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Gerónimo de Aguilar

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Gerónimo de Aguilar (1489-1531) was a Franciscan friar born in Seville. Aguilar was later involved with the 1519 Spanish conquest of Mexico, and with La Malinche. In 1511 Aguilar left Panama on a caravel sailing to Santo Domingo, accompanying the procurator Juan de Valdivia. They were shipwrecked near the Yucatán Peninsula due to bad weather, but Aguilar, along with a sailor from Palos, in Spain, Gonzalo... Read enhanced Wikipedia article
Wikipedia Articles: results 1 - 10 of 16
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    Gerónimo de Aguilar

    Jeronimo de Aguilar (1489-1531) was a Franciscan friar born in Seville. Aguilar was later involved with the 1519 Spanish conquest of Mexico, and with La Malinche.
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    Aguilar

    Gerónimo de Aguilar (1489–1531?), 16th century Spanish conquistador and translator for Hernán Cortés
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    Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire

    He would speak to Gerónimo de Aguilar in Spanish who would then translate into Mayan for Malinche.
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    La Malinche

    Gerónimo de Aguilar
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    Spanish conquest of Yucatán

    Over the succeeding years their numbers dwindled further as others were lost to disease or exhaustion, until only two were left– Gerónimo de Aguilar who had escaped his former captor and found refuge with another Maya ruler, and Gonzalo Guerrero who had won some prestige among the Maya for his bravery and had now the standing of a ranking warrior and noble.
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    Geronimo (disambiguation)

    Gerónimo de Aguilar, a Franciscan friar involved in the Spanish conquest of Mexico.
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    Pivot language

    For example, when Hernán Cortés communicated with Mesoamerican Indians, he would talk Spanish to Gerónimo de Aguilar who would talk Mayan to Malintzin who would talk Nahuatl to the locals.
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    Anita Mason

    The novel deals with Cortés’ conquest of Mexico in 1521, and is partly narrated by Cortes’ interpreter, a Spaniard named Gerónimo de Aguilar, who had been shipwrecked in the area a decade earlier.
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    Fall of Tenochtitlan

    The captive woman Malinalli Tenépal, also known as La Malinche or Doña Marina, translated from Nahuatl to Maya chontal; the Spaniard Gerónimo de Aguilar translated from Maya chontal to Spanish.
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    Aztec (book)

    La Malinche (rendered Cé-Malinali, "One Grass" in Nahuatl, and later self-proclaimed "Lady Grass", Malintzin), the shipwrecked Gerónimo de Aguilar and Gonzalo Guerrero, as well as Hernán Cortés himself and many of his retinue.
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Gerónimo de Aguilar