Pedro Arias Davila had been a party…
1531 CE
Pedro Arias Davila had been a party to the original agreement with Francisco Pizarro and Diego de Almagro which brought about the discovery of Peru, but had withdrawn in 1526 for a small compensation, having lost confidence in the outcome.
In the same year he had been superseded as Governor of Panama by Pedro de los Ríos, and retired to León in Nicaragua, where he was named its new governor on July 1, 1527.
Here he will live for the rest of his life until he dies on March 6, 1531.
He leaves an unenviable record, as a man of unreliable character, cruel, and unscrupulous.
Through his foundation of Panama, however, he had laid the basis for the discovery of South America's west coast and the subsequent conquest of Peru.
De Soto, having become a regidor (a member of the municipal council) of León, Nicaragua, in 1530, had led an expedition up the coast of the Yucatán Peninsula, searching for a passage between the Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean to enable trade with the Orient, the richest market in the world.
Failing that, and without means to explore further, de Soto, upon Pedro Arias Dávila's death, leaves his estates in Nicaragua to join Pizarro in his planned expedition to Peru.