20:
70:
into the bay. Despite claiming to be in distress and in need of provisions the
Spanish refused to give provisions given that the crews seemed to be in healthy condition and Narborough's true intentions being unclear to them. Narborough then unexpectedly made the decision to leave, and his ship departed Corral Bay on 31 December. The four English hostages and a man known as
69:
on late
December 1670. There the expedition established contact with the Spanish garrison whose commanders were highly suspicious of Narborough's intentions despite England being at peace with Spain. The Spanish demanded and received four English hostages in exchange for allowing Narborough's ship
78:
where they were subject to lengthy interrogations, as the
Spanish struggled to find out the goal of Narborough's expedition. Narborough returned home in June 1671 without achieving his original purpose. A narrative of the expedition was published at London in 1694 under the title
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thought that the fort of Aguada del Inglés, the same place where
Narborough had approached the coast, would be the landing place for an enemy attack on the fort system. For this purpose in Olaguer Feliú plans this fort had to concentrate most of the troops in case of war.
154:
The place Corral Bay that
Narborough approached became known as Aguada del Inglés (lit. "water supply of the English"). A fort was built there in the late 18th century to avoid any landing by enemies of Spain. It was built following the 1779 plans of
142:. This proposal was turned down by the Spanish Council d'Etat. High costs, the difficulties of navigating the strait and a presumed low ability of the fortifications to prevent passage made the council decide against the proposal. Later the
135:" (English) bases in the far south caused the Spanish authorities concern. The expedition of Antonio de Vea could find nothing to verify an English presence. The Spanish eventually concluded that Talcapillán was lying and dismissed him.
301:
337:[Interactions between Spaniards of Chiloé and Chonos in the XVII and XVII centuries: Pedro and Francisco Delco, Ignacio and Cristóbal Talcapillán and Martín Olleta]
104:
215:"La expedición de John Narborough a Chile, 1670: Defensa de Valdivia, rumeros de indios, informaciones de los prisioneros y la creencia en la Ciudad de los Césares"
217:[John Narborough expedition to Chile, 1670: Defense of Valdivia, indian rumours, information on prisoners, and the belief in the City of the Césares].
214:
99:. The information was probably complemented by rumours of naval activities spread by indigenous peoples of Patagonia, with whom the Spanish had contact in
335:"Interacciones entre españoles de Chiloé y Chonos en los siglos XVII y XVIII: Pedro y Francisco Delco, Ignacio y Cristóbal Talcapillán y Martín Olleta"
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expeditions on the three consecutive summers of 1674–1676, seeking news of any
English presence. The expedition of Jerónimo Diez de Mendoza brought to
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468:
316:
159:
27:
By the late 1660s, the
English rulers had considered invading Spanish-ruled Chile for several years. In 1655, Simón de Casseres proposed to
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disembarked
Patriot troops in Aguada del Inglés leading to the fall of the whole fort system. This validated the plan of Olaguer Feliú.
175:
478:
473:
265:
429:
Angulo, S.E. (1997). "La
Artillería y los Artilleros en Chile. Valdivia y Chiloé como antemural del Pacífico".
92:
392:
Angulo, S. E. (1997). "La
Artillería y los Artilleros en Chile. Valdivia y Chiloé como antemural del Pacífico".
23:
Route of Narborough's expedition to Valdivia. Modern political boundaries between Chile and Argentina are shown.
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Another response to the expedition of Narborough was Fajardo y Álvarez de Toledo's proposal to fortify the
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The Count of Molina de Herrera, Antonio de Tovar y Paz, learnt of Narborough's expedition while active as
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258:"Las exploraciones inglesas en el estrecho de Magallanes. El mapa manuscrito de John Narborough"
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62:. Having made landings at various points the expedition finally arrived to the
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An Account of several late Voyages and Discoveries to the South and North
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31:
a plan to take over Chile with only four ships and a thousand men.
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59:
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379:(in Spanish). Santiago: Andrés Bello. pp. 122–123.
410:
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146:ratified these conclusions ending the discussion.
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in October of the following year. In 1670 he visited
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58:in eastern Patagonia and claimed the territory for
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74:were left behind and ended up in the prisons of
42:was chosen to conduct a secretive voyage in the
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16:John Narborough's expedition to Chile in 1670
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305:(in Spanish). Valparaíso. pp. 525–537.
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315:: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
302:Anuario Hidrográfico de la Marina de Chile
420:
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323:
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209:
188:
103:. In response, the Spanish organized the
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18:
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469:1670 in the Captaincy General of Chile
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50:on 26 September 1669, and entered the
431:Militaria: revista de cultura militar
394:Militaria: revista de cultura militar
266:Anales del Instituto de la Patagonia
149:
376:Historia del Estrecho de Magallanes
86:
13:
294:"Expedición de Bartolomé Gallardo"
14:
490:
234:10.4067/S0718-22442017000200011
285:
36:Anglo-Spanish War of 1662–1668
1:
454:. Santiago de Chile: Zig Zag.
181:
292:Gallardo, Bartolomé (1886).
7:
10:
495:
479:History of Los Ríos Region
256:; Moore, David M. (1982).
105:Jerónimo Diez de Mendoza
474:England–Spain relations
331:Urbina Carrasco, Ximena
211:Urbina C., María Ximena
24:
144:Council of the Indies
125:Cristóbal Talcapillán
22:
164:Manuel Olaguer Feliú
162:. Military engineer
131:whose claims about "
452:La toma de Valdivia
172:Capture of Valdivia
97:Court of St James's
52:Straits of Magellan
46:. He set sail from
254:Martinic B., Mateo
140:Strait of Magellan
109:Bartolomé Gallardo
25:
433:, 10, pp. 237-264
396:, 10, pp. 237-264
157:military engineer
150:Aguada del Inglés
64:heavily fortified
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87:Spanish response
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176:Thomas Cochrane
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72:Carlos Enriques
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29:Oliver Cromwell
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347:(in Spanish).
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113:Antonio de Vea
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353:. Retrieved
351:(1): 103–114
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275:. Retrieved
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227:(2): 11–36.
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160:Antonio Duce
153:
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33:
26:
415:Guarda 1970
355:21 December
277:21 December
170:During the
127:, a native
56:Port Desire
463:Categories
220:Magallania
182:References
133:Morohuinca
93:Ambassador
67:Corral Bay
44:South Seas
34:After the
311:cite book
450:(1970).
373:(1977).
344:Chungara
333:(2016).
213:(2017).
174:in 1820
48:Deptford
95:to the
60:England
273:: 7–20
121:Chiloé
117:Chacao
101:Chiloé
339:(PDF)
297:(PDF)
261:(PDF)
129:Chono
357:2019
317:link
279:2019
111:and
76:Lima
229:doi
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309:{{
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