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Cities of Gold
“Always,
when people came into... the West, they brought with them a necessity
to imagine it. One of the reasons for this, I think, is simply the
vastness. When one looks at the Grand Canyon for example, it's
endlessly mysterious. You feel the silence coming up and enveloping you
and you know there are places there where no one has ever been."
N. Scott Momaday
In 1540,
six years after Cabeza de Vaca returned to Mexico City , the Spanish
Viceroy sent yet another expedition northward. They were searching for
seven cities said to be filled with gold and treasure. In command of
the expedition was the ambitious governor of a Mexican province, Francisco Vasquez de
Coronado.
For more than four months Coronado followed old Indian
trails across deserts and through the mountains. Finally, exhausted and
hungry, he reached an adobe settlement that he hoped was the first of
the fabled Seven Cities of Gold. It was really the pueblo of Hawikuh,
home to an agricultural people, called the Zuni.
"What was going on at Zuni was a summer solstice ritual.
And these kinds of rituals are always regarded as private, and so when
Coronado came in while these rituals were in progress, Zuni elders
sketched a cornmeal line between Coronado's men and the people at Zuni,
a line which Coronado was not supposed to cross. Coronado's men, who
were literally starving to death by that time, just bulled right in."
Alfonso Ortiz
The Zunis fled from the Spanish guns, whose thunderous sound
they had never heard before. Coronado quickly over-ran the town, seized
their food, set up a wooden cross and demanded that they immediately
convert to Christianity. But he discovered that the Zunis had no gold.
Over the next few weeks, Coronado would destroy thirteen
villages, punishing all who resisted him precisely as rebellious
subjects would have been punished in Spain.
"There was a decree that would be read when the Spanish
came into a new native community that said -- in Latin -- 'Everybody
here must fall down and worship Jesus Christ, and if you don't we will
take it that you are worshipers of the devil and you will be wiped out.
You basically have five minutes."
Michael Dorris
Coronado sent expeditions into the surrounding countryside.
One group marched to the Gulf of California, another crossed the
Painted Desert into the land of the Hopis and a third marched for
twenty days to the edge of a great gorge -- the Grand Canyon of the
Colorado. Nothing in their experience had prepared them for its sheer
size.
Captain Melgosa, with Juan Galeras and another
companion... kept descending... until they were lost to view... The men
who remained above estimated that some rocks jutting out from the
canyon must be about as high as a man.... At four o'clock, they
returned [and] swore that when they reached them they were found to be
taller than the highest tower of Seville.
Pedro de Castañeda
But once again, they found no gold.
Coronado then heard of yet another city called Quivira, far to
the north, filled with treasures beyond his wildest dreams. He led his
men toward it -- out onto the Great Plains -- through an ocean of grass
so vast and featureless they had to navigate with a sea-compass. "Who
could believe," one of them later wrote, "that 1,000 horses and 500 of
our cows and more than 5,000 rams and ewes and more than 1,500 men, in
traveling over those plains, would leave no more trace when they had
passed than if nothing had been there -- nothing ."
In the end, Quivira turned out to be
just a Wichita village on the bank of the Arkansas River, its
inhabitants no wealthier than the other Indians Coronado had
encountered. Finally, Coronado ordered his exhausted men to begin the
long march back to Mexico. His search had lasted three years, led him
across a quarter of the West, and earned him nothing.
The country itself is the best I
have ever seen for producing all the products of Spain... But what I am
sure of is that there is not any gold nor any other metal in all that
country.
Francisco Vasquez de Coronado
"The possibility of peace had been lost. And in a sense,
the world was changed forever. Cabeza de Vaca may have been moving in
the direction of coexistence; peace. And in a sense, I think Coronado's
expedition stifled that impulse, and made for warfare in the future.
N. Scott Momaday
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