Alonso de Sotomayor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alonso de Sotomayor, Governor of Chile
Alonso de Sotomayor, Governor of Chile

Alonso de Sotomayor y Valmediano (Trujillo, Spain), 1545–1610) was a Spanish conquistador from Extremadura, and a Royal Governor of Chile.

Contents

[edit] Early life

He was the son of Gutiérrez de Sotomayor e Hinojosa and Beatriz de Valmediano, and at the age of 15 he joined the army, serving first in Italy until 1567, and then moving to Flanders.

In 1580 he was called back to Madrid by his official duties. The King Philip II, seeing his military efficiency, awarded him a knighthood in the Order of Santiago, and sent him on a campaign against Portugal. However, at that time news arrived from Chile, where the Arauco War continued and reinforcements were needed. The king subsequently decided to name Sotomayor governor of the district and send him there with a large contingent of soldiers to resolve the situation.

[edit] Governor of Chile

Sotomayor arrived in Chile in 1583 and found himself required to play the role of judge, hearing innumberable accusations against the previous governor Martín Ruiz de Gamboa. This previous administrator had become extremely unpopular for a tax regime which prohibited the payment of taxes by the Indians in the form of labor.

Sotomayor had to detain Gamboa in the government house of Santiago, from which he was released only after providing a bond. However, Sotomayor later absolved Gamboa and freed him entirely.

With these antecedents, Sotomayor's first decision was reestablishing the old system of labor levies, abolishing the Tax of Gamboa and reinstituting the Tax of Santillán, albeit with provisions to humanize the old system, with the goal of avoiding the excesses of the encomenderos against the Indians.

[edit] The Arauco war

Sotomayor wanted to extend the conquest of Chile in the style of Pedro de Valdivia, which is to say, by building a series of forts which would protect each other and the cities. However, carrying out this project required a professional army, and requests for such were turned down by the Spanish authorities, due to the general scarcity of resources in the area and of the Crown.

Instead he launched a number of campaigns against the resisting Mapuche Indians. He succeeded in capturing the mestizo Alonso Díaz, who had been a resistance leader for many years. Sotomayor sent his brother Luis to fight a campaign in the area around Valdivia, and succeeded in defeating the Mapuches in a surprise attack at Angol on January 16, 1585.

Gamboa, Bravo de Saravia y Sotomayor
Gamboa, Bravo de Saravia y Sotomayor

In that same year Sotomayor put in action his plan with the few men that he had. He ordered the construction of a fort on each side of the Bio Bio River at a place called Millapoa, with the goal of cutting communications between the Mapuches and the Indians of the north. He raised another fort at Purén, where he also placed a small detachment. He hoped to quickly establish towns in each of these places, persuaded that this was the best method of reducing the tribes and which would attract enough people to bring reinforcements to Chile for the definitive conquest.

However, his actions did not really weaken the Mapuches. The capture of Diaz didn't change the situation, and the establishment of the forts did not have any of their intended conseqences. Instead, the Aracanians were every day better aqainted with the Spanish horses and weapons. The arquebus was their only problem, as they did not know how to use it and in any case did not have any gunpowder.

[edit] Problems of the government

Amidst these problems with the insurgency, Sotomayor also had to confront the attacks of English pirates, most notably Thomas Cavendish, who anchored in Quintero on April 9, 1587. There he was defeated by the Spanish, losing 10 men. Additionally, he had to deal with revolts by soldiers in the south, motivated by the poverty that they suffered on account of not being paid in either gold or encomienda rights.

Alarmed by the situation and by the lack of reinforcements, Sotomayor went to Peru on July 30, 1592 to petition the viceroy there for more men. He left the old and circumspect lawyer Pedro de Viscarra, who had arrived from Spain two years earlier with the title of lieutenant governor of Chile.

[edit] Governor of Panama and return to Spain

In August, Sotomayor disembarked in Callao, where he learned that the king had named a new governor of Chile, Martín García Óñez de Loyola. He returned to Chile to testify about and defend his actions, a tribunal from which he emerged triumphant. He then headed towards Spain, but was detained on the road by the Viceroy of Peru, who asked him to take charge of the province of Panama, then menaced by English invasion.

Upon his return to Spain he was again named governor of Chile in 1604. However, due to his bitter frustrations there he declined the post. He joined the Council of the Indies and in 1609 and was charged with the expulsion of the Moriscos from Spain.

Preceded by
Martín Ruiz de Gamboa
Royal Governor of Chile
1580-1583
Succeeded by
Pedro de Viscarra de la Barrera
In other languages