I | INTRODUCTION |
Vasco da
Gama (1469?-1524), Portuguese explorer and navigator, who was the first
person to reach India from Europe by a sea route. Da Gama was born in
Sines, in southwestern Portugal. He joined the Portuguese navy at a young age
and participated in the wars against the Spanish kingdom of Castile. Little else
is known of his early life.
II | VOYAGE TO INDIA |
Following the discovery in 1488 of the Cape of
Good Hope by Portuguese navigator Bartolomeu Dias, Portuguese king John II
ordered the construction of a fleet to seek a maritime route to the Indies. The
Portuguese had been spurred by the discoveries of Italian-Spanish explorer
Christopher Columbus and by the fear that the Spanish might reach the Indies and
tap their wealth first. John died in 1495, however, before the completion of the
ships. He was succeeded as king by Manuel, who issued orders for the expedition
and, impressed by da Gama’s ability, appointed him to lead it. The fleet
consisted of the flagship São Gabriel, the São Raphael (captained
by da Gama’s brother Paulo), and two smaller ships.
Departing from Lisbon on July 8, 1497, da Gama
plotted his route to take advantage of the prevailing winds. After reaching the
vicinity of Cape Verde he veered far to the west and then swung back in a great
arc to arrive at the African coast near the Cape of Good Hope. Whether he did
this by chance or by following information gathered by earlier mariners is not
known, but his procedure established the route still followed by sailing
vessels.
Da Gama rounded the Cape of Good Hope at the
southern tip of Africa in November. On Christmas Day he sighted and named the
region of Natal, from the Portuguese word for Christmas. In the spring of 1498
da Gama reached the East African ports of Moçambique and Mombasa, but ran into
armed resistance from Arab Muslim traders at both. At Malindi, on the coast of
what is now Kenya, he managed to secure a pilot to guide him eastward. With the
aid of Arab navigator Ahmed ibn Majid, da Gama sailed across the Arabian Sea and
on May 20, 1498, reached Calicut (now Kozhikode) on the Malabar Coast of India.
Da Gama thus completed the first voyage from western Europe around Africa to the
East.
Because of the hostility of local Arab
merchants, who controlled the seaborne trade of the East and feared the loss of
their monopoly, the ruler of Calicut rebuffed da Gama. He received a better
reception from other coastal rulers, however, and obtained from them a valuable
cargo of spices. He set sail for Portugal on August 29, 1498. Facing unfavorable
winds for much of the voyage, the return journey took three times longer than
the outgoing trip. Many of da Gama’s crew—including his brother Paulo—died of
scurvy before they returned to Portugal in September 1499.
Da Gama navigated about 40,000 km (25,000 mi)
on his expedition and demonstrated that the Indian Ocean was not the landlocked
sea Europeans had thought it to be since the time of the ancient Greeks. King
Manuel rewarded him with the titles Dom and, later, Admiral of the Indian
Sea.
III | LATER VOYAGES |
To follow up the discoveries of da Gama,
Manuel immediately dispatched Portuguese navigator Pedro Álvares Cabral to
India. Cabral established a Portuguese trading post in Calicut. When news
reached Portugal that those stationed in Calicut by Cabral had been massacred,
da Gama was sent to avenge that act. On the way to India he attacked Arab Muslim
ships ruthlessly. One ship he sunk carried more than 400 men, women, and
children returning from a pilgrimage to Mecca.
Arriving in Calicut, da Gama quickly subdued
the inhabitants, impressing them with the superior firepower of the Portuguese
and forcing the ruler to make peace. On his return voyage he established
Portuguese colonies at Moçambique and Sofala on the coast of what is now
Mozambique. He returned to Portugal in September 1503 having accomplished his
mission and bearing a rich cargo of spices, but he left behind a memory of
useless cruelty that damaged the Portuguese name for generations.
Richly rewarded by the Portuguese royal
family for breaking the Arab Muslim monopoly on trade with India, da Gama
settled down to profit from his ventures. For the next 20 years he saw no active
sea duty. He received the title of count of Vidigueira in 1519. In 1524 he was
named viceroy and sent to India to correct the mounting corruption among the
Portuguese authorities there. Da Gama reached India in the autumn of 1524, but
he died in Cochin only three months after his arrival.
He was buried in Goa, on the coast of India,
but in 1539 his remains were conveyed to Portugal and interred in the Church of
Vidigueira. There the coffin remained until 1880, when it was transferred to a
marble sepulcher in the church of the Monastery of the Jerónimos at Belém,
outside Lisbon. This monastery had been erected by Manuel as a token of the
country’s gratitude to da Gama. Later it was proved that the wrong coffin had
been removed from Vidigueira and in 1898, about 400 years after da Gama’s first
voyage, the coffin that contained his true remains was placed in the sepulcher.
The tomb lies very near that of Camões, Portugal’s most famous poet, who
commemorated da Gama’s deeds in his epic 1572 poem The Lusiads.
IV | DA GAMA’S LEGACY |
On his return to Lisbon in 1499, da Gama had
completed the longest recorded sea voyage ever to set sail up to that time. By
pioneering the Portuguese sea route to India, da Gama established Lisbon as the
center of the European spice trade. This laid the foundation for the Portuguese
Empire, which controlled trade with the ports of East Africa, southwest India,
and Indonesia for centuries.
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