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Group: Greenland (Kalaallit Nunaat) (self-governed territory of Denmark)

Pedro de Heredia, a son of Pedro …

Years: 1528 - 1528

Pedro de Heredia, a son of Pedro de Heredia and Inés Fernandez, is a descendant of a rich family of noble lineage.

The chronicler Juan de Castellanos tells that even in his early years, he showed an adventurous and quarrelsome character.

In his youth, Pedro de Heredia had been involved in an altercation with six men who tried to kill him in a dark alley in Madrid.

The fight had left him with a disfigured nose that required the intervention of a doctor from the Spanish Crown.

In retaliation, Heredia had hunted down three of his attackers and killed them before fleeing to the New World to evade justice, leaving behind his wife and children.

Heredia had traveled to the West Indies with his brother Alonso de Heredia and settled in Santo Domingo, the capital of the island of Hispaniola, where he eventually inherited a sugar mill and an estate in Azua Province.

Then came news of the death of the governor of Santa Marta, Rodrigo de Bastidas, and the Royal Audiencia of Santo Domingo decided to send Pedro de Vadillo as interim governor of the province and Pedro de Heredia as his lieutenant.

In 1527, Vadillo and Heredia had landed in Santa Marta with two hundred men and soon became involved in disputes with Rodrigo Alvarez Palomino, a former lieutenant of Bastidas, which were resolved when the latter was drowned in the river that bears his name.

Vadillo had served as interim governor of Santa Marta but returned to Santo Domingo to face a residencia (an administrative and judicial tribunal).

In the meantime, Heredia continues in office until 1528, gaining extensive experience in his dealings with the Indians.

He accumulates a considerable booty from exchanges of mirrors, bells and other trinkets with the natives, then returns to Santo Domingo and sails back to Spain.

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