Zorro was Real.

Stephen Andes
The Pop Culturist
Published in
5 min readFeb 27, 2020

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Revealing the Latinx Origins to America’s Original Caped Crusader

Vintage Guy Williams

Was there ever a guy who galavanted around Old California wearing a mask and black cape, who went by the moniker “Zorro”?

Short answer: No.

Zorro is fiction. Don Diego de la Vega, the true identity of Zorro, was a product of the pulp fiction writer, Johnston McCulley (1883–1958). The first Zorro tale appeared in the pulps in 1919. Zorro went on to become the star of more pulp stories, feature films, film serials, comics, spoofs, pornos, and reboots.

And, of course, Antonio Banderas.

But, have no fear. Zorro — zft, zft, zft — is rooted in real history. There are several real-life individuals who have a lot of similarities to Zorro.

The Irish Zorro?

The first Zorro prototype people often point to is the so-called “Irish Zorro.” The Irishman in question was named William Lamport. His name, however, has many variants: Don Guillen de Lombardo, Guillen de Lampart, etc. What we know is that he lived in the seventeenth century, was born in Ireland, but lived a peripatetic life. He moved to England, then to Spain and, finally, to Colonial Mexico.

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Stephen Andes
The Pop Culturist

Pop Culture is everywhere. And all of it has a history. It tells us who we are and who we want to be. Next Book: Speedy Gonzales. https://zorrosghost.com/