If you image yourself riding on a boat to set sail for new land and riches and you get thrown off path well that is what happened to Cabeza and his crew. The narvaez expedition sailed in 1527 until 1532 they went on this expedition because they wanted to set sail for new world. After the expedition the ships were carried off course in the gulf of mexico to what is today called Tampa, Florida. Cabezas rafts were blown ashore to Galveston Island and Indians captured him and he was slave for two years (background essay). How did Cabeza de vaca survive? Cabeza de vaca survived because of his success as a healer, survival skills, and his respect for the native americans.
Cabeza de vaca survived because of his successes as a healer. Even though cabeza was not a doctor he was a great help to the Indians, Cabeza had once been brought a man that was shot with an arrow in the right shoulder and the point of the arrow rested over his heart. Cabeza took his knife and cut the man open and then removed the arrow head and saved his man's life (Doc.C). Since cabeza help him they knew he would be great help if anyone need health help.
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Cabeza was a very skillful man he knew how to survive, Cabeza would hollow out horse legs so that he could have his clean water in a container to drink from (Doc.B). When Cabeza went on his trek across Texas he went through some very harsh weather and landscape, having to cross mountains and drive yourself down a stream after a long day of walking (Doc.A). If cabeza didn't know how to cook meat properly, build a fire, gather materials, and find shelter he wouldn’t have made this trek as amazing as it (Doc.B). It took two years for the exploration of texas that means building rafts to cross rivers, finding the materials around to help heal or protect you from the wild Cabeza made the most of everything he had
Cabeza de Vaca survived because of his success as a healer. Being a healer for the indian tribes he met along his journey helped him gain respect and trust of the indians.(C) This would have made the indians want to keep
Cabeza De Vaca survived because of his success as a healer, respect for the natives, and his wilderness and survival skills. Although these are probably the most important reasons of why he survived there may be many more. Cabeza De Vaca was one of only four men that made it to Mexico City. Cabeza was not the person leading the expedition, he was just leading his
A third reason Cabeza was able to survive was he was useful to the Natives. Good evidence of this is when Cabeza proved how useful he was when he saved one of the Natives. Document C shows a report of Cabeza using his knife to cut open the man’s chest and removing an arrow. Cabeza stitched the man up and he was healed. This act made Cabeza of use to the Natives, because they realized that keeping him alive and able to heal others was important to them. This evidence also explains how Cabeza stayed alive, because without Cabeza showing himself to be of use to the Natives, they may have seen him as a threat and killed him right then and there.
First of all, one of the approaches Cabeza De Vaca took in order to persist was befriending some of, if not most of, the Indians that he encountered throughout his journey. One example of him performing this task is when an Indian tribe brought a wounded man to Cabeza in order for him to cure the badly injured Indian. Cabeza opened the Indian’s chest and took out the arrow that was resting above his heart. By doing this, Cabeza De Vaca and his fellow
How did Cabeza survive being shipwrecked, being alone, and enslaved? Being resourceful and finding ways to manage thirst and hunger under terrible conditions. Having communication skills to talk to the indians to befriend them and luck, lots of luck. That is how he did
“A Land So Strange” is a book any history enthusiast would enjoy. Beautifully written by Andres Resendez he is able to show the epic journey of Cabeza de Vaca through a book. Cabeza de Vaca a Spaniard scholar who shipwrecked in Florida in 1528 with a group of about 300 Spanish men, explorers, and slaves who accompanied him along the way. Having hopes to claim and settle in Florida but unexpectedly consistent events; like nature, natives, and loss of navigation turned their mission into an unexpected journey. Andres Resendez wonderfully words these unexpected events with a pleasant amount of detail that any reader could picture the journey of eight years of challenges leaving only four survivors Cabeza de Vaca, two other Spaniards, and an African slave who ended up wanting to just go back home. Regardless of these events he is considered one of the best explorers who survived the unimaginable and lead even with the lack of supplies and men to get their way back home. The journey was humbling by the fact he had to survive with what was around him and pushed through because of his curiosity to know more. This book is informative and practical because the author was able to illustrate his words that created a story based upon facts and understanding of the main characters experience that allowed one to see the passion Cabeza de Vaca in his expedition.
The Spanish conquistadors’ motives greatly affected the people living in the new world. These motives influenced the Native Americans in all different ways some ways better or bigger than others. Three of the biggest motives that effected the Native Americans were gold, Christianity, and glory.
However, he then goes on to say how deeply moved they were, which is somewhat ironic. It's almost as if Cabeza de Vaca and his followers know that the Indians aren't truly unworthy creatures but they use what everybody already agrees upon to manipulate their supposed worthiness and justify their claims. He also goes on to explain the warrior-like tendencies of the Indians and how fierce and relentless they are. He describes them by saying, "whoever has to fight Indians must take great care not to let them think he is disheartened or that he covets what they own. In war they must be treated very harshly, for should they notice either fear or greed, as a people they know how to bide their time waiting for revenge and take courage from their enemies' fears. After using up all their arrows, they part, each going his own way, without attempting pursuit, although one side might have more men than the other. Such is their custom." (68) They have these customs that are very unnatural and are not normative behavior. Cabeza de Vaca refers to the customs of the Charruco Indians with great
Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca and his companions, Andres Dorantes, Alonzo del Castillo Maldonado, and Estevan were the sole survivors of a four hundred men expedition. The group of them went about the friendly Indian tribes preforming miracles of healing, with the power of Christianity. At one time five sick persons were brought into the camp, and the Indians insisted that Castillo should cure them. At sunset he pronounced a blessing over the sick, and all the Christians united in a prayer to God, asking him to restore the sick to health, and on the following morning there was not a sick person among them. De Vaca and his companions reached the Pacific coast where the Indians, showed signs of civilization, living in houses covered with straw, wearing cotton clothes and dressed skins, with belts and ornaments of stone, and cultivating their fields, but had been driven therefrom by the brutal Spanish soldiery and had taken refuge in the mountains, de Vaca and his comrades, being regarded as emissaries from the Almighty, exercised such power over these untutored savages that, at their bidding, the Indians returned to their deserted habitations, and began again to cultivate their fields, the assurance being given them by de Vaca and his companions that henceforth they would
Cabeza de Vaca was originally part of the 600-man Narváez Expedition, and in the end was one of four survivors. The trip was highly disastrous, on the literal first page he tells how local inhabitants “seduced more than 140 of our men to the desert”#.
Conversely, the explorer Cabeza de Vaca reflexively deviated from the European norm of intolerance because he kept an open mind in learning indigenous spirituality and health care in what is now northern Mexico and the southwestern United States. De Vaca overcame his fears to forego the absolute bigotry of Columbus and the crusaders and step outside of his religious comfort zone. He ventured to take part in indigenous rituals, consenting to native people tying him to the pillars of a smoky longhouse and putting him in a cage with his enslaved guide Estevanico on a boat dragged by a deformed dwarf. In a relatively harmonious fashion, the non-Christian natives de Vaca encountered expressed gratitude at his willingness to train as a medicine man,
In the story “La Relacion” by Alvar Cabeza de Vaca. Cabeza de Vaca’s history of the 8 years living with the Native Americans in Texas and in the South West. He goes through slavery, served as a trader and eventually became recognized as a great healer and related to religion or soul leader by making a great disparity.”Cabeza de Vaca and his men were later forced to act as healers.”
Cabeza de Vaca was known for his discovery of America. He documented his trek in America, as a lost traveler, exposed to unfamiliar territory, multiple hardships, and the native Indian tribes. His journal entry over his reencounters with the Christians is only a small record over his adventures on the whole Narvaez Expedition of 1528. The document was published in Spain, 1542, at a time when dispute over the mistreatment of natives in America in their colonization became a subject to resolve. His journal entry discusses his brief experience in an Indian tribe, the news he receives of nearby Spanish men penetrating the tribal communities, and the realization that the “Christians” were not a character he thought they were. Cabeza de Vaca sympathized the indigenous tribes and believed that they should not face the cruelty the Spanish settlers set in order to
As Cabeza de Vaca continues, his encounters seemingly becomes harsher and he starts to relate these outcomes to God. Cabeza de Vaca also relates the losses to not only the surprising attack of the Indians and their camouflage within the surroundings but also to weaponry they used and the way they used them, “ The bows they use are as thick as the arm, of eleven or twelve palms in length, which they will discharge at two hundred paces with so great precision that they miss nothing”(pg.131). In chapter eight of Cabeza de Vaca log is where you start to see the experiences are in the name of God. Cabeza de Vaca starts to describe the land and the troubles of it including the harsh conditions of resources not being available, “ I cease here to relate more of this, because any one may suppose what would occur in a country so remote and malign, so destitute of all resources, whereby either to live in it or go out of it; but most certain assistance is in God,
Q 1: Perform Verify and Count Commands for all three tables and identify any exceptions.