A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 3 - By Robert Kerr












































































































 -  By
continual complaints and constantly importuning the favourites at court,
it was at length determined to send a judge to - Page 291
A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 3 - By Robert Kerr - Page 291 of 789 - First - Home

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By Continual Complaints And Constantly Importuning The Favourites At Court, It Was At Length Determined To Send A Judge To

Hispaniola to inquire into all these affairs; who was authorized, if he found the admiral guilty of what had been

Laid to his charge, to send him home to Spain and to remain himself as governor of the colony. The person chosen for this purpose was Francis de Bovadilla, a poor knight of the order of Calatrava, who besides his full and ample commission was supplied with blank directed letters subscribed by their majesties, which he was empowered to direct to such persons as he might think fit in Hispaniola, commanding them to be aiding and assisting to him in the discharge of his commission.

Thus furnished with ample powers, Bovadilla arrived at St Domingo in the latter end of August 1500, at which time the admiral happened to be at the Conception settling the affairs of that province, in which his brother had been assaulted by the rebels, and where the Indians were more numerous and of quicker capacity and more enlarged understandings than in any other part of the island.

Finding no person at his arrival who could in any way keep him in awe, Bovadilla immediately took possession of the admirals palace, and appropriated every thing he found there to his own use as if it had fallen to him by inheritance. He gathered together all whom he could find who had been in rebellion, and many others who hated the admiral and his brothers, and immediately declared himself governor of the colony; and to secure the affections of the people, he proclaimed a general freedom for twenty years. He then summoned the admiral to appear before him without delay, as necessary for their majesties service; and to justify this measure he sent on the seventh of September the royal letter, of which the following is the substance, by F. John de la Sera, to the admiral.

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