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Show LEADING FACTS OF NEW MEXICAN FRANCISCO HISTORY Wy we et ts yyw Wa Wh win ND ND pn ay anny WF MW Aap 7 cnet ® Vp) Wo Wy. ache ‘ 5 0 45, Wis Ney wh Ufa) an » [C, enega wy Mm nv MlleDateWil9Un Wi, 188 A Gol steo Son rn Cristdbo/ /s/eva 0 7ex/gue & v i & © ° { we Alarnt{o ° re AS © Abo SA TR IN THE © Senecyr or eight other horses were wounded; recovered and are were the travel-worn and battle-bruised explorers, shelter in the abandoned pueblo, for there they in plenty. Disappointed in the character of the they had been by the stories of the friar Marcos, careful examination and report of all they saw; the a a which was then surrounded and attacked. We had to Pe ee - ae, back to the village, withdraw, on account 0 the great damage they did us from the flat roofs, and we began to assault elteae” ete a seine ‘with the artillery and muskets, and that afternoon they came out of it badly hurt by some stones, se Vasquez Francisco surrendered. CENTURY cvo/ seven hard enough, ried i of them.ORE Th e rest then tei and kill them epi to tensometenerin versions RG attack BAP I am certain, indeed, that he would have been there yet, if it had ones en OSan and well as the horses, have now and the rest stayed in the village and oo 0 Tebira yd Socorro 189 205 Letter from Coronado to Mendoza, August 3, 1540; Relacion del Suceso, Doe. de Indias, vol. xiv, p. 318, Account of what happened on the Journey which Francisco Vasquez made to discover Cibola, states: ‘‘The day we reached the first village, part of them came out to fight us, SEVENTEENT P/IROS. Za still they made © Tenebo TOMPIROS . Sevilleta Manrich, but the men, as well.’’ 205 Happy, indeed, when they found also found food village, led on as o Qverec ol CORONADO help, like a good cavalier, the second time that they knocked me to the ground, by placing his own body above mine, I should have been in much greater danger than I was. But, by the pleasure of God, these Indians surrendered, and their city was taken with the help of our Lord, and a sufficient supply of corn was found there to relieve our necessities. The army-master and Don Pedro de Tobar and Hernando de Alvarado and Pablo de Melgoza, the infantry captain, sustained some bruises, although none of them were wounded. Agoniez Quarez was hit in the arm by an arrow, and one Torres, who lived in Panuco, in the face by another, and two other footmen received slight arrow wounds. They all directed their attack against me because my armor was gilded and glittered and on this account I was hurt more than the rest, and not because I had done more or was farther in advance than the others; for all these gentlemen and soldiers bore themselves well, as was expected of them. I praise God that I am now well, although somewhat sore from the stones. Two or three other soldiers were hurt in the battle which we had on the plain, and three horses were killed, one that of Don Lopez and another that of Vigliega, and the third that of Don Alonzo Lazaro ° CArhl, VASQUEZ Je %. Pe e “9 the army-master, D. Garcia Lopez de Cardenas, who rescued rine Indians surrendered, they abandoned the village and went to the other villages, and as they left the houses we made ourselves at home in them. |