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Garcia Álvarez de Figueroa

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Garcia Álvarez de Figueroa
3rd Governor of the Province of Margarita
In office
1626–1630
Preceded byAndrés Rodríguez de Villegas
Succeeded byJuan de Eulate

Garcia Álvarez de Figueroa was a Spanish soldier who was Governor of the Margarita Province, based on Isla Margarita off the coast of what today is Venezuela, from 1626 to 1630.[1]

In December 1619 Admiral Álvarez de Figueroa was with a fleet of six galleons that set out from Cadiz with instructions to pass through the Strait of Magellan without stopping in Brazil. The fleet ran into a violent storm and was forced to run back to land, with most of the ships run aground on Cape Trafalgar and many people drowned. Only the galleon that held Admiral Garcia Alvarez de Figueroa and the cosmographer Diego Ramirez de Arellano stayed afloat.[2]

Admiral Garcia Álvarez de Figueroa was appointed Governor and Captain General of the Island of Margarita on 30 April 1625.[1] He took over from Andrés Rodríguez de Villegas on 1 June 1626.[3] He was accompanied by his son Gerónimo.[4] Figueroa was known for his interest in letters, for his contempt of the local Waikerí people, and for his enjoyment of the trade in pearls from Cubagua and the Macanao Peninsula.[5] He was succeeded by Juan de Eulate, a former governor of New Mexico who was appointed governor of Margarita Province on 10 April 1630.[6]

References

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Citations

Sources

  • "1 de Junio de 1626". Fodeapemine. Government of Venezuela. Archived from the original on 2013-04-21. Retrieved 2012-08-30.
  • "30 de Abril". En Oriente. 7 January 2006. Retrieved 2012-08-30.
  • "Andrés Rodríguez de Villegas". venezuelatuya.com. Retrieved 2012-08-30.
  • López, José Eliseo (1999). La Emigración Desde la España Penínsular a Venezuela en Los Siglos XVI, XVII y XVIII. CDCH UCV. p. 116. ISBN 978-980-6061-35-4. Retrieved 2012-08-30.
  • "Pirateria en el Mediterraneo" (PDF), Historia De La Armada Espanola Desde La Union De Los Reinos De Castilla Y De Aragon, Instituto de Historia y Cultura Naval, p. 304, retrieved 2012-08-30