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==Biography== ===Spain=== Juan Ponce de León was born in the village of [[Santervás de Campos]] in the northern part of what is now the Spanish [[Provinces of Spain|province]] of [[Valladolid (province)|Valladolid]].{{sfn|Hoffman|2000|p= }} Although early historians placed his birth in 1460, and this date has been used traditionally, more recent evidence shows he was likely born in 1474.{{sfn|Morison|1974|pp=502, 529}}{{sfn|Sterling|2003|p=973}} The surname Ponce de León dates from the 13th century. The Ponce de León lineage began with [[Ponce Vela de Cabrera|Ponce Vélaz de Cabrera]], descendant of count [[Bermudo Núñez]], and [[Sancha Ponce de Cabrera]],{{Sfn|Torres Sevilla-Quiñones de León|1999|p=188}} daughter of [[Ponce Giraldo de Cabrera]].{{sfn|Rubio|2003|p=26}} Before October 1235, a son of Ponce Vela de Cabrera and his wife Teresa Rodríguez Girón named [[Pedro Ponce de Cabrera]]{{Sfn|Torres Sevilla-Quiñones de León|1999|p=191}} married [[Aldonza Alfonso]], an illegitimate daughter of King [[Alfonso IX of León]].{{Sfn|Torres Sevilla-Quiñones de León|1999|p=191}} The descendants of this marriage added the "de León" to their patronymic and were known thereafter by the name Ponce de León.{{sfn|Alegre-Carvajal|2014|p=333}} Although the identity of Juan Ponce de León's parents is still a matter of conjecture, according to Fuson and Arnade, citing Puerto Rican historian Aurelio Tió, Pedro Ponce de León and Leonor de Figueroa were most likely the parents of Juan Ponce de León.{{sfn|Fuson|2000|p=38}}{{sfn|Arnade|1967|p=40}} Thus Ponce appears to have been a member of a distinguished and influential noble family. His relatives included [[Rodrigo Ponce de León, Duke of Cádiz]], a celebrated figure in the [[Moors|Moorish]] wars (sometimes known as a "new [[El Cid|Cid]]"),{{sfn|Carriazo Rubio|2005|p=66}}{{sfn|Claussen|2020|pp=1, 154}} and Juan Ponce de León's first cousin.{{sfn|Arnade|1967|pp=36, 45}} Aurelio Tió, in his ''Nuevas fuentes para la historia de Puerto Rico'', made a vigorous case for Juan Ponce's aristocratic heritage, determining that Juan Ponce's father was Pedro Ponce de León, the Fourth Lord of Villagarcía, and his mother was Leonor de Figueroa, the daughter of Lorenzo Suárez de Figueroa, Lord of Salvaleón, and María Manuel; consequently Juan Ponce's paternal grandmother, Teresa de Guzmán (Teresa Ponce de León y Guzmán), was La Señora de la Casa Toral,{{sfn|Tió|1961|p=535}} making Juan Ponce a Ponce de León on both sides of his family.{{sfn|Thomas|2013|p=261}} Through this grandmother, Ponce de León was related to another notable family, the Núñez de Guzmáns; a contemporary chronicler, [[Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés]], says that as a young man he served as a page and then as a squire to Pedro Núñez de Guzmán,{{sfn|Oviedo|1851|p=44}} Knight Commander of the [[Order of Calatrava]].{{sfn|Slavicek|2009|p=14}} Devereux says Ponce de León probably joined the Spanish campaigns against the Muslims in the [[Granada War]]{{sfn|Devereux|1993|p=7}} in which the [[Catholic Monarchs]] finally conquered in 1492 the [[Emirate of Granada|Nasrid Kingdom of Granada]],{{sfn|Morison|1974|p=502}} the last Muslim polity surviving in the Iberian peninsula.{{sfn|Wyman|2021|p=73}} Puerto Rican historian Vicente Murga Sanz states that as the squire of Pedro Núñez de Guzmán, it is possible that Juan Ponce de León fought on the side of Rodrigo Ponce de León at the Battle of Granada. Fernandez de Oviedo writes that when Juan Ponce de León arrived in the Americas he was a military man who had gained his experience in the [[Granada War]], but Arnade cautions, "Without proof the biographers of the conquistador state that he accompanied Pedro Núñez de Guzmán in the war against the Moors during the Granada campaign".{{sfn|Arnade|1967|pp=44–45}} ===Arrival in the New World=== In September 1493, some 1,200 sailors, colonists, and soldiers joined [[Christopher Columbus]] for his [[Christopher Columbus#Second voyage (1493–1496)|second voyage]] to the New World.{{sfn|Allen|1997|p=210}}{{sfn|Kessel|2003|pp=4–5}} Ponce de León, nineteen years old, was able to get passage in this expedition, with Núñez de Guzmán's help,{{sfn|Turner|2013|p=2}} as one of 200 "gentleman volunteers".{{sfn|PickettPickett|2014|p=17}}{{sfn|Scammell|2018|p=396}} The fleet reached the Caribbean in November 1493. They visited several islands before arriving at their primary destination in [[Hispaniola]],{{sfn|Van Middeldyk|1903|pp=12–15}} and anchored on the coast of a large island the native people called Borikén (Boriquen in Spanish), "the land of the brave lord", which would eventually become known as [[Puerto Rico]].{{sfn|Schimmer|2015|p=}} This was Ponce de León's first glimpse of the place that would play a major role in his future. Historians are divided on what he did during the next several years, but it is possible that he returned to Spain at some point and made his way back to Hispaniola with [[Nicolás de Ovando]].{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=56–57}} ===Hispaniola=== In 1502 the newly appointed governor, [[Nicolás de Ovando]], arrived in [[Hispaniola]], with the Spanish Crown expecting him to bring order to a colony in disarray, a task in which he succeeded.{{sfn|Vilches|2010|p=125}}{{sfn|Marley|2008|pp=9–11}} Ovando interpreted his instructions as authorizing subjugation of the native [[Taíno people|Taínos]], and consequently authorized the [[Jaragua massacre]] in November 1503. In 1504, when Taínos overran a small Spanish garrison in [[Higüey (city)|Higüey]] on the island's eastern side, Ovando assigned Ponce de León to crush the rebellion.{{sfn|Marley|2008|pp=9–11}} Ponce de León was actively involved in the Higüey massacre, about which friar [[Bartolomé de las Casas]] attempted to notify Spanish authorities. Ovando rewarded his victorious commander by appointing him frontier governor of the newly conquered province, then named [[La Altagracia Province|Higüey]] also. Ponce de León received a substantial land grant with an ''[[encomienda]]'' of sufficient Indian labor to farm his new estate.{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=63–65}}{{sfn|Goodwin|2019|p=36}} Ponce de León prospered in this new role. He found a ready market for his farm produce and livestock at nearby [[Boca de Yuma]] where Spanish ships stocked supplies before the long voyage back to Spain. In 1505 Ovando authorized Ponce de León to establish a new town in Higüey, which he named [[Salvaleón de Higüey|Salvaleón]]. In 1508 King [[Ferdinand II of Aragon|Ferdinand]] (Queen Isabella having opposed the exploitation of natives but dying in 1504) authorized Ponce de León to conquer the remaining Taínos and exploit them by forcing them to mine gold.{{sfn|Rouse|1992|p=155}} Around this time, Ponce de León married Leonora, an innkeeper's daughter. They had three daughters, Juana, Isabel and María,{{sfn|Perea|1972|p=26}} and one son, Luis.{{sfn|Tió|1971|p=21}} The large stone house Ponce de León ordered built for his growing family still stands today near the city of [[San Rafael del Yuma]]; he named it Salvaleón after his grandmother's estate in Castile.{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=66–68}} ===Puerto Rico=== [[Image:Ponce de Leon house.JPG|thumb|The ruins of Juan Ponce de León's residence at [[Caparra Archaeological Site|Caparra]]]] As provincial governor, Ponce de León heard stories from [[Kalinago|Island Caribs]] who had been captured when they raided Spanish colonies. They told him of gold on the neighboring island of San Juan, now [[Puerto Rico]], which he had first seen as a member of Christopher Columbus's second voyage in 1493, describing a fertile land with much gold to be found in the many rivers. Inspired by the possibility of riches, Ponce de León requested and received permission from [[Nicolás de Ovando|Ovando]] to explore the island.{{sfn|Manucy|Torres-Reyes|1979|p=23}} The official settlement of San Juan by Spaniards is often dated to 1508, when Ponce landed in a [[caravel]] with about fifty men on the southern coast of the island, but there is documentation in the [[Archive of the Indies]] (''Archivo General de Indias'') that he had led an expedition there with several hundred men as early as 1506, under orders by Governor Ovando to explore, settle, and conquer the island.{{sfn|Devereux|1993|pp=28, 34}} Puerto Rican scholar Aurelio Tió wrote two books which contain much archival material concerning Ponce de León, including documentation he discovered in Spain and in Puerto Rico.{{sfn|Arnade|1967|pp=34, 55}} He writes in detail of the ''Probanza de Juan González'', according to which a temporary base was established on the west coast of Puerto Rico near the Bay of Añasco in 1506.{{sfn|Tió|1961|pp=18, 27, 30, 110}}{{sfn|Anderson-Córdova|2005|p=342}} This earlier trip was said to have been done quietly because the Spanish crown in 1504 had commissioned [[Vicente Yáñez Pinzón]] to explore the island and build a fort.{{sfn|Anderson-Córdova|2017|p=42}} Pinzón did not fulfill his commission and it expired in 1507, leaving the way clear for Ponce de León.{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=72–75}} His earlier exploration had confirmed the presence of gold and gave him a good understanding of the geography of the island. In 1508, [[Ferdinand II of Aragon]] gave permission to Ponce de León for the first ''official'' expedition to the island, which the Spanish then called San Juan Bautista. Ponce de León led a small exploratory party to Puerto Rico in 1508 that found [[placer deposit]]s of gold in the western end of the island.{{sfn|Richards|2019|p=325}} This expedition, consisting of about 50 men in one ship, left Hispaniola on 12 July 1508 and eventually anchored in [[San Juan Bay]], near today's city of San Juan.{{sfn|Marley|2008|pp=12–13}} Ponce de León searched inland until he found a suitable site about two miles from the bay. Here he erected a storehouse and a fortified house, creating the first settlement in Puerto Rico, [[San Juan, Puerto Rico#History|Caparra]].{{sfn|Lawson|1946|p=3}} Although a few crops were planted, the settlers spent most of their time and energy searching for [[gold]]. By early 1509 Ponce de León decided to return to Hispaniola. His expedition had collected a good quantity of gold but was running low on food and supplies.{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=75–77}} [[File:Juan Ponce de Leon Conquistador monument in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico.jpg|thumb|Juan Ponce de León Conquistador monument in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico]] The expedition was deemed a great success and Ovando appointed Ponce de León governor of San Juan Bautista. This appointment was later confirmed by Ferdinand II on 14 August 1509. He was instructed to extend the settlement of the island and continue mining for gold. The new governor returned to the island as instructed, bringing with him his wife and children.{{sfn|Lawson|1946|pp=3–4}} The rush of Spaniards from Hispaniola wanting to mine gold disrupted the way of life of the Taíno native people. Back on his island, Ponce de León parceled out the native Taínos among himself and other settlers using the system of forced labor known as {{lang|es|[[encomienda]]}}.{{sfn|Van Middeldyk|1903|pp=27–29}} The Indians were put to work growing food crops and mining for gold. Ponce put those assigned to his personal {{lang|es|encomienda}}, {{lang|es|Hacienda Grande}}, to work searching for gold in the Toa Valley just east of San Juan.{{sfn|Rouse|1992|p=158}} Many of the [[Spaniards]] treated the Taínos very harshly and death rates were very high. The demand for slaves kidnapped from other islands grew. By June 1511, the Taínos, pushed to the limits of their endurance, began a short-lived rebellion, which was forcibly put down by Ponce de León and a small force of troops armed with [[crossbow]]s and [[arquebus]]es (long guns).{{sfn|Van Middeldyk|1903|pp=36–41}}{{sfn|Floyd|1973|p=135}} Even as Ponce de León was settling the island of San Juan, significant changes were taking place in the politics and government of the [[Spanish West Indies]]. On 10 July 1509, [[Diego Colón]], the son of [[Christopher Columbus]], arrived in Hispaniola as acting [[Viceroy#Spanish Empire|Viceroy]], replacing Nicolás de Ovando.{{sfn|Lawson|1946|p=4}} For several years Diego Colón had been waging a legal battle over his rights to inherit the titles and privileges granted to his father. The Crown regretted the sweeping powers that had been granted to Columbus and his heirs and sought to establish more direct control in the New World. In spite of the Crown's opposition, Colón prevailed in court and Ferdinand was required to appoint him Viceroy.{{sfn|Kessel|2003|p=10}} Although the courts had ordered that Ponce de León should remain in office, Colón circumvented this directive on 28 October 1509 by appointing Juan Ceron chief justice and Miguel Diaz chief constable of the island, effectively overriding the authority of the governor. This situation prevailed until 2 March 1510, when Ferdinand issued orders reaffirming Ponce de León's position as governor. Ponce de León then had Ceron and Diaz arrested and sent back to Spain.{{sfn|Van Middeldyk|1903|p=18}} The political struggle between Colón and Ponce de León continued in this manner for the next few years. Ponce de León had influential supporters in Spain and Ferdinand regarded him as a loyal servant. However, Colón's position as Viceroy made him a powerful opponent and eventually it became clear that Ponce de León's position on San Juan was not tenable.{{sfn|Lawson|1946|pp=5–7}} Finally, on 28 November 1511, Ceron returned from Spain and was officially reinstated as governor.{{sfn|Fuson|2000|p=95}} ===First voyage to Florida in 1513=== {{Spanish colonization of the Americas|boxwidth=100px}} Rumors of undiscovered islands to the northwest of [[Hispaniola]] had reached Spain by 1511, and [[Ferdinand II of Aragon|Ferdinand]] was interested in forestalling further exploration and discovery by Colón. In an effort to reward Ponce de León for his services, Ferdinand urged him to seek these new lands outside the authority of Colón. Ponce de León readily agreed to a new venture, and in February 1512 a royal contract was dispatched outlining his rights and authorities to search for "the Islands of Beniny".{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=88–91}} The contract stipulated that Ponce de León held exclusive rights to the discovery of Beniny and neighboring islands for the next three years. He would be governor for life of any lands he discovered, but he was expected to finance all costs of exploration and settlement himself. In addition, the contract gave specific instructions for the distribution of gold, Native Americans, and other profits extracted from the new lands; the contract made no mention of a rejuvenating fountain.{{sfn|Weddle|1985|p=40}}{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=92–95}}{{sfn|Lawson|1946|pp=84–88}} Ponce de León equipped three ships with at least 200 men, including several Africans, at his own expense and set out from Puerto Rico on 4 March 1513.<ref>{{Cite web |last= |first= |last2= |first2= |title=African Americans in St. Augustine 1565-1821 - Castillo de San Marcos National Monument (U.S. National Park Service) |url=https://www.nps.gov/casa/learn/historyculture/african-americans-in-st-augustine-1565-1821.htm |access-date=2024-12-04 |website=www.nps.gov |language=en}}</ref> The only near contemporary description known for this expedition comes from [[Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas]], a Spanish historian who apparently had access to the original ships' logs or related secondary sources from which he created a summary of the voyage published in 1601.{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=99–103}}{{sfn|Weddle|1985|p=51}}{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=103–115}} The brevity of the account and occasional gaps in the record have led historians to speculate and dispute many details of the voyage. The three ships in this small fleet were the ''Santiago'', the ''San Cristobal'' and the ''Santa Maria de la Consolacion''. Anton de Alaminos was their chief pilot. He was already an experienced sailor, and would become one of the most respected pilots in the region. After leaving Puerto Rico, they sailed northwest along the great chain of Bahama Islands, known then as the Lucayos.{{sfn|Turner|2012|p=5}} Herrera wrote that on 27 March 1513, Easter Sunday, they sighted land he described as an island that was unfamiliar to the sailors on the expedition. Because many Spanish seamen were acquainted with the Bahamas, which had been depopulated by slaving ventures, some scholars believe that this "island" was actually Florida, as it was thought to be an island for several years after its formal discovery.{{sfn|Turner|2012|p=5}} Historian and marine archeologist Samuel Turner says that Ponce de León sighted the Florida coast on Easter Sunday of 1513, and that many historians have misinterpreted Herrera's text by claiming it was one of the Bahama Islands Ponce saw on that date. Turner writes that because Beimini is described as an island, they assume that Herrera refers to one of the Bahama Islands, variously proposing that this "island" was [[Eleuthera]], [[Man-O-War Cay]], [[Great Abaco]],{{sfn|Weddle|1985|pp=40–41}} or [[Grand Bahama]].{{sfn|Turner|2013|pp=8–9}} For the next several days the fleet crossed open water until [[Timeline of Florida History|2 April]], when they sighted land which Ponce de León believed was another island. He named it ''[[Spanish Florida|La Florida]]'' in recognition of the verdant landscape and because it was the [[Easter]] season, which the Spaniards called ''[[Pascua Florida]]'' (Festival of Flowers). The following day they came ashore to seek information and take possession of this new land.{{sfn|Morison|1974|p=507}}{{sfn|Steigman|2005|p=33}} The precise location of their landing on the Florida coast has been disputed for many years. Some historians believe it occurred at or near [[St. Augustine, Florida|St. Augustine]],{{sfn|Lawson|1946|pp=29–32}} but others prefer a more southerly landing at a small harbor now called [[Ponce de León Inlet]].{{sfn|Morison|1974|p=507}} Some believe that Ponce came ashore even farther south near the present location of [[Melbourne Beach, Florida|Melbourne Beach]],{{sfn|Peck|1993|p=39}}<ref name=BBN>Datzman, Ken. "Did the famous explorer Ponce de León first hit Melbourne Beach", ''[[Brevard Business News]]'', vol 30, no. 1 (Melbourne, Florida: 2 January 2012), pp. 1 and 19.</ref> a hypothesis first proposed by Douglas Peck, an amateur historian who attempted to reconstruct the track of the voyage sailing in his 33-foot [[Bermuda rig|Bermuda-rigged]] sailboat. Samuel Turner dismisses this theory,{{sfn|Turner|2013|p=15}} pointing out that Ponce's fleet encountered a storm on 30 March, sailing in it for two days, with no indication in Herrera of the wind direction or how strong it was, and that this fact complicates any attempt to reconstruct the voyage (not to mention that Peck's boat was nothing like the Spanish ships). On 2 April, after the weather improved, Ponce's pilot Anton de Alaminos took a [[Celestial navigation|navigational fix]] by the sun at noon in nine fathoms of water with a [[Quadrant (instrument)|quadrant]] or a [[mariner's astrolabe]], and obtained a reading of 30 degrees, 8 minutes of latitude, the coordinate recorded in the ship's log when it was closest to the landing site, as reported by Herrera (who had the original logbook) in 1601.{{sfn|Turner|2012|p=5}}{{sfn|Turner|2013|pp=9–15}} This latitude corresponds to a spot north of St. Augustine between what is now the [[Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve]] and [[Ponte Vedra Beach]].{{sfn|Turner|2012|p=5}}{{sfn|Turner|2013|pp=14–15}} The expedition sailed north for the remainder of the day before anchoring for the night and rowing ashore the next morning. After remaining in the area of their first landing for about five days, the ships turned south for further exploration of the coast. On 8 April they encountered a current so strong that it pushed them backwards and forced them to seek anchorage. The smallest ship, the ''San Cristobal'', was carried out of sight and lost for two days. This was the first known encounter by Europeans with the [[Gulf Stream]], occurring where it reaches maximum force between the Florida coast and the Bahamas. Because of the powerful boost provided by the current, it would soon become the primary route for eastbound ships leaving the Spanish West Indies bound for Europe.{{sfn|Weddle|1985|p=42}} They continued down the coast hugging the shore to avoid the strong head current. By 4 May the fleet reached and named [[Biscayne Bay]]. They took on water at an island they named Santa Marta (now [[Key Biscayne]]) and explored the [[Tequesta]] Miami mound town at the mouth of the Miami River. The Tequesta people did not engage the Spanish, but instead evacuated into the coastal woodlands. On 15 May they left Biscayne Bay and sailed along the [[Florida Keys]], looking for a passage to head north and explore the west coast of the Florida peninsula.{{sfn|Weddle|1985|p=42}} From a distance the Keys reminded Ponce de León of men who were suffering, so he named them ''Los Martires'' (the Martyrs).{{sfn|Weddle|1985|p=42}} Eventually they found a gap in the reefs and sailed "to the north and other times to the northeast" until they reached the Florida mainland on 23 May, where they encountered the [[Calusa]], who refused to trade and drove off the Spanish ships by surrounding them with warriors in sea canoes armed with long bows.{{sfn|Weddle|1985|pp=43–44}} [[File:DSC0018a.jpg|thumb|180px|[[Statue of Juan Ponce de León|Ponce de León's statue]] in Plaza San José, San Juan, Puerto Rico<ref>[http://www.lmsj.org/sitios.htm San Juan municipality] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100902090750/http://lmsj.org/sitios.htm |date=2 September 2010 }}</ref>]] Again, the exact site of their landfall is controversial. The vicinity of [[Charlotte Harbor, Florida|Charlotte Harbor]] is the most commonly identified spot, while some assert a landing further north at [[Tampa Bay]] or even [[Pensacola, Florida|Pensacola]].<ref name=Allen97>Allen, pp. 215–216.</ref> Other historians have argued the distances were too great to cover in the available time and the more likely location was [[Cape Romano]] or [[Cape Sable]].<ref name=Allen97/> Here Ponce de León anchored for several days to take on water and repair the ships. They were approached by [[Calusa]], who initially indicated an interest in trading, but relations soon turned hostile.{{sfn|Weddle|1985|pp=43–45}}{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=108–110}} Several skirmishes followed with casualties on both sides. The Spaniards captured eight Calusa (four men and four women) and seized five war canoes abandoned by the retreating warriors. On 5 June, a final confrontation occurred when some 80 Calusa warriors attacked a party of eleven Spanish sailors. The result was a standoff with neither party willing to come within striking distance of their opponents' weapons.{{sfn|Weddle|1985|pp=43–45}}{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=108–110}} On 14 June they set sail again looking for a chain of islands in the west that had been described by their captives. They reached the [[Dry Tortugas]] on 21 June.{{sfn|Marley|2008|pp=9–11}} There they captured giant sea turtles, [[Caribbean monk seal]]s, and thousands of seabirds. From these islands they sailed southwest in an apparent attempt to circle around Cuba and return home to Puerto Rico. Failing to take into account the powerful currents pushing them eastward, they struck the northeast shore of Cuba and were initially confused about their location.{{sfn|Weddle|1985|p=45}} Once they regained their bearings, the fleet retraced their route east along the Florida Keys and around the Florida peninsula, reaching [[Grand Bahama]] on 8 July. They were surprised to come across another Spanish ship, piloted by [[Diego Miruelo]], who was either on a slaving voyage or had been sent by [[Diego Colón]] to spy on Ponce de León. Shortly thereafter Miruelo's ship was wrecked in a storm and Ponce de León rescued the stranded crew. From here the little fleet disbanded. Ponce de León tasked the ''Santa Maria'' with further exploration while he returned home with the rest of crew. Ponce de León reached Puerto Rico on 19 October 1513 after having been away for almost eight months. The other ship, after further explorations returned safely on 20 February 1514.{{sfn|Weddle|1985|pp=46–47}} Although Ponce de León is widely credited with the discovery of Florida, he almost certainly was not the first European to reach the peninsula. Spanish slave expeditions had been regularly raiding the Bahamas since 1494 and there is some evidence that one or more of these slavers made it as far as the shores of Florida.{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=88–89}} Another piece of evidence that others came before Ponce de León is the [[Cantino planisphere|Cantino Map]] from 1502, which shows a peninsula near Cuba that looks like Florida's and includes characteristic place names. ====Fountain of Youth==== {{main|Fountain of Youth}} According to a popular legend, Ponce de León discovered Florida while searching for the Fountain of Youth. Though stories of vitality-restoring waters were known on both sides of the Atlantic long before Ponce de León, the story of his searching for them was not attached to him until after his death. In his ''Historia general y natural de las Indias'' of 1535, [[Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés]] wrote that Ponce de León was looking for the waters of ''Bimini''.{{sfn|Oviedo|1851|p=482}} A similar account appears in [[Francisco López de Gómara]]'s ''Historia general de las Indias'' of 1551.<ref>Francisco López de Gómara. ''Historia General de las Indias'', second part.</ref> Then in 1575, [[Hernando de Escalante Fontaneda]], a shipwreck survivor who had lived with the Native Americans of Florida for 17 years, published his memoir in which he locates the waters called the River Jordan (flowing out of Eden) in Florida,<ref name="Gruman2003">{{cite book |last1=Gruman |first1=Gerald Joseph |title=A History of Ideas About the Prolongation of Life |year=2003 |publisher=Springer Publishing Company |isbn=978-0-8261-1875-2 |page=35 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1NllD8F_dfcC&pg=PA35 |quote=Juan Ponz [''sic''] de León... went from Florida in search of the River Jordan... that he might become young from bathing in such a stream.}}</ref> and says that Ponce de León was supposed to have looked for them there.<ref>[http://www.keyshistory.org/Fontenada.html "Fontaneda's Memoir"]. Translation by Buckingham Smith, 1854. From keyshistory.org. Retrieved 28 March 2007.</ref> Though Fontaneda doubted that Ponce de León had really gone to Florida looking for the waters, the account was included in the ''Historia general de los hechos de los castellanos'' of [[Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas]] of 1615. Most historians hold that the search for [[gold]] and the expansion of the [[Spanish Empire]] were far more imperative than any potential search for such a fountain.<ref name="Douglas">{{cite book|author=Douglas, Marjory Stoneman|year=1947|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sPjDLXqemQ0C&q=Did+Juan+Ponce+de+Le%C3%B3n+actually+land+in+Florida%3F&pg=PA99|title=The Everglades: River of Grass|publisher=[[Pineapple Press]]|access-date=30 March 2008|isbn=9781561641352}}</ref><ref name="Sauer1975">{{cite book|author=Carl Ortwin Sauer|title=Sixteenth Century North America: The Land and the People as Seen by the Europeans|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EWXU6sjN9ZUC&pg=PA26|year=1975|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=978-0-520-02777-0|page=26}}</ref> ===Between voyages=== Upon his return to Puerto Rico, Ponce de León found the island in turmoil. A party of [[Island Caribs|Caribs]] from a neighboring island had attacked the settlement of [[San Juan, Puerto Rico#History|Caparra]], killed several Spaniards and burned it to the ground. Ponce de León's own [[Caparra Archaeological Site|house]] was destroyed and his family narrowly escaped. [[Diego Colón|Colón]] used the attack as a pretext for renewing hostilities against the local [[Taíno people|Taíno]] tribes. The explorer suspected that Colón was working to further undermine his position on the island and perhaps even to take his claims for the newly discovered Florida.{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=121–124}} Ponce de León decided he should return to Spain and personally report the results of his recent expedition. He left Puerto Rico in April 1514 and was warmly received by Ferdinand when he arrived at court in [[Valladolid]]. There he was knighted,{{sfn|Marley|2008|pp=9–11}} and given a personal [[coat of arms]], becoming the first conquistador to receive these honors. He also visited [[Casa de Contratación]] in [[Seville]], which was the central bureaucracy and clearinghouse for all of Spain's activities in the New World. The Casa took detailed notes of his discoveries and added them to the [[Padrón Real]], a master map which served as the basis for official navigation charts provided to Spanish captains and pilots.{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=125–127}} During his stay in Spain, a new contract{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=129–131}} was drawn up for Ponce de León confirming his rights to settle and govern [[Bimini|Beniny]] and Florida,<ref name="Shepherd1907">{{cite book|author=William Robert Shepherd|title=Guide to the Materials for the History of the United States in Spanish Archives|url=https://archive.org/details/guidetomaterial01shepgoog|year=1907|publisher=Carnegie institution of Washington|page=[https://archive.org/details/guidetomaterial01shepgoog/page/n76 68]}}</ref> which was then presumed to be an island. In addition to the usual directions for sharing gold and other valuables with the king, the contract was one of the first to stipulate that the [[Requerimiento]] was to be read to the inhabitants of the islands prior to their conquest. Ponce de León was also ordered to organize an armada for the purpose of attacking and subduing the Caribs, who continued to attack Spanish settlements in the Caribbean.{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=128–132}} [[File:Juan Ponce de León tomb - Catedral de San Juan Bautista de Puerto Rico - DSC06849.JPG|thumb|upright|The Tomb of Ponce de León in the [[Catedral Metropolitana Basílica de San Juan Bautista (San Juan, Puerto Rico)|Cathedral of San Juan Bautista]] in San Juan, Puerto Rico]] Three ships were purchased for his armada and after repairs and provisioning Ponce de León left Spain on 14 May 1515 with his little fleet. The record of his activities against the Caribs is vague. There was one engagement in [[Guadeloupe]] on his return to the area and possibly two or three other encounters.{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=136–138}} The campaign came to an abrupt end in 1516 when Ferdinand died. The king had been a strong supporter and Ponce de León felt it was imperative he return to Spain and defend his privileges and titles. He did receive assurances of support from Cardinal [[Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros]], the regent appointed to govern Castile, but it was nearly two years before he was able to return home to Puerto Rico. Meanwhile, there had been at least two unauthorized voyages to "his" Florida both ending in repulsion by the native Calusa or Tequesta warriors. Ponce de León realized he had to act soon if he was to maintain his claim. ===Last voyage to Florida=== In early 1521, Ponce de León organized a colonizing expedition consisting of some 200 men, including priests, farmers and artisans, 50 horses and other domestic animals, and farming implements carried on two ships. The expedition landed somewhere on the coast of [[southwest Florida]], likely in the vicinity of [[Charlotte Harbor (estuary)|Charlotte Harbor]] or the [[Caloosahatchee River]], areas which Ponce de León had visited in his earlier voyage to Florida.{{sfn|Davis|1935|pp=51–66}} Before the settlement could be established, the colonists were attacked by the [[Calusa]], the [[Indigenous peoples of Florida|indigenous]] people who dominated southern Florida and whose principal town was nearby. Ponce de León was mortally wounded in the skirmish when, historians believe, an arrow [[Arrow poison|poisoned]] with the [[sap]] of the [[manchineel tree]] struck his thigh.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Swamp |first=Michael |last=Grunwald |publisher=[[Simon & Schuster]] |year=2007 |isbn=978-0-7432-5107-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=olHjhlx0Em8C&pg=PA25 |page=25}}</ref> The expedition immediately abandoned the colonization attempt and sailed to [[Havana]], [[Cuba]], where Ponce de León soon died of his wounds. He was buried in [[Puerto Rico]], in the crypt of [[San José Church]] from 1559 to 1836, when his remains were exhumed and transferred to the [[Catedral Metropolitana Basílica de San Juan Bautista (San Juan, Puerto Rico)|Cathedral of San Juan Bautista]].{{sfn|Fuson|2000|pp=173–176}} Inscribed on the side panel of the altar-tomb in his mausoleum are these words in Latin: "MOLE SVB HAC FORTIS REQVIESCVNT OSSA LEONIS OVI VICIT FACTIS NOMINA MAGNA SVIS" ("Under this structure rest the bones of a lion, more for his great deeds than for his name").{{sfn|Villatoro|2021|p=}}
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