Princess Dácil was a Guanche
princess of the kingdom of Taoro on the island Tenerife (in the Canary Islands)
She was daughter to Mencey (king) Adjona and Caseloria and granddaughter of Bencomo. Dácil was admired throughout the island for her
beauty. She was described as blonde and freckled, with green eyes, like many other aborigines of northern Tenerife.
Rumors began to surface that Captain Fernando García del Castillo and
Princess Dácil were lovers. They were believed to have spoken alone—a practice strictly forbidden by Guanche law. The Guanche, Duriman
El Montanez, who was promised Dácil in marriage felt spurned and further fed accusations of her being alone with a man, who was, in addition, a Castilian, and, therefore, the enemy of the Guanche homeland. Duriman
el Montañes asked Bencomo to arrest
Princess Dácil (Bencomo's granddaughter). Bencomo complied with the law and imprisoned Dácil for many months. When she was released, Dácil was able to convince Bencomo that she had never met Captain Fernando García del Castillo alone; that, in fact, she had many witnesses to attest that she was always accompanied when meeting with the Castillian captain.She later married the captain in the Iglesia de la Concepción (Church of the Conception) of
Los Realejos. She was baptized as Mencías del Castillo. The date of Dácil's
death and her place of burial are unknown.