Francisco Vazquez de Coronado was the Spanish nobleman who searched for the Seven Cities of Cibola.
Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca, a Spanish nobleman, went looking for the fabled city of Cibola in the 16th century. However, he didn't find the city but instead became one of the first Europeans to explore and document parts of present-day Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona.
The Spanish nobleman who went looking for Cibola was Francisco Vásquez de Coronado. He led an expedition in 1540 to find the fabled Seven Cities of Gold in the American Southwest, believing Cibola to be one of them.
Cibola, City of Gold of gold was a story that was told by a Spaniard named Escabon. After telling the story, Spanish explorers went searching for it, but never found it.
He went to Mexico and to fing Cibola (7 cities of gold) He went to Mexico and to fing Cibola (7 cities of gold)
1518. They were looking for God, gold and glory.
Because he was looking for one of the (supposed) seven cities of gold. CIbola is where he went and found it was nothing but buildings of hay and animal skins.
no, De vaca claimed he found it, but later when other people went to search, no one found it!
what is i went to in spanish
Francisco Vasquez de Coronado was in charge of the expedition that went searching for the seven cities. He was sent by the Spanish Viceroy because it was believed the cities were filled with gold and other valuable treasures.
Each European nation was ruled by a king. He divided his nation into many smaller pieces, and each one he granted to a nobleman. The nobleman in return had to agree to pay some tax to the king and to fight for him if the king ever went to war. The nobleman was now the king's vassal. Each nobleman could even have his own vassals. The sons of nobleman who had no land often became knights, the highest ranking soldiers. The vast majority of the population, however, were poor serfs. They had to subsistence farm for survival, and pay the nobles above them with part of their crop. If the noble went to war, some of them had to fight as infantry soldiers.
Throughout the 16th and 17th centuries both the Spaniards and the English went looking for El Dorado. Sir Walter Raleigh of England went twice. Cortes might have went looking for it too.
Fui allí.