Magellan had established a temporary settlement for…
April 1520 CE
Magellan had established a temporary settlement for overwintering, called Puerto San Julian, on March 30, 1520.
On Easter (April 1 and 2), a mutiny breaks out involving three of the five ship captains.
Magellan takes quick, decisive, and ruthless action.
Luis de Mendoza, the captain of Victoria, is killed by a party sent by Magellan, and the ship is recovered.
After Concepción's anchor cable had been secretly cut by his forces, the ship drifts towards the well-armed Trinidad, and Concepcion's captain de Quesada and his inner circle surrender.
Juan de Cartagena, the head of the mutineers on the San Antonio, subsequently gives up.
Antonio Pigafetta reports that Gaspar Quesada, the captain of Concepción, and other mutineers were executed, while Juan de Cartagena, the captain of San Antonio, and a priest named Padre Sanchez de la Reina were marooned on the coast.
Most of the men, including Juan Sebastián Elcano, are needed and forgiven.
Reportedly those killed were drawn and quartered and impaled on the coast; their bones will be found by Sir Francis Drake in 1578.