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Conquerors of the high seas - the first to sail around
the world
North America discovered
Naming "America"
First voyage around the world
Second circumnavigation
First solo circumnavigation
Around Alone
Age of Discovery
The Age of Discovery was led by the the great sea adventurers in their
search for a route to spice markets of the Far East when the eastern Mediterranean
were blocked by powerful rivals. When Vasco da Gama sailed around the
Cape of Good Hope to reach India in 1488, the Portuguese concentrated
their efforts to the south and east. The Spanish, who agreed to divide
the world in two with the Portuguese in the Treaty of Tordesillas on 7
June 1494, sailed west. They were not aware of the American continents
and no one knew there was a Pacific Ocean.
Christopher Columbus
(1451-1506), an Italian who had moved to Spain, theorised that since the
earth was a sphere, a ship could reach the Far East from the opposite
direction. He convinced the monarchs to sponsor his search, setting sail
in August 1492. After 10 weeks, he sighted an island in the Bahamas, which
he named San Salvador. Thinking he had found islands near Japan, he sailed
on until he reached Cuba (which he thought was China) and Haiti. He encountered
dark-skinned peoples whom he called "Indians" because he assumed he had
been sailing in the Indian Ocean.
Columbus made 3 more voyages
to the New World which he thought was the East, in 1493, 1497 and 1502,
exploring Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Jamaica, and Trinidad. He never
reached North America, and until he died, thought he had reached Asia.
North
America already discovered
Viking ships reached North America almost 500 year before Columbus set
sail. Sailing from Iceland in mid-990, Biarni Heriolfsson was blown
off course and located an unknown land. He did not explore or name it.
In 1002 Leifr Eiriksson backtracked Biarni's course and reached
the coast of present-day Canada. He then sailed south and discovered an
island he called Vinland (present-day Newfoundland) where he established
a colony and traded for 3 years with the native population known as Skraelings.
The Skraelings eventually forced them to leave, but the Vikings continued
to sail to Canada for timber.
"New Found Land"
In 1497 King Henry VII granted John Cabot (1450-1498) a charter
to explore. On 2 May Cabot and a crew of 18 left Bristol, England in a
small ship called Matthew. He sailed farther north than Columbus did,
out of the way of the Spanish territories. On 24 June the crew sighted
land. Cabot was convinced he had found an island off the coast of Asia
and named it "new found land." It was the first documented landing in
Newfoundland since the Viking voyages. Cabot returned to England on 6
August 1497, and although he brought no spices or treasure back with him,
he was the first to map out the North American coast.
Naming
"America"
The Portuguese-Spanish dividing line ran through the Atlantic with Spain
gaining lands to the west, including the Americas. Brazil was granted
to Portugal, who gained eastern Africa and India. But without accurate
measurements, the question on the exact line persisted. In 1501, King
Manuel I of Portugal dispatched fleets to Brazil, one of the officers
being the Italian Amerigo Vespucci. He was among the first explorers
to report that South America was a continent, not an island, calling it
the "New World". An excellent mapmaker, Vespucci sold copies
of his maps to German cartographer Martin Waldseemuller, who, when reproducing
it in 1507, gave Vespucci credit by writing his first name on the South
American continent. Thus the southern continent became known as "America".

Replica of the ship in which Ferdinand Magellan
led the first circumnavigation of the world.
The correct Portuguese name of Ferdinand Magellan is Fernao do Magalhaes.
The family coat of arms of Magalhaes are Argent, three fesses chequy
Gules and Or. The family is still alive today. Fernao wasn't the head
of the main branch.
Contributions to this story made by Susanna Viljanen |
The first
circumnavigation
The first circumnavigation of the globe was led by Ferdinand Magellan,
who was born in Oporto, Portugal in 1480. In 1505 he enlisted in the navy
where he learned seamanship and naval warfare under Portuguese viceroys
in India. In 1509 he took part in the Battle of Die, which gave Portugal
supremacy over the Indian Ocean. For 7 years he traded from Cochin, China
and Malacca.
Like Columbus before him, Magellan
believed he would reach the Far East by sailing west. Snubbed by the Portuguese
king, Magellan convinced the Spanish king, Charles I that at least some
of the Spice Islands lay in the Spanish half of the undiscovered world.
In September 1519 Magellan set sail with 280 men on 5 ships (San Antonio,
Santiago, Trinidad, Victoria, and Concepcion) on a voyage fraught with
hardship and mutiny. An Italian nobleman on the ship, Antonio Pigafetta,
kept a diary of the voyage.
They crossed the equator on
20 November 1519 and sighted Brazil on 6 December. Magellan thought it
unwise to go near the Portuguese territory since he was sailing under
the Spanish flag, and anchored near present-day Rio de Janiero on 13th
December. They were greeted by Guarani Indians who believed the white
men to be gods and showered them with goods. After stocking up, they sailed
south, reaching Patagonia (Argentina) in March 1520. The Santiago was
sent to explore further south and was lost in a gale.
In August, Magellan decided
it was time to move further south to look for a passage through to the
east. By October they sighted a strait. During the passage, the captain
of San Antonia turned his ship back toward Spain, taking most of the fleet's
provisions.
Into the vast Pacific
The 3 ships emerged from the strait to the Pacific by end-November. Magellan
thought the Spice Islands were a short voyage away, but they sailed for
96 days without sighting land. Conditions aboard the ships were abominable.
The crew survived on sawdust, leather strips, and rats. Finally, in January
1521, they stopped off at an island to feast. In March, they reached Guam.
The Armada de Maluco reached the Philippines (which Magellan named San
Lazaro) on 15 March 1521. He anchored at Suluan on 16 March and went to
Homonhon on 17 March. On March 28, 1521 Magellan and his fleet made landfall
at Mazaua.
After befriending an island
king, Magellan foolishly got involved in a tribal war and was killed in
battle on 27 April 1521. Sebastian del Cano took command of the ships
and 115 survivors. Because there were not enough men to crew 3 ships,
he burned the Concepcion.
They sailed to the Moluccas
(Spice Islands) in November, loading valuable spices. To guarantee that
at least one ship would make it back to Spain, the Trinidad went east
across the Pacific, while the Victoria continued west. The Trinidad was
seized by the Portuguese and most of her crew were killed. The Victoria
managed to elude the Portuguese in the Indian Ocean and rounded the Cape
of Good Hope. On 6 September 1522, almost three years from the day it
began its historic journey, the Victoria and 18 crew members (Pigafetta
among them) arrived in Spain. They were the first to circumnavigate
the globe. When the Victoria's spices were auctioned, the income was
high enough to cover all the expenses of the voyage and even produce profit.
Vicente de Jesus
contibuted to this page as follows:
"On March 28, 1521 Magellan and his fleet made landfall at Mazaua,
a mystery island that is the object of a controversy parallel to the Columbus
first landfall question. My studies show Mazaua is in 9 degrees N. A team
of geologists, geomorphologist and archaeologist was hired in year 2000
to search for the isle and have discovered a most improbable thing: an
isle that has been fused with mainland Mindanao at Butuan City. We hope
to excavate and find authentic remnants of Magellan's visit. If indeed
this was Mazaua, there's no question there will be material proof of Magellan's
having been to this isle."
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The
second circumnavigation
The second circumnavigation of the globe was accomplished by the pirate-turned-explorer
Englishman Francis Drake (1540-1596). Seeing Spain amassing a new
vast empire, Queen Elizabeth I secretly sent Drake to the west, with the
added intent to harass the Spanish. On 13 December 1577 Drake sailed from
Plymouth, England with 6 ships under his command.
In September 1578 five of the
ships turned back at the Strait of Magellan, while Drake sailed on in
the Golden Hind. By June 1579 he had reached the coast of present-day
California and sailed as far north as the present-day United States-Canadian
border. He then turned southwest and crossed the Pacific Ocean in 2 months.
He voyaged through the Indies, across the Indian Ocean, and around the
Cape of Good Hope. With the Golden Hind laden with gold and spices, he
sailed into Plymouth on 26 September 1580, the first captain to
circumnavigate the globe.
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Captain Cook
Another famous circumnavigation was that of James Cook. He sailed
from England on 25 August 1768 aboard the Endeavour with 94 crewmen and
scientists. On 11 April 1769, they reached Tahiti. On government orders,
they sailed south, reaching New Zealand on 6 October. By April 1770, Cook
explored and documented Australia. The Endeavour then made its way to
Java, sailing on past the Cape of Good Hope. On 13 July 1771 Cook sailed
into Dover. Following the historic 3-year journey, he was appointed Naval
Commander by King George III.
First solo circumnavigation
Joshua Slocum, who was born in Nova Scotia in
1844, became an American citizen and Captain Slocum at age 25. On 24 April
1895, at 51-year old, Slocum sailed out of Boston in his 11m (37ft) sloop
Spray, a decrepit oyster dredger that he had rebuilt himself.
Slocum crossed the Atlantic
toward the Suez Canal. In Gibraltar, he was warned of pirates in the Mediterranean.
So, he started back across the Atlantic, and headed down the Brazilian
coast, through the hellish Strait of Magellan. He faced deadly currents,
rocky coasts and heavy seas as he sailed around Australia, the Cape of
Good Hope, and across the Atlantic.
On 27 June 1898, more than 3 years and 74000km (46,000 miles) later,
Joshua Slocum entered Newport, Rhode Island, as the first man to sail
around the world solo.
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Francis Chichester in Gypsy Moth IV, first to
sail around the world with only one stop.
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First around with only one
stop
The honour of being the first to sail around the world alone with only
one stop went to Francis Chichester (1902-1972). In 1966, the 64-year
old Chichester sailed his 16m (53ft) ketch Gypsy Moth IV from England.
The steering mechanism broke 3 700km (2,300 miles ) from Australia. Soon
after leaving Sydney, the Gipsy capsized but righted itself. Around the
Cape Horn, Chichester faced 15m (50ft) high waves. But he was not a man
to step back from a challenge. In 1960 he was the winner of the first
single-hand transatlantic race. He also made the world's first solo long
distance flight in a seaplane (England to Australia). On 28 May 1967,
after 226 days at sea, he was welcomed back by a half-million people at
Plymouth, England.
Around
Alone
Today, sailing single-handedly non-stop around the world still grabs the
imagination. Chay Blyth, nicknamed "the man of steel"
became one of few when he sailed against the winds around the world from
east to west aboard the ketch British Steel in 1971, completing the voyage
in 302 days. Two years later Frenchman Alain Colas aboard his trimaran
Manureva circumnavigated around the 3 great capes, taking only 129 days
to complete the voyage.
The first woman to sail solo around
the world Dame Naomi James. In 1979 the 29-year-old braved the seas for
272 days circumnavigating the globe via Cape Horn, the classic "Clipper
Route."
Jonathan Sanders circumnavigated
the globe 7 times single-handedly. He also achieved a remarkable non-stop
triple circumnavigation between May 1986 and March 1988, covering 131,535km
(71,023 nautical miles). Circumnavigation had become the rage, as with
the Whitbread race. Then Frenchman Philippe Jeantot launched the
idea of a single-handed non-stop race around the world, called Vendee
Globe.
The contests
In 1982, British company BOC Gasses launched the BOC Challenge single-handed
race around the world: "One person, One boat, Around the world."
Renamed AroundAlone and currently known after its sponsor, the VELUX
5 Oceans is the longest race on Earth for an individual in any sport,
spanning 43,000km (27,000 miles) of the roughest and most remote oceans.
The finish line literally is a world away.
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Amerigo Vespucci, after whom the American continents
were named in 1507.

Joshua Slocum, the first man to sail around the world
alone (1895-1898). Planning a voyage up the Amazon, Slocum set sail from
Vineyard Haven on November 14, 1909, but he was lost with his ship.

Joshua Slocum became the first man to sail around
the world alone in his 37-sloop Spray.
In 120AD Egyptian Mathematician
and astronomer Ptolemy (Claudius Ptolemaeus) invents a number of projections
whereby an area on the curved surface of the Earth can be represented
on a flat surface. His geography is introduced in Europe in 1406 and with
the invention of the printing press in 1450 his plans are published and
widely accepted.
Shipping company Cunard Laconia introduced the first around-the-world
cruise on the Laconia in 1922.
More about cruise liners
Maps
of Magellan's voyage
Francis
Drake's voyage
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