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The myth of El Dorado (translated
as "the golden one" or "the gilded one"), is of direct relevance to the
colonial history of Caribbean Amerindians insofar as this myth helped to
drive the ambitions of European colonizers in penetrating Amerindian territories
and incorporating Amerindian allies, in the vain search for a fabled city
of gold ruled by a native who was reputed to cover his body in gold dust.
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El
Dorado: “…Columbus opened up the way for treasure
seekers when he discovered gold in San Salvador and Hispaniola. The news
imparted to Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain soon spread throughout Europe,
and there began the settlement of the West Indies under the guise of Christianity
completely decimating the local Amerindian population….”
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Encyclopaedia
Britannica, Sir Walter Raleigh, 1154-1618: Excerpt—“Raleigh
also spelled RALEGH, English adventurer and writer, a favourite of Queen
Elizabeth I, who knighted him in 1585. Accused of treason by Elizabeth's
successor, James I, he was imprisoned in the Tower of London and eventually
put to death….Between 1584 and 1589 he had tried to establish a colony
near Roanoke Island (in present North Carolina), which he named Virginia;
but he never set foot there himself. In 1595 he led an expedition to what
is now Guyana, in South America, sailing up the Orinoco River in the heart
of Spain's colonial empire. He described the expedition in his book The
Discoverie of Guiana (1596). Spanish documents and stories told by Indians
had convinced him of the existence of Eldorado, a fabulous city of gold
in the interior of South America. He did locate some gold mines, but no
one supported his project for colonizing the area. In 1596 he went with
Robert Devereux, earl of Essex, on an unsuccessful expedition against the
Spanish city of Cádiz, and he was Essex' rear admiral on the Islands
voyage, in 1597, an expedition to the Azores….He still hoped to exploit
the wealth of Guyana, arguing that the country had been ceded to England
by its native chiefs in 1595. With the King's permission, he financed and
led a second expedition there, promising to open a gold mine without offending
Spain. A severe fever prevented his leading his men upriver. His lieutenant,
Lawrence Kemys, burned a Spanish settlement but found no gold. Raleigh's
son Walter died in the action. King James invoked the suspended sentence
of 1603, and in 1618, after writing a spirited defense of his acts, Raleigh
was executed….”
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MSN
Encarta, “Omagua”: “…At the time of the Spanish
conquest of South America in the 16th century, an erroneous report credited
the Omagua with having tremendous stores of gold, and in 1536, 1541, and
1560 unsuccessful attempts were made by the Spanish to conquer their lands….”
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The
Search for El Dorado, Volume VIII of Theodor De Bry's Grand Voyages, from
the Internet Archive: Excerpt—“The story of El
Dorado was one of the most influential myths connected with the ‘New World.’
The legend first appeared in the 1530s or 40s as a story of an Indian chief
who was rich enough to cover himself with gold dust during certain ceremonies;
this chief was the golden man, “El Hombre Dorado.” The legend had its source
in the Colombian highlands, near present-day Bogota, but when the Spanish
conquistadors reached this region they found no such rich chief or kingdom.
The legend didn’t die, however, but instead transformed itself and moved
slowly across the continent. After an amazing series of horrific and unsuccessful
searches for El Dorado, the myth finally solidified as a story about a
rich city of El Dorado, called Manoa by the natives, located on a huge
lake in the highlands of Guiana….”
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"Trinidad's
first governor confused El Dorado with fountain of youth", by Kim Johnson,
Trinidad Express, Sunday, 27 June, 1999: [look
80% of the way down this page to find the article] "Juan Ponce de Leon
(1466-1521) sought the Fountain of Youth in Florida. But El Dorado-The
Gilded Man, an Amerindian king who annointed himself daily with gold dust-
was supposed to live somewhere in Peru. Alas, like any rainbow's pot of
gold, his kingdom retreated from its seekers. It migrated east and ended
up in North-eastern Venezuela or Guyana. Thus Trinidad became important
as the launching pad for its conquest. Antonio de Berrio, Trinidad's first
Governor, was already an old retired soldier when he was recruited to the
search for El Dorado…"
This page last updated: Thursday,
01 May, 2003 |
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