Cíbola

E422711

Cíbola is the legendary “Seven Cities of Gold” sought by Spanish explorers in the 16th century in what is now the American Southwest.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Cíbola canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf legend
legendary city
mythical place
alsoKnownAs Seven Cities of Gold NERFINISHED
associatedLegendType lost city legend
treasure legend
associatedWith Arizona (legendary location) NERFINISHED
New Mexico (legendary location) NERFINISHED
connectedWith Zuni pueblos (as possible historical referent) NERFINISHED
country legendary location in the region of the present-day United States
culture Native American lore
Spanish colonial lore
describedAs Seven fabulously wealthy cities
cities rich in gold and precious metals
firstMajorExpedition Coronado expedition (1540–1542) NERFINISHED
hasInterpretation misinterpretation or exaggeration of indigenous settlements
symbol of unattainable wealth
hasNumber seven cities (in legend)
hasTheme disappointment and disillusionment
exploration of unknown lands
quest for wealth
influenced European perceptions of North American interior wealth
Spanish colonial policy in northern New Spain
influencedBy earlier European myths of rich lands in the West
inspired subsequent treasure-hunting narratives in the American Southwest
languageOfName Spanish
locatedIn American Southwest (legendary) NERFINISHED
motivationFor Spanish expeditions in the American Southwest
partOf Spanish Golden Age exploration myths
regionType semi-arid North American interior (legendary setting)
relatedTo El Dorado NERFINISHED
Quivira NERFINISHED
Seven Cities of Antillia NERFINISHED
reportedBy Fray Marcos de Niza in accounts to Spanish authorities NERFINISHED
representedIn maps of early modern cartographers as a vague northern region
soughtBy Francisco Vázquez de Coronado NERFINISHED
Fray Marcos de Niza NERFINISHED
Spanish explorers
conquistadors
status mythical, not historically verified as real cities of gold
subjectOf Spanish chronicles of the 16th century
archaeological and historical speculation
later American frontier literature
symbolizes European greed and ambition in the New World
the dangers of relying on secondhand reports
timePeriod 16th century Spanish exploration

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.