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Juan del Junco, in some texts also named as Juan de Junco, was born in Asturias in 1503. He was baptised in Ribadesella ; as was his brother, Rodrigo del Junco , who would become governor of La Florida . [ 5 ]
Monument dedicated to Juan de la Cosa in Santoña, Cantabria.. No one knows exactly where Juan de la Cosa was born. Canovas del Castillo (1892) states that he was from Santoña, Cantabria, [3] because there are documents showing that he was a resident there and his wife and daughter lived in that city. [4]
The map of Juan de la Cosa is a world map that includes the earliest known representation of the New World and the first depiction of the equator and the Tropic of Cancer on a nautical chart. The map is attributed to the Castilian navigator and cartographer, Juan de la Cosa , and was likely created in 1500.
Casa del Fundador Gonzalo Suárez Rendón; ... Epítome de la conquista del Nuevo Reino de Granada; F. ... Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada; Juan del Junco; L.
Marina de la Caballería; Jerónimo Luis de Cabrera; Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo; Alonso de Cáceres; Felipe de Cáceres; Miguel Caldera; Mencía Calderón; Bartolomé Camacho Zambrano; Juan de la Cámara; Pedro de Candia; Juan Cano de Saavedra; Francisco Cano; Antón García Caro; Francisco de Carvajal; Juan de Carvajal; Pedro del Castillo; Diego ...
Alejandro Junco de la Vega, Mexican journalist; Aura García-Junco, Mexican author; Carlos del Junco, Cuban harmonica player; Eduardo Sánchez Junco, Spanish editor; Francisco del Junco, Cuban-American serial killer; José Junco, Cuban baseball player; José Álvarez Junco, Spanish historian; Juan del Junco, Spanish conquistador; Luis Juncos ...
About 1590 Rodrigo del Junco returned with his family to Florida, where, according to Francisco Xavier de Santa Cruz y Mallén in his Historia de familias cubanas, he was appointed governor in 1592, [3] but died the same year in a shipwreck off the coast of Florida. Rodrigo del Junco was the second husband of Francisca de Miranda Santo Domingo.
Hernán Venegas Carrillo was a member of the main expedition from the Caribbean coastal city of Santa Marta into the heart of the Colombian Andes, shown in green. Hernán Venegas Carrillo embarked on a ship sailing from Seville, Spain to the New World, probably in 1533, in the company of Juan del Junco. [7]