Unsuccessful expeditions

April 2, 2008 / by katyag

In 1528 Spanish four survivors of unsuccessful expedition to Florida said that they had heard from Native Americans stories of cities with great riches somewhere in the north. Viceroy of New Spain organized an expedition headed by the Franciscan monk Marcos de Niza, who thought that the castaways' stories were related to seven cities of Cibola and Quivira. The expedition failed. And Marcos de Niza returned to Mexico City and claimed that they had seen a city very far away and greater than the great Tenochtitlan; in this city, the people used dishes of gold and silver, decorated their houses with turquoise, and had gigantic pearls, emeralds, and other beautiful gems.

This news fueled new expedition.The Viceroy Antonio de Mendoza immediately organizing a second large military expedition to take possession of the riches that the monk had described so vividly. New expedition was going more slowly. It went through the state of Sonora and arrived in present day Arizona. There, conquistadors discovered that Marcos de Niza's stories were lies and that there were in fact no treasures as he had described. They also found that, contrary to the monk's account, the sea was not within view from that region, but many miles away.

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