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AMARO PARGO’S – Missing Treasure Chest

AMARO PARGO’S

Missing Treasure Chest

Overview

One of the most renowned corsairs in Spain during the Golden Age of Piracy, Amaro Pargo was seen as the Spanish equivalent of Francis Drake, dominating the route between Cádiz and the Caribbean from 1701 to 1727 attacking ships belonging to enemies of Spain.

He lived a prosperous life, he died a very rich man on October 4th 1747 and was buried with a marble headstone engraved with the family shield, under the shield, a skull on cross bones, winking with its right eye.

In his last will and testament he wrote that he had left a box in his cabin containing precious jewels, gold, silver, pearls, satins and more. The entire box’s contents were itemised in a book wrapped in parchment and marked with the letter “D”. However, the book and the box have never been found.

Portrait of Amaro Pargo in the “Christ of Humility and Patience” canvas from the Hermitage of Our Lady of the Rosary.

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The Legend

San Cristóbal de La Laguna.

Born Rodriguez Felipe in San Cristóbal de La Laguna, on the island of Tenerife (Canary Islands) on 3 May 1678 to Juan Rodriguez Felipe and Beatriz Tejera Machado, affluent property owners of San Cristóbal de La Laguna who lived in the Plaza de San Cristóbal in La Laguna, where Rodriguez Felipe would grow up before becoming Amaro Pargo.

In 1701 Rodriguez boarded a galley ship of the King of Spain named the Ave Maria, nicknamed La Chata as a second lieutenant. While on route between the Caribbean and Cadiz the ship was boarded by pirates. Amaro suggested to the captain that they stage a surrender deceiving the pirates and starting a battle which catches the pirates off-guard. The plan was a success and they emerged victorious from the battle. As a thanks, the captain gifted Amaro with his first ship with which he began his business activities as a trader and a corsair under a letter of marque from King Phillip V of Spain.

It is documented that Amaro Pargo Systematically attacked and looted enemy ships in his long 40 some year career in trading and as a corsair. His exploits were often rewarded by friendly captains and the kings of Spain. With his acumen for business as a merchant trader and his prevalent success at looting ships he was able to amass a massive amount of wealth which may well have made him the richest man in Tenerife. Some of those exploits for which he is known for are as follows:

In 1703 Amaro was captaining the Ave Maria y Las Ánimas, a frigate which was a part of the West Indies Fleet, a Spanish Treasure Fleet purposed for transporting a wide variety of goods including precious metals and gems from the America’s back to Spain.

Artwork of El Clavel.

Island of Tenerife.

In 1712 he captured an English Ship, the Saint Joseph. According to its captain, Alexander Westher, Amaro sacked the ship and seized its possessions.

By Royal Decree from Felipe V in 1719, Amaro was authorized to build a merchant ship of 58 guns in Campeche. In 1722 Amaro used the ship to approach and loot a Dutch ship, the Duyvelant before it became a part of the Navy in 1723.

In 1737 he was the owner of El Mercader de Canarias, a ship captained by John Plunket. He also had ownership shares with another merchant vessel of La Laguna, the Don Pedro Dujardin.

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The Treasure

After amassing a large fortune during his career Amaro Pargo had become one of the wealthiest people in the Canary Islands. Although he donated a large sum of his wealth to helping the people of Tenerife he still held a fortune and owned several properties and ships.

October 4th 1747 marked the passing of Amaro Pargo who died in his hometown of San Cristóbal de La Laguna on the island of Tenerife. According to records and documents regarding his funeral it was a “very solemn” event which captivated the entire community. During the process of transferring his body to the where he would be buried the funeral procession had to be stopped 8 times because of the crowds that had gathered in the streets to witness the event. When the procession finally reached its destination of the Santo Domingo de Guzmán Convent in La Laguna, Amaro was laid to rest in the family tomb where a large marble headstone was placed. The headstone was engraved with the family shield, and under it a skull winking with its right eye in front of two crossed bones.

La Siervita de Dios (Sister Mary of Jesus).

Papers of Amaro Pargo.

A hearing was held for the reading of Amaro Pargo’s will which he had written up before his passing. At the time of his death his estate was substantial and all was due to be divided up amongst the heirs. At this time Manuel de la Trinidad Rodríguez had arrived in La Laguna to demand his share of his fathers estate. However, as the illegitimate son of Amaro Pargo and Josefa María del Valdespino of Cuba, he was denied by the rest of the heirs of Amaro’s estate, rejecting his claims that he deserved any part of the estate.

During the reading of the will there was one item which could not be inherited by the heirs. An entry in the will by Amaro stated that a large carved chest was kept in his cabin containing silver, gold, pearls, jewellery, precious stones, chinese porcelain, paintings, silks and other rich fabrics all of which of great value and each itemized in a book wrapped in parchment and marked with the letter “D”. However, the book was nowhere to be found and the location of his cabin unknown. As such, the treasure chest went unclaimed and has never been found.

Main commercial routes of the Spanish Empire with the Indies (in red). Amaro Pargo used the route that crossed the Atlantic and went to the Caribbean.

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The Clues

Many treasure hunters have searched for Amaro Pargo’s lost treasure chest over the centuries since. Many speculate as to where or what his “cabin” may have been or what the “D” on the parchment may have signified.

Many who have hunted for the lost treasure of Amaro Pargo believed it to have been in his home in Machado, El Rosario which has been looted many times over the years with no success.

Casa de Amaro Pargo.

Drone Footage of Casa de Amaro Pargo.

Other treasure hunters believed the “cabin” to be a cave known as the Cave of San Mateo in the Punta del Hidalgo hills northeast of Tenerife, where it is believed Amaro Pargo and his crew used the cave to store their loot from their many ventures.

Despite all of the efforts over many years by countless treasure hunters, the treasure has never been found.

Map of the Canary Islands.

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Conclusion

The Tomb Of Amaro Pargo.

This treasure legend is one that is backed by evidence in the form of Amaro Pargo’s own will stating that it existed, it’s contents would make any treasure hunter who was able to find it very wealthy and given its elusive nature over the centuries they would certainly go down in the history books for finding the carved treasure chest of Amaro Pargo.

Unfortunately, there is very little information available that can help locate the treasure which is likely why the treasure chest has never been found. What we know is that there should be a book wrapped in parchment and a letter “D” written on it. What the “D” represents is unknown.

Perhaps this book contains the whereabouts of the treasure chest. While it is likely the book and its contents have been lost to time since Amaro Pargo’s death in 1747 we can still hold out a little hope that it may one day be found tucked away in a safe place and that it may tell us where we can find this legendary treasure or the “cabin” in which it is kept.

The Exhumation of the Tomb Of Amaro Pargo for the Assassin’s Creed IV: Black Flag by Ubisoft.

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Written By

Follow On:

ADAM L C

Director of Areas Grey

Adam is an avid treasure hunter, seeker of adventure and the creator of Areas Grey. After travelling for almost half his life and cataloguing over 100 treasure legends along the way. He decided this was simply far too much treasure for one person to chase! As a result he created Areas Grey so he could share his stories, connect with other treasure hunters and put a little more adventure in the lives of the treasure hunting community.

Adam is a Private Investigator and former Wilderness Guide with a passion for history and archaeology. With the skills, knowledge and gear, Adam is always eager to go on the next fortune seeking adventure and connect with fellow treasure hunters along the way.

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Join Robert, host of the CodeBar Live podcast and journey into the greatest treasure legends, armchair treasure hunts, codes, ciphers, puzzles, escape rooms, ARG’s, puzzle boxes & more!

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La Noche Triste – The Night of Sorrows

LA NOCHE TRISTE

The Night Of Sorrows

Overview

In 1520 a Spanish Conquistador, Hernán Cortés led an army into the Mexican capital of Tenochtitlan where they took Moctezuma II (King of Hueyi Tlatoani of the Mexica) hostage. When the Aztecs attacked and Cortés learnt he was wanted by the Governor of Cuba for insubordination, he and his men made a plan to escape in the night to the coast taking as much gold and jewels with them as they could carry.

They were spotted by Eagle warriors and an onslaught ensued which became known as La Noche Triste or “The Night of Sorrows”. Due to the weight of the treasures, many of the soldiers drowned in the causeways. These treasures are said to now lay in the dried creeks and lakes that were once Lake Texcoco around Mexico city.

The Sad Night, a painting by an unknonwn artist from second half of the 17th Century.

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The Legend

Hernán Cortés, a Spanish conquistador during the Spanish colonization of the Americas during the 1500’s had arrived in the interior of Mexico from Cuba against the orders of Velázquez, the Governor of Cuba whom he had a long history of disagreements and personal affairs. By doing this was a direct act of mutiny. Along his way to Tenochtitlán he fought and conquered many of the native settlements, converting them to Christianity. Amongst these natives was Mariana also known as La Malinche, who acting as Cortés’ translator (and future mistress) would contribute to the Spanish conquest of the Aztec empire.

Having entered this expedition without authority of Governor Velázquez of Cuba and with an act of mutiny an army of Spanish soldiers were descending on Cortés to apprehend him for his crimes. Catching word of this Cortés marched across the terrain towards the coast where he not only defeated the larger force of Spanish soldiers but successfully recruited a large number of them after telling them of the riches of Tenochititlan.

Hernán Cortés a portrait painting from the 18th century.

Image attributed to Miguel Gonzalez of Hernan Cortes scuttling his fleet off the Veracruz coast.

Cortés’ victory came at a price. During his absence from the Spanish compound the Aztecs had been sieged by other Spanish forces during the celebration of Toxcatl, an annual feast that occurred in May. This became known as The Massacre in the Great Temple which saw the slaughter of Aztec elites, nobles and priests, turning the Aztecs against the Spanish including Cortés.

In an attempt to settle the unrest Cortés ordered Moctezuma, the Aztec Tlatoan (King) who they had taken hostage previously to address his people and persuade them to stop the fighting. It is disputed what took place next, if it was the Aztecs who pelted Moctezuma with stones to death when he tried to address his people or if Moctezuma was executed by the Spanish.

The Tokugawa Shogunate saw many leaders or Shoguns throughout its 200 year reign over Japan which started with Tokugawa Leyasu in 1603…

 

# Name (Born – Died) Shogun From Shogun To
1 Tokugawa Ieyasu
(1543–1616)
1603 1605
2 Tokugawa Hidetada
(1579–1632)
1605 1623
3 Tokugawa Iemitsu
(1604–1651)
1623 1651
4 Tokugawa Ietsuna
(1641–1680)
1651 1680
5 Tokugawa Tsunayoshi
(1646–1709)
1680 1709
6 Tokugawa Ienobu
(1662–1712)
1709 1712
7 Tokugawa Ietsugu
(1709–1716)
1713 1716
8 Tokugawa Yoshimune
(1684–1751)
1716 1745
9 Tokugawa Ieshige
(1712–1761)
1745 1760
10 Tokugawa Ieharu
(1737–1786)
1760 1786
11 Tokugawa Ienari
(1773–1841)
1787 1837
12 Tokugawa Ieyoshi
(1793–1853)
1837 1853
13 Tokugawa Iesada
(1824–1858)
1853 1858
14 Tokugawa Iemochi
(1846–1866)
1858 1866
15 Tokugawa Yoshinobu
(1837–1913)
1866 1867

 

The Conquest of Tenochtitlán. Painting from the second half of the 17th century Representing the 1521 Fall of Tenochtitlan.

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The Treasure

With Moctezuma dead there was no way to settle the conflict, outnumbered and with dwindling supplies Cortés knew it was only a matter of time before they met their fate at the hands of the Aztec warriors. A plan was hatched in which messengers would be sent to meet with the Aztecs to request a ceasefire for one week to allow the Spaniards enough time to return any treasure and in exchange the Aztecs would let them leave the city peacefully. This of course was a misdirect as their real plan was to sneak out of the city at night carrying as much gold and other treasures as they could feasibly pack.

The only ways out of the city and over the causeways was by any of the 8 bridges. However, with 4 of the bridges damaged and those that weren’t heavily guarded by Aztec soldiers the Spaniards crafted a portable bridge to cross any span any sections of the water.

La Malinche and Hernán Cortés in the city of Xaltelolco, in a drawing from the late 16th-century codex History of Tlaxcala.

Tenochtitlan and islands in the Texcoco Lake by Hanns Prem.

The plan was enacted on the night of July 1st 1520, a night that would forever be known as The Night of Sorrows – La Noche Triste. Heading west out of the city while the habitants slept and under the cover of rainfall set out to reach the section of the causeway where they were led to believe would be unguarded. Along their journey to the causeway an unexpected patrol of Aztec Eagle Warriors spotted the Spaniards and raised the alarm alerting the other Aztec forces in the areas. Before they knew it their stealthy escape plan had failed and had now turned into a ferocious battle with no easy way out.

The Spaniards and allied natives fighting their way across the causeway whilst surrounded by hundreds of canoes would soon find that their greed would prove to be their unmaking as the sheer weight of it would prove too much in these conditions overburdening the soldiers and causing them to lose their footing and succumb to the treacherous waters below, taking their treasures with them.

Cortés and a few other soldiers who were on horseback managed to reach the other side of the causeway leaving those trailing behind to fend for themselves. Seeking refuge in the nearby village of Tacuba from where Cortés watched the badly wounded stragglers make their way in behind him.

Feeling his guilt from his cowardice he headed back with his horsemen to the causeway where he found Pedro de Alvardo, badly wounded. They gathered the survivors and heading north where they faced the battle of Otumba before proceeding to Tlaxcala where the siege of Tenochlhtlan initiated the end of the Aztec empire.

The Conquest of Tenochtitlán. Painting from the second half of the 17th century Representing the 1521 Fall of Tenochtitlan.

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The Clues

The emperor Moctezuma 1892. Irving, Washington; Robertson, W. M.; Davenport, Benjamin Rush

So, what happened to all that treasure? The number of casualties suffered is unclear with different sources claiming vastly different numbers. Cortés claimed that 154 Spaniards did during the expedition but Francisco López de Gómera claimed that that 450 soldiers and 4,000 allies were lost. Then, the Spanish Conquistador, Bernal Diaz del Castillo who participated in the Conquest of Mexico under Cortés claimed that as many as 860 soldiers had been killed during the expedition.

While the amount or value of the treasure lost to the causeway is unknown and highly disputed, taking the smallest number of losses claimed by Cortés and if each soldier and ally had been loaded with as much gold as they could carry and enough that they were unable to navigate the causeway then It’s easy to imagine that the sheer volume of treasure that could have been washed away or sunken into the bed of the causeway could be immense. But, is the legend real?

Over the years treasure hunters have focused on an alternative claim to what happened to the treasure, one that says the Spanish soldiers hid the gold in Texcoco Lake while fleeing the city with intentions of returning to it later. Many have pursued this version of the legend without success. Intermittently between 1912 and 1950 the lake was drained by the Mexican Government in search of the treasure but nothing was found.

Other treasure hunters have searched along the routes of the fleeing Spanish forces believing that the treasure would have been buried by the side of the route they took but again, nothing was found. With so many failed attempts to find the treasure many believe that the treasure is either somewhere else or it was found and returned by the Aztecs.

If the treasure had been hidden by the Spaniards during or after their escape then it is safe to say that when Cortés later returned to the area he would have reclaimed it, which he did not.

This is a map of the Valley of Mexico on the eve of the Spanish conquest of Mexico. It shows the major towns within the Valley, in particular, the island capital of the Aztecs, Tenochtitlan. The map also shows the five lakes that once existed within the Valley, highlighted to differentiate the brackish from the fresh waters. It was compiled from several sources, most prominently those listed below.

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Conclusion

Massive Gold Bar Unearthed in Mexico Was Aztec Treasure Looted By Cortes.

In 1981 a massive gold bar weighing 4.25lbs was discovered by a construction worker who’d been digging the foundations for the construction of a central bank in Mexico City. Analysis on the bar revealed that it was likely from Tenochtitlán due to its composition being the same as other pieces recovered by the Templo Mayor Project. Due to this analysis the bar can be dated between 1519 & 1520 when Cortés would have been making his escape during La Noche Triste. It is therefore believed that this is just one piece of a massive amount of treasure that was looted when the Spaniards fled the city.

Because of this discovery at least a part of the route that Cortés took out of the city can be confirmed narrowing the search for the rest of the treasure. However as the waters surrounding Mexico City have long since dried up, finding the treasure may need some serious digging power and permissions from the city. So whether you’re living in Mexico or just visiting there, who knows, there could be a fortune under your very feet.

Reconstruction by Alfonso Caso (Los barrios antíguos de Tenochtitlán y Tlatelolco, Memorias de la Academia Mexicana de la Historia, 15, 1956) based on map by José de Alzate, 1789. The grey area in the center is the Colonial “traza”, i. e. area inhabited by the Spanish.

The discovery of the gold bar would lead many to believe that the treasure is there and just waiting to be found.

What do you think?

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Written By

Follow On:

ADAM L C

Director of Areas Grey

Adam is an avid treasure hunter, seeker of adventure and the creator of Areas Grey. After travelling for almost half his life and cataloguing over 100 treasure legends along the way. He decided this was simply far too much treasure for one person to chase! As a result he created Areas Grey so he could share his stories, connect with other treasure hunters and put a little more adventure in the lives of the treasure hunting community.

Adam is a Private Investigator and former Wilderness Guide with a passion for history and archaeology. With the skills, knowledge and gear, Adam is always eager to go on the next fortune seeking adventure and connect with fellow treasure hunters along the way.

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CodeBar Podcast

Join Robert, host of the CodeBar Live podcast and journey into the greatest treasure legends, armchair treasure hunts, codes, ciphers, puzzles, escape rooms, ARG’s, puzzle boxes & more!

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Get Free Priority Access To Treasure News, Giveaways, And More!

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LET’S CONNECT AND FIND SOME TREASURE!

It’s always a pleasure to hear from a fellow treasure hunter, get in touch using the form below.

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