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Juan Ponce de León y Loayza

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In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Ponce de León and the second
or maternal family name is Loayza.
Juan Ponce de León y Loayza
Born Juan Ponce de León y Loayza
San Juan, Puerto Rico, Viceroyalty of New Spain
Nationality Spanish (Puerto Rican)
Citizenship Spain
Known for City of Ponce named after him
Spouse Doña Ana de Salamanca[1]
Parent(s) Juan Ponce de León II
Doña Isabel de Loayza
Juan Ponce de León y Loayza[a] (born San Juan, Puerto Rico)[2] was the son of Juan
Ponce de León II (born Juan Troche-Ponce de León), the interim Spanish governor of
Puerto Rico in 1579. His mother was Isabel de Loayza born in Villa Talavera de la
Reina, Toledo, Spain, the daughter of Governor Iñigo López de Cervantes y Loayza.
[3][4] The city of Ponce, Puerto Rico, was named after Juan Ponce de León y Loayza.

Contents
1 Noble lineage
2 Background
3 Political leadership
4 Aftermath
5 Ancestors
6 See also
7 Notes
8 References
Noble lineage
Juan Ponce de León y Loayza's father, Juan Ponce de León II, was the son of lady
Juana Ponce de León, one of three daughters born of Juan Ponce de León, the Spanish
conquistador, and his wife Leonora Ponce de León (their other three children were
Isabel, Maria, and Luis).[5] Thus, Juan Ponce de León y Loayza was the great-
grandson of the Spanish conquistador and first governor of Puerto Rico, Juan Ponce
de León.

Background

Juan Ponce de León II, the first native Puerto Rican governor of Puerto Rico, was
the father of Juan Ponce de León y Loayza
In his trip from Spain to Puerto Rico in August 1577, Bishop Diego de Salamanca,
not finding a commercial ship heading to Puerto Rico at the time, boarded a Spanish
warship headed to Mexico, which dropped him off in the southern coast of Puerto
Rico at Guanica. He then rode by horse through the interior of the Island in his
way to his post in San Juan.[6]

While traveling to San Juan, he took notice that the southern region was not being
attended to by the Spanish leaders in San Juan, and while in San Juan, made efforts
to have farmers sent to the South to settle there and work the land.[7] Having
married Doña Ana de Salamanca,[8] the niece of Bishop Diego de Salamanca, Juan
Ponce de León y Loayza learned of Diego's efforts and became interested in
colonizing the area, thus becoming one of the first settlers on the southern shores
of Puerto Rico.[9]

The first Spanish settlement was near Rio Jacaguas,[10] but being too vulnerable to
indigenous peoples attacks at that location,[11] the colony moved further west and
inland to the banks of Rio Portugues,[12] near the center of the current location
of the city that bears his name.[13][14]

Political leadership

The city of Ponce was named after Juan Ponce de León y Loayza, the great-grandson
of Spanish conquistador Juan Ponce de León
In 1670, a small chapel was built in the area where the actual plaza is now
located. Ponce de León y Loaiza was the town's most enthusiastic colonizer; it was
his main interest to have this area settled and incorporated into a town. These
were the humble beginnings of what would become a very important and aristocratic
city.[15] While a resident there, and as son of interim governor of Puerto Rico,
Juan Ponce de León y Loayza worked to have the Queen of Spain issue a permit to
formalize the founding of a hamlet there. The hamlet had developed around the small
chapel, raised and dedicated in honor of Our Lady of Guadalupe.

On 17 September 1692, the King of Spain Carlos II issued a Cédula Real (Royal
Permit) converting the chapel into a parish, and in so doing officially recognized
the small settlement as a hamlet as was Spanish custom.[16] It is believed that
Juan Ponce de León y Loayza himself was instrumental in obtaining the royal permit
to formalize the founding of the hamlet.[17]

Aftermath
In 1848, many years after Juan Ponce de León y Loayza's death, the hamlet was
declared a villa (Villa de Ponce) by Royal Decree. In 1877, it obtained its city
charter, paving the way to becoming the modern-day city of Ponce.

Ancestors
Ancestors of Juan Ponce de León y Loayza
See also
flag Puerto Rico portal
List of Puerto Ricans
Notes
According to historian Francisco Lluch Mora, his full name was Juan Troche Ponce
de León de Loaíza y Guzmán. See Francisco Lluch Mora, Orígenes Y Fundación De Ponce
Y Otras Noticias Relativas a Su Desarrollo Urbano, Demográfico Y Cultural (Siglos
XVI-XIX), p. 26.
References
Ponce: Notas para su historia. Mariano Vidal Armstrong. Oficina Estatal de
Conservacion Historica. San Juan, Puerto Rico. 1989. page 10. Accessed 19 February
2018.
Passengers to Puerto Rico – 1567 – 1577. Miguel Hernández. Puerto Rico Hispanic
Genealogical Society. (Note that the young Ponce de León traveled from Spain to
Puerto Rico on 7 June 1572 {Record #33}).
Historia de Puerto Rico. Salvador Brau. (New York: D. Appleton & Co.) 1917.
Copyright, 1904. Page 94.
Derecho de Sucesiones: La Sucesión Intestada. Efraín González Tejera. University
of Puerto Rico Press. 2000. Page 368.
Biography of Juan Ponce de Leon
Historia de Puerto Rico. Salvador Brau. 1904. New York: D. Appleton & Co.
Published: 1917. page 94.
Repertorio Historico de Puerto Rico. "Puerto Rico at the Dawn of the Modern Age:
Books and Pamphlets, ca. 1830–1930." American Memory, Library of Congress.
Washington, DC, 1999. (From: Año I, NÚM. 1. Repertorio Historico de Puerto Rico.
Director Propietario: Cayetano Coll y Toste. Date: November 1896. Publisher:
Sucesion de J. J. Acosta. Fortaleza 21, San Juan, Puerto Rico. 1896.)][permanent
dead link]
Ana de Salamanca arrived from Spain
The Catholic Historical Review. Vol. 4. American Catholic Historical Association.
Page 350.
Yerba Bruja (In Spanish) Retrieved 17 January 2010.
Ponce Webcindario. (In Spanish). Retrieved 17 January 2010.
Ponce. Francisco Suarez. Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico. Ponce,
Puerto Rico. 2009.] Archived 14 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 17
January 2010.
Ponce...La Perla del Sur. Projecto Salon Hogar. (In Spanish)] Archived 21 February
2009 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 17 January 2010.
Ponce en 1831. Sylvia Zavala Trías. (In Spanish) Antepasados Esclavos. Retrieved
17 January 2010.
Spain in Puerto Rico: The Early Settlements. Archived 12 June 2011 at the Wayback
Machine Doris M. Vazquez. Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute. New Haven,
Connecticut, USA.
Puerto Rico En Breve: Nuestra Trayectoria Historica y Cultural.
Welcome to Puerto Rico
Categories: Royal Governors of Puerto Rico16th-century Spanish peoplePuerto Rican
people of Spanish descentPoliticians from PonceSpanish West Indies

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