Son of Francisco de Gaztañeta, a Basque sailor to the Americas, he accompanied his father from the age of 12.
Here, in this relatively tolerant Basque border town, they started their own production, using beans brought back by the famously intrepid Basque sailors.
But the Basque sailor stayed in Cumbria and was taken in by some farm people.
The Basque sailor never found the stone barn again, and neither did his friends nor any of his children.
The Basque sailor dreamt that there was a king who watched him.
Two of your examples - the glovemaker's child and the Basque sailor - did not in fact identify him as Uskglass.
Many Basque sailors on Spanish ships were among the first Europeans to reach North America.
It seems that it was this industry, along with cod-fishing, is what brought Basque sailors to the North Sea and eventually to Newfoundland.
Some Basque sailors became prisoners, but most of them were able to reach France.
They found Zadornin, the Basque sailor, lying in the mud near the fort wall.