Giacomo Castiglione (Italian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Giacomo Castiglione" in Italian language version.

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archive.org

archive.org

  • (ES) Alonso de Zuazo, Cartas y memorias (1511-1539), Città del Messico, Conaculta (Consejo nacional para la cultura y las artes) – Dirección General de Publicaciones, 2000, p. 121, ISBN 9789701848555, OCLC 760474267.
    «139 Jácome de Castellón, Giacomo Castiglione, nació en Génova en 1492. Pasó a Indias, avecindándose en la ciudad de Santo Domingo, donde fue cómplice de fechorías del tesorero Pasamonte, dedicado a la trata de esclavos»

bookserver.archive.org

  • (EN) Leonard Victor Dalton, Venezuela (PDF), New York – Londra, Charles Scribner's Sons – T. Fisher Unwin, 1912, p. 70. URL consultato l'11 novembre 2022.
    «A second semi-military expedition from Hispaniola in 1521, under the leadership of Jacome Castellon, built the castle of Araya in spite of the Cubaguans, and founded the city of la gloriosa Santa Ines de Nueva Córdoba, the modern Cumaná. The fortress was reduced to ruins by an earthquake in 1530. In the meantime, orders had been received from Spain to name the already existing city on Cubagua, Nueva Cadiz, and three years later, in 1524, La Asuncion was founded on the island of Margarita, while in 1527 the inhabitants of New Cadiz received the right to elect annually an alcalde, the Emperor giving 500 pesos for rebuilding the church there. Thus we have three cities founded in Venezuela territory within the first twenty-five years of the sixteenth century.»

loc.gov

lccn.loc.gov

  • (EN) Thomas E. Weil et al., Area handbook for Venezuela, a cura di The American University, Washington, Superintendent of Documents – U.S. Government printing office, 1971, p. 33, LCCN 74-611208, OCLC 211419.
    «As Spanish mines and plantations in the Antilles used up the local Indian populations, raids on the relatively docile Indians of the coast became more frequent. To control such traffic and to protect the Indians, Spain sent Jácome Castellón, who, after subduing the Indians of the northeast area, in 1523 founded a fortified city called Nueva Córdoba, known today as Cumaná.»

rah.es

dbe.rah.es

sbn.it

opac.sbn.it

  • (ES) Giandomenico Coleti, Diccionario historico-geografico de la América meridional [Dizionario storico-geografico dell'America meridionale], a cura di Gabriel Giraldo Jaramillo, vol. 1, Bogotà, Ediciones del Banco de la República – Talleres Gráficos, 1974 [1771], p. 84, OCLC 1734765, SBN IT\ICCU\TO0\0584943.
    «Cadiz (Gades Gadira Nova).–Ciudad en la isla de Cubagua, fundada por Santiago de Castellón en 1547. Su comercio era muy activo debido a la pesca de bellas perlas que allí se hacía. Al extinguirse ésta, también la ciudad fue declinado poco a poco.»
  • (EN) Farming and fishing support Northeastern region, in Venezuela Up-to-date, vol. 3, n. 7, Washington, Ambasciata del Venezuela, giugno 1952, p. 20, ISSN 0042-3432 (WC · ACNP), OCLC 1768984, SBN IT\ICCU\UFI\0537970.
    «Attempts at colonization from Hispaniola and later from Margarita began in 1513; but the humanitarian and scientific effort to further agriculture and Christianity among the Cumanagotos promoted by Friar Bartolomé de las Casas was ruined by the interposition of soldier adventurers, against whom the local caciques revolted, and was finally dissipated in the punitive expedition of Ocampo. Jácome Castellón, who took over from Ocampo, then founded in 1523 the city of Nueva Córdoha which thrives today under the authoctonous name of Cumaná.»
  • (EN) Bruce B. Solnick, The West Indies and central America to 1898, New York, Knopf, 1970, p. 48, OCLC 963469732, SBN IT\ICCU\UBO\3210706.
    «A settlement on the island of Cubagua that dated from 1515 was destroyed by a hurricane and tidal wave in 1543 and reestablished in 1547 by Jacome Castellón, who founded the town of Nuova Cádiz»

unibo.it

acnpsearch.unibo.it

  • (EN) Farming and fishing support Northeastern region, in Venezuela Up-to-date, vol. 3, n. 7, Washington, Ambasciata del Venezuela, giugno 1952, p. 20, ISSN 0042-3432 (WC · ACNP), OCLC 1768984, SBN IT\ICCU\UFI\0537970.
    «Attempts at colonization from Hispaniola and later from Margarita began in 1513; but the humanitarian and scientific effort to further agriculture and Christianity among the Cumanagotos promoted by Friar Bartolomé de las Casas was ruined by the interposition of soldier adventurers, against whom the local caciques revolted, and was finally dissipated in the punitive expedition of Ocampo. Jácome Castellón, who took over from Ocampo, then founded in 1523 the city of Nueva Córdoha which thrives today under the authoctonous name of Cumaná.»

worldcat.org

  • (ES) Manuel Giménez Fernández, Fracaso de Vallejo y envío de Jácome de Castellón (IX-1522), in Bartolomé de las Casas. Capellán de S.M. Carlos I poblador de Cumana (1517-1523), vol. 2, Madrid, Consejo superior de investigaciones cientificas – Escuela des estudios hispanoamericanos, 1984, p. 1199, ISBN 9788400057572, OCLC 434551238.
    «Jácome o Xácome de Castellón, cuyo exacto nombre de origen debió ser Giacomo Castiglione, era genovés, nacido en 1492, hijo de Bernardo Castellón, establecido en Toledo desde fines del siglo XV, donde estaba casado con Inés Suárez, al parecer castellana ; y pasó por primera vez a las Indias en 31-V-1510, llevando como criado a Juan Rodríguez de Morales, hijo del jurado toledano Jaime de Morales ; pero debió tratarse de un breve viaje de negocios, pues en 30-IV-1512 volvió a obtener licencia para trasladarse a Indias, con la particularidad de que presentó carta de naturaleza, y hubo de nenovársela en 15-VII del mismo año al tiempo que se le concedía a su criado Alonso de Salvanés y a Andrés de Villacorta»
  • (ES) Luigi Avonto, Mercaderes en la conquista de Tierra Firme, Caracas, Fundación centro de estudios latinoamericanos Rómulo Gallegos – Istituto italiano di cultura in Venezuela, 1999, p. 10 e p. 50, ISBN 9789806197657, OCLC 44169824.
    «Giacomo Castiglione, era hijo del mercader genovés Bernardo Castellón, establecido en Toledo desde fines del siglo XV, donde estaba casado con Inés Suárez, al parecer castellana. [...] Nacido en 1492, Castellón, cuyo exacto nombre de origen era seguramente Giacomo Castiglione, era hijo del mercader genovés Bernardo Castellón, establecido en Toledo desde fines del siglo XV. Un documento del 31 de mayo de 1510, en el cual figura como "mercader genovés", vecino de Toledo, de 18 años de edad»
  • (ES) Jerónimo Martínez-Mendoza, Venezuela colonial. Investigaciones y noticias para el conocimiento de su historia, Caracas, Editorial Arte, 1965, p. 55, OCLC 325418.
    «Según Manuel Giménez Fernández, Castellón era hijo del genovés Bernardo Castiglione, casado con la castellana Inés Suárez, establecido en Toledo a fines del siglo XV. Jácome nació en 1492 y su nombre debió ser originalmente Giacomo Castiglione. Pasó a Indias en 1510»
  • (ES) Alonso de Zuazo, Cartas y memorias (1511-1539), Città del Messico, Conaculta (Consejo nacional para la cultura y las artes) – Dirección General de Publicaciones, 2000, p. 121, ISBN 9789701848555, OCLC 760474267.
    «139 Jácome de Castellón, Giacomo Castiglione, nació en Génova en 1492. Pasó a Indias, avecindándose en la ciudad de Santo Domingo, donde fue cómplice de fechorías del tesorero Pasamonte, dedicado a la trata de esclavos»
  • Quaderni, San Paolo del Brasile, Istituto italiano di cultura, 1993, p. 176, OCLC 29417884.
    «20 II genovese Giacomo Castiglione (Jácome Castellón nei documenti spagnoli), figlio di Bernardo, stabilitosi a Toledo verso la fine del XV sec., era nato nel 1492. Nel 1510 si era recato per la prima volta nelle Indie, probabilmente in viaggio d'affari per conto del mercante genovese di Siviglia Stefano Centurione, tornandovi poi nel 1512»
  • (ES) Giandomenico Coleti, Diccionario historico-geografico de la América meridional [Dizionario storico-geografico dell'America meridionale], a cura di Gabriel Giraldo Jaramillo, vol. 1, Bogotà, Ediciones del Banco de la República – Talleres Gráficos, 1974 [1771], p. 84, OCLC 1734765, SBN IT\ICCU\TO0\0584943.
    «Cadiz (Gades Gadira Nova).–Ciudad en la isla de Cubagua, fundada por Santiago de Castellón en 1547. Su comercio era muy activo debido a la pesca de bellas perlas que allí se hacía. Al extinguirse ésta, también la ciudad fue declinado poco a poco.»
  • La cruzada del océano, p. ?. (ES) José Javier Esparza, La cruzada del océano. La gran aventura de la conquista de América, Madrid, La Esfera de los Libros, 2015, ISBN 9788490602638, OCLC 908934208.
  • (EN) James D. Henderson, Helen Delpar e Maurice Philip Brungardt, A reference guide to Latin American history, a cura di Richard N. Weldon, Armonk, New York – Londra, M. E. Sharpe, 2000, p. 59, ISBN 1-56324-744-5, OCLC 875918219.
    «1520 Native Americans and Spanish clashed on the Venezuelan coast. Reacting against Spanish slaving expeditions and forced labor in the pearl fisheries of Cubagua, the native Americans rebelled against the Spanish. The punitive expedition of Jácome Castellón followed in retaliation, and he began building a fort at the future site of Cumaná. May 19. The Dominican priest Bartolomé de las Casas, defender of the rights of native Americans, was licensed to colonize Venezuela. Obligated to establish three towns with forty residents each, las Casas failed in this and in his attempt to convert the natives. His order's mission of Chichirivichi was destroyed by the natives in October.»
  • (EN) Thomas E. Weil et al., Area handbook for Venezuela, a cura di The American University, Washington, Superintendent of Documents – U.S. Government printing office, 1971, p. 33, LCCN 74-611208, OCLC 211419.
    «As Spanish mines and plantations in the Antilles used up the local Indian populations, raids on the relatively docile Indians of the coast became more frequent. To control such traffic and to protect the Indians, Spain sent Jácome Castellón, who, after subduing the Indians of the northeast area, in 1523 founded a fortified city called Nueva Córdoba, known today as Cumaná.»
  • (EN) Farming and fishing support Northeastern region, in Venezuela Up-to-date, vol. 3, n. 7, Washington, Ambasciata del Venezuela, giugno 1952, p. 20, ISSN 0042-3432 (WC · ACNP), OCLC 1768984, SBN IT\ICCU\UFI\0537970.
    «Attempts at colonization from Hispaniola and later from Margarita began in 1513; but the humanitarian and scientific effort to further agriculture and Christianity among the Cumanagotos promoted by Friar Bartolomé de las Casas was ruined by the interposition of soldier adventurers, against whom the local caciques revolted, and was finally dissipated in the punitive expedition of Ocampo. Jácome Castellón, who took over from Ocampo, then founded in 1523 the city of Nueva Córdoha which thrives today under the authoctonous name of Cumaná.»
  • (EN) Bruce B. Solnick, The West Indies and central America to 1898, New York, Knopf, 1970, p. 48, OCLC 963469732, SBN IT\ICCU\UBO\3210706.
    «A settlement on the island of Cubagua that dated from 1515 was destroyed by a hurricane and tidal wave in 1543 and reestablished in 1547 by Jacome Castellón, who founded the town of Nuova Cádiz»