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Encyclopedia > First Battle of Acentejo

The First Battle of Acentejo was a battle that took place on the island of Tenerife between the Guanches and an alliance of Spaniards, other Europeans, associated natives (mostly from other islands), on May 31, 1494, during the Spanish conquest of this island. It resulted in a victory for the Guanches of Tenerife. Tenerife (English also Teneriffe), a Spanish island, is the largest of the seven Canary Islands in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Africa. ... Guanches (also: Guanchis or Guanchos) (native Guanchinet; Guan=person, Chinet=Teneriffe, man of Teneriffe, corrupted, according to Núñez de la Peña, by Spaniards into Guanchos), were the aboriginal inhabitants of the Canary Islands. ... May 31 is the 151st day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (152nd in leap years), with 214 days remaining, as the last day of May. ... Events January 25 - Alfonso II becomes King of Naples. ...


The Spaniards, under the command of Adelantado ("military governor") Alonso Fernández de Lugo, had committed the terrible blunder of walking blindly into the ravine known as Acentejo. Despite their technological superiority—the Spaniards, protected with armor and shields, fought with blunderbusses and cannon—the Guanches, fighting naked, attacked them from the slopes with stones and spears of hardened wood (known as a banot). Unable to manuever with their horses, due to the fact that these slopes were covered in very thick, arboreal brush, the Guanches, who numbered some 300 men, under the leadership of the warrior Tinguaro, made use of their mobility and intimate knowledge of the terrain to gain the upper hand.


It is believed that four out of five Spanish soldiers fell in this battle, leaving a 1,000 dead on the battlefield. The defeat was not total, however. Fernández de Lugo, though wounded, was able to escape with his life (by exchanging the red cape of an Adelantado for that of a common soldier), and his surviving forces (some 200 men) were harried until he was forced to re-embark and sail back to Gran Canaria. The Adelantado was able to return and defeat the native forces at the Second Battle of Acentejo. Gran Canaria is one of the Canary Islands, an archipelago located in the Atlantic Ocean 210 km from the northwest coast of Africa and belonging to Spain. ...


A town built on the site where the battle occurred is called La Matanza ("the slaughter") de Acentejo, which also contains a large mural commemorating the victory.


References

Batalla de Acentejo (http://personal.telefonica.terra.es/web/mleal/articles/canarias/44.htm)


510 Aniversario de la Batalla de Acentejo: La Derrota de un Imperio (http://elguanche.net/acentejo510.htm)


  Results from FactBites:
 
sociology - Second Battle of Acentejo (309 words)
The Second Battle of Acentejo was a battle that took place on December 25, 1495, between the invading Spanish forces and the natives of the island of Tenerife, known as Guanches.
Whereas in the First Battle of Acentejo the Guanches had been favored by their knowledge of the mountainous terrain, in this second engagement, the native forces found themselves at a disadvantage on the plain of Aguere.
The Second Battle of Acentejo was certainly not the last battle on Tenerife but certainly the most decisive, resulting in the ultimate incorporation of the island into the Crown of Castile and the subjugation of the aborigines.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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