(d) Francisco de Fuentes, in the list of those who shared the ransom.
(e) Pedro de Ayala. Diego de Mora, afterwards settled at Truxillo on the coast of Peru. The president, Gasca made him a captain of cavalry, and he was subsequently corregidor of Lima.
(g) Francisco Moscoso.
(h) Hernando de Haro, taken prisoner by the Ynca Titu Atauchi, but treated kindly.
(i) Pedro de Mendoza, in the list of those who shared the ransom.
(j) Juan de Rada, a stanch follower of Almagro. He accompanied his chief on his expedition to Chili, and avenged his death by the assassination of Pizarro.
(k) Alonzo de Avila.
(l) Blas de Atienza was the second man who ever embarked on the Pacific, when he served under Vasco Nuñez de Balbóa in 1513. He settled at Truxillo; and his daughter Inez accompanied Pedro de Ursua in 1560 in his ill-fated expedition to discover El Dorado. His son Blas was a friar, who published a book called Relacion de los Religiosos, at Lima, in 1617.
[Cf. also note in Markham’s Reports on the Discovery of Peru, p. 104.—Ed.]
[1478] There is no record, however, that a special designation for the marquisate was ever granted to Pizarro. It is therefore an error to call him Marquis of Atabillos, as he is sometimes designated. He signed himself simply the Marquis Pizarro.