Everything about Juan De O Ate totally explained
Don Juan de Oñate Salazar (
1552 –
1626) was an explorer, colonial
governor of the
New Spain (present-day Mexico) province of
New Mexico, and founder of various settlements in the present day
Southwest of the
United States.
Oñate was born in the New Spain city of
Zacatecas to
Spanish colonists. His father was the conquistador
Cristóbal de Oñate. The younger Oñate began his career as an
Indian fighter in the northern frontier region of
New Spain. He married Isabel de Tolosa Cortés de Moctezuma, granddaughter of
Hernán Cortés, the conqueror of the
Aztec Triple Alliance, and great granddaughter of the
Aztec Emperor Moctezuma Xocoyotzin.
In
1595 he was ordered by King
Philip II to colonize the upper
Rio Grande (Río Bravo del Norte) valley (explored in
1540 by
Francisco Vásquez de Coronado). His stated objective was to spread
Roman Catholicism and establish new
missions. He began the expedition in
1598, fording the Rio Grande (Río del Norte) at the present-day
Ciudad Juárez–
El Paso crossing in late April. On
April 30,
1598 he claimed all of New Mexico beyond the river for Spain.
That summer his party continued up the Rio Grande to present-day
northern New Mexico, where he encamped among the
Pueblo Indians. He founded the province of
Santa Fé de Nuevo México and became the province's first governor.
Gaspar Pérez de Villagrá, a captain of the expedition, chronicled Oñate’s conquest of New Mexico’s indigenous peoples in his epic
Historia de Nuevo México (1610).
Oñate soon gained a reputation as a stern ruler of both the Spanish colonists and the
indigenous people. In October of 1598, a skirmish erupted when Oñate's occupying Spanish military demanded supplies from the Acoma tribe--demanding things essential to the Acoma surviving the winter. The Acoma resisted and thirteen Spaniards were killed, amongst them Don Juan Oñate’s nephew. In 1599, Oñate retaliated; his soldiers killed 800 villagers. They enslaved the remaining 500 women and children, and by Don Juan’s decree, they amputated the left foot of every Acoma man over the age of twenty-five. Eighty men had their left foot amputated.
In
1606, Oñate was recalled to
Mexico City for a hearing into his conduct. After finishing plans for the founding of the town of
Santa Fé, he resigned his post and was tried and convicted of cruelty to both Indians and colonists. He was banished from the "kingdom" of New Mexico but on appeal was cleared of all charges. Eventually Oñate went to Spain, where the
king appointed him head of mining inspectors for all of Spain. He died in Spain in
1626. He is sometimes referred to as "the Last
Conquistador."
Oñate is honored by some Anglo-Americans, Spanish Americans and Mexican Americans for his exploratory ventures, but is vilified by others for his cruelty to the Indians of Acoma Pueblo. In the Oñate Monument Visitors Center northeast of
Española on New Mexico highway 68 is the
1991 bronze statue dedicated to the man. In
1998 New Mexico celebrated the four hundredth anniversary of his arrival, but that same year individuals opposed to the statue cut off the statue's right foot and left a note saying, "Fair is fair." The sculptor, Reynaldo Rivera, recast the foot but the seam is still visible. Some commentators suggested leaving the statue maimed as a symbolic reminder of the foot-mutilating incident.
In
1997, the City of
El Paso agreed to hire a sculptor, John Sherrill Houser, to create a
statue of the conquistador. It took nearly 9 years to build and was stationed in the sculptor's
Mexico City warehouse. The $2 million statue was completed in early 2006. In pieces and transported on flatbed trailers, it was brought to El Paso during the summer and was installed in October.
The City of El Paso held a grand ceremony to unveil an 18-
ton and 34-foot tall statue on
April 21,
2007. It was well received and welcomed by the majority of El Pasoans and the Spanish Ambassador to the United States,
Carlos Westendorp. Oñate is mounted atop his
Andalusian horse while holding the
La Toma declaration in his right hand. According to
Houser, it's the largest and heaviest equestrian statue in the world. Acoma tribal members from New Mexico were present and protested the statue.
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