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  1. It may quite honestly be called the first American chapter in this story, since Saavedra accomplished the first voyage across the Pacific Ocean that was planned on, and made from, American shores, in American- built ships, manned with crews recruited in the New World and provisioned from an American base, and that was undertaken, partly at ...

  2. It may quite honestly be called the first American chapter in this story, since Saavedra accomplished the first voyage across the Pacific Ocean that was planned on, and made from, American shores, in American- built ships, manned with crews recruited in the New World and provisioned from an American base, and that was undertaken, partly at ...

  3. Posted By Todoavante on 12 de mayo de 2011 . Expedición de don Álvaro de Saavedra Cerón 1527 – 1536. Hernán Cortes al alcanzar el Pacífico ordenó la construcción de unos bergantines del porte de unas veinte toneladas, con los que se fue recorriendo las costas, tanto en el seno mejicano, entre el Pánuco y la Florida, así como por el Oeste, desde Zacátula a Panamá, estando los ...

  4. Four survivors were rescued in 1528 by Álvaro de Saavedra Cerón's Spanish expedition coming from Mexico. The last galleon, Santa Maria de la Victoria, was the only ship to reach the Spice Islands, landing in September 1526. Survivors. Loaísa himself died on July 30, 1526, Elcano a few days later, and Alonso de Salazar three weeks after that.

  5. In 1527, Hernán Cortés prepared a new expedition to search for the missing fleet of the Loaísa expedition and commissioned his cousin Álvaro to command the n...

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  7. Álvaro de Saavedra Cerón (often written as Álvaro de Saavedra) (d. 1529) was one of the Spanish explorers in the Pacific Ocean. The exact date and place of his birth are unknown, but he was born in the late 15th century or early 16th century in Spain. Hernán Cortés was his relative, whom he accompanied to Mexico (New Spain) in 1526.