Conquest That Never Was

Regular price €29.99
Quantity:
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days
Shipping & Delivery
A01=W. George Lovell
Andean sierra
Author_W. George Lovell
Bahia de Caraquez
Carihuairazo
Category=NHK
Chimborazo
Diego de Almagro
Ecuador
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Guatemala
Hernando Cortes
impact of colonialism on Indigenous peoples of the Americas
Indigenous Mayas
Islas de la Especieria
Iztapa
Manabi coast
Moluccas
Pedro de Alvarado
Peru
Quito
Sebastian de Belalcazar
Spanish colonial enterprise
Spanish conquistadors
Spice Islands

Product details

  • ISBN 9780271101422
  • Weight: 223g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 05 May 2026
  • Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
Secure checkout Fast Shipping Easy returns

The Conquest That Never Was uncovers one of the most ambitious but disastrous campaigns of the early colonial period. Pedro de Alvarado—best known as Cortés’s lieutenant in Mexico and later as the conqueror of Guatemala—sought to extend his fame and fortune by seizing Quito in the northern Inca Empire. Instead, his massive fleet and army met ruin in the high Andes, leaving Alvarado humiliated and forcing him to transfer his forces to rival conquistadors.

This volume traces Alvarado’s career after Guatemala, focusing on the ill-fated expedition of 1534 as well as his unrealized license to conquer the Spice Islands, his involvement in the Spanish conquest of Ecuador, and his eventual death in battle in Mexico. Drawing on transatlantic correspondence, legal testimony, Spanish chronicles, and a Maya-authored history, Lovell reconstructs both the trajectory of Alvarado’s campaigns and the mind of a conquistador driven by greed and glory. Vivid descriptions carry readers from Guatemala’s rainforests to the snowbound passes of the Andes, revealing how fragile imperial ambitions could be in practice.

By documenting Alvarado’s failed bid to contest Pizarro in Peru, The Conquest That Never Was complicates the triumphalist narrative of Spanish expansion. It illuminates the contradictions, rivalries, and violence at the heart of the colonial project, while foregrounding Indigenous labor and suffering in conquest. Designed for upper-level undergraduate and graduate courses, the book also offers scholars of Latin American history, historical geography, and the Andes a gripping case study of imperial aspiration and collapse.

W. George Lovell is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada; Professor of Geography at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario; and Visiting Professor in Latin American History at the Universidad Pablo de Olavide in Seville, Spain. Among his many publications are Death in the Snow: Pedro de Alvarado and the Illusive Conquest of Peru, Conquest and Survival in Colonial Guatemala: A Historical Geography of the Cuchumatán Highlands, 1500–1821, and (with Christopher H. Lutz and Wendy Kramer) Strike Fear in the Land: Pedro de Alvarado and the Conquest of Guatemala, 1520–1541.

More from this author