Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- VOYAGE TO THE STRAIT OF MAGELLAN BY THE CAPTAIN PEDRO SARMIENTO DE GAMBÓA, IN THE YEARS 1579 AND 1580, AND ACCOUNTS OF THE EXPEDITION
- I NARRATIVE AND ROUTE OF THE VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY OF THE STRAIT OF THE MOTHER OF GOD, FORMERLY CALLED “OF MAGELLAN”
- 1 Causes for sending the Expedition
- 2 The Voyage from Callao to the Gulf of Trinidad
- 3 Arrival in the Gulf of Trinidad
- 4 Narrative of the first Expedition of Discovery made by the General, with the Pilots Anton Pablos and Hernando Lamero, in the boat Nuestra Señora de Guia, up the Gulf of the Most Holy Trinity.
- 5 Second Voyage of Discovery in the boat Santiago
- 6 Third Voyage of Discovery, in the boat Nuestra Señora de Guia
- 7 Voyage to the Strait of Magellan—Desertion of the Almiranta
- 8 In the Strait of Magellan
- 9 The Voyage to Spain
- 10 Letter from the Viceroy of Peru, Don Francisco de Toledo, to the Governor of Rio de la Plata
- II RELATION OF WHAT HAPPENED TO THE ROYAL FLEET FOR THE STRAIT OF MAGELLAN
- III REPORT TOUCHING THE CAPTAINS AND SHIPS, MASTERS AND PILOTS
- IV CONCISE NARRATIVE BY PEDRO SARMIENTO DE GAMBÓA
- Index
- Index
- Plate section
6 - Third Voyage of Discovery, in the boat Nuestra Señora de Guia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- VOYAGE TO THE STRAIT OF MAGELLAN BY THE CAPTAIN PEDRO SARMIENTO DE GAMBÓA, IN THE YEARS 1579 AND 1580, AND ACCOUNTS OF THE EXPEDITION
- I NARRATIVE AND ROUTE OF THE VOYAGE AND DISCOVERY OF THE STRAIT OF THE MOTHER OF GOD, FORMERLY CALLED “OF MAGELLAN”
- 1 Causes for sending the Expedition
- 2 The Voyage from Callao to the Gulf of Trinidad
- 3 Arrival in the Gulf of Trinidad
- 4 Narrative of the first Expedition of Discovery made by the General, with the Pilots Anton Pablos and Hernando Lamero, in the boat Nuestra Señora de Guia, up the Gulf of the Most Holy Trinity.
- 5 Second Voyage of Discovery in the boat Santiago
- 6 Third Voyage of Discovery, in the boat Nuestra Señora de Guia
- 7 Voyage to the Strait of Magellan—Desertion of the Almiranta
- 8 In the Strait of Magellan
- 9 The Voyage to Spain
- 10 Letter from the Viceroy of Peru, Don Francisco de Toledo, to the Governor of Rio de la Plata
- II RELATION OF WHAT HAPPENED TO THE ROYAL FLEET FOR THE STRAIT OF MAGELLAN
- III REPORT TOUCHING THE CAPTAINS AND SHIPS, MASTERS AND PILOTS
- IV CONCISE NARRATIVE BY PEDRO SARMIENTO DE GAMBÓA
- Index
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
Pedro Sarmiento set out on Tuesday, the 29th of December 1579, with Anton Pablos and Hernando Lamero, Pilots, and twelve men, in the boat “Nuestra Señora de Guia”, with provisions for ten days. They left Port Bermejo to discover the channel, which appeared to turn S.E. from Port Bermejo, and ascertain whether there was a channel and port by which the ships might be taken through safely, without having to return to the high sea.
We made sail before a W.S.W. wind, steering S.E. by E. for 2 leagues, as far as an island which extends a league N.N.E. and S.S.W. It was named “Los Innocentes”, because we left it the day after their feast, and followed the channel S.E. another 4 leagues to a point on the east coast to the east of the inlet of La Concepcion. Behind this point, which we named the point of “San Juan”, to the north, the coast forms a creek, where we made fast and slept there, stationing a good guard, as we always did.
To the S.S.E. of the island of Los Innocentes there is a large entrance to a channel which, in our belief, is the one which leads from the bay of Guadalupe, as before said.
To the north-east of the Innocents there is a large channel, where we stopped and remained that night, and which we believed to be the one which comes from the bay and channel of San Andres. A league to the N.E. of the point of San Juan there is the mouth of a channel, which should be the channel of San Andres coming from Concepcion.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1895