In 1516, Juan
Díaz de Solís, a
Portuguese
mariner in the
employ of the
Spanish Crown,
led a small crew
to the shores of
the River Plate
in the search of
a trade route to
the Far East.
His dream ended
here in failure,
murdered by the
Querandí or the
cannibalistic
Charrúa, who
inhabited the
eastern - or
Uruguayan -
bank. Another
brief
exploration into
the region was
made in 1520 by
Ferdinand
Magellan who
continued his
epic voyage
south to
discover the
famous straits
that now bear
his name; while
the next
significant
expedition to
this part of the
world was made
by
Sebastian
Cabot who
reached the
River Plate in
1526 and built a
small,
short-lived fort
near modern
Rosario. Cabot
misleadingly
christened the
river
El Río
de la Plata
(the River of
Silver), after
finding bullion
amongst the
indigenous
groups of
Paraguay and
believing there
to be deposits
nearby. This was
not the case -
ironically, this
silver had
probably been
brought there by
the Portuguese
adventurer,
Aleixo García.
García, in 1524,
traversed the
continent as far
as the eastern
fringes of the
Inca empire, but
was murdered
with his Andean
booty on his
return journey.
The legends that
Cabot's
discoveries
nourished after
his return to
Spain were to
bring nothing
but heartache
for many that
followed.
Stories of a
fabled
civilization -
variously called
Trapalanda or
the
City of
the Cesars -
persisted well
into the
eighteenth
century,
tempting many
into expeditions
whose only
return was
hardship.
Cabot's silver
had its most
lasting legacy
in the word "
Argentina "
itself, which
derives from the
metal's Latin
name,
argentum .
First used in a
poem in 1602, it
was adopted in
the nineteenth
century as the
name of the
Republic. A more
immediate legacy
was that, in
1535, Pedro de
Mendoza was
authorized by
the Spanish
Crown to
colonize the
River Plate in
an effort to
pre-empt
Portuguese
conquest. In
February 1536,
Mendoza founded
Buenos Aires,
originally named
Puerto Nuestra
Señora Santa
María del Buen
Ayre after the
"good air" of
the
sweet-smelling
river.
Mendoza's
plans soon went
awry: it proved
impossible to
subjugate the
local nomadic
Querandí, so as
to use them for
forced
agricultural
labour. Indeed,
their aggression
towards the
Spanish invaders
forced Mendoza
to send Pedro de
Ayolas upstream
to find a more
suitable site
for settlement.
In August 1537,
Ayolas founded
Nuestra
Señora de la
Asunción del
Paraguay
where the
Spanish
discovered a
more amenable
indigenous
population in
the
semi-sedentary
Guaraní. They
received the
Spaniards with
gifts, including
food and women,
and, accustomed
to agricultural
work, they were
more easily
exploited for
labour. Mendoza
died at sea on a
voyage to Spain
and authority
for the colony
devolved to
Domingo de Irala,
who, after
almost constant
struggle with
the Querandí,
finally ordered
the evacuation
of Buenos Aires
in 1541. By this
time, Spanish
interest in
colonizing this
area of the
world had
decreased
significantly
anyway, mainly
as a result of
Pizarro
's spectacular
conquest, in
1535, of Inca
Peru, with its
vast reserves of
bullion and a
huge indigenous
population that
represented a
tremendous
labour resource
to the
conquerors.
From 1543,
the new
Viceroyalty of
Peru, with its
capital at Lima,
was given
authority over
all of southern
Spanish South
America. The
northwestern
Andean region of
Argentina was
first
tentatively
explored from
the north in the
mid 1530s, but
the impulse for
colonizing this
region really
came with the
discovery, in
1545, of
enormous
silver deposits
in Potosí
, in Upper Peru
(modern-day
Bolivia). This
led to the
establishment of
the
Governorship of
Tucumán ,
covering a
region far
larger than the
modern province
of that name,
and embracing
most of today's
northwest.
Conquistadors
from Chile and
Peru crossed the
Andes seeking to
press gang the
locals into
labour and find
an overland
route to the
Potosí silver
mines. Francisco
de Aguirre
founded Santiago
del Estero in
1553,
Argentina's
earliest
continually
inhabited town,
while other
Spaniards
established the
settlements of
Mendoza (1561),
San Juan (1562),
Córdoba (1573),
Salta (1582), La
Rioja (1591) and
San Salvador de
Jujuy (1593).
Meanwhile,
the Spanish in
Asunción sent an
expedition of
mainly
mixed-blood
mestizos
under the
command of Juan
de Garay down
the River
Paraná, founding
Santa Fé in 1573
and
resettling
Buenos Aires
in 1580 - this
time, for good.
Buenos Aires was
no longer
dependent on
having to secure
its own
indigenous
labour force to
avoid
starvation, as
it could be
supplied from
Asunción.
Settlers also
benefitted from
one vital legacy
of the Mendoza
settlement - the
feral horses
and cattle
that had
multiplied
incredibly in
the area in the
interim. Few
then realized
the significance
these animals
would have on
most of
Argentina's
nomadic
indigenous
groups, who
adopted the
horse with
alacrity and
would round up
the cattle for
trade with
Cordillera
groups.