Sebastian Cabot has built the Sancti Spiritu…
1528 CE
Sebastian Cabot has built the Sancti Spiritu fort next to the Carcarañá River, in today's Santa Fe Province.
The Spanish enjoy the warm climate, and Cabo has built a house nearby.
They have obtained help from the local natives, and the priest Francisco García provides religious support.
The natives were initially friendly towards the Spanish.
Cabot has sent one ship back to Spain, with his reports, accusations against the mutineers, and requests for further aid.He had left the fort on December 23, 1527, in a ship with one hundred and thirty men, in a second quest to find the legendary empire of the White King.
leaving the other thirty-two men at the fort.
The expedition is a harsh one and the natives have had to be forced into obedience.
As a result, they leave and provide no more food.
Many Spaniards do not agree with the actions of Cabot and attempt to mutiny, but after Francisco García reveals their plan, their leader is executed.
The expedition stops near the Paraguay River, after hearing there are new ships in the area.
Miguel Riflos leads some further exploration with thirty men, but most of them die during a mutiny of Francisco del Puerto against Núñez de Balboa, caused by personal enmity.
The new ships, which intercept Cabot before his return to Sancti Spiritu, are led by Diego García de Moguer, who had taken part in the 1516 voyage of Solís and, after returning to Spain, had participated in the expedition of Ferdinand Magellan and Juan Sebastián Elcano between 1519 and 1522.
They discuss the validity of exclusive navigation rights on the river, but finally agree to return to the fort, join forces, request Spanish aid and embark on a second expedition ion search of the White King.
Spanish sources indicate that Diego García was born in Moguer in 1484 (or 1496), but there are Portuguese sources that say he was born in Lisbon.
Having received approval for a new voyage, Garcia had sailed on January 15, 1526 (August 15, 1527 is also mentioned) from La Coruña, Cape Finisterre, in command of an expedition with three ships.
The voyage is financed by merchants to find a suitable spice route, intended to follow Elcano's route and passing through the Magellan Strait.
After voyaging through the Atlantic Ocean, García had arrived on the south coast of Brazil.
In February 1528, he had explored the area around the Río de la Plata, an excursion documented in José Toribio Medina's Los viajes de Diego García de Moguer (The travels of Diego García de Moguer).