[1277] Magellan and his companions seem to have given the latter name, according to Pigafetta, and Galvano and others soon adopted the name. (Cf. Bancroft, Central America, vol. i. pp. 135, 136, 373; and the present volume, ante, p. 196).
[1278] Brevoort (Verrazano, p. 80) suspects that the Vopellio map of 1556 represents the geographical views of Cortés at this time. Mr. Brevoort has a copy of this rare map. See ante, p. 436, for fac-simile.
[1279] Cf. collation of references in Bancroft, No. Mexican States, i. 18; Northwest Coast, i. 13.
[1280] Pacheco, Coleccion de documentos inéditos, xxiii. 366.
[1281] Bancroft, Mexico, ii. 258.
[1282] These are given in Navarrete, v. 442. Cf. other references in Bancroft, Mexico, ii. 258, where his statements are at variance with those in his Central America, i. 143.
[1283] Documentos inéditos, xiv. 65, where a report describes this preliminary expedition.
[1284] In 1524 Francisco Cortés in his expedition to the Jalisco coast heard from the natives of a wooden house stranded there many years earlier, which may possibly refer to an early Portuguese voyage. H. H. Bancroft, North Mexican States, i. 15.
[1285] Prescott, Ferdinand and Isabella, ii. 180, and references.
[1286] Cf. Bancroft, North Mexican States, vol. i. chap. iii., on this voyage, with full references.