. 59
Japan, i. 8, 39, 66, 67; ii. 5
Java, i. 82, 83
Jeannin, P., i. 27
Jenkinson, Anthony, i. 72, 73
Joannes, de Plano Carpino, ii. 4; Extra Ser. 13
Jones, John Winter, i. 7, 22, 32
Jordanus [Catalani], i. 31
Jourdain, John, ii. 16
Jovius, Paulas, i. 12
Juet, Robert, i. 27
Keeling, William, i. 56
Knight, John, i. 5, 56, 88, 89
Lambrechtsen, i. 27
Lancaster, Sir James, i. 56
La PeyrÈre, Isaac de, i. 18
La Plata, City, i. 33
La Plata, River, i. 81
Lefroy, Sir John Henry, K.C.M.G., i. 65, 86
Leguat, FranÇois, i. 82, 83
Le Maire, Jacob, ii. 18
Lendas da India, i. 42
Leo Africanus, i. 92-94
Leone, Giovanni, i. 92-94
Leupe, P. A., i. 25
Levant, i. 87
Le Verrier, Jean, i. 46; ii. 21
Leza, Gaspar Gonzalez de, i. 39; ii. 14, 15
Linschoten, Jan Huyghen van, i. 70, 71
McCrindle, John Watson, i. 89
Madras, i. 74, 75, 78
Madrid MSS., i. 29
Magellan, Ferdinand, i. 52
Magellan, Straits of, i. 91; ii. 18
Major, Richard Henry, i. 2, 6, 10, 12, 14, 15, 17, 22, 25, 43, 46, 50
Malay Archipelago, ii. 16, 18
Malabar, i. 35
Maldive Islands, i. 76, 77, 80
Maluco Islands. See Molucca Islands.
Manoa, i. 3
Markham, Sir Albert Hastings, K.C.B., i. 59
Markham, Sir Clements Robert, K.C.B., i. 24, 26, 28, 29, 33, 34, 41, 56, 57, 60, 61, 63, 68, 79, 86, 90, 91; ii. 14, 15, 21, 22, 28, 29
Martens, Friedrich, i. 18
Maudslay, Alfred Percival, ii. 23, 24, 25, 30
Mauritius, i. 82, 83
Maynarde, Thomas, i. 4
MendaÑa de Neyra, Alvaro, i. 25, 39; ii. 7, 8, 14, 15
Mendoza, Juan Gonzalez de, i. 14, 15
Mexico, i. 23; ii. 23, 24, 25, 30
Michon, Marie, Extra Ser., 12, 33
Middleton, Christopher, i. 11
Middleton, Sir Henry, i. 19, 56
Mirabilia Descripta, i. 31
Mogul, The Great, ii. 1, 2
Molucca Island, i. 19, 39, 52, 76, 77, 80
Molyneux, Emery, i. 79
Montezuma, i. 61; ii. 23, 24
Morga, Antonio de, i. 39; ii. 11, 15
Morgan, Henry, i, 59
Morgan, Edward Delmar, i. 72, 73, 79, 83, 86
Mundy, Peter, ii. 17
Munk, Jens, i. 96, 97
MÜnster, Sebastian, i. 12
Muscovy Company, i. 7, 63; ii. 11
Neumann, Karl Friedrich, i. 58
New Hebrides, ii. 14, 15
New Spain, ii. 23, 24, 25, 30
New World, i. 2, 43
Nicaragua, i. 34
Nicopolis, i. 58
Nikitin, Athanasius, i. 22
Nombre de Dios, i. 16
Norsemen in America, i. 2, 50
North-East Voyages, i. 13
North-West Passage, i. 5, 11, 38, 56, 88, 89, 96, 97
Northern Seas, i. 50
Nova Zembla, i. 13, 54
NuÑez CabeÇa de Vaca, Alvar, i. 81
Ocampo, Baltasar de, ii. 22
Olaondo, Alberto, ii. 13
Olid, CristÓval de, ii. 23
Oliver, Samuel Pasfield, i. 82, 83
Omagua, i. 28
’OmÂn, i. 44
Ondegardo, Polo de, i. 48; ii. 22
Orellana, Francisco de, i. 24
OrlÉans, Pierre Joseph d’, i. 17
Ormuz, Kings of, ii. 9
Oviedo, Gabriel de, ii. 22
Pachacamac, i. 47; ii. 22
Pacific Ocean, i. 1. 34, 57; ii. 13, 18
Paraguay, River, i. 81
Parke, Robert, i. 14, 15
Pellham, Edward, i. 18
Pelsart, Francis, i. 25
Pereira, Thomas, i. 17
Persia, i. 32, 49, 72, 73; ii. 19, 20
Peru, i. 33, 34, 41, 45, 47, 60, 61, 68; ii. 22
Peru, Chronicle of, i. 33, 68
Philip, William, i. 13, 54
Philippine Islands, i. 39
Pigafetta, Antonio, i. 52
Pitt Diamond, i. 78
Pitt, Thomas, i. 74, 75, 78
Pizarro, Francisco, i. 21, 47; ii. 22
Pizarro, Gonzalo, i. 21, 24, 47; ii. 22
Pizarro, Hernando, i. 47; ii. 22
Pochahontas, i. 6
Pool, Gerrit Thomasz., i. 25
Portugal, i. 64; ii. 10
Pory, John, i. 92-94
Powhatan, i. 6
Prado y Tovar, Don Diego de, ii. 14, 15
Prestage, Edgar, i. 95, 100
Prester John, i. 64; ii. 10
Pricket Abacuk, i. 27
Public Record Office MSS., i. 38
Puerto Rico, i. 4
Purchas, Samuel, i. 13, 56, 63; Extra Ser. 14-33
Pyrard, FranÇois, i. 76, 77, 80
QuatremÈre, i. 22
Quiros, Pedro Fernandez de, i. 25, 39; ii. 14, 15
Raleigh, Sir Walter, i. 3
Raleigh, Walter, Professor, Extra Ser. 12
Ramusio, Giovanni Battista, i. 49, 52
Ravenstein, Ernest George, i. 99; ii. 6
Rawlinson MSS., ii. 17
Recueil de Voyages, i. 31
RemÓn, Alonzo, ii. 23
Ribault, John, i. 7
Rockhill, William Woodville, ii. 4
Rodriguez, Island, i. 82, 83
Roe, Sir Thomas, ii. 1, 2
Roggeveen, Jacob, ii. 13
Roy, Eugene Armand, i. 49
Rubruquis, Gulielmus de, ii. 4; Extra Ser. 13
Rundall, Thomas, i. 5, 8
Russe Commonwealth, i. 20
Russia, i. 10, 12, 20, 72, 73
Rye, William Brenchley, i. 9
Salil-Ibn-Ruzaik, i. 44
Samarcand, i. 26
Sancho, Pedro, i. 47; ii. 22
Santo-Stefano, Hieronimo di, i. 22
Saris, John, i. 8; ii. 5
Sarmiento de Gamboa, Pedro, i. 91; ii. 22
Satow, Sir Ernest Mason, G.C.M.G., ii. 5
Schiltberger, Johann, i. 58
Schmidel, Ulrich, i. 81
Schmidt. Ulrich. See Schmidel.
Schomburgk, Sir Robert Hermann, i. 3
Schouten, Willem Cornelisz., ii. 18
Scory, Sir Edmund, ii. 21
Seaman’s Secrets, i. 59
Segersz., Jacob, ii. 11
Sellman, Edward, i. 38
Shakspere’s “New Map,” i. 59
Sharpeigh, Alexander, i. 56
Shaw, Norton, i. 23
Siam, i. 39
Simon, Pedro, i. 28
Sinclair, William Frederic, ii. 9
Sloane MSS. i. 25, 65; ii. 16
Smith, Capt. John, i. 65, 86
Smith, Sir Thomas, i. 19, 63, 65
Smyth, William Henry, i. 21
Solomon Islands, ii. 7, 8, 14, 15
Somers, Sir George, i. 65
Soto, Ferdinando de, i. 9, 47
Soulsby, Basil Harrington, ii. 10, 11, 14, 15, 16, 18
Sousa Tavares, Francisco de, i. 30
South Sea. See Pacific Ocean.
Spanish MSS., i. 29, 48
Spanish Voyages, i. 25, 39; ii. 7, 8, 13, 14, 15
Speilbergen, Joris van, ii. 18
Spitsbergen, i. 13, 18, 54; ii. 11
Staden, Johann von, i. 51
Stanley of Alderley, Lord, i. 35, 39, 42, 52, 64
Staunton, Sir George Thomas, Bart., i. 14, 15
Stere, William, i. 13
Storm van’s Gravesande, ii. 26, 27
Strachey, William, i. 6
Suarez de Figueroa, Christoval, i. 57; ii. 14, 15
Summer Islands, i. 65, 86
Syria, i. 32
Tabasco, ii. 23
Tahiti, ii. 13
Tamerlane, The Great, i. 26
Tana (Azov), i. 49
TapÍa, AndrÉs de, ii. 23
Tartary, i. 17; ii. 1, 2, 4
Tavares, Francisco de Sousa. See Sousa Tavares, F. de.
Teixeira, Pedro, ii. 9
Telfer, John Buchan, i. 58
Temple, Sir Richard Carnac, Bart., ii. 12, 17
Tenerife, ii. 21
Terra Australis, i. 25
Terra Florida, i. 9
Thomas, William, i. 49
Thompson, Sir Edward Maunde, K.C.B., i. 66, 67
Thomson, Basil Home, ii. 7, 8
Thorne, Robert, i. 7
Tiele, Pieter Anton, i. 70, 71
Tierra Firme, i. 28, 34, 47
Timour, Great Khan, i. 26
Toledo, Francisco de, Viceroy of Peru. ii. 22
Tootal, Albert, i. 51
Topographia Christiana, i. 98
Torquemada, Fray Juan de, ii. 14, 15
Torres, Luis Vaez de, i. 25, 39; ii. 14, 15
Toscanelli, Paolo, i. 86
Towerson, Gabriel, i. 19
Tractatus de Globis, i. 79
Transylvanus, Maximilianus, i. 52
Tupac Amaru, Inca, ii. 22
Turbervile, George, i. 10
Turkey Merchants, i. 87
Ursua, Pedro de, i. 28, 47
Valle, Pietro della, i. 84, 85
Varthema, Ludovico di, i. 19, 32
Vaux, William Sandys Wright, i. 16
Vaz, Lopez, i. 16
Veer, Gerrit de, i. 13, 54
VelÁsquez, Diego, ii. 23
Vera Cruz, ii. 23
Verarzanus, John, i. 7, 27
Verbiest, Ferdinand, i. 17
Vespucci, Amerigo, i. 90
Vilcapampa, ii. 22
Virginia Britannia, i. 6
Vivero y Velasco, Rodrigo de, i. 8
Vlamingh, Willem de, i. 25
Volkersen, Samuel, i. 25
Warner, George Frederic, Litt.D., ii. 3
Weigates, Straits of, i. 13, 54
West Indies, i. 4, 23; ii. 3, 23
Weymouth, George, i. 5, 88, 89
White, Adam, i. 18
Whiteway, Richard Stephen, ii. 10
Wielhorsky, i. 22
William of Rubruck. See Rubruquis, Gulielmus de.
Wilmere, Alice, i. 23
Winter, John, i. 16
Witsen, Nicolaas, i. 17, 25
Wolstenholme, Sir John, i. 63, 88, 89
Worlde’s Hydrographical Description, i. 59
Wright, Edward, i. 59
Xeres, Francisco de, i. 47; ii. 22
Yncas. See Incas.
Yucatan, ii. 23
Yule, Sir Henry, K.C.S.L., i. 31, 36, 37, 74, 75, 78; ii. 19, 20
Zeno, Antonio, i. 50
Zeno, Caterino, i. 49
Zeno, Nicolo, i. 50
Zychman, i. 51


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III. Each member of the Society, having paid his Subscription, shall be entitled to a copy of every work produced by the Society, and to vote at the general meetings within the period subscribed for; and if he do not signify, before the close of the year, his wish to resign, he shall be considered as a member for the succeeding year.

IV. The management of the Society’s affairs shall be vested in a Council consisting of twenty-two members, viz., a President, three Vice-Presidents, a Treasurer, a Secretary, and sixteen ordinary members, to be elected annually; but vacancies occurring between the general meetings shall be filled up by the Council.

V. A General Meeting of the Subscribers shall be held annually. The Secretary’s Report on the condition and proceedings of the Society shall be then read, and the meeting shall proceed to elect the Council for the ensuing year.

VI. At each Annual Election, three of the old Council shall retire.

VII. The Council shall meet when necessary for the dispatch of business, three forming a quorum, including the Secretary; the Chairman having a casting vote.

VIII. Gentlemen preparing and editing works for the Society, shall receive twenty-five copies of such works respectively.


LIST OF MEMBERS.—1913.[88]

Members are requested to inform the Hon. Secretary of any errors or alterations in this List.

1899 Aberdare, The Right Hon. Lord, 83, Eaton Square, S.W.
1847 Aberdeen University Library, Aberdeen.
1895 Adelaide Public Library, North Terrace, Adelaide, South Australia.
1847 Admiralty, The, Whitehall, S.W. [2 COPIES.]
1847 Advocates’ Library, 11, Parliament Square, Edinburgh.
1899 Alexander, William Lindsay, Esq., Pinkieburn, Musselburgh, N.B.
1847 All Souls College, Oxford.
1847 American Geographical Society, 11, West 81st Street, New York City, U.S.A.
1906 Andrews, Michael C., Esq., 17, University Square, Belfast.
1847 Antiquaries, The Society of, Burlington House, Piccadilly, W.
1909 Armstrong, Capt. B. H. O., R. E., 5, Gliddon Road, West Kensington.
1847 Army and Navy Club, 36, Pall Mall, S.W.
1847 AthenÆum Club, Pall Mall, S.W.
1912 Aylward, R. M., Esq., 7ª Avenida Sur, No. 87, Guatemala.
1899 Baer, Joseph & Co., Messrs., Hochstrasse 6, Frankfort-on-Main, Germany.
1847 Bagram, John Ernest, Esq., 10, Old Post Office Street, Calcutta.
1912 Baird, H. A., Esq., West House, Bothwell, N.B.
1909 Baldwin, Stanley, Esq., M.P., Astley Hall, nr. Stourport.
1899 Ball, John B., Esq., Ashburton Cottage, Putney Heath, S.W.
1893 Barclay, Hugh Gurney, Esq., Colney Hall, Norwich.
1911 Barwick, G. F., Esq., British Museum.
1899 Basset, M. RenÉ, Directeur de l’Ecole SupÉrieure des Lettres d’Alger, Villa Louise, rue Denfert Rochereau, Algiers.
1894 Baxter, Hon. James Phinney, Esq., 61, Deering Street, Portland, Maine, U.S.A.
1896 Beaumont, Admiral Sir Lewis Anthony, G.C.B., K.C.M.G., St. Georges, Hurstpierpoint, Sussex.
1904 Beetem, Charles Gilbert, Esq., 110, South Hanover Street, Carlisle, Pa., U.S.A.
1899 Belfast Library and Society for Promoting Knowledge, Donegall Square North, Belfast.
1896 Belhaven and Stenton, Col. The Right Hon. the Lord, R.E., 41, Lennox Gardens, S.W. (Vice-President).
1847 Berlin Geographical Society (Gesellschaft fÜr Erdkunde), Wilhelmstrasse 23, Berlin, S.W., 48.
1847 Berlin, the Royal Library of, Opernplatz, Berlin, W.
1847 Berlin University, Geographical Institute of, Georgenstrasse 34-36, Berlin, N.W. 7.
1847 Bewsher, F. W., Esq., St. Paul’s School, Kensington, W.
1911 Bingham, Professor Hiram, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
1899 Birmingham Central Free Library, Ratcliff Place, Birmingham.
1847 Birmingham Old Library, The, Margaret Street, Birmingham.
1910 Birmingham University Library.
1911 Blake, Dr. Joseph A., 601, Madison Avenue, New York.
1899 Board of Education, The Keeper, Science Library, Science Museum, South Kensington, S.W.
1847 Bodleian Library, Oxford.
1894 Bonaparte, H. H. Prince Roland NapolÉon, Avenue d’JÉna 10, Paris.
1847 Boston AthenÆum Library, 10-1/2, Beacon Street, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
1847 Boston Public Library, Copley Square, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
1899 Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, U.S.A.
1894 Bower, Major-General Hamilton, c/o Messrs. Cox and Co., 16, Charing Cross.
1896 Bowring, Sir Thomas B., 7, Palace Gate, Kensington, W.
1912 Boyd-Richardson, Lieutenant S. B., R.N., Leybourne, Witley, nr. Godalming, Surrey.
1906 Brereton, The Rev. William, The Rectory, Steeple Gidding, Peterboro’.
1893 Brighton Public Library, Royal Pavilion, Church Street, Brighton.
1890 British Guiana Royal Agricultural and Commercial Society, Georgetown, Demerara.
1847 British Museum. Department of British and MediÆval Antiquities.
1847 British Museum. Department of Printed Books.
1896 Brock, Henry G., Esq., 1612, Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.
1909 Brooke, John Arthur, Esq., J.P., Fenay Hall, Huddersfield.
1899 Brookline Public Library, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
1899 Brooklyn Mercantile Library, 197, Montague Street, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S.A.
1899 Brown, Arthur William Whateley, Esq., 62, Carlisle Mansions, Carlisle Place, Victoria Street, S.W.
1896 Buda-Pesth, The Geographical Institute of the University of, Hungary.
1910 Buenos Aires, Biblioteca Nacional (c/o E. Terquem, 19, Rue Scribe, Paris).
1899 Burdekin, Benjamin Thomas, Esq., The Terrace, Eyam, Sheffield.
1890 Burns, Capt. John William, Leesthorpe Hall, Melton Mowbray.
1903 California, University of, Berkeley, Cal., U.S.A.
1847 Cambridge University Library, Cambridge.
1911 Canada, Department of the Naval Service, Ottawa.
1847 Canada, The Parliament Library, Ottawa.
1896 Cardiff Public Library, Trinity Street, Cardiff.
1847 Carlisle, The Rt. Hon. the Earl of, Naworth Castle, Bampton, Cumberland.
1847 Carlton Club Library, 94, Pall Mall, S.W.
1899 Carnegie Library, Pittsburgh, Pa., U.S.A.
1910 Cattarns, Richard, Esq., 7, Gloucester Terrace, Regent’s Park, N.W.
1894 Chamberlain, Right Hon. Joseph, M.P., 40, Princes Gardens, S.W.
1899 Chambers, Captain Bertram Mordaunt, R.N., Navy Office, Melbourne.
1910 Chapelot et Cie., 30, Rue et Passage Dauphine, Paris.
1910 Chicago, Geographical Society of, P.O. Box 223, Chicago.
1899 Chicago Public Library, Chicago, Ill., U.S.A.
1899 Chicago University Library, Chicago, Ill., U.S.A.
1896 Christ Church, Oxford.
1847 Christiania University Library, Christiania, Norway.
1899 Cincinnati Public Library, Ohio, U.S.A.
1907 Clark, Arthur H., Esq., Caxton Buildings, Cleveland, Ohio.
1903 Clay, John, Esq., University Press and Burrell’s Corner, Cambridge.
1909 Close, A.M., Esq.
1908 Close, Lieut.-Col. Charles Frederick, C.M.G., R.E., Ordnance Survey Office, Southampton.
1847 Colonial Office, The, Downing Street, S. W.
1899 Columbia University, Library of, New York, U.S.A.
1896 Conway, Sir William Martin, Allington Castle, Maidstone, Kent.
1903 Cooke, William Charles, Esq., Vailima. Bishopstown, Cork.
1847 Copenhagen Royal Library (Det Store Kongelige Bibliotek). Copenhagen.
1894 Cora, Professor Guido, M.A., Via Nazionale, 181, Rome.
1847 Cornell University. Ithaca. New York, U.S.A.
1903 Corney, Bolton Glanvill, Esq., I.S.O., 19, Abingdon Court, Kensington, W.
1899 Corning, C. R., Esq., 36 Wall Street. New York.
1893 Cow, John, Esq., Elfinsward, Hayward’s Heath, Sussex.
1902 Cox, Alexander G., Esq., Imperial Railways of North China, Tientsin.
1908 Crewdson, W., Esq., J. P., Southside, St. Leonards-on-Sea.
1904 Croydon Public Libraries. Central Library, Town Hall, Croydon.
1893 Curzon of Kedleston, The Right Hon. Earl, G.M.S.I., G.M.I.E., 1, Carlton House Terrace, S.W.
1911 Cutting, Lady Sybil, c/o the Earl of Desart, 2, Rutland Gardens, S.W.
1847 Dalton, Rev. Canon John Neale, C.M.G., C.V.O., 4, The Cloisters, Windsor.
1899 Dampier, Gerald Robert, Esq., I.C.S., Dehra Dun, N.W.P., India.
1899 Danish Royal Naval Library (Det Kongelige Danske SØkaart Archiv), Copenhagen.
1908 Darwin, Major Leonard, late R.E., 12. Egerton Place, S.W.
1894 De Bertodano, Baldomero Hyacinth, Esq., Cowbridge House, Malmesbury, Wilts.
1911 Delbanco, D., Esq., 9, Mincing Lane, E.C.
1899 Detroit Public Library, Michigan, U.S.A.
1893 Dijon University Library, Rue Monge, Dijon, CÓte d’Or, France.
1899 Dresden Geographical Society (Verein fÜr Erdkunde), Kleine BrÜdergasse 2111, Dresden.
1902 Dublin, Trinity College Library.
1910 Dunn, J. H., Esq., Coombe Cottage, Kingston Hill, S.W.
1899 École FranÇaise d’ExtrÊme Orient, Hanoi, Indo-Chine FranÇaise.
1892 Edinburgh Public Library, George IV. Bridge, Edinburgh.
1847 Edinburgh University Library, Edinburgh.
1847 Edwards, Francis, Esq., 83, High Street, Marylebone, W.
1906 Enoch Pratt Free Library, Baltimore, Md., U.S.A.
1912 Ewing, Arthur, Esq., R.M.S. “Carnarvon.” Devonport.
1910 Fairbrother. Colonel W. T., C.B., Indian Army. Bareilly, N.P., India.
1911 Fayal, The Most Noble the Marquis de. Lisbon.
1899 Fellowes AthenÆum, 46, Millmont Street, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
1894 Fisher, Arthur, Esq., The Mazry, Tiverton, Devon.
1896 Fitzgerald, Captain Edward Arthur, 5th Dragoon Guards.
1847 Foreign Office of Germany (AuswÄrtiges Amt), Wilhelmstrasse, Berlin, W.
1893 Forrest, George William, Esq., C.I.E., Rose Bank, Iffley, Oxford.
1902 Foster, Francis Apthorp, Esq., Edgartown, Mass., U.S.A.
1893 Foster, William, Esq., C.I.E., India Office, S.W.
1910 Fraser, Lovat, Esq., The White House, Slough.
1911 Garcia, SeÑor Genaro, Apartado 337, Mexico D.F.
1847 George, Charles William, Esq., 51, Hampton Road, Bristol.
1901 Gill, William Harrison, Esq., Marunouchi. Tokyo (c/o Messrs. Nichols, Ocean House, 24/5, Great Tower Street, E.C.)
1847 Glasgow University Library, Glasgow.
1880 Godman, Frederick Du Cane, Esq., D.C.L., F.R.S., 45, Pont Street, S.W.
1905 Goldie, The Right. Hon. Sir George Taubman, K.C.M.G., F.R.S., Naval & Military Club, Piccadilly, W.
1847 GÖttingen University Library, GÖttingen, Germany.
1877 Gray, Albert, Esq., K.C. (President), Catherine Lodge, Trafalgar Square, Chelsea, S.W.
1894 Gray, Matthew Hamilton, Esq., Lessness Park, Abbey Wood, Kent.
1903 Greenlee, William B., Esq., 130 Kenesaw Terrace, Chicago, Ill., U.S.A.
1899 Griffiths, John G., Esq., 4, Hyde Park Gardens, W.
1899 Grosvenor Library, Buffalo, N.Y., U.S.A.
1847 Guildhall Library, E.C.
1887 Guillemard, Francis Henry Hill, Esq., M.A., M.D., The Old Mill House, Trumpington, Cambridge.
1910 Hackley Public Library, Muskegon, Mich., U.S.A.
1847 Hamburg Commerz-Bibliothek, Hamburg, Germany.
1901 Hammersmith Public Libraries, Carnegie (Central) Library, Hammersmith, W.
1898 Hannen, The Hon. Henry Arthur, The Hall, West Farleigh, Kent.
1913 Hargreaves, Walter Ernest, Esq., Nazeing, Essex.
1906 Harrison, Carter H., Esq. (c/o Messrs. Stevens and Brown).
1905 Harrison, William P., Esq., 1523, Park Street, Chicago, Ill., U.S.A.
1847 Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., U.S.A.
1899 Harvie-Brown, John Alexander, Esq., Dunipace, Larbert, Stirlingshire.
1887 Heawood, Edward, Esq., M.A., Church Hill, Merstham, Surrey (Treasurer).
1899 Heidelberg University Library, Heidelberg (Koestersche Buchhandlung).
1904 Henderson, George, Esq., Tower House, The Park, Harrow.
1903 Henderson, Turner, Esq., Studley Priory, Oxford.
1890 Hervey, Dudley Francis Amelius, Esq., C.M.G., Westfields, Aldeburgh, Suffolk.
1899 Hiersemann, Herr Karl Wilhelm, KÖnigsstrasse, 3, Leipzig.
1874 Hippisley, Alfred Edward, Esq., 8, Herbert Crescent, Hans Place, W.
1904 Holdich, Colonel Sir Thomas Hungerford, K.C.M.G., K.C.I.E., C.B., R.E., 41, Courtfield Road, S.W.
1899 Hoover, Herbert Clarke, Esq., The Red House, Hornton Street, Kensington, W.
1887 Horner, Sir John Francis Fortescue, K.C.V.O., Mells Park, Frome, Somerset.
1911 Hoskins, G. H., Esq., Sidney.
1890 Hoyt Public Library, East Saginaw, Mich., U.S.A.
1909 Hubbard, H. M., Esq., H6, The Albany, Piccadilly, W.
1899 HÜgel, Baron Anatole A. A. von. Curator, Museum of ArchÆology and Ethnology, Cambridge.
1894 Hull Public Libraries, Baker Street, Hull.
1899 Im Thurn, Sir Everard, K.C.M.G., C.B., 39, Lexham Gardens, W.
1847 India Office, Downing Street, S.W. [20 COPIES.]
1899 Ingle, William Bruncker, Esq., 4, Orchard Road, Blackheath, S.E.
1892 Inner Temple, Hon. Society of the, Temple, E.C.
1899 Jackson, Stewart Douglas, Esq., 61, St. Vincent Street, Glasgow.
1898 James, Arthur Curtiss, Esq., 92 Park Avenue, New York City, U.S.A.
1911 James, Norman, N. W. James Lumber Co., Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A.
1896 James, Walter B., Esq., M.D., 17, West 54th Street, New York City, U.S.A.
1912 Jenkins, Captain F. W. R., Apartado 331, Guatemala.
1907 Johannesburg Public Library, Johannesburg, South Africa.
1847 John Carter Brown Library, 357, Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island, U.S.A.
1847 John Rylands Library, Deansgate, Manchester.
1847 Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md., U.S.A.
1899 Johnson, W. Morton, Esq., Woodleigh, Altrincham.
1910 Jones, L. C, Esq., M.D., Falmouth, Mass., U.S.A.
1903 Kansas University Library, Lawrence, Kans., U.S.A.
1887 Keltie, John Scott, Esq., LL.D., Secretary R.G.S., 1, Savile Row, Burlington Gardens, W.
1909 Kesteven, C. H., Esq., 2, Hungerford Street, Calcutta.
1899 Kiel, Royal University of, Kiel, Schleswig-Holstein.
1899 Kimberley Public Library, Kimberley, Cape Colony.
1907 Kindberg, Herrn Captain J. P., GÖteborg, Sweden.
1898 Kinder, Claude William, Esq., C.M.G., Kelvin, Avondale Road, Fleet, Hants.
1890 King’s Inns, The Hon. Society of the, Henrietta Street, Dublin.
1899 Kitching, John, Esq., Oaklands, Queen’s Road, Kingston Hill, S.W.
1899 Klincksieck, M. Charles, 11, Rue de Lille, Paris.
1912 Koebel, W. H., Esq., Author’s Club, 2, Whitehall Court, S.W.
1910 Koninklijk Instituut voor de Taal Land en Volkenkunde van Nederlandsch Indie. The Hague.
1899 Langton, J. J. P., Esq., 802, Spruce Street, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.A.
1899 Larchmont Yacht Club, Larchmont, N. Y., U.S.A.
1899 Leeds Library, 18, Commercial Street, Leeds.
1912 Legislative Library. Victoria, British Columbia.
1899 Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pa., U.S.A.
1893 Leipzig, Library of the University of Leipzig.
1912 Leland Stanford Junior University, Library of, Stanford University, Cal., U.S.A.
1899 Levy, Judah, Esq., 17, Greville Place, N.W.
1905 Lincoln, Arthur, Esq., 7, Nassau Street, New York City, U.S.A.
1912 Lind, Walter, Esq., 1º Calle, Guatemala, C.A.
1899 Lindsay-Smith, Fred. Alex., Esq., J.P., 18, Sussex Place, Regent’s Park.
1847 Liverpool Free Public Library, William Brown Street, Liverpool.
1896 Liverpool Geographical Society, 14, Hargreaves Buildings, Chapel Street, Liverpool.
1899 Liverpool, University of Liverpool.
1911 Loder, Gerald W. E., Esq., F.S.A., Wakehurst Place, Ardingly, Sussex.
1899 Loescher, Messrs. J., and Co., Via Due Macelli, 88.
1899 Logan, William, Esq., Heatheryhaugh, Moffat, Dumfriesshire.
1847 London Institution, 11, Finsbury Circus, E.C.
1847 London Library, 12, St. James’s Square, S.W.
1895 Long Island Historical Society, Pierrepont Street, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S.A.
1899 Los Angeles Public Library, Los Angeles, Cal., U.S.A.
1899 Lowrey, Joseph, Esq., The Hermitage, Loughton, Essex.
1912 Luard, Major Charles Eckford, M.A., D.S.O., Indore, Central India.
1880 Lucas, Sir Charles Prestwood, K.C.M.G., C.B., 65, St. George’s Square, S.W.
1895 Lucas, Frederic Wm., Esq., 21, Surrey Street, Strand, W.C.
1912 Lukach, H. C. Esq., M.A., Government House, Cyprus.
1898 Lydenberg, H. M., Esq., New York Public Library, Fifth Avenue and Forty-second Street, New York City, U.S.A.
1880 Lyons University Library, Lyon, France.
1899 Lyttleton-Annesley, Lieut.-General Sir Arthur Lyttelton, K.C.Y.O., Templemere, Oatlands Park, Weybridge.
1910 McCulloch, H. A., Esq., Banco Aleman Transatlantico, Buenos Aires.
1910 MacDonald, H. E., The Right Hon. Sir Claude M., G.C.M.G., G.C.V.O., K.C.B., British Embassy, Tokio, Japan.
1899 Macrae, Charles Colin. Esq., 93, Onslow Gardens, S.W.
1908 Maggs Brothers, Messrs., 109, Strand, W.C.
1847 Manchester Public Free Libraries, King Street, Manchester.
1899 Manierre, George, Esq., 112w, Adams Street, Chicago, Ill., U.S.A.
1880 Markham, Admiral Sir Albert Hastings, K.C.B., 6, Marble Arch, W.
1852 Markham, Sir Clements Robert, K.C.B., F.R.S., 21, Eccleston Square, S.W. (Vice-President).
1892 Marquand, Henry, Esq., Whitegates Farm, Bedford, New York, U.S.A.
1899 Martelli, Ernest Wynne, Esq., 4, New Square, Lincoln’s Inn, W.C.
1847 Massachusetts Historical Society, 1154, Boylston Street, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
1899 Massie, Major Roger Henry, R.A., Rangoon.
1905 Maudslay, Alfred Percival, Esq., Morney Cross, Hereford.
1899 McClurg, Messrs. A. C., & Co., 215-221, Wabash Avenue, Chicago, Ill., U.S.A.
1901 Merriman, J. A., Esq., Standard Bank of South Africa, Durban.
1911 Messer, Allan E., Esq., 2, Lyall Street, Belgrave Square, S.W.
1893 Michigan, University of, Ann Arbor, Mich., U.S.A.
1899 Middletown, Conn., Wesleyan University Library, U.S.A.
1904 Mikkelsen, Michael A., Esq., 610, South Fifth Avenue, Mt. Vernon, New York.
1847 Mills, Colonel Dudley Acland, R.E., Droaks, Beaulieu, Hants.
1912 Milward, Graham, Esq., 77, Colmore Row, Birmingham
1896 Milwaukee Public Library, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S.A.
1895 Minneapolis AthenÆum, Minneapolis, Minn., U.S.A.
1899 Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul, Minnesota, U.S.A.
1899 Mitchell Library, 21, Miller Street, Glasgow.
1899 Mitchell, Wm., Esq., 14, Forbesfield Road, Aberdeen.
1899 Monson, The Right Hon. Lord, C.V.O., Burton Hall, Lincoln.
1901 Moreno, Dr. Francisco J., La Plata Museum, La Plata, Argentine Republic.
1893 Morris, Henry Cecil Low, Esq., M.D., Gothic Cottage, Bognor, Sussex.
1899 Morrison, George Ernest, Esq., M.D., Times Correspondent, c/o H.B.M. Legation, Peking.
1911 Morrison, R. E., Esq., Ardoch, Partickhill, Glasgow.
1899 Morrisson, James W., Esq., 200-206, Randolph Street, Chicago, Ill., U.S.A.
1895 Moxon, Alfred Edward, Esq., c/o Mrs. Gough, The Lodge, Souldern, nearBanbury.
1847 Munich Royal Library (Kgl. Hof u. Staats-Bibliothek), Munich, Germany.
1899 Nathan, Lt.-Col. Sir Matthew, G.C.M.G., R.E., Brandon House, Kensington Palace Gardens, W.
1894 Naval and Military Club. 94, Piccadilly, W.
1909 Nebraska University Library, Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.A.
1880 Netherlands, Royal Geographical Society of the (Koninklijk Nederlandsch Aardrijkskundig Genootschap), Singel 421, Amsterdam.
1899 Netherlands, Royal Library of the, The Hague.
1847 Newberry Library, The, Chicago, Ill., U.S.A.
1847 Newcastle-upon-Tyne Literary and Philosophical Society, Westgate Road, Newcastle-on-Tyne.
1899 Newcastle-upon-Tyne Public Library, New Bridge Street, Newcastle-on-Tyne.
1894 New London Public Library, Conn., U.S.A.
1899 New South Wales, Public Library of, Sydney, N.S.W.
1899 New York Athletic Club, Central Park, South, New York City, U.S.A.
1895 New York Public Library. 40, Lafayette Place, New York City, U.S.A.
1847 New York State Library, Albany, New York, U.S.A.
1894 New York Yacht Club, 37 West 44 Street, New York City, U.S.A.
1897 New Zealand, The High Commissioner for, 13, Victoria Street, S.W.
1911 Nijhoff, Martinus, The Hague, Holland.
1896 North Adams Public Library, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
1893 Northcliffe, The Right Hon. Lord, Elmwood, St. Peter’s, Thanet.
1899 Nottingham Public Library, Sherwood Street, Nottingham.
1890 Oriental Club, 18, Hanover Square, W.
1902 Otani, Kozui, Esq., Nishi Honganji, Horikawa, Kyoto, Japan.
1899 Oxford and Cambridge Club, 71, Pall Mall, S.W.
1847 Oxford Union Society, Oxford.
1911 Pan-American Union, Washington, D.C., U.S.A.
1847 Paris, BibliothÈque Nationale, Rue de Richelieu, Paris.
1847 Paris, Institut de France, Quai de Conti 23, Paris.
1899 Parlett, Harold George, Esq., H.B.M. Consulate, Dairen, Japan.
1880 Peabody Institute, Baltimore, Md., U.S.A.
1908 Pearson, Dr. F. S., Coombe House, Kingston Hill, S.W.
1847 Peckover of Wisbech, The Right Hon. Lord, Bank House, Wisbech (Vice President).
1896 Peech, W. H., Esq., St. Stephen’s Club. Westminster, S.W.
1893 Peek, Sir Wilfred, Bart., c/o Mr. Grover, Rousdon, Lyme Regis.
1911 Penrose, R. A. F., Esq., Bullitt Buildings, Philadelphia, U.S.A.
1899 Pequot Library, Southport, Conn., U.S.A.
1880 Petherick, Edward Augustus, Esq., Commonwealth Library, Melbourne, Australia.
1895 Philadelphia Free Library, Pa., U.S.A.
1899 Philadelphia, Library Company of, N.W. corner Juniper & Locust Streets, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.
1899 Philadelphia, Union League Club, 8, Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.
1899 Philadelphia, University Club, 1510 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.A.
1909 Plymouth, Officers’ Library, Royal Marine Barracks.
1899 Plymouth Proprietary and Cottonian Library, Cornwall Street, Plymouth.
1899 Portico Library, 57, Mosley Street, Manchester.
1911 Pykett, The Rev. G. F., Anglo-Chinese School, Methodist Epis. Mission, Penang.
1894 Quaritch, Bernard Alfred, Esq., 11, Grafton Street, New Bond Street, W. (12 COPIES).
1890 Raffles Museum and Library, Singapore.
1910 Reeves, E. A., Esq., Map-Curator, R.G.S., Hillside, Reigate Road, Reigate.
1847 Reform Club, 104, Pall Mall, S.W.
1899 Reggio, AndrÉ C., Esq., 43, Tremont Street, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
1895 Rhodes, Josiah, Esq., The Elms, Lytham, Lancashire.
1907 Ricketts, D. P., Esq., Imperial Chinese Railways, Tientsin, China.
1882 Riggs, T. L., Esq., 1311, Mass. Avenue, Washington, D.C., U.S.A.
1911 Rio de Janeiro, Archivo Publico Nacional, Sa da Republica, No. 26.
1887 Rockhill, H.E. the Hon. William Woodville, United States Ambassador, Constantinople.
1899 Rodd, H.E. The Right Hon. Sir James Rennell, G.C.V.O., K.C.M.G., C.B., British Embassy, Rome.
1898 RÖhrscheid and Ebbecke, Herrn, Am Hof, 28, Bonn, Germany.
1906 Rotterdamsch Leeskabinet, Rotterdam.
1911 Royal Anthropological Institute, 50, Great Russell Street, W.C.
1893 Royal Artillery Institution, Woolwich.
1847 Royal Colonial Institute, Northumberland Avenue, W.C.
1896 Royal Cruising Club, 1, Bolton Street, Piccadilly, W.
1847 Royal Engineers’ Institute, Chatham.
1847 Royal Geographical Society, Kensington Gore, W.
1890 Royal Scottish Geographical Society, Synod Hall, Castle Terrace, Edinburgh.
1897 Royal Societies Club, 63, St. James’s Street, S.W.
1847 Royal United Service Institution, Whitehall, S.W.
1899 Runciman, The Right Hon. Walter, M.P., Doxford, Chathill, Northumberland.
1904 Ruxton, Captain Upton Fitz Herbert, Little Drove House, Singleton, Sussex.
1900 Ryley, John Horton, Esq., 8, Rue d’Auteuil, Paris.
1899 St. Andrews University, St. Andrews.
1899 St. Deiniol’s Library, Hawarden, Flintshire, N. Wales.
1893 St. John’s, New Brunswick, Free Public Library.
1890 St. Louis Mercantile Library, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.A.
1899 St. Martin’s-in-the-Fields Free Public Library, 115, St. Martin’s Lane, W.C.
1847 St. Petersburg University Library, St. Petersburg.
1894 St. Wladimir University, Kiew, Russia.
1911 Saise, Walter, Esq., D.Sc, M. Inst. C.E., Stapleton, Bristol.
1912 Sanford, J. B., Esq., H.B.M. Vice-Consul, Monterrey, N. L., Mexico.
1899 San Francisco Public Library, San Francisco, Cal., U.S.A.
1899 Sclater, Dr. William Lutley, Odiham Priory, Winchfield.
1899 Seattle Public Library, Seattle, Washington, U.S.A.
1906 Seligmanu, Charles Gabriel, Esq., M.B., 36, Finchley Road, N.W.
1894 Seymour, Admiral of the Fleet the Right Hon. Sir Edward Hobart, G.C.B., O.M., G.C.V.O., LL.D., Queen Anne’s Mansions. St. James’s Park, S.W.
1898 Sheffield Free Public Libraries, Surrey Street, Sheffield.
1847 Signet Library, 11, Parliament Square, Edinburgh.
1890 Sinclair, Mrs. William Frederic, 102, Cheyne Walk, Chelsea, S.W.
1910 Skimming, E. H. B., Esq., 6, Cleveland Terrace, W.
1912 Skipper, Mervyn G., Esq., care of Eastern Extensions Tel. Co., Penang.
1904 Smith, John Langford, Esq., H.B.M. Consular Service, China, c/o E. Greenwood, Esq., Frith Knowl, Elstree.
1906 Smith, J. de Berniere, Esq., 4, Gloucester Terrace, Regent’s Park, N.W.
1913 Smith, The Right Hon. James Parker, Jordanhill, Glasgow.
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1909 Solomon, Sir E. P., The Senate, Cape Town.
1899 South African Public Library, Queen Victoria Street, Cape Town, South Africa.
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1912 Stein, Herr Johann, K. Ungar. UniversitÄts-Buchhandlung, Kolozsvar, Hungary.
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1894 Taylor, Captain William Robert, 1, Daysbrook Road, Streatham Hill, S.W.
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FOOTNOTES:

[1] Forming Book III of the Civil Wars of Peru.

[2] The official register of the Casa de Contratacion at Seville, shows that the fleet of Blasco NuÑez consisted of 49 ships. The Viceroy took 50 servants. The total number of passengers was 915, among them 36 married men with their wives, and 87 single girls with their parents. The chief passengers were Agustin de Zarate, Accountant, the Licentiate Zarate with his wife, Rodrigo de Contreras and his son, Judge Lison de Tejada, the Licentiate Alvarez, and the Viceroy’s brother Francisco Velasquez de Vela NuÑez.

[3] The new laws.

The new laws, advocated by Las Casas, but opposed by several experienced statesmen, some of them with much knowledge of the Indies, were signed by Charles V at Barcelona on November 20th, 1542.

The first Ordinance was that after the deaths of those who possessed grants of Indians, their wives or children were not to succeed to them[4], but that the Indians were to become vassals of the King, the children of the former owners receiving certain fruits of the labour of such Indians for their sustenance.

No Indian is to be made to carry loads without being paid, nor to be forced to work in mines or pearl fisheries, nor to be obliged to render personal service.

Bishops, Monasteries, and Hospitals to be deprived of Indians granted to them formerly, as well as all officials.

All who fought in the war between Pizarro and Almagro, on both sides, to be deprived of all grants of Indians. This would include all the settlers in Peru.

[4] The original grants were for two lives.

[5] It appears that over 300 Indians had been brought from Peru to Panama by their owners. The Viceroy ordered them to be released and sent back.

[6]

Blasco NuÑez Vela, native of Avila, then General Overseer of the Guards of Castille, Viceroy and President of the Court of

Justice, selected because he would enforce the royal orders with rigour.

1 Licentiate Diego de Cepeda, native of Tordesillas, then a Judge in Gran Canaria—Judge.

2 Licentiate Lison de Tejada, a native of LogroÑo—Judge.

3 Licentiate Alvarez—Judge.

4 Licentiate Pedro Ortiz de Zarate, a native of OrduÑa, who was then chief magistrate in Segovia—Judge.

Agustin de Zarate, then Secretary of the Royal Council, was, appointed Accountant. He had been for 15 years Comptroller of accounts for Castille. He took as little part as possible in the troubles, confining his energies to his own department. On his return the Emperor made him Superintendent of finances in Flanders. He collected materials for a book which he wrote when he had leisure in Spain. It was published at Antwerp in 1555, Seville 1577, and by Barcia. He writes as an eye-witness of the events which led to the expulsion of the Viceroy, but as a prejudiced partizan against Gonzalo Pizarro.

[7] People he afterwards put to death.

[8] Francisco de Carbajal was born in 1468 at a village called Ragana near Arevalo, in the diocese of Avila. His quotations and frequent references to ancient history show that he received a fairly good education. But he must have been young when he entered upon a military life. He served under the great Captain, Gonsalvo de Cordova, Colonna, Leyva, and other well-known warriors of the Italian wars. He was at the battle of Ravenna in 1512, when he was aged 44, and must already have seen much service. He fought at the battle of Pavia in 1525, and at the sack of Rome in 1527. At Rome he took for his share of the booty all the papers in a lawyer’s office. The ransom for them enabled him to go to Mexico with his wife Catalina Leyton, of a noble Portuguese family. In 1536, when he was 68, he first went to Peru. He was sent by the Viceroy of Mexico, Don Antonio de Mendoza, to assist Pizarro, at the time when he was besieged by the Indians in Lima. Pizarro sent him to settle in Charcas. Arriving at Arequipa on his way he knew no one, and was standing at the corner of a street with his wife and family, not knowing what to do. Miguel Cornejo, a citizen, saw them, heard their story, and took them to his house, treating them hospitably. At the battle of Huarina, ten years afterwards, Cornejo was taken prisoner, fighting against Carbajal, and expected to be put to death. Carbajal said to him—“I am not unmindful of what you did for me at Arequipa, with my wife and family, not knowing where to go. I give you liberty, and for your sake exempt your companions from all punishment. Go home and look to your safety with all quiet and content.” After the murder of the Marquis Pizarro, Carbajal joined Vaca de Castro and was appointed “Sargento-Mayor.” At the battle of Chupas he marshalled the royal army, and showed both military skill and extraordinary personal valour. The old veteran was very corpulent, and when a shot from young Almagro’s cannon mowed a space in the advancing troops of Vaca de Castro, Carbajal threw himself into the gap, telling the men that his size made him a bigger target than any one else. Then he took off his morion and breastplate, throwing them on the ground to be like the meanest soldier, so arousing the admiration of the troops that they carried all before them. The victory of Chupas was due to him.

The rumours respecting the New Laws convinced Carbajal that there was trouble ahead. He was long past 70, and was anxious to end his days at home and in peace. He got permission from Vaca de Castro to return to Spain, and went to Lima to obtain a passage home. General Mendiburu (Diccionario Historico-Biografico del Peru) thought, from Carbajal having lodged in the house of the Treasurer Riquelme on that occasion, that they were great friends. But Cieza de Leon implies that he was rather an unwelcome guest.

[9] Secretary also to the Marquis Pizarro. After the murder, he arranged about the burial and the care of the children.

[10] A native of Sahagun. He served with Belalcazar in the conquest of Quito, and with the Pizarros at the battle of Salinas. He was at the battle of Chupas on the side of Vaca de Castro. He afterwards joined Gonzalo Pizarro, plotted against him, and got his deserts.

[11] Of Diego Maldonado the rich there is much more further on.

[12] The Licentiate Carbajal was a brother of the Factor Illan Suarez de Carbajal.

[13] Antonio de Altamirano came to Peru with Alvarado. He was a citizen of Cuzco and had a part of the palace of Huayna Ceapac for his house, where he found a great treasure. His half-caste sons, very promising lads, were schoolfellows of the Inca Garcilasso, but they died young. Altamirano was put to death by order of Gonzalo Pizarro.

[14] Hernando Bachicao was a native of San Lucar de Barrameda. He is not mentioned until 1537 when he was at the Mala conference. He served at the battle of Salinas and at Chupas. Regidor of Cuzco, he was active against the Viceroy, and was at AÑaquito. At Huarina he deserted to Centeno but was captured. Carbajal hung him. Bachicao was a cruel, faithless ruffian.

[15] Piura.

[16] Yllan Suarez de Carbajal was a native of Talavera. He came to Peru with Hernando Pizarro in 1534, then aged 31, as Factor. He was learned and accomplished. He strove to reconcile Pizarro and Almagro and was at the Mala conference. He was at Lima when Pizarro was murdered, and was imprisoned by the Almagro faction. His murder by the Viceroy finally destroyed the chances of that unfortunate man.

[17] Diego de Aguero was one of Pizarro’s original companions at Caxamarca, receiving 362 marcs and 8880 pesos of gold from the Atahualpa ransom. He was employed to negotiate with Alvarado for his departure. He was a citizen of Lima and had a repartimiento at Lunahuana. He served at the battle of Chupas. He married a daughter of Nicolas de Ribera.

[18] Pablo Meneses was a native of Talavera. He was Camp Master at Lima 1544. He joined Gonzalo Pizarro but, going to Panama with Hinojosa, he changed sides and joined Gasca. He served against Giron.

[19] Or Llaches. See my translation of Xeres, p. 80, Hakluyt Society’s volume for 1872.

[20] They were perfectly true. There is a letter from Blasco NuÑez to the Emperor Charles V, dated at Panama on February 15th, 1544 (MuÑoz Coll., t. 83, f. 246) in which he brings all sorts of accusations against Vaca de Castro before he could possibly have verified any of them, and which he had received from followers of Almagro at Panama.

[21] The Licentiate Antonio de la Gama was sent to Puerto Rico in 1517 to hold a residencia. He went thence to Panama where he planned improvements. Arriving in Peru he was employed to negotiate with Almagro. In 1539 Pizarro left him at Lima as his Lieutenant and Chief Judge. After the battle of Chupas he judged and condemned the rebels. Vaca de Castro sent him to Lima as his Lieutenant, but he left on the approach of the Viceroy and went to Cuzco. The Viceroy excepted him from pardon for having joined Gonzalo Pizarro. He remained at Cuzco, and was living in 1551.

[22] Ruy Lopez?.

[23] So thought the Viceroy who seized Solar and intended to hang him. This was prevented, but Solar was kept in prison until he was released by the Judges.

[24] The Licentiate Benito Suarez de Carbajal was a brother of Illan Suarez de Carbajal, the Factor. He came with his brother to Peru, and was at the battle of Chupas. He joined Gonzalo Pizarro against the Viceroy to avenge his brother’s death, and was at the battle of AÑaquito where the Viceroy was killed. He then went over to Gasca and was at Sacsahuana, Gasca making him Alferez General. He was the Corregidor of Cuzco. The ladies called him “Galan” and “Buen Mozo.” On June 24th, 1549, he was climbing into a lady’s balcony at Cuzco, when the husband came out and cut the rope ladder; Carbajal fell 20 feet and was killed.

[25] Alonso Riquelme, the Treasurer, was appointed to that office by Charles V, and went out with Pizarro. He was in favour of murdering Atahualpa. He was at the founding of the city of the Kings (Lima) on Jan. 18, 1535. He was at Cuzco when Almagro arrived from Chile. When Pizarro was murdered he was at Lima where he continued to reside. He joined the Judges against the Viceroy, and was a very decided partisan of Gonzalo Pizarro. He was then an old man, but the date of his death is not known.

[26] Fray Geronimo de Loaysa, the first Archbishop of Lima, was born at Talavera. One of his brothers was Archbishop of Seville and President of the Council of the Indies. Fray Geronimo arrived at Lima as Bishop in 1543. He did what he could as a peacemaker. In 1546 he set out for Spain, at the request of Gonzalo Pizarro, to explain the state of affairs. But he found Gasca at Panama, and joined with him. He was at Sacsahuana and helped Gasca in the repartimientos. He held the first Council of Lima in 1551, having been promoted to Archbishop. In the insurrection of Giron he marched against the rebels. He befriended the two young daughters of the murdered Inca Tupac Amaru, taking them into his house. Archbishop Loaysa died on October 25, 1575.

[27] Diego de Mora was a native of Ciudad Real. He came to Peru with Almagro and settled at Truxillo, marrying Ana de Valverde, sister of the Bishop. He was granted the valleys of Chimu and Chicama. He was at the battle of Chupas. He joined Gonzalo Pizarro and was at AÑaquito. Then he turned round and joined Gasca, being present at Sacsahuana. But he refused to join Giron’s rebellion continuing as Governor of Truxillo.

[28] Diego Centeno was a native of Ciudad Rodrigo. He came to Peru with Alvarado in 1534, and was at the battle of Salinas on the side of the Pizarros. He was also at Chupas. He then settled at Chuquisaca, and when the news of the new laws arrived, he and Hinojosa were appointed Procurators by the citizens. He seems to have wavered for some time, but eventually took up arms against Gonzalo Pizarro in Charcas. Old Carbajal went against him, defeated him, and hunted him until he was obliged to hide in a cave for nearly a year. He then collected forces again, surprised Cuzco, and marched southward. Gonzalo Pizarro and Carbajal encountered him at the battle of Huarina, where he was entirely defeated on October 20, 1547. He managed to escape to Gasca’s army, and was given charge of Gonzalo Pizarro when he surrendered. Centeno was much dissatisfied with Gasca’s distribution of the repartimientos. He went back to Chuquisaca where he was poisoned. He left two sons.

[29] Pedro Alonso Hinojosa was born at Truxillo in Estremadura and came to Peru with Hernando Pizarro in 1534. He was at the siege of Cuzco, escaped from Almagro, and was Standard Bearer for the Pizarros at the battle of Salinas, April 20, 1538. He was also at the battle of Chupas. He joined Gonzalo Pizarro and went to Arequipa to secure the services of Carbajal. Gonzalo Pizarro gave him command of his fleet and he took Panama. But he was talked over by Gasca and gave up the ships to him. Gasca made him Captain-General of his army, and he was at Sacsahuana. He received Gonzalo Pizarro’s estates and mines in Charcas, where he was murdered by the rebels under Sebastian de Castilla in 1553.

[30] Francisco de Almendras was one of Pizarro’s original followers, and at Caxamarca he received 181 marcs and 4440 pesos of gold as his share of the Atahualpa ransom. He became a Regidor or Magistrate at Chuquisaca, where he executed several enemies of Gonzalo Pizarro, whom he joined with his two nephews Diego and Martin on the road to Cuzco. He was a violent and very active partisan. Returning to Chuquisaca he was seized by Diego Centeno and put to death, in spite of his entreaties to be spared because of his large family, June 16, 1545. His nephew Diego served against Giron, but was murdered by a negro. The other nephew Martin was afterwards Alcalde of Chuquisaca.

[31] Alonso de Toro, another citizen of Cuzco, was Lieutenant-General to Gonzalo Pizarro. Diego Gonzalez, his father-in-law, killed him out of sheer alarm, owing to certain matrimonial quarrels.

[32] Francisco de Villacastin was one of the original conquerors in Panama and in Peru. He became a citizen of Cuzco, had a house there, and married Leonora Ccoya, an Inca princess, the widow of Juan Balsa who was hanged at Lima by Carbajal. Villacastin first served with Pedrarias on the isthmus, and was employed in making the road from Nombre de Dios to Panama. The monkeys threw stones at the workers, and one wounded Villacastin, who was then a cross-bow man, knocking out two of his front teeth. He had a good repartimiento at Ayavire. He died in prison after Sacsahuana, being a staunch supporter of Gonzalo Pizarro. Garcilasso says that he was wounded in the face by an enemy after he had surrendered. “He was a good man and did much good to many people.”

[33] Tomas Vasquez was one of the first conquerors. He had a house in Cuzco and mines in Caravaya. He was a turbulent soldier mixed up in all troubles. For this reason the Viceroy, Marquis of CaÑete, ordered him to be beheaded as an undesirable person.

[34] Son of the Judge (Oidor) Zarate. He afterwards joined Centeno.

[35] He was then Bishop: not Archbishop until 1547.

[36] Friar Domingo de Santo Tomas was a native of Seville and professed a monk there. He was one of six Dominicans who first went to Peru, being the youngest. He studied the general language, which he called Quichua, and his grammar was published at Valladolid in 1560. He also studied the language of the coast, which is much more difficult. He founded the houses of his Order at Chincha, Chicama, and Truxillo. He won the affection of the Indians whom he tried to defend. In 1545 he was named Prior of the convent at Lima. He strove to induce Gonzalo Pizarro to submit and accept the offers of Gasca. He then joined Gasca and was present at Sacsahuana, 1552. Vicar-General, July 28, 1553. Provincial. He then visited Spain and was well received at Court, returning to Peru in 1561, and was made Bishop of Charcas. He built the first church at Paucar-colla. After a residence at Chuquisaca he went back to Lima in 1567 to attend the second Council of Lima; and returning to Chuquisaca the Bishop died about 1570. Portrait in a room of the University of San Marcos.

[37] The Licentiate Rodrigo NiÑo was the son of a Regidor of Toledo. He was faithful when the Viceroy sent him, with others, to intercept Puelles, but he afterwards sided with the Judges, and had the custody of the Viceroy at San Lorenzo and on the way to Huacho. He joined Gonzalo Pizarro and, on the march to Quito, he forged a letter to get Maldonado the rich into trouble, and put it under Pizarro’s pillow. He deserted Pizarro and joined Gasca who sent him to Spain in charge of convicts. Nearly all escaped in the West Indies, so when he arrived at San Lucar he was sent to prison in Oran. Released after two years he returned to Peru in 1554, and served against Giron. He married (third husband) Maria, sister of Bishop Valverde, whose first husband was Rodrigo OrgoÑez. He was Alcalde of Lima 1555, 1558, 1564. His son Fernando was Alcalde 1597, 1603.

[38] Or Chuquisaca.

[39] In the valley of the Cauca, in the newly-discovered province of New Granada.

[40] Alonso de Mesa was a native of the Canary Islands. He was one of Pizarro’s original followers, was at Caxamarca and received 135 marks and 3350 pesos of gold as his share of the Atahualpa ransom. He was in the siege of Cuzco and served at the battle of Chupas. He concealed himself when Gonzalo Pizarro took up arms, and was at Sacsahuana with Gasca. He fled from Cuzco when Giron rose in rebellion and served against him. He was a citizen of Cuzco and had a house there. His son went to Spain to advocate the cause of the Incas.

[41] Herrara leaves out this and states it as a fact.

[42] Homily in S. Luc. c. xiv. vv. 25-33.

[43] See my book, the Incas of Peru, pp. 260-274.

[44] Lorenzo de Aldana came to Peru with Alvarado. He was appointed governor of Popayan, to supersede Belalcazar, by Pizarro. He was in the Chilian expedition with Almagro; but deserted the Almagro party, and was with Vaca de Castro at the battle of Chupas. He was Governor of Lima for Gonzalo Pizarro, who entrusted him with some ships to go to Panama. There he joined Hinojosa and both went over to Gasca, who again made him Governor of Lima. He served against Giron and was at Chuquinga. Aldana died very rich in 1571. He was conscience smitten on his death-bed at the treatment of the natives, and left all his wealth to be invested for the payment of the tribute imposed upon the natives in his repartimiento.

[45] Parmenion, Alexander’s very able general who served Philip and his son for a lifetime, and had reached the age of 70, was left in command in Media when Alexander went onwards in pursuit of Darius. A conspiracy was discovered in which Philotas, the son of Parmenion, was supposed to be implicated. He was tortured and then put to death. Polydamas was then sent into Media with orders for Cleander, the second in command, to assassinate Parmenion before he heard of his son’s death. The crime was perpetrated by Cleander with his own hand. Of Parmenion’s other two sons, Hector was accidentally drowned in the Nile, and Nicanor was carried off by a sudden illness during the march into Hyrcania.

The comparison of the Viceroy’s promulgation of the New Laws with the murder of Parmenion by order of Polydamas is rather far-fetched. The supposed point is that both felt bound implicitly to obey a royal order, however distasteful.

[46] Francisco de Ampuero was a citizen of Lima, a friend and strong partisan of the Marquis Pizarro. After the murder he joined Vaca de Castro and was at the battle of Chupas. He joined Gonzalo Pizarro and was Alferez General at the battle of AÑaquito. He married the Princess Inez Yupanqui Ñusta, after she had had a daughter by the Marquis Pizarro. He took his young daughter Francesca to Spain where she eventually married her uncle Hernando Pizarro in prison, and had children. Ampuero also made a home for two unfortunate orphans, grandsons of Inca Manco. He was Alcalde of Lima 1571-1574.

[47] In the action which the Camp Master Francisco de Carbajal took against Gaspar Rodriguez de Camporedondo and the others at Pucara on Sept. 28, 1544, Loaysa made a confession. He said that he came from Lima and lodged in the house of Gaspar Rodriguez all the time that he was in Cuzco, hearing all the doubts he raised. One night, the 23rd of August, in the lodgings of Luis Suarez and the licentiate Leon they began to discuss the ordinances. Then Diego Maldonado the rich came in, and Leon said that, if he had a safe conduct, he would go to Lima and argue with the Judges that the King was ill-advised in approving the new laws. Loaysa said he would go if he had the means. Diego Maldonado the rich heard him and said, “What is wanting, Father?” He replied that he had no horse. Maldonado said that he would provide a mount for him to go to Lima and negotiate with the Judges. Thus supplied Loaysa left Cuzco with many letters, and attended only by four Yanaconas.

Loaysa arrived in Lima when the Viceroy had just finished his dinner and, after making his report, he went to his lodgings in the house of the Accountant Juan de Caceres where he was visited by Pablo de Meneses, Don Alonso and Martin de Robles, Diego de Silva and several others. They asked for the news, and Loaysa said that Gonzalo Pizarro had 550 men. A provision of the Judges was obtained pardoning Gaspar Rodriguez, Gumiel, Guevara, Alonso de Toro, Tomas Vasquez, Villacastin, Portocarrero and Altamirano if they came over to the Viceroy in 15 days. The confession was taken down by the scrivener Pedro Gonzalez del Castillo.

[48] Friar Tomas de San Martin, Regent or Principal of the Dominicans. He left Lima before the Bishop, overtaking Pero Lopez and Ampuero at Vilcas. He was authorized to negotiate with Gonzalo Pizarro, to offer him certain terms, and to try to alienate his officers from him. These negotiations came to an end in January, 1544. The Regent was also empowered by the Judges to ascertain in what light they were looked upon by Pizarro. He was assured that the rebels desired that the Judges and their court should remain in accordance with the King’s orders. Pizarro sent a letter to the Judges by the Regent.

[49] The husband of the Countess Matilda of Tuscany was Guelpone or Welphone, to whom the Milanese confided the defence of their liberties in the early times of the Lombard Republic.

[50] A.D. 1160.

[51] St Jerome never wrote any special treatise on the instruction of virgins. He treats of the subject in his Epistolae ad Eustachium, Le custodia virginitatis, and in other places. But in none of these does the passage quoted by Cieza occur. It is in an anonymous letter entitled Virginitatis laus which has been attributed, without any reason, to St Jerome.

[52] I.e. the province of Santander.

[53] Pedro de Puelles came to Peru with Alvarado in 1534, and was Lieutenant-Governor of Quito during the expedition of Gonzalo Pizarro into Quijos. He was at the battle of Chupas, and in 1544 was appointed Governor of Huanuco by Vaca de Castro. He was confirmed in this office by the Viceroy and was well received by him. Yet he joined Gonzalo Pizarro, went in chase of the Viceroy, and when Carbajal turned back owing to Centeno’s proceedings, Puelles was made Camp Master. At AÑaquito he ordered the Viceroy to be killed. Puelles was again Governor of Quito. Returning to Lima he urged Gonzalo Pizarro to declare himself King. Then he resolved to betray Pizarro and join Gasca, but he was assassinated by his own officers.

[54] The Father Provincial San Martin left Lima for Cuzco before the Bishop, though we are not told by Cieza de Leon when he set out or of the arrangements for his mission. It appears, from MS. letters, that San Martin was sent by the Viceroy to make certain proposals to Gonzalo Pizarro and, meanwhile, if possible to seduce his chief followers. Pizarro’s detailed reply to the Viceroy was dated August 2, 1544. The conduct of San Martin fully accounts for the refusal to receive the Bishop or Pero Lopez.

[55] Herrera calls him Juan, and adds that he was a son of the Licentiate Vadillo who led the expedition from Uraba to Popayan, Dec. vii, Lib. viii, cap. iii.

[56] Gonzalo Diaz de Pineda came with Belalcazar to the conquest of Quito. In 1536 he was sent to explore Quijos and Canelos, and his report led Gonzalo Pizarro to undertake his expedition. Pineda accompanied Pizarro, and went in search of Orellana. In 1544 he offered his services to the Viceroy, and went with Vela NuÑez to intercept Puelles with 35 mules, which cost 12,000 ducats. He turned traitor, tried to murder Vela NuÑez, and joined Gonzalo Pizarro. In 1545 Gonzalo Pizarro sent him to Piura to collect men, when the Viceroy suddenly arrived. Pineda was surprised and fled into the mountains, where he died of hunger.

[57] DoÑa Brianda de AcuÑa. The Viceroy left three sons in Spain, Antonio, Juan and Cristobal, the two eldest being pages of the Empress, with the habits of Santiago and Alcantara. Antonio died when appointed Ambassador to France. Juan de AcuÑa Vela was Captain-General of Artillery and on the Council of War. Cristobal was Bishop of Canary, afterwards of Burgos.

[58] The true story was told by one of the Inca’s sons named Titu Cusi Yupanqui, who was an eye-witness. The story in the text is quite wrong. See page 164.

[59] Friar Juan Solano, born 1507, a Dominican monk, was a native of Archidona and belonged to the monastery of San Estevan at Seville. On March 1, 1543, the King made him Bishop of Cuzco, to succeed Valverde. He did not reach Cuzco until Nov. 3, 1545. He placed the first stone of the cathedral on March 13, 1560, and created the parishes of San Cristoval, San Sebastian, San Blas, and Santa Ana.

He signed the agreement to appoint Gonzalo Pizarro Governor of Peru when in Lima. He went over to the other side and accompanied Diego Centeno to Huarina; but escaped from the battlefield or Carbajal would certainly have hung him. Carbajal did hang his brother Jimenes. He joined Gasca at Xauxa. He was at Sacsahuana and then resided at Cuzco. He returned to Spain and went to Rome, where he lived for many years in the convent of La Minerva, and died on Jan. 14, 1580, aged 76.

[60] Guillan.

[61] As many as 25 mounted men deserted the Viceroy and rode out of Lima in the night. These were Baltasar de Castilla, Lorenzo Sebastian and Baltasar de Castilla were the brother and son of the Conde de Gomera. The family was closely connected with the Canary Islands by the marriage of Don Diego Ayala y Herrera with Inez, daughter and princess of Fernan Perasa, Lord of the Canary Islands. Their grandson Guillen Perasa de Ayala was created Count of Gomera by Charles V. He married Maria de Castilla and these younger sons used the surname of Castilla. Sebastian, the youngest, was the murderer of Hinojosa and was soon afterwards murdered, in his turn, by his own men. Baltasar joined the Almagro party, after the assassination of Pizarro, and was on that side at the battle of Chupas, Sept. 15, Mexia, Rodrigo de Salazar el Corcovedo, Francisco de Escobedo, Francisco de Carbajal, Pedro Martin de Sicilia (or de Don Benito), and Diego and Jeronimo de Carbajal, nephews of the Factor. Salazar was the man who had apprehended the younger Almagro at Cuzco. They seized some papers in charge of the priest Loaysa, whom they overtook. These letters made it clear that there was correspondence with the Viceroy and treachery in the camp of Gonzalo Pizarro. It was thought necessary to make examples of the traitors. Gaspar de Rojas, Felipe Gutierrez, and a Galician named Arias de Maldonado were at Guamanga. Pedro de Puelles, by Gonzalo’s order, arrested and beheaded them. Gaspar Rodriguez de Camporedondo was a double-dyed traitor. He was in Gonzalo’s camp at the head of 200 pikemen. Carbajal arrested him and he was beheaded without delay.

1542. With Gonzalo at AÑaquito, and sent with Hinojosa to Panama. A captain of infantry at Sacsahuana, April 9, 1548. Received the repartimiento of Parinocochas. He gave the supper at Cuzco when his niece married Alonso de Loaysa, Nov. 13, 1553. Giron broke in and killed one or two of the supper party. He put Castilla to death for trying to escape to Lima. Castilla was a chief citizen of Cuzco, and there are descendants.

[62] His mad resolution was to sack Lima and retreat to Truxillo, sending all the women and children by sea and the men by land.

[63] The Viceroy had assembled 400 men to defend his house. The Judges were frightened and shut themselves up in the lodgings of Cepeda. Then one Francisco de Escobar said, “Gentlemen, let us come out and die fighting like men, rather than shut ourselves up like chickens.” So they came out and, marching to the square, were joined by many citizens as they went. Then things fell out as the Bishop describes.

[64] San Lorenzo.

[65] Party of Almagro.

[66] Huacho.

[67] As the army of Gonzalo Pizarro approached the Judges became more and more alarmed. They sent an embassy to him, consisting of the Accountant Agustin de Zarate and a prominent citizen named Antonio de Ribera. They found Gonzalo at Xauxa. Ribera was allowed to proceed but Zarate was arrested, and was kept a prisoner for ten days in the bitter cold of the heights of Pariacaca until Gonzalo’s forces came there on the way to Lima. Antonio de Ribera was a sort of brother-in-law of Gonzalo, as he had married the widow of his half brother Francisco Martin de Alcantara. Gonzalo’s answer to the Judges was that it was for the common good that he should be Governor and if that was granted he would comply with what the Judges asked. If not he would enter by force. Those who had left Cuzco to join the Viceroy were hiding in different houses. Others fled into the montaÑa. When Gonzalo Pizarro was within a league of Lima, he sent Carbajal in advance with 30 arquebusiers, who seized 28 of the fugitives, among them Gabriel de Rojas, Garcilasso de la Vega who escaped and hid in the Dominican Convent, Melchor Verdugo, the Licentiate Carbajal, Pedro del Barco, Martin de Florencia, Alonso de Caceres, Pedro de Manjarves, Luis de Leon, Anton Ruiz de Guevara. Carbajal locked them up in the prison and took the key. The Judges did not interfere. All their troops had gone over to Gonzalo Pizarro. The Judges were then asked to proclaim Pizarro as Governor. They said they had not the power. Upon which Carbajal took three of the prisoners and hanged them on a tree outside the town. These were Pedro del Barco, Martin de Florencia, and Juan de Saavedra. Carbajal was so witty and amusing during the executions that they must have found it quite a pleasure to be hanged by him. Luis de Leon was begged off by his brother, who was one of Carbajal’s soldiers. Carbajal told the Judges that unless they signed the document at once recognizing Gonzalo Pizarro as Governor, he would hang all the rest and sack the town. The Judges saw that the Camp Master was in earnest. The document was signed, and Gonzalo Pizarro entered Lima as Governor of Peru, promising that there should be no more executions. Bachicao led the vanguard with the artillery, then 200 pikemen followed by 150 arquebusiers led by Guevara and 200 under Pedro CermeÑo. Next rode Gonzalo Pizarro himself in a coat of mail covered by a brocade surtout. Behind him were three captains abreast, Puerto Carrero with the standard of Castille, Antonio Altamirano with the standard of Cuzco, Pedro de Puelles with the standard of Pizarro’s arms. Then followed the cavalry. In this order the procession went to the house of the Licentiate Zarate where the Judges were assembled. Pizarro received their submission and then went to the municipal buildings where the assembled Magistrates received him with great ceremony. Pizarro then took possession of his brother’s house, lately occupied by the Viceroy, and the troops were taken to their quarters. This took place in the end of October, 1544, forty days after the arrest of the Viceroy. Gonzalo only occupied himself with military matters, the Judges exercising their authority as a Court of Justice, with sittings in the house of the Treasurer Riquelme. Alonso de Toro was sent to Cuzco, Pedro de Fuentes to Arequipa, Francisco de Almendras to Chuquisaca as Lieutenants of the Governor. There was one more execution of an opponent who talked too much, one Diego Gumiel.

Escape of Garcilasso de la Vega.

Carbajal did not succeed in arresting Garcilasso de la Vega, who fled from Cuzco. When the Camp Master knocked at his door that night, it was opened by a soldier named Hernando Perez Tablero, a native of Almendral in the dukedom of Feria, and foster-brother of Alonso de Vargas the brother of Garcilasso de la Vega. He was an old servant of the family. As soon as he saw the dreaded Camp Master he ran to Garcilasso and warned him. The knight got out by a back way and escaped into the convent of Santo Domingo. He was received by the monks and concealed in a vault, where he remained for more than four months. Old Carbajal searched for him several times in the convent until, through the intercession of friends, he was at last pardoned. But Gonzalo Pizarro always kept him a prisoner, living in Gonzalo’s tent and never being allowed to go out of his sight, until Sacsahuana. So that he was unwillingly at the battle of Huarina.

[68] sic.

[69] One witness said that, after the first blow, Cueto said, embracing the Viceroy, “no more, Sir, for the love of God,” yet he was killed by the servants with many stabs. Ribadeneira, Tapia, Vela (a relation) and other attendants were present.

[70] By order of Alonso de Lerma, Ensign to the General Vela NuÑez, two negroes took the body of the Factor to bury it secretly. Afterwards the body was ordered to be disinterred, and the numerous deep poniard wounds were seen and noted. Finally it was again buried very honourably.

[71] The Viceroy’s wild scheme was to abandon Lima, taking all the inhabitants to Truxillo, men by land, women and children by sea.

[72] Juan de Acosta was a native of Barcarrota near Badajos. He served under Gonzalo Pizarro in the Quijos expedition as “Alferez General,” and displayed great valour, endurance, and energy. He returned with Gonzalo, and commanded the vanguard at the battle of AÑaquito. He was wounded, but he was in the procession when Pizarro entered Lima in triumph. When Aldana betrayed his benefactor and declared for Gasca with Pizarro’s ships, Acosta went up the coast to prevent them from getting water. He served actively the cause of his master and was wounded at the battle of Huarina, being a captain of infantry. Before Sacsahuana Juan de Acosta, with 30 men, went to destroy Gasca’s bridge at Cotabamba, but his plan was betrayed by a soldier named Juan NuÑez del Prado. When all hope was gone, he proposed to Gonzalo Pizarro to dash into the enemy’s ranks and die like heroes. Gonzalo said, “better to die like Christians” and rode over to surrender. Acosta followed him (April 9, 1548). He was put to death by Gasca, and his head, in an iron cage, was exposed for a long time at Cuzco. When nearly all deserted their chief, Juan de Acosta remained faithful to the last. Nearly all the public men in Peru had acted treacherously or changed sides. The few honourable men deserve to be placed on record. Besides old Carbajal and Juan de Acosta, there remained faithful to Pizarro, and were ruthlessly put to death by Gasca, the Captains Francisco Maldonado, Juan Velez de Guevara, Dionisio de Bobadilla, and Gonzalo de los Nidos, whose tongue was cut out before execution by order of the cruel Gasca. Many others were hanged or tortured.

[73] Almendras had befriended Centeno in many ways, and had treated him as his own son.

[74] Killed in the battle.

[75] Killed in the battle.

[76] Wounded.

[77] Wounded.

[78] Francisco de OÑate, one of the first conquerors, had the house at Cuzco which was afterwards occupied by Garcilasso de la Vega, facing what is now the Plaza del Cabildo, on the west side. OÑate was slain at the battle of Chupas.

[79] The Editor omits them, and all the rest, and merely gives the last few words of the narrative, and some testimonies.

[80] The Appendix only consists of these extracts. Evidently the most important part of the narrative is omitted. Unfortunately Jimenes de la Espada gives no clue to the title of the document he copied from, nor to its whereabouts, he merely ends by saying: “I am somewhat prolix in giving these details because all or nearly all respecting the life of Titu Cusi Yupanqui, the penultimate native monarch of Peru, is completely unknown.”

The Mission to Titu Cusi Yupanqui was in the time of the President Lope Garcia de Castro, 1564-69.

[81] Inca Manco had been murdered by a Spaniard in 1545. He had established himself in the mountainous region of Vilcapampa, which Rodriguez calls “the land of war of Manco” between the rivers Apurimac and Vilcamayu. His eldest son Sayri Tupac came out and surrendered to the Spaniards. He died in 1560. The next brother Titu Cusi Yupanqui continued to reign in Vilcapampa.

[82] Don Diego de ZuÑiga y Velasco, Count of Nieva, was Viceroy of Peru from 1559 to 1564, when he was assassinated by a jealous husband.

[83] Petacas de mani (Arachis hypogÆa).

[84] Diego Mendez de Sotomayor fought at the battle of Chupas on the side of Almagro the lad, Sept. 16, 1542, and escaped to Cuzco where he was made prisoner. He escaped and took refuge with Manco Inca, who received him hospitably.

Titu Cusi Yupanqui gave an account of the murder of his father, written Feb. 6, 1570. He describes how they tried to kill him also, and how he escaped.

[85] “Intip churin ceam-mi sapalla, punchaupi churin canqui.”

[86] Perhaps Martin Hurtado de Arbieto, who afterwards commanded the force sent against Tupac Amaro.

[87] The Viceroy Count of Nieva.

[88] Sent to press, April 15th, 1913.

Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber:
Peru in their rovolt=> Peru in their rovolt {pg 14}
Rabdona and Santa Cruz were=> Rebdona and Santa Cruz were {pg 122}
Nunez de Segura=> NuÑez de Segura {pg 156}
consents to Franciso de Carbajal’s return to Spain, 8;=> consents to Francisco de Carbajal’s return to Spain, 8; {pg 303}
Martin de, visits Beltasar de Loaysa, 92 (n.);=> Martin de, visits Baltasar de Loaysa, 92 (n.); {pg 210}
Segura, Hernan Nunez de, 156=> Segura, Hernan NuÑez de, 156 {pg 211}

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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