Pedro Ruíz Corredor

Pedro Ruíz Corredor (?, ?, Castile - after 1601, ?) was a Spanish conquistador who participated in the Spanish conquest of the Muisca.

Biography
The origins of Pedro Ruíz Corredor are unknown. He arrived from Spain in Santa Marta in 1533. Ruíz Corredor joined the expedition of Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada in the quest for El Dorado, leaving Santa Marta in April 1536.

Ruíz Corredor received the encomienda of Oicatá and Nemuza. His brother Miguel was mayor of Tunja in 1591 and 1598. Pedro Ruíz Corredor returned to Spain with the valuables he conquered in the New Kingdom of Granada. In 1548, he was sent to Peru, where he assisted the troops of Pedro de la Gasca and Gonzalo Pizarro. In June 1570, Ruíz Corredor was back in Oicatá and ordered the Muisca of his encomienda, and the villages of Chivatá, Motavita, Suta, Cómbita and Moniquirá to construct acequias, channels for the drainage of the lands. In 1601, Ruíz Corredor is mentioned as he had promised to pay the native people in his encomienda 200 cotton mantles, but only complied with half of that.

Pedro Ruíz Corredor married Elvira Pérez de Cuéllar and the couple got one daughter; María Ruíz Corredor. Elvira's sister Isabel was married to Bartolomé Camacho Zambrano, fellow conquistador in Colombia.

The place and year of death of Pedro Ruíz Corredor remain unknown.