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Orellana arrived in the New World as a teenager, working for some years in Nicaragua before going south as part of reinforcements for the Pizarro clan around 1533. He fought in the campaigns to submit the rebellious Manco Inca, in whose course Francisco lost one eye (other sources say he lost it later). When the war between the Pizarros and Diego de Almagro broke out, Orellana remained as a loyal Pizarrist, and as a reward he was appointed governor of the lands of modern day Ecuador. For several years, his job involved working with the old Inca administration to develop the land and rebuild some collateral damage of the conquest (he even dedicated himself to [[CunningLinguist learn the local languages]] to better coordinate things with the natives), and over time he proved good at the task, building a very stable province and [[NonIdleRich becoming immensely rich all in one]]. Orellana might have perfectly stayed on the couch and lived off this to the end of his life, but a [[CallToAdventure desire for adventure]] led him to join Gonzalo Pizarro's expedition in the search of the Land of Cinnamon, a fabulous realm in the heart of South America where the precious spices supposedly grew freely.

The expedition, started in 1541, was effectively the largest land enterprise of the Spanish Empire up to the point, counting on around 360 Spaniards and 4,000 natives, and carrying masses of horses, dogs, llamas and pigs to ensure success against any eventuality. However, if those 16th century Iberian explorations were easy, they wouldn't be 16th century Iberian explorations in the first place, as it would turn out.

to:

Orellana arrived in the New World as a teenager, working for some years in Nicaragua before going south as part of reinforcements for the Pizarro clan around 1533. He fought in the campaigns to submit the rebellious Manco Inca, in whose course Francisco lost one eye (other sources say he lost it later). When the war between the Pizarros and Diego de Almagro broke out, Orellana remained as a loyal Pizarrist, and as a reward he was appointed governor of the lands of modern day Ecuador. For several years, his job involved working with the old Inca administration to develop the land and rebuild some collateral damage of the conquest (he even dedicated himself to [[CunningLinguist learn the local languages]] to better coordinate things with the natives), and over time he proved good at the task, building a very stable province and [[NonIdleRich becoming immensely rich all in one]]. Orellana might have perfectly stayed on the couch and lived off this to the end of his life, but a [[CallToAdventure desire for adventure]] led him to join Gonzalo Pizarro's expedition in the search of the Land of Cinnamon, a fabulous realm in the heart of South America where the precious spices supposedly grew freely.

freely.[[note]]Modern pop culture, probably influenced by ''Film/AguirreTheWrathOfGod'' conflating his travel with the expedition of UsefulNotes/LopeDeAguirre, tends to believe he was seeking the CityOfGold of El Dorado. This was not the case, although the Land of Cinnamon was definitely a similar legend.[[/note]]

The expedition, started in 1541, was effectively the largest land enterprise of the Spanish Empire up to the point, counting on around 360 Spaniards and 4,000 natives, and carrying masses of horses, dogs, llamas and pigs to ensure success against any eventuality. However, if those 16th century Iberian explorations exploration expeditions were easy, they wouldn't be 16th century Iberian explorations exploration expeditions in the first place, as it would turn out.



From this point, evidently, the travel became such an adventure that it's hard to say what is truth and what is fiction in the chronicle of the expedition. Orellana and his people apparently stopped finding friendly tribes, instead finding hostile peoples like Omaguas and Machiparo, and had to resort to attack and plunder in order to survive. Among their enemies they supposedly found Pira-tapuya indigenous [[AmazonBrigade warrior women]] like the famed Amazons of Greek mythology, which is the reason why they named the river Amazonas (their first option had been Orellana river). In any case, after defeating the women by good ol' steel and keeping on with the travel without pause, the expedition finally got out of the most dense parte of the Amazonian jungle, and when they found tribes they could identify as Caribes, they were overjoyed to discover the river was flowing into the Atlantic coast. On August 1542, after seven grueling months of expedition, Orellana and company finally sighted the ocean, not less happy that the [[Literature/{{Anabasis}} Ten Thousand]] sighting the Black Sea, and managed to reach the Spanish settlement of Cubagua.

Predicting that the impetuous Gonzalo would not be happy, Orellana returned directly to Spain by ship. After rejecting an offer by King of Portugal John III to expand Brazil for them (there was some controversy whether the mouth of the Amazonas belonged to Spain or Portugal by the Treaty of Tordesillas), he was able to personally tell King UsefulNotes/CharlesV of his epic, which landed Orellana governor of all the lands he had discovered, baptized New Andalusia, and saved him from the Pizarro family's accusations of having abandoned and betrayed them.

For Orellana, that was all past history, as now he had his own feud to conquer... as well as all the troubles that come with being your own boss: politics delayed his fleet so much that he lost the king's favor, money did not arrive in time, and a minor scandal broke when Francisco married the humble and much younger Ana de Ayala (apparently a case of true love). Orellana and Ayala had to sail off hidden in his own fleet and resort to piracy to get supplies, and upon arriving in South America, they had lost half of the ships. The maligned expedition, now reduced to 100 men and women, finally found a river mouth that Orellana believed to be part of the Amazonas delta.

to:

From this point, evidently, the travel journey became such an adventure that it's hard to say what is truth and what is fiction in the chronicle of the expedition. Orellana and his people apparently stopped finding friendly tribes, instead finding hostile peoples like Omaguas and Machiparo, and had to resort to attack fight and plunder in order to survive. Among their enemies they supposedly found Pira-tapuya indigenous [[AmazonBrigade warrior women]] like the famed Amazons of Greek mythology, which is the reason why they named the river Amazonas (their first option had been Orellana river). In any case, after defeating the women by good ol' steel and keeping on with the travel without pause, the expedition finally got out of the most dense parte of the Amazonian jungle, and when they found tribes they could identify as Caribes, they were overjoyed to discover the river was flowing into the Atlantic coast. On August 1542, after seven grueling months of expedition, Orellana and company finally sighted the ocean, not less happy that the [[Literature/{{Anabasis}} Ten Thousand]] sighting the Black Sea, and managed to reach the Spanish settlement of Cubagua.

Predicting that the impetuous Gonzalo would not be happy, Orellana returned directly to Spain by ship. After rejecting an offer by King John III of Portugal John III to expand Brazil for them (there was some controversy whether the mouth of the Amazonas belonged to Spain or Portugal by the Treaty of Tordesillas), he was able to personally tell King UsefulNotes/CharlesV of his epic, which landed Orellana governor of all the lands he had discovered, baptized New Andalusia, and saved him from the Pizarro family's accusations of having abandoned and betrayed them.

For Orellana, that was all past history, as now he had his own feud to conquer... as well as all the troubles that come with being your own boss: politics boss. Orellana had surely proved to be a true survivor and leader, but compared to colleagues like Pizarro and UsefulNotes/HernanCortez, he lacked the necessary connections, Machiavellianism and sheer luck to pull his own expedition off. Politics delayed his fleet so much that he lost the king's favor, money did not arrive in time, and a minor scandal broke when Francisco married the humble and much younger Ana de Ayala (apparently a case of true love). Orellana and Ayala had to sail off hidden in his their own fleet and resort to piracy to get supplies, and upon eventually arriving in South America, they had lost America with only half of the ships. The maligned expedition, now reduced to 100 men and women, finally found a river mouth that Orellana believed to be part of the Amazonas delta.
delta, but he failed to find the main river.

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Orellana arrived in the New World as reinforcements for the Pizarro clan as soon as 1535, after which he fought during the campaigns to submit the rebellious Manco Inca, in whose course Francisco lost one eye (other sources say he lost it later). When the war between the Pizarros and Diego de Almagro broke out, Orellana remained as a loyal Pizarrist, and as a reward he was appointed governor of the lands of modern day Ecuador. For several years, his job involved basically organizing the old Inca administration to fix and rebuild the collateral damage of the conquest (he even [[CunningLinguist dedicated himself to learn the local languages]] to better coordinate things), and this only changed in 1540, when he decided join Gonzalo Pizarro's expedition in the search of the Land of Cinnamon, a fabulous land in the heart of South America where the precious spices supposedly grew freely. The expedition was possibly the largest land enterprise of the Spanish, counting on around 360 Spaniards and 4,000 natives, and carrying masses of horses, dogs, llamas and pigs to ensure success against any eventuality. Of course, if those 16th century Iberian explorations were easy, they wouldn't be 16th century Iberian explorations, as it would turn out.

Crossing the Andes turned out to be a nightmare, after which not less than 140 Spaniards and 3,000 natives had either died or deserted on the belief it would be a SuicideMission. The unnerved Pizarro even executed their guides, believing they had conned them all, but the expedition continued anyway and eventually came upon the Coca and Napo rivers, where they built brigantines and bought canoes from friendly natives, being informed about populated villages where they could resupply. After running out of food, the explorers decided for Pizarro to wait in land with most of the expedition while Orellana continued through the Napo river with 70 men until finding the damn villages, but it took so much time for Orellana to do so that the expedition broke up: Pizarro deemed Orellana MIA and ordered to go back to the Inca lands, while Orellana and his people equally believed they were too far to rendexvous and voted to keep on the travel by themselves. Orellana and company, unsupported but undaunted, finally reached the end of the Napo and became the first Europeans to sight the largest river in the planet.

From this point, the travel became evidently such an adventure that it's hard to say what is truth and what is fiction in the chronicle of the travel. Orellana and his people apparently stopped finding friendly tribes, replaced by the hostile Omaguas and Machiparo, and had to resort to attack and plunder in order to survive, and among their enemies they supposedly found Pira-tapuya indigenous [[AmazonBrigade warrior women]] like the famed Amazons of Greek mythology, which is the reason why they named the river Amazonas (their first option had been Orellana river). In any case, after defeating the women by good ol' gunfire and keeping on with the travel without pause, the expedition finally got out of the most dense of the Amazonian jungle, and when they found tribes they could identify as Caribes, they were overjoyed to comprehend the river was finally flowing into the Atlantic coast. On August 1542, after seven grueling months of expedition, Orellana and company finally sighted the ocean, not less happy that back when the [[Literature/{{Anabasis}} Ten Thousand]] sighted the Black Sea, and managed to reach the Spanish settlement of Cubagua.

Predicting that the impetuous Gonzalo would not be happy, Orellana returned directly to Spain by ship, and after rejecting an offer by King of Portugal John III to expand Brazil for them (there was some controversy whether the mouth of the Amazons belonged to Spain or Portugal by the Treaty of Tordesillas), he could personally tell King UsefulNotes/CharlesV of his epic, which landed Orellana governor of all the lands he had discovered and saved him from the Pizarro family's accusations of having abandoned and betrayed them. For Orellana, that was all past history, as now he had his own feud to conquer... as well as all the troubles that come with being your own boss: politics delayed his fleet so much that he lost the king's favor, money did not arrive in time, and a family scandal broke when Francisco married the pauper, younger Ana de Ayala (apparently for love). Orellana and Ayala had to sail off hidden in his own fleet and resort to piracy to get supplies, and upon arriving in South America, they had lost half of the ships. The expedition, now reduced to 100 men, found a river mouth that Orellana identified as part of the Amazonas delta.

Sometimes, what starts badly ends even worse, and this second expedition would be not only unsuccessful, but also Orellana's final. After weeks of walking in circles around the lands in the search of the mouth river, being attacked by natives, eating all of their food and just plain going insane, Orellana died, according to Ayala by a mix of illness and desperation. Only 46 expeditioners survived, led by Ayala and Diego García de Paredes Jr (the son of UsefulNotes/DiegoGarciaDeParedes) to the nearby settlement of Margarita Island, from which most of them embarked in the search of more fortunate conquests through America.

to:

Orellana arrived in the New World as a teenager, working for some years in Nicaragua before going south as part of reinforcements for the Pizarro clan as soon as 1535, after which he around 1533. He fought during in the campaigns to submit the rebellious Manco Inca, in whose course Francisco lost one eye (other sources say he lost it later). When the war between the Pizarros and Diego de Almagro broke out, Orellana remained as a loyal Pizarrist, and as a reward he was appointed governor of the lands of modern day Ecuador. For several years, his job involved basically organizing working with the old Inca administration to fix develop the land and rebuild the some collateral damage of the conquest (he even [[CunningLinguist dedicated himself to [[CunningLinguist learn the local languages]] to better coordinate things), things with the natives), and over time he proved good at the task, building a very stable province and [[NonIdleRich becoming immensely rich all in one]]. Orellana might have perfectly stayed on the couch and lived off this only changed in 1540, when he decided to the end of his life, but a [[CallToAdventure desire for adventure]] led him to join Gonzalo Pizarro's expedition in the search of the Land of Cinnamon, a fabulous land realm in the heart of South America where the precious spices supposedly grew freely. freely.

The expedition expedition, started in 1541, was possibly effectively the largest land enterprise of the Spanish, Spanish Empire up to the point, counting on around 360 Spaniards and 4,000 natives, and carrying masses of horses, dogs, llamas and pigs to ensure success against any eventuality. Of course, However, if those 16th century Iberian explorations were easy, they wouldn't be 16th century Iberian explorations, explorations in the first place, as it would turn out.

Crossing Merely crossing the Andes turned out to be a [[Literature/TheLordOfTheRings Caradhras]]-like nightmare, after which not less than 140 Spaniards and 3,000 natives had either died or deserted on the belief it would be a SuicideMission. The unnerved Pizarro even executed their guides, believing they had conned them all, but the expedition continued anyway and eventually came upon the Coca and Napo rivers, where they built brigantines and bought canoes from friendly natives, being informed learning in the process about supposed populated villages where they could resupply. After running out of food, the explorers decided for Pizarro to wait in land with most of the expedition while Orellana continued through the Napo river with 70 men until finding the damn villages, but it took so much time for Orellana to do so that the expedition broke up: Pizarro deemed Orellana MIA and ordered to go back to the Inca lands, while Orellana and his people equally believed they were too far to rendexvous rendezvous and voted to keep on continue the travel by themselves. Orellana and company, unsupported but undaunted, finally reached the end of the Napo and became the first Europeans to sight the largest river in the planet.

From this point, evidently, the travel became evidently such an adventure that it's hard to say what is truth and what is fiction in the chronicle of the travel. expedition. Orellana and his people apparently stopped finding friendly tribes, replaced by the instead finding hostile peoples like Omaguas and Machiparo, and had to resort to attack and plunder in order to survive, and among survive. Among their enemies they supposedly found Pira-tapuya indigenous [[AmazonBrigade warrior women]] like the famed Amazons of Greek mythology, which is the reason why they named the river Amazonas (their first option had been Orellana river). In any case, after defeating the women by good ol' gunfire steel and keeping on with the travel without pause, the expedition finally got out of the most dense parte of the Amazonian jungle, and when they found tribes they could identify as Caribes, they were overjoyed to comprehend discover the river was finally flowing into the Atlantic coast. On August 1542, after seven grueling months of expedition, Orellana and company finally sighted the ocean, not less happy that back when the [[Literature/{{Anabasis}} Ten Thousand]] sighted sighting the Black Sea, and managed to reach the Spanish settlement of Cubagua.

Predicting that the impetuous Gonzalo would not be happy, Orellana returned directly to Spain by ship, and after ship. After rejecting an offer by King of Portugal John III to expand Brazil for them (there was some controversy whether the mouth of the Amazons Amazonas belonged to Spain or Portugal by the Treaty of Tordesillas), he could was able to personally tell King UsefulNotes/CharlesV of his epic, which landed Orellana governor of all the lands he had discovered discovered, baptized New Andalusia, and saved him from the Pizarro family's accusations of having abandoned and betrayed them. them.

For Orellana, that was all past history, as now he had his own feud to conquer... as well as all the troubles that come with being your own boss: politics delayed his fleet so much that he lost the king's favor, money did not arrive in time, and a family minor scandal broke when Francisco married the pauper, humble and much younger Ana de Ayala (apparently for a case of true love). Orellana and Ayala had to sail off hidden in his own fleet and resort to piracy to get supplies, and upon arriving in South America, they had lost half of the ships. The maligned expedition, now reduced to 100 men, men and women, finally found a river mouth that Orellana identified as believed to be part of the Amazonas delta.

Sometimes, what starts badly ends even worse, and this second expedition would be not only unsuccessful, but also Orellana's final. After weeks of walking in circles around the lands in the search of the mouth main river, being attacked by natives, eating all of their food and [[HungryJungle just plain going insane, insane]], Orellana died, according to Ayala by a mix of illness and desperation. Only 46 expeditioners survived, led by Ayala and Diego García de Paredes Jr (the son of UsefulNotes/DiegoGarciaDeParedes) to the nearby settlement of Margarita Island, from which most of them embarked in the search of more fortunate conquests through America.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Francisco de Orellana Bejarano Pizarro y Torres de Altamirano (1511 - November 1546) was a Spanish conquistador and explorer of the 16th century. A distant relative to UsefulNotes/FranciscoPizarro and UsefulNotes/HernanCortez, he served as a close associate to the former and participated in the UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheIncaEmpire before branching off as a full time explorer. He led the expedition that discovered and named UsefulNotes/TheAmazonRainforest.

Orellana arrived in the New World as reinforcements for the Pizarro clan as soon as 1535, after which he fought during the campaigns to submit the rebellious Manco Inca, in whose course Francisco lost one eye (other sources say he lost it later). When the war between the Pizarros and Diego de Almagro broke out, Orellana remained as a loyal Pizarrist, and as a reward he was appointed governor of the lands of modern day Ecuador. For several years, his job involved basically organizing the old Inca administration to fix and rebuild the collateral damage of the conquest and its various troubles (he even [[CunningLinguist dedicated himself to learn the local languages]] to better coordinate things), and this only changed in 1540, when he decided join Gonzalo Pizarro's expedition in the search of the Land of Cinnamon, a fabulous land in the heart South America where the precious spices supposedly grew freely. The expedition was possibly the largest land enterprise of the Spanish, counting on around 360 Spaniards and 4,000 natives, and carrying masses of horses, dogs, llamas and pigs to ensure success against any eventuality. Of course, if those 16th century Iberian explorations were easy, they wouldn't be 16th century Iberian explorations, as it would turn out.

Crossing the Andes turned out to be a nightmare, after which not less than 140 Spaniards and 3,000 natives had either died or deserted on the belief it would be a suicidal mission. The unnerved Pizarro even executed their guides, believing they had conned them all, but the expedition continued anyway and eventually came upon the Coca and Napo rivers, where they built brigantines and bought canoes from friendly natives, being informed about populated villages where they could resupply. After running out of food, the explorers decided for Pizarro to wait in land with most of the expedition while Orellana continued through the Napo river with 70 men until finding the damn villages, but it took so much time for Orellana to do so that the expedition broke up: Pizarro deemed Orellana MIA and ordered to go back the Inca lands, while Orellana and his people equally believed they were too far to reunite and voted to keep on the travel by themselves. Orellana and company, unsupported but undaunted, finally reached the end of the Napo and became the first Europeans to sight the largest river in the planet.

From this point, the travel became evidently such an adventure that it's hard to say what is truth and what is fiction in the chronicle of the travel. Orellana and his people apparently stopped finding friendly tribes, replaced by the hostile Omaguas and Machiparo, and had to resort to attack and plunder in order to survive, and among their enemies they supposedly found Pira-tapuya indigenous warrior women like the famed Amazons of Greek mythology, which is the reason why they named the river Amazonas (their first option had been Orellana river). In any case, after defeating the women by good ol' gunfire and keeping on with the travel without pause, the expedition finally got out of the most dense of the Amazonian jungle, and when they found tribes they could identify as Caribes, they were overjoyed to comprehend the river was finally flowing into the Atlantic coast. On August 1542, after seven grueling months of expedition, Orellana and company finally sighted the ocean, not less happy that back when the [[Literature/{{Anabasis}} Ten Thousands]] sighted the Black Sea, and managed to reach the Spanish settlement of Cubagua.

to:

Francisco de Orellana Bejarano Pizarro y Torres de Altamirano (1511 - November 1546) was a Spanish conquistador and explorer of the 16th century. A distant relative to UsefulNotes/FranciscoPizarro and UsefulNotes/HernanCortez, he served as a close associate to the former and participated in the UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheIncaEmpire before branching off as a full time explorer. He led the expedition that discovered and named UsefulNotes/TheAmazonRainforest.

Orellana arrived in the New World as reinforcements for the Pizarro clan as soon as 1535, after which he fought during the campaigns to submit the rebellious Manco Inca, in whose course Francisco lost one eye (other sources say he lost it later). When the war between the Pizarros and Diego de Almagro broke out, Orellana remained as a loyal Pizarrist, and as a reward he was appointed governor of the lands of modern day Ecuador. For several years, his job involved basically organizing the old Inca administration to fix and rebuild the collateral damage of the conquest and its various troubles (he even [[CunningLinguist dedicated himself to learn the local languages]] to better coordinate things), and this only changed in 1540, when he decided join Gonzalo Pizarro's expedition in the search of the Land of Cinnamon, a fabulous land in the heart of South America where the precious spices supposedly grew freely. The expedition was possibly the largest land enterprise of the Spanish, counting on around 360 Spaniards and 4,000 natives, and carrying masses of horses, dogs, llamas and pigs to ensure success against any eventuality. Of course, if those 16th century Iberian explorations were easy, they wouldn't be 16th century Iberian explorations, as it would turn out.

Crossing the Andes turned out to be a nightmare, after which not less than 140 Spaniards and 3,000 natives had either died or deserted on the belief it would be a suicidal mission.SuicideMission. The unnerved Pizarro even executed their guides, believing they had conned them all, but the expedition continued anyway and eventually came upon the Coca and Napo rivers, where they built brigantines and bought canoes from friendly natives, being informed about populated villages where they could resupply. After running out of food, the explorers decided for Pizarro to wait in land with most of the expedition while Orellana continued through the Napo river with 70 men until finding the damn villages, but it took so much time for Orellana to do so that the expedition broke up: Pizarro deemed Orellana MIA and ordered to go back to the Inca lands, while Orellana and his people equally believed they were too far to reunite rendexvous and voted to keep on the travel by themselves. Orellana and company, unsupported but undaunted, finally reached the end of the Napo and became the first Europeans to sight the largest river in the planet.

From this point, the travel became evidently such an adventure that it's hard to say what is truth and what is fiction in the chronicle of the travel. Orellana and his people apparently stopped finding friendly tribes, replaced by the hostile Omaguas and Machiparo, and had to resort to attack and plunder in order to survive, and among their enemies they supposedly found Pira-tapuya indigenous [[AmazonBrigade warrior women women]] like the famed Amazons of Greek mythology, which is the reason why they named the river Amazonas (their first option had been Orellana river). In any case, after defeating the women by good ol' gunfire and keeping on with the travel without pause, the expedition finally got out of the most dense of the Amazonian jungle, and when they found tribes they could identify as Caribes, they were overjoyed to comprehend the river was finally flowing into the Atlantic coast. On August 1542, after seven grueling months of expedition, Orellana and company finally sighted the ocean, not less happy that back when the [[Literature/{{Anabasis}} Ten Thousands]] Thousand]] sighted the Black Sea, and managed to reach the Spanish settlement of Cubagua.
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Added DiffLines:


!!In fiction
[[AC:{{Film}}]]
* ''Film/AguirreTheWrathOfGod'' features the disappeared expedition of Orellana at the background, and a cut subplot would have addressed it directly.
* Orellana is mentioned at the background of ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheKingdomOfTheCrystalSkull''.

[[AC:{{Literature}}]]
* ''La conquista del Amazonas'' is a historical novel about Orellana written by Spanish-British actor Edward Rosset.

[[AC:VideoGames]]
* Orellana is featured in the El Dorado expansion of ''VideoGame/AgeOfEmpiresII''.
* He also appears in ''VideoGame/TheAmazonTrail''.

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Francisco de Orellana Bejarano Pizarro y Torres de Altamirano (1511 - November 1546) was a Spanish conquistador and explorer of the 17th century. A distant relative to UsefulNotes/FranciscoPizarro and UsefulNotes/HernanCortez, he served as a close associate to the former and participated in the UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheIncaEmpire before branching off as a full time explorer. He led the expedition that discovered and named the Amazonas river.

Orellana arrived in the New World as reinforcements for the Pizarro clan as soon as 1535, after which he fought during the campaigns to submit the rebellious Manco Inca, in whose course Francisco lost one eye (other sources say he lost it later). When the war between the Pizarros and Diego de Almagro broke out, Orellana remained as a Pizarro loyalist, and as a reward he was appointed governor of the lands of modern day Ecuador. For several years, his job was basically organizing the old Inca administration to fix and rebuild the collateral damage of the conquest and its various troubles (he even dedicated himself to learn the local languages to better coordinate things), and this only changed in 1540, when he decided join Gonzalo Pizarro's expedition in the search of the Land of Cinnamon, a fabulous land in the heart South America where the precious spices supposedly grew free. The expedition was possibly the largest land enterprise of the Spanish, counting on around 360 Spaniards and 4,000 natives, and carrying thousands of horses, dogs, llamas and pigs to ensure success against any eventuality. Of course, if those 16th century Iberian explorations were easy, they wouldn't be 16th century Iberian explorations, as it would turn out.

Crossing the Andes turned out to be a nightmare, after which not less than 140 Spaniards and 3,000 natives had either died or deserted on the belief this would be a suicidal mission. The unnerved Pizarro even executed their guides, believing they had conned them all, but the expedition continued anyway and eventually came upon the Coca and Napo rivers, where they built brigantines and bought canoes from friendly natives, being informed about populated villages where they could resupply. After running out of food, the explorers decided for Pizarro to wait in land with most of the expedition while Orellana continued through the Napo river with 70 men until finding the damn villages, but it took so much time for Orellana to do so that the expedition broke up: Pizarro deemed Orellana MIA and ordered to go back the Inca Empire, while Orellana and his people equally believed they were too far to reunite and voted to keep on the travel by themselves. Orellana and company, unsupported but undaunted, finally reached the end of the Napo and became the first Europeans to sight the largest river in the planet.

From this point, the travel became evidently such an adventure that it's hard to say what is truth and what is fiction in the chronicle of the travel. Orellana and his people apparently stopped finding friendly tribes, replaced by the hostile Omaguas and Machiparo, and had to resort to attack and plunder in order to survive, and among their enemies they supposedly found Pira-tapuya indigenous warrior women like the famed Amazons of Greek mythology, which is the reason why they named the river Amazonas (their first option had been Orellana river). In any case, after defeating the women by good ol' gunfire and keeping on with the travel without pause, the expedition finally got out of the most dense of the Amazonian jungle, and when they found tribes they could identify as Caribes, they were overjoyed to comprehend the river was finally flowing into the Atlantic coast. On August 1542, after seven grueling months of expedition, Orellana and company finally sighted the ocean, not less happy that back when the 10,000 sighted the Black Sea, and managed to reach the Spanish settlement of Cubagua.

Predicting that the impetuous Gonzalo would not be happy, Orellana returned directly to Spain by ship, and after rejecting an offer by King of Portugal John III to expand Brazil for them (there was some controversy whether the mouth of the Amazons belonged to Spain or Portugal by the Treaty of Tordesillas), he could personally tell King UsefulNotes/CharlosV of his epic, which landed Orellana governor of all the lands he had discovered and saved him from the Pizarro family's accusations of having abandoned and betrayed them. For Orellana, that was all past history, as now he had his own feud to conquer... as well as all the troubles that come with being your own boss: politics delayed his fleet so much that he lost the king's favor, money did not arrive in time, and a family scandal broke when Francisco married the pauper, younger Ana de Ayala (apparently for love). Orellana and Ayala had to sail off hidden in his own fleet and resort to piracy to get supplies, and upon arriving in South America, they had lost half of the ships. The expedition, now reduced to 100 men, found a river mouth that Orellana identified as part of the Amazonas delta.

Sometimes, what starts badly ends even worse, and this second expedition would be not only unsuccessful, but also Orellana's final. After weeks of walking in circles around the lands in the search of the mouth river, being attacked by natives, eating all of their food and just plain going insane, Orellana died, according to Ayala by a mix of illness and desperation. Only 46 expeditioners survived, led by Ayala and Diego García de Paredes Jr (the son of UsefulNotes/DiegoGarciaDeParedes) to the nearby settlement of Margarita Island, from which most of them embarked in the search of more fortunate conquests through America.

to:

Francisco de Orellana Bejarano Pizarro y Torres de Altamirano (1511 - November 1546) was a Spanish conquistador and explorer of the 17th 16th century. A distant relative to UsefulNotes/FranciscoPizarro and UsefulNotes/HernanCortez, he served as a close associate to the former and participated in the UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheIncaEmpire before branching off as a full time explorer. He led the expedition that discovered and named the Amazonas river.

UsefulNotes/TheAmazonRainforest.

Orellana arrived in the New World as reinforcements for the Pizarro clan as soon as 1535, after which he fought during the campaigns to submit the rebellious Manco Inca, in whose course Francisco lost one eye (other sources say he lost it later). When the war between the Pizarros and Diego de Almagro broke out, Orellana remained as a Pizarro loyalist, loyal Pizarrist, and as a reward he was appointed governor of the lands of modern day Ecuador. For several years, his job was involved basically organizing the old Inca administration to fix and rebuild the collateral damage of the conquest and its various troubles (he even [[CunningLinguist dedicated himself to learn the local languages languages]] to better coordinate things), and this only changed in 1540, when he decided join Gonzalo Pizarro's expedition in the search of the Land of Cinnamon, a fabulous land in the heart South America where the precious spices supposedly grew free. freely. The expedition was possibly the largest land enterprise of the Spanish, counting on around 360 Spaniards and 4,000 natives, and carrying thousands masses of horses, dogs, llamas and pigs to ensure success against any eventuality. Of course, if those 16th century Iberian explorations were easy, they wouldn't be 16th century Iberian explorations, as it would turn out.

Crossing the Andes turned out to be a nightmare, after which not less than 140 Spaniards and 3,000 natives had either died or deserted on the belief this it would be a suicidal mission. The unnerved Pizarro even executed their guides, believing they had conned them all, but the expedition continued anyway and eventually came upon the Coca and Napo rivers, where they built brigantines and bought canoes from friendly natives, being informed about populated villages where they could resupply. After running out of food, the explorers decided for Pizarro to wait in land with most of the expedition while Orellana continued through the Napo river with 70 men until finding the damn villages, but it took so much time for Orellana to do so that the expedition broke up: Pizarro deemed Orellana MIA and ordered to go back the Inca Empire, lands, while Orellana and his people equally believed they were too far to reunite and voted to keep on the travel by themselves. Orellana and company, unsupported but undaunted, finally reached the end of the Napo and became the first Europeans to sight the largest river in the planet.

From this point, the travel became evidently such an adventure that it's hard to say what is truth and what is fiction in the chronicle of the travel. Orellana and his people apparently stopped finding friendly tribes, replaced by the hostile Omaguas and Machiparo, and had to resort to attack and plunder in order to survive, and among their enemies they supposedly found Pira-tapuya indigenous warrior women like the famed Amazons of Greek mythology, which is the reason why they named the river Amazonas (their first option had been Orellana river). In any case, after defeating the women by good ol' gunfire and keeping on with the travel without pause, the expedition finally got out of the most dense of the Amazonian jungle, and when they found tribes they could identify as Caribes, they were overjoyed to comprehend the river was finally flowing into the Atlantic coast. On August 1542, after seven grueling months of expedition, Orellana and company finally sighted the ocean, not less happy that back when the 10,000 [[Literature/{{Anabasis}} Ten Thousands]] sighted the Black Sea, and managed to reach the Spanish settlement of Cubagua.

Predicting that the impetuous Gonzalo would not be happy, Orellana returned directly to Spain by ship, and after rejecting an offer by King of Portugal John III to expand Brazil for them (there was some controversy whether the mouth of the Amazons belonged to Spain or Portugal by the Treaty of Tordesillas), he could personally tell King UsefulNotes/CharlosV UsefulNotes/CharlesV of his epic, which landed Orellana governor of all the lands he had discovered and saved him from the Pizarro family's accusations of having abandoned and betrayed them. For Orellana, that was all past history, as now he had his own feud to conquer... as well as all the troubles that come with being your own boss: politics delayed his fleet so much that he lost the king's favor, money did not arrive in time, and a family scandal broke when Francisco married the pauper, younger Ana de Ayala (apparently for love). Orellana and Ayala had to sail off hidden in his own fleet and resort to piracy to get supplies, and upon arriving in South America, they had lost half of the ships. The expedition, now reduced to 100 men, found a river mouth that Orellana identified as part of the Amazonas delta.

Sometimes, what starts badly ends even worse, and this second expedition would be not only unsuccessful, but also Orellana's final. After weeks of walking in circles around the lands in the search of the mouth river, being attacked by natives, eating all of their food and just plain going insane, Orellana died, according to Ayala by a mix of illness and desperation. Only 46 expeditioners survived, led by Ayala and Diego García de Paredes Jr (the son of UsefulNotes/DiegoGarciaDeParedes) to the nearby settlement of Margarita Island, from which most of them embarked in the search of more fortunate conquests through America.America.
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[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/orellana.jpg]]
Francisco de Orellana Bejarano Pizarro y Torres de Altamirano (1511 - November 1546) was a Spanish conquistador and explorer of the 17th century. A distant relative to UsefulNotes/FranciscoPizarro and UsefulNotes/HernanCortez, he served as a close associate to the former and participated in the UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheIncaEmpire before branching off as a full time explorer. He led the expedition that discovered and named the Amazonas river.

Orellana arrived in the New World as reinforcements for the Pizarro clan as soon as 1535, after which he fought during the campaigns to submit the rebellious Manco Inca, in whose course Francisco lost one eye (other sources say he lost it later). When the war between the Pizarros and Diego de Almagro broke out, Orellana remained as a Pizarro loyalist, and as a reward he was appointed governor of the lands of modern day Ecuador. For several years, his job was basically organizing the old Inca administration to fix and rebuild the collateral damage of the conquest and its various troubles (he even dedicated himself to learn the local languages to better coordinate things), and this only changed in 1540, when he decided join Gonzalo Pizarro's expedition in the search of the Land of Cinnamon, a fabulous land in the heart South America where the precious spices supposedly grew free. The expedition was possibly the largest land enterprise of the Spanish, counting on around 360 Spaniards and 4,000 natives, and carrying thousands of horses, dogs, llamas and pigs to ensure success against any eventuality. Of course, if those 16th century Iberian explorations were easy, they wouldn't be 16th century Iberian explorations, as it would turn out.

Crossing the Andes turned out to be a nightmare, after which not less than 140 Spaniards and 3,000 natives had either died or deserted on the belief this would be a suicidal mission. The unnerved Pizarro even executed their guides, believing they had conned them all, but the expedition continued anyway and eventually came upon the Coca and Napo rivers, where they built brigantines and bought canoes from friendly natives, being informed about populated villages where they could resupply. After running out of food, the explorers decided for Pizarro to wait in land with most of the expedition while Orellana continued through the Napo river with 70 men until finding the damn villages, but it took so much time for Orellana to do so that the expedition broke up: Pizarro deemed Orellana MIA and ordered to go back the Inca Empire, while Orellana and his people equally believed they were too far to reunite and voted to keep on the travel by themselves. Orellana and company, unsupported but undaunted, finally reached the end of the Napo and became the first Europeans to sight the largest river in the planet.

From this point, the travel became evidently such an adventure that it's hard to say what is truth and what is fiction in the chronicle of the travel. Orellana and his people apparently stopped finding friendly tribes, replaced by the hostile Omaguas and Machiparo, and had to resort to attack and plunder in order to survive, and among their enemies they supposedly found Pira-tapuya indigenous warrior women like the famed Amazons of Greek mythology, which is the reason why they named the river Amazonas (their first option had been Orellana river). In any case, after defeating the women by good ol' gunfire and keeping on with the travel without pause, the expedition finally got out of the most dense of the Amazonian jungle, and when they found tribes they could identify as Caribes, they were overjoyed to comprehend the river was finally flowing into the Atlantic coast. On August 1542, after seven grueling months of expedition, Orellana and company finally sighted the ocean, not less happy that back when the 10,000 sighted the Black Sea, and managed to reach the Spanish settlement of Cubagua.

Predicting that the impetuous Gonzalo would not be happy, Orellana returned directly to Spain by ship, and after rejecting an offer by King of Portugal John III to expand Brazil for them (there was some controversy whether the mouth of the Amazons belonged to Spain or Portugal by the Treaty of Tordesillas), he could personally tell King UsefulNotes/CharlosV of his epic, which landed Orellana governor of all the lands he had discovered and saved him from the Pizarro family's accusations of having abandoned and betrayed them. For Orellana, that was all past history, as now he had his own feud to conquer... as well as all the troubles that come with being your own boss: politics delayed his fleet so much that he lost the king's favor, money did not arrive in time, and a family scandal broke when Francisco married the pauper, younger Ana de Ayala (apparently for love). Orellana and Ayala had to sail off hidden in his own fleet and resort to piracy to get supplies, and upon arriving in South America, they had lost half of the ships. The expedition, now reduced to 100 men, found a river mouth that Orellana identified as part of the Amazonas delta.

Sometimes, what starts badly ends even worse, and this second expedition would be not only unsuccessful, but also Orellana's final. After weeks of walking in circles around the lands in the search of the mouth river, being attacked by natives, eating all of their food and just plain going insane, Orellana died, according to Ayala by a mix of illness and desperation. Only 46 expeditioners survived, led by Ayala and Diego García de Paredes Jr (the son of UsefulNotes/DiegoGarciaDeParedes) to the nearby settlement of Margarita Island, from which most of them embarked in the search of more fortunate conquests through America.

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