India Catalina
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Catalina | |
---|---|
Born | c. 1495 |
Died | unknown |
Occupation | Translator/Interpreter |
Known for | Translator for Pedro de Heredia during the Spanish conquest of the Chibchan Nations. |
Spouse | Alonso Montañez |
India Catalina (c. 1495 – ?) was an indigenous woman (almost certainly Calamari) from the Colombian Atlantic coast, who accompanied Pedro de Heredia and played a role in the Spanish conquest of Colombia, acting as interpreter and intermediary.
History
Catalina was abducted in 1509 by Spanish conqueror Diego de Nicuesa from an indigenous settlement known as Zamba o Galerazamba, where she was the daughter of the local chief. She was sent to Santo Domingo, where she learned the Spanish language and adopted the Catholic religion. Pedro de Heredia required her to serve as an interpreter to the Native Americans. Afterwards, she married Alonso Montañez, Pedro de Heredia's nephew.[citation needed]
The events of the Spanish conquest in the area of modern Cartagena ended with the complete annihilation of the Calamari people, which happened with her help.[citation needed]
The name of Catalina India appeared in a letter sent for Pedro de Heredia to King Carlos V in 1533. No one knew what her real name was because he[clarification needed] began calling her 'Catalina' from 1509 when the Diego de Nicuesa expedition kidnapped and took her to Santo Domingo where was educated as a Spaniard. From that time she would use Spanish dress only but was still considered a slave.
When they returned to Cartagena twenty years after, she was changed.[clarification needed] She made the first contact with Corinche Indians after her arrival with Heredia, on the 14 January 1533. She translated for Heredia in the pacification of the many Indian towns as turbacos that he eliminated in combat to Juan de La Cosa many years ago.[clarification needed]
Monument
The monument to India Catalina was sculpted by Eladio Gil Zambrana and presented to the public in 1974. Small scale replicas are used in the Cartagena Film Festival awards.
See also
References
- Lecturas: Fin de Semana El Tiempo newspaper, pag. 2, Vicente Martinez Emilliani, September 9, 2006
- Dr. Luis Fernando Villanueva
- BIOGRAFÍAS DE HOMBRES ILUSTRES Ó NOTABLES, Relativas á la época del Descubrimiento, Conquista y Colonización de la parte de América denominada actualmente Estados Unidos de Colombia. Doña Soledad Acosta De Samper, 1883
External links
- 1490s births
- 1529 deaths
- People from Bolívar Department
- Indigenous peoples in Colombia
- History of Colombia
- Women in 16th-century warfare
- Spanish colonization of the Americas
- Monuments and memorials in Colombia
- Colombian women
- Converts to Roman Catholicism
- Converts to Roman Catholicism from pagan religions
- Women in war in Colombia
- Buildings and structures in Cartagena, Colombia
- Monuments of Colombia
- Kidnapped Colombian people