Everything about Luis Carvajal Y De La Cueva totally explained
Luis de Carabajal y Cueva (sometimes
Luis de Carvajal y de la Cueva; c.
1539 –
1595) was a Spanish adventurer, slave-trader and governor of
Nuevo León. He was the first Spanish subject to enter Texas from Mexico across the lower
Rio Grande.
Background
Carabajal was born in
Mogadouro,
Portugal, to Gaspar de Carvajal and Francisca de León, Jewish
conversos (
converts to
Catholicism). When he was eight his family took him to
Sahagún, in the
Kingdom of León (
Spain). After his father died his tutor,
Duarte de León, sent him back to
Portugal. After spending 13 years in
Cape Verde,
Africa, as a royal accountant in the slave trade, he sailed to
Seville and married
Guiomar de Ribera, a lady from
Lisbon whose father was also in the slave trade.
First sojourn in New Spain
Shortly thereafter, motivated by financial losses and marital problems, Carvajal sailed for New Spain in his own ship as second in command of the Spanish Indies fleet. Upon his arrival he was appointed alcalde ordinario of
Tampico. In the fall of 1568, Alcalde Carvajal rounded up 77 Englishmen marooned on the Tamaulipas coast by [JohnHawkins], who had lost some of his ships in a fight with the Spanish fleet at Veracruz.
When this exploit was reported to Viceroy
Martín Enríquez de Almanza, he was so impressed that he commissioned Carvajal a captain, sending him to open a road between Pánuco province and the Mazapil mines. Later he was sent to chastise hostile Indian bands at the mouth of the Río Bravo (Rio Grande). He claimed to have punished the natives responsible for the massacre of 400 castaways from three ships wrecked on the coast en route to Spain — presumably the Padre Island shipwrecks of 1554. During the campaign, he crossed the lower Rio Grande into what is now Texas, becoming the first Spanish subject to do so.
He was accused of using his authority to trade in Indian slaves, and was summoned to Mexico City to defend himself. He soon left there for Spain, where in March 1579 he proposed to the Council of the Indies to develop all the ports from the Río Pánuco to Santa Elena on the Atlantic coast; to settle the area between Tampico and the mines of Mazapil and Zacatecas; and to extend exploration and settlement across Mexico "from sea to sea."
Second sojourn in New Spain
In
1579 Phillip II, King of Spain, granted him the title of governor and captain-general with the mission to "discover, pacify and settle" a new province in
New Spain (modern-day
Mexico) to be called
Nuevo Reyno de León, 200 leagues inland from the port of
Tampico. Significantly, the charter allowed the
Blood Purity Laws (Pureza de Sangre), which stipulated that Spanish immigrants to the
New World be at least three generations of Old Christian, to be lifted in an effort to encourage migration to this remote province beset by attacks by indigenous tribes. This Northern Province therefore became a target for migration by Iberian
conversos, for example New Christians.
In consideration of the appointment of governor, he undertook to colonize the territory at his own expense, being allowed the privilege of repaying himself out of the revenues. His original jurisdiction was to comprise a somewhat ill-defined territory, beginning at the port of
Tampico, extending along the
River Panuco, and thence turning northward; but it wasn't to exceed 200 leagues either way. It would seem to have included
Tamaulipas, as well as the states of Nuevo León and
Coahuila, and parts of
San Luis Potosí,
Zacatecas,
Durango,
Chihuahua and
Texas.
Carabajal received his royal patent as governor of Nuevo Reino de León on
May 31,
1579. He sailed onboard the
Santa Catarina with 100 families, most of them recruited from his own and his wife's kin. He arrived in Mexico in 1580, and began to prepare for his occupancy of the territory. He planted his colony on a site formerly called
Santa Lucia, and named the place
City of León. He also founded a settlement called
San Luis Rey de Francia.
To pacify and colonize the new territory, Carabajal was allowed 100 soldiers and 60 married laborers, accompanied by their wives and children. It is safe to assume that a number of these early colonists were Spanish Jews, who, under the guise of
Maranos, had hoped to escape persecution and find prosperity in the New World. In this expectation they were disappointed, for within a decade after their settlement a score of them were openly denounced and more or less severely punished for Judaizing. In 1590 there seems to have been an extensive colony of them in Mexico.
Don Luis de Carabajal brought with him to Mexico his brother-in-law, Don Francisco Rodríguez de Matos, and his sister, Doña Francisca Nuñez de Carabajal, with their children. In the year 1590, while in the midst of prosperity, and seemingly leading Christian lives, they were seized by the
Inquisition. Doña Isabel was tortured until she implicated the whole of the Carabajal family, who, with the exception of Don Baltasar, were imprisoned. The latter succeeded in escaping to Tasco, and was condemned to death in his absence.
Luis Carabajal was also accused by the Inquisition of
heresy. He was condemned to a six-year exile from New Spain, but while waiting for the execution of his sentence, he died in prison. On
December 8,
1596, most of his extended family, including Doña Francisca and her children, Isabel, Catalina, Leonor, and
Luis, as well as Manuel Diaz, Beatriz Enriquez, Diego Enriquez, and Manuel de Lucena and 121 of the original settlers of Monterrey, died at the stake in Mexico City.
Monterrey still bears the customs of his Jewish heritage, particularly the cuisine (
cabrito,
semitas), popular
Sephardic family names (like
Garza), and some local festivities. His nephew, Luis de Carabajal the younger, left a memoir, letters and account of the inquisition proceedings against the extended Carabajal family.
Sources
-
- Vicente Riva Palacio, El Libro Rojo, Mexico, 1870.
- C.K. Landis, Carabajal the Jew, a Legend of Monterey, Vineland, N. J., 1894.
- Carl L. Duaine, Caverns of Oblivion, Manchaca, Texas: Packrat, 1971
- Alfonso Toro, La familia Carvajal: Estudio histórico sobre los judíos y la Inquisición de la Nueva España en el siglo XVI (2 vols.), Mexico City: Patria, 1944.
- Robert S. Weddle, Spanish Sea: The Gulf of Mexico in North American Discovery, 1500-1685, College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1985.
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