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    • Lucas Vasques de Ayllon (1475-1526) - North Carolina History

      Lawyer and nobleman from Spain

      • A lawyer and nobleman from Spain, Lucas Vasques de Ayllon sponsored the first Spanish explorations (three total) of what became North Carolina. He also discovered Chesapeake Bay and established San Miguel de Guandape, a settlement near what would be Jamestown.
      northcarolinahistory.org › encyclopedia › lucas-vasques-de-ayllon-1475-1526
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  2. Written By Dr. Troy L. Kickler. A lawyer and nobleman from Spain, Lucas Vasques de Ayllon sponsored the first Spanish explorations (three total) of what became North Carolina. He also discovered Chesapeake Bay and established San Miguel de Guandape, a settlement near what would be Jamestown.

  3. Apr 15, 2016 · The founder of the first Spanish town in the territory of what came to be the United States, Ayllón was born circa 1480 in Toledo, Spain, to Juan Vázquez de Ayllón and Inés de Villalobos. In 1504 Ayllón arrived in the Spanish colony of Hispaniola to serve as a district judge. He became a judge on the Caribbean region’s highest appeals ...

  4. Lucas Vazquez de Ayllon was a Spanish conquistador and explorer who tried to start a colony in North America in 1526. He was the first European colonizer of what is now South Carolina . His attempt to settle the Carolina coast near the mouth of the Peedee River at Winyah Bay was unsuccessful.

  5. Sep 7, 2019 · Lucas Vázquez de Ayllón, a government functionary in the colony, wanted to start a settlement of his own, and he got permission from the King and Queen of Spain to send scouts sailing...

    • Allyon Expedition
    • De Soto Expedition
    • De Luna Colony
    • Later Expeditions

    The first documented exploration was carried out along the coastline in 1525 by two ships from Puerto Rico under pilot Pedro de Quejos, who had landed in South Carolina in 1521 on a slaving expedition. This brief reconnaissance of the entire coastline prefaced the subsequent colonial venture of Lucas Vazquez de Ayllon, whose 600 colonists first mad...

    In the spring of 1540, an army of some 600 Spanish soldiers under the command of Hernando de Soto marched north from Florida into southwestern Georgia in search of riches. The expedition crossed the Flint River near present-day Newton, visited the chiefdom of Capachequi located along Chickasawhatchee Creek, and then pushed northeast toward present-...

    In the aftermath of the de Soto expedition the Spanish crown first mounted an abortive missionary effort by Dominican priests under Fray Luis Cancer on the Gulf Coast of the Florida peninsula in 1549. In 1559 they launched a massive colonial venture under Tristan de Luna, when some 1,500 Mexican soldiers and colonists sailed from Vera Cruz to Pensa...

    In 1561, after the Luna colony failed and the colonists returned to Mexico, Luna’s replacement, Angel de Villafane, led a ship around the Florida peninsula briefly to reconnoiter the Atlantic coastline of Georgia and South Carolina. This same region soon witnessed a flurry of activity by other European explorers. In 1562 Frenchsailors under Jean Ri...

  6. San Miguel de Gualdape (sometimes San Miguel de Guadalupe) was a short-lived Spanish colony founded in 1526 by Lucas Vázquez de Ayllón. It was established somewhere on the coast of present-day Carolinas or Georgia, but the exact location has been the subject of a long-running scholarly dispute.

  7. enterprise, led by Lucas Vazquez de Ayllon, a lawyer and resident of Havana, was an attempt by the Spanish to establish the first European settlement in North America. The idea for the expedition had settled upon De Ayllon several years earlier. He arrived in Hispaniola from Spain in 1502 and took up several prominent positions in the

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