Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca was born…
February 1528 CE
Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca was born around 1490 into a hidalgo family, the son of Francisco Núñez de Vera and Teresa Cabeza de Vaca y de Zurita, in the town of Jerez de la Frontera, Cadiz, Spain.
Despite the family's status as minor nobility, they possessed modest economic resources.
Álvar Núñez's maternal surname, Cabeza de Vaca (meaning “head of cow”) is said to be associated with a maternal ancestor, Martin Alhaja.
He had shown the Spanish king a secret mountain pass, marked by a cow’s skull, enabling the king to win the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa against the Muslim Moors in 1212.
Some sources indicate that after his parents died when he was young, the boy Álvar had been taken in by relatives (most likely his aunt and uncle or his paternal grandfather, Pedro de Vara).
Evidence suggests that he probably had a moderately comfortable early life.
He had been appointed chamberlain for the house of a noble family in his teen years, then had participated in the conquest of the Canary Islands where he had been appointed a governor.
Enlisting in the Spanish army in 1511, he had served in Italy (with distinction), Spain and Navarre, receiving several medals of honor and becoming more of a political figure in Spain.
The explorer named Pánfilo de Narváez has been sent by Spain’s King Charles I to explore the unknown territory that the Spanish called La Florida (present-day Florida in the United States).
Cabeza de Vaca had been attached to this expedition as the expedition’s treasurer.
Records indicate that he also has a military role as one of the chief officers on the Narváez expedition, noted as sheriff or marshal.
On June 17, 1527, the fleet of five ships had set sail towards the province of Pánuco (which is on the western border of Florida).
When they stopped in Hispaniola for supplies, Narváez lost approximately one hundred and fifty of his six hundred-man expedition: They chose to stay on the island rather than continue with the expedition.
The expedition had gone on to Cuba, where Cabeza de Vaca had taken two ships to recruit more men and buy supplies.
Their fleet had been battered by a hurricane, resulting in the destruction of both ships and the loss of most of Cabeza de Vaca’s men.
Narváez had arrived days later to pick up the survivors.
After nearly four months, on February 20, 1528, Narevaéz arrives in Cienfuegos with one of two new ships and a few more recruits.
The other ship he sends on to Havana.
At this point, the expedition has about four hundred men and eighty horses horses.
The winter layover had caused a depletion of supplies, and they plan to restock in Havana on the way to the Florida coast.