The Seven Cities of Cibola, which were supposedly made of silver and gold
It was of little importance. He was searching for gold.
He was searching for the seven cities of gold.
The Spanish 1540 expedition was searching for gold and the fabled Seven Cities of Cibola.
It was Garcia Lopez de Cardenas from the Coronado expeition in 1540.
did Francisco Coronado ever accomplish his goalyes . Francisco Coronado discovered the grand canyon in Arizona.
Francisco Vasquez de Coronado had set out in search of gold and other treasures to bring back to Spain, but was disappointed to find only mud, stone, and angry Zuni warriors in the southern Americas - now known as Texas - and Mexico.
no Francisco Coronado found it
Depends on how you define "successful." His commander, Francisco Vasquez de Coronado, was searching for the Seven Cities of Gold -- which were never found. Cardenas was searching for a northern route as part of this journey -- and he failed in his assignment. Indeed, his discovery of the Grand Canyon was a huge disappointment for him, because he found it impossible to go any further north. Was it a success to be the first European to see this? Three centuries later, the area was still considered a utterly worthless piece of land.
He was searching for the Seven Cities of Gold, but he never found any. He was branded failure by Spanish Leaders. On his expedition he found the Zuni, Hopi, and Pueblos Native Americans, who repelled when he demanded for them to convert to Christianity.
He was searching for the Seven Cities of Gold, but he never found any. He was branded failure by Spanish Leaders. On his expedition he found the Zuni, Hopi, and Pueblos Native Americans, who repelled when he demanded for them to convert to Christianity.
Coronado found several villages of the Pueblo Native American group in present-day New Mexico in the 1540s while searching for the fabled Seven Cities of Gold. He explored the region but did not find the riches he had hoped for.
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