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Alvise Cadamosto

Alvise Cadamosto or Alvise da Ca' da Mosto (Portuguese pronunciation: [alˈvizɨ kɐðaˈmoʃtu], also known in Portuguese as Luís Cadamosto; c. 1432 – 18 July 1488) was a Venetian explorer and slave trader,[1] who was hired by the Portuguese prince Henry the Navigator and undertook two known journeys to West Africa in 1455 and 1456, accompanied by the Genoese captain Antoniotto Usodimare. Cadamosto and his companions are credited with the discovery of the Cape Verde Islands and the points along the Guinea coast, from the Gambia River to the Geba River (in Guinea-Bissau), the greatest leap in the Henrican discoveries since 1446. Cadamosto's accounts of his journeys, including his detailed observations of West African societies, have proven invaluable to historians.

Background Edit

Alvise was born at the Ca' da Mosto, a palace on the Grand Canal of Venice from which his name derives. His father was Giovanni da Mosto, a Venetian civil servant and merchant, and his mother Elizabeth Querini, from a leading patrician family of Venice. Alvise was the eldest of three sons, having younger brothers Pietro and Antonio.

At a remarkably young age, Alvise was cast out as a merchant adventurer, sailing with Venetian galleys in the Mediterranean. From 1442 to 1448, Alvise undertook various trips on Venetian galleys to the Barbary Coast and Crete, as a commercial agent of his cousin, Andrea Barbarigo.[2] In 1451, he was appointed noble officer of the marine corps of crossbowmen on a galley to Alexandria.[3] The next year, he served the same position on a Venetian galley to Flanders. Upon his return, he found his family disgraced and dispossessed. His father, caught in a bribery scandal, had been banished from Venice, and taken refuge in the Duchy of Modena.[4] His Querini relatives took the opportunity to seize possession of his family's property. This setback marred the future prospects of Cadamosto's career in Venice, and probably encouraged his spirit of adventure, hoping to restore his family name and fortune with great feats of his own.

Expeditions to Africa Edit

In August 1454, at the age of 22, Alvise and his brother Antonio embarked on a Venetian merchant galley, captained by Marco Zen, destined for Flanders. On the outward journey, the galley was detained by bad weather near Cape St. Vincent, Portugal. While waiting for the weather to improve, the Portuguese Prince Henry the Navigator, who had his seat nearby at Sagres, dispatched a couple of his commercial agents, led by his secretary Antão Gonçalves and the local Venetian consul Patrizio di Conti, to interest the stranded Venetian merchants in opening trade contracts for sugar and other goods from the prince's Madeira island.[5] Informed by the visitors of Henry's recent discoveries in Africa, Cadamosto, "inflamed with the desire of visiting these newly discovered regions",[6] immediately applied to Prince Henry at his residence at Raposeira to undertake an expedition on his behalf. Henry hired him on the spot.

(Note: the 16th-century Portuguese chronicler Damião de Góis, uniquely among historians, mistakenly asserted that Cadamosto's encounter took place in 1444 rather that 1454.[7] Given the eminence of Góis, this erroneous dating has been cited by others, and has been a cause of much confusion for later histories and chronologies.[8])

First Journey (1455) Edit

Alvise Cadamosto set out on 22 March 1455 on a 43-tonne caravel supplied by Prince Henry, with Vicente Dias as ship master[9] He proceeded to Porto Santo and Madeira, and thereafter weaved his way through the Canary islands, making stops in La Gomera, El Hierro and La Palma before reaching the African coast around Cape Blanc. Cadamosto made note of the existence of the Portuguese factory-fort at Arguin, but does not seem to have stopped there himself.

Cadamosto cruised down the west African coast to the mouth of the Senegal River (which he calls the Rio do Senega, the first recorded use of that name.) He does not seem to have stopped here, his destination being further south, at an anchorage point along the Grande Côte he called the Palma di Budomel (location uncertain, probably around Mboro, 15°09′42″N 16°55′45″W / 15.16167°N 16.92917°W / 15.16167; -16.92917).[10] Cadamosto notes that this spot (or resgate) was already used by Portuguese traders. He dates that trade between the Portuguese and the Wolof people of the Senegal region was opened around 1450 ("five years before I went on this voyage").[11] Cadamosto had sought to trade Iberian horses for black slaves, the principal line of business at this resgate. Horses were highly valued on the Senegalese coast, and traded at a rate of between 9 and 14 slaves per horse. Cadamosto is said to have sold seven horses and some woolen goods (a total value of around 300 ducats) for about 100 slaves.[12]

While at the anchorage, Cadamosto was surprised to be met by the ruler himself, the Damel of Cayor (whom he calls Budomel), accompanied by his retinue. The Damel invited him inland while the details of the trade were finalized. Cadamosto spent nearly an entire month in an inland village, hosted by the prince Bisboror (Budomel's nephew), during which time he delighted in observing much about the local country and customs.[13]

His trade in Cayor completed, rather than return home with his human cargo, Cadamosto decided to cruise further down the coast, towards the Cape Vert peninsula.[14] This was intended as a pure exploratory jaunt, "to discover new countries" beyond the Cape, more specifically the mysterious "kingdom called Gambra", where Prince Henry had heard (from earlier slave captives) that gold was found in abundance.[15] Around Cape Vert, in June 1455,[16] Cadamosto came across two Portuguese caravels, one of which was commanded by Antoniotto Usodimare, a Genoese captain in Prince Henry's service, the other by an unnamed squire of Henry's household. They agreed to join forces and proceeded south together.

After a brief fishing stop on some unnamed islands (probably Îles des Madeleines[17]), Cadamosto, Usodimare and the Portuguese squire sailed south, down the Petite Côte until they reached the Sine-Saloum delta, a stretch inhabited by the Sereri (Serer people). Cadamosto has nothing good to say about the Serer, characterizing them as savage idolaters "of great cruelty" (although we should note at this point his information is being drawn principally from Wolof interpreters).[18] Cadamosto claims he was the one who named the Saloum River as the Rio di Barbacini, the name by which it would remain known on European maps thereafter.[19] Cadamosto and Usodimare tried to put in there, but quickly decided against it when an interpreter they landed to make contact with the local Serer natives gathered on the beaches was killed on the spot.

Pressing south, Cadamosto and Usodimare finally discovered the mouth of the Gambia River in late June or early July 1455. They set about sailing upriver, but their advance faced unremitting hostility from the Mandinka inhabitants upriver. Subjected to intense missile fire, they barely fended off a massed canoe attack that sought to trap and board them. According to Cadamosto's interpreters, the Mandinka believed the Portuguese were cannibals, that they had come to the region to buy black men to eat.[20] Urged by their frightened crews (and probably desirous to keep his human cargo intact – he had been carrying a shipload of slaves since Cayor), Cadamosto decided to call off venturing further and backed out of the river. Cadamosto does not supply details of the return trip to Portugal.

At the mouth of the Gambia, Cadamosto made a note of the near-disappearance of the northern Pole Star on the horizon, and roughly sketched a bright constellation to the south, believed to be the first known depiction of the Southern Cross constellation (albeit wrongly positioned and with too many stars – a more accurate rendition would have to wait until Mestre João Faras in 1500.)[21] Cadamosto called it the carro dell' ostro (southern chariot).[22]

It is known that the fleet was back in Portugal before the end of the year, as Antoniotto Usodimare would write a letter dated 12 December 1455 to his creditors back in Genoa, reporting the results of his voyage (albeit with much exaggeration, and without mentioning Cadamosto).

Second Journey (1456) Edit

 
Map of the Cape Verde islands and the Guinea coast, c. 1771

Cadamosto set out again from Lagos in May 1456, this time not alone, but together with Antoniotto Usodimare and another caravel with an unnamed Portuguese captain, another servant of Prince Henry. The three vessels made no known trading stops, intending to sail straight to the Gambia River (probably per Prince Henry's instructions).

Catching a storm around Cape Vert peninsula, the little fleet was forced to sail west, away from the coast for two days and three nights (about 300 miles) and stumbled on the as-yet-undiscovered archipelago of the Cape Verde Islands.[23] Cadamosto, Usodimare and the unnamed captain scouted several of the uninhabited islands, believing them to be four in number (although Cadamosto notes in his account that later explorers would find them to be ten). They anchored first on an island which they named Buona Vista (Boa Vista), before proceeding on to a larger island, which they named San Jacobo (Santiago) (according to Cadamosto, on account of it being the feast of SS. Philip and James – probably an error[24]) Finding the islands uninteresting, they headed on.

(Note: although Cadamosto's claims credit for the discovery of the Cape Verde islands, this is disputed by Diogo Gomes, who claims he discovered the islands, together with Antonio da Noli, in 1462 (sometimes dated 1460)[25])

Cadamosto, Usodimare and the unnamed Portuguese captain proceeded to enter the Gambia River again, albeit this time without opposition. They sailed about 10 Italian miles (15 km) upriver and anchored briefly on a river island they named Santo Andrea (to bury a deceased crew member, named Andrea; the island is believed to be modern Dog Island[26]).

 
Map of the Gambia River and surrounding area, c. 1732

The trio proceeded upriver carefully, warily watched by native Mandinka canoes, but this time no hostilities or ambushes emerged. Eventually, one of the interpreters managed to entice some of the canoe-borne natives aboard the Portuguese ships and opened peaceful contact. The natives identified themselves as subjects of king Forosangoli (of the southern bank of the Gambia)[27] and that he, and most other Mandinka kings along the Gambia river were all vassal subjects of the Emperor of Mali (Impatore di Melli), and that some of the local kings were willing to meet the Portuguese. Following the instructions of his interlocutors, Cadamosto sailed some 60 Italian miles up the Gambia river, reaching the residence of the Mandinka king he called Battimansa, Mandinka for "king of the Batti' (probably Badibu, on the north side of the river).[28] They were well received, but disappointed at the little evidence of the large amounts of gold they had expected to find. They engaged in some petty trade with the locals, in particular musk (invaluable to European perfumers), and imply they even acquired live specimens of African civet cat.[29]

Cadamosto mentions interacting with another lord, Guumimensa, whose dominion was closer to the mouth of the river. This is probably none other than the formidable 'Niumimansa', king of the Niumi-Banta of Barra region, whose rule extended over Niumi-Bato (Niominka) of the Diombos River shore, an old antagonist of Portuguese explorers.[30] However, Cadamosto reports their relations went quite smoothly.

Cadamosto and his companions stayed in Badibu for 11 days, before departing. They did not discover the commercial center of Cantor, which was still several miles upriver (it was only discovered a couple of years later, by Diogo Gomes). But he did discover malaria, and his crew quickly fell ill with fevers. It was probably this epidemic that prompted Cadamosto to cut short his stay and leave the Gambia river, back to the ocean, where the fevers seemed to have subsided.

Resolved to continue exploring the West African coast, Cadamosto's trio set sail south, doubling Cape St. Mary (13°29′10″N 16°40′6″W / 13.48611°N 16.66833°W / 13.48611; -16.66833) and carefully navigating the dangerous breakers around Bald Cape (13°22′47″N 16°47′43″W / 13.37972°N 16.79528°W / 13.37972; -16.79528), reporting a couple of rivers along the way (none of which he names). A few days later, Cadamosto and his companions discovered the mouth of the Casamance River (12°33′22″N 16°45′44″W / 12.55611°N 16.76222°W / 12.55611; -16.76222).[31] They named the river after the local lord Casamansa, king ('mansa') of Kasa (called Casangas by later Portuguese, a now near-extinct people, related to the Bainuk people). They sent a couple of launches to land to open contact, but being told the king was absent on campaign, Cadamosto did not linger but decided to continue on.

Sailing south, the fleet reached a red-colored headland they named Capo Rosso (Cape Roxo, 12°20′8″N 16°42′47″W / 12.33556°N 16.71306°W / 12.33556; -16.71306, today marking the border between the republic of Senegal and Guinea-Bissau).[32] In his account, Cadamosto names two large rivers beyond the Cape Roxo promontory – Santa Anna and San Dominico – which are a little confusing. It is believed one is likely to be the Cacheu River (12°10′32″N 16°20′47″W / 12.17556°N 16.34639°W / 12.17556; -16.34639, often indicated in later Portuguese maps as Rio de São Domingos) while the other river is probably one of the branches (Rio de Jatta or Rio das Ancoras) of the Mansôa River (11°51′34″N 15°58′24″W / 11.85944°N 15.97333°W / 11.85944; -15.97333)[33]

A day later, Cadamosto discovered a great river (grandissimo fiume), which they named Rio Grande (the Geba River – more precisely, the wide estuary it forms together with the Corubal River, it doesn't seem they actually entered the river itself) (11°45′N 15°38′W / 11.750°N 15.633°W / 11.750; -15.633).[34] After anchoring near the southern bank of the estuary, they were approached by a couple of long native canoes from the mainland (no identification given, probably Balantas or Biafares)[35] A few trinkets were traded with the canoes, but they were unable to open communication, as their on-ship interpreters (Wolof and/or Mandinka) did not understand their native language. After a couple of days, they lifted anchor and made their way to some "of the many islands in the sea" (the Bissagos Islands), but found it just as impossible to communicate with the inhabitants there.

Given the language barrier, they saw no point in proceeding further. Cadamosto, Usodimare and the unnamed Portuguese captain set sail back to Portugal.

Achievement Edit

The record of Portuguese discoveries prior to Alvise Cadamosto did not seem to have gone beyond the Sine-Saloum delta.[36] The furthest pre-Cadamosto seems to have been the singular expedition of Álvaro Fernandes in 1446, which may have reached as far as Cape Roxo, but this was not followed up. The 1447 expedition led by Estêvão Afonso did not go beyond the beginning of the estuary of the Gambia River, and thereafter expeditions below Cape Vert were largely suspended by Prince Henry. The principal barrier to the Portuguese seems to have been belligerence of the Niumi-Bato (Niominka) and the Niumi-Banta (Mandinka of Niumi (Barra)), both led by the same king, Niumimansa.[37] Cadamosto encountered that hostility on his first expedition of 1455. But on his second trip, in 1456, opposition fell away for some reason, and he managed to become the first European (along with Antoniotto Usodimare and their anonymous companions) to sail up the Gambia River. It is uncertain what caused this change of attitude from one year to the next – a new Niumimansa? A shift in senegambian politics? The unreliable Diogo Gomes later boasted that he sailed to the Gambia sometime between 1456 and 1458 and single-handedly negotiated a peace with the Niumimansa, although this is likely exaggerated.[38])

Once they opened the Gambia River, Cadamosto and Usodimare led the next great leap of Henrican discoveries in Africa – Cape Verde islands, the Casamance River, Cape Roxo, Cacheu River and finally the Geba River and Bissagos Islands. The length of coast they discovered in 1456 was the greatest leap in the Portuguese era of discoveries since 1446. Much the same coast would be covered again by Diogo Gomes around 1458 (possibly as early as 1456, probably sent by Henry as a follow-up to Cadamosto's report) and 1462. Cadamosto's furthest marker would only really be surpassed by Pedro de Sintra in 1461–62.

Return to Venice Edit

After his return in 1456, Cadamosto continued to live in Lagos for many years, suggesting he must have continued to engage, directly or indirectly, in West African commerce. It is not known whether Cadamosto himself made any further trips down the African coast.[39] Cadamosto bluntly states that there were no other voyages of exploratory significance by anyone after 1456, until the expedition of Pedro de Sintra in 1462. Cadamosto acquired the details of that expedition from Sintra's clerk upon its return.

Cadamosto's patron, Prince Henry the Navigator, died in November 1460, and the monopoly on African trade reverted to the Portuguese crown and its operations were gradually transferred from Lagos to Lisbon. Probably seeing no future for himself in the new order, Cadamosto left Portugal and returned to Venice in February 1463. Cadamosto is believed to have brought notes, logs and several nautical maps with him. Cadamosto used these to compose his famous Navigationi sometime in the mid-1460s. The Navigazioni, besides generally hailing the Portuguese discoveries and lionizing Prince Henry, provided detailed accounts of three expeditions – his own voyages of 1455 and 1456, and the voyage of Pedro de Sintra in 1462. He is believed to have delivered much of his primary material to the Venetian cartographer Grazioso Benincasa, as Benincasa went on to produce an atlas in 1468, depicting the West African coast with remarkable accuracy.[40]

The Navigationi were probably written in an effort to advertise his accomplishments, and rescue his family name. Upon his return, Cadamosto managed to recover some of his family's property from his Querini relatives and, a couple of years later, married Elisabetta di Giorgio Venier, a rich noblewoman but of frail health – she died without bearing him a child.[41] He returned to commerce, with trading interests as far afield as Spain, Alexandria, Syria and England, and with fortune and connections restored, carved out a diplomatic and administrative career for the Republic of Venice alongside it. Cadamosto served as Venetian proveditor in Cattaro, then in Corone, and was sent on diplomatic missions to Dalmatia and Herzegovina.[42] After the fall of Negroponte in 1470, Cadamosto was placed in charge of devising a plan for the defense of Albania against the Ottomans.

In 1481, Alvise Cadamosto was elected captain of the Venetian Alexandria galley fleet, ending his naval career on the same ships where he started. He died in 1483, in the Polesine, while on diplomatic mission to Rovigo to assess the spoils acquired by the Venetian Republic after their victory over Ercole I d'Este, Duke of Ferrara in the War of Ferrara.[43] (although in some accounts, the date of his death is sometimes given as early as 1477 and as late as 1488).

The Navigazioni Edit

For historians of the Portuguese discoveries under Henry the Navigator, Alvise Cadamosto's accounts, the Navigazioni, have proven to be an invaluable document. Cadamosto's accounts, Gomes Eanes de Zurara's chronicle and the memoirs of Diogo Gomes, are practically all that remain of the contemporary written record of the Henrican discoveries.[44] Indeed, until the publication of João de Barros's Decadas da Asia in 1552 (which drew on a manuscript draft of Zurara's chronicle), Cadamosto's Navigazioni was the only published work circulating in Europe about the Portuguese discoveries. Cadamosto emphasized the central role of Prince Henry, and was instrumental in building up the image of the Navigator Prince for posterity. Compared to the hagiographic Zurara and the fallible Gomes, historians have relished and lauded the reliability and detail provided by Cadamosto, giving a richer and clearer view of how the Henrican enterprise operated.[45]

Cadamosto's accounts are also invaluable for historians of Africa, providing the first written detailed accounts of the Senegambia region, beyond the fringes touched one century earlier by Arab historian Ibn Battuta. Cadamosto gives a summary of contemporary European knowledge about West Africa. He describes the Mali Empire (Melli) and the Trans-Saharan trade, e.g. how Berber caravans carry the Saharan salt from desert pans like Teghaza (Tegazza) to frontier cities like Timbuctu (Tombutto). [46] He goes to explain how gold coming out of the heart of Mali goes out in three parts, one to Cochia (Kukiya) and then eastwards onto Egypt, the second via Timbuctu to Toet (Tuat) and then north towards Tunisia, and a third part, also via Timbuctu, goes west to Hoden (Ouadane), destined for Morocco, part of which is deviated to the Portuguese factory at Arguin.[47]

Cadamosto is the first known person to refer to the Senegal River by its recognizably modern name (Rio di Senega) rather than the "western Nile". Curiously, Cadamosto notes that the Senegal was probably the Niger of ancient geographers (e.g. Ptolomey). He repeats the old error of assuming that the Senegal river and the (actual) Niger river are connected to each other, forming one great east–west river, and relates the legend that it was believed to be a tributary of the great Biblical river of Gihon (Gion) that flowed from the Garden of Eden across the lands of Aethiopia.[48]

Cadamosto describes the Wolof (Gilofi) empire, which he notes was bound on the east by the Fula Tekrur/Toucouleur (Tuchusor) and to the south by the Mandinka states of the Gambia River (Gambra)[49] Cadamosto goes into quite some detail on the politics, society and culture of the Wolof states. He supplies a meticulously detailed eyewitness description of the Cayor village he stayed in 1455, the Damel's court, the people, customs, economy, local fauna and flora, etc.[50] The details demonstrate Cadamosto's sheer curiosity – he describes the courtly customs, the houses, the use of cowrie shells as currency, the food and drink, the operation of local markets, livestock and cultivation, the production of palm wine, weapons, the dances and music, the reaction to European novelties (clothes, ships, cannon, bag-pipes). In all this, Cadamosto's narrative evinces a degree of honest curiosity and absence of prejudice perhaps surprising for a European of that era. Cadamosto attempts a similarly detailed account of the Mandinka people of the Gambia River, making particular note of their abundant cotton (rare in Wolof areas), although not nearly as complete, as he did not seem to venture much away from his boats there.[51] He does not cease to marvel at the extraordinary wildlife which is far more plentiful around the Gambia, notably the hippopotamus (which he calls the "horse fish") and the largely unfamiliar African elephant (whose meat he was tempted to taste – a piece of which he salted and brought back to Portugal for Prince Henry himself; a preserved elephant's foot would be forwarded to Henry's sister, Isabella, Duchess of Burgundy.).[52]

Editions Edit

Alvise Cadamosto's accounts were first published in Italian at the head of the famous 1507 collection Paesi novamente retrovati, edited by Francazano Montalboddo and published in Vicenza. It was quickly followed by translations into Latin (1508), German (1508) and French (1515). The Italian version was reprinted in the famous Ramusio collection of 1550. Although reprinted and widely disseminated in other countries, a Portuguese translation did not appear until 1812.[53]

Cadamosto was also long alleged to be the author of the Portolano del mare, a rutter with sailing directions for the Mediterranean Sea coasts, found in the library of St. Mark in Venice, with the publication stamp of Bernardo Rizzo in 1490. Cadamosto's authorship of the portolano has been generally discarded in modern times.[54]

Editions of Cadamosto's Navigazioni:

  • Original (1507), as opening chapters of Francanzano Montalboddo, editor, Paesi novamente retrovati et Novo Mondo da Alberico Vesputio Florentino intitulato, published in Vicenza, 1507. (reprinted 1508, 1512, 1519, 1521). Cadamosto's account of his 1455 and 1456 voyages starts with title: "Libro Primo: In comenza el libro de la prima Navigatione per loceano a le terre de Nigri de la Bassa Ethiopia per comandamento del Illust. Signor Infante Don Hurich fratello de Don Dourth Re de Portogallo" (Cap. 1 through Cap. 47) is the 1455 & 1456 Cadamosto voyages. Cadamosto's account of Pedro de Sintra is at the beginning of the next section, "Libro Secundo: De la Navigatione de Lisbona a Callichut de lengua Portogallese intaliana", starting with heading "Chi scriprireno noui paesi cum li sui nomi" (Cap. 48–50).[55]
  • Latin (1508) trans. of Montalboddo's 1507 Paesi by Archangelo Madrigini, Abbot of Casalo, as Itinerarium Portugallensium e Lusitania in Indiam et Inde in Occidentem et Demum ad Aquilonem published in Milan, 1508.[56] This Latin translation was reprinted in Simon Grynaeus, Novus orbis regnorum et insularum veteribus incognitorum, 1532.
  • German (1508) trans. by Jobstein Ruchamer, in Newe unbekante landte und ein newe weldte in kurt verganger zeythe erfunden, published in Nuremberg, 1508
  • French (1515): trans. by Mathurin du Redouer, Sensuyt le Nouveau monde & navigations faictes par Emeric Vespuce Florentin: Dez pays & isles nouvellement trouvez auparavant a nous inconneuz tant en l'Ethiope que Arrabie, Calichut et aultres plusiers regions estranges, published in Paris, 1515. (1916 reprint online) (Reprint 1895, C. Schefer ed., Relation des voyages à la côte occidentale d'Afrique d'Alvise de Ca' da Mosto, 1455–1457, Paris: Leroux online; New translation by Frédérique Verrier (1994) Voyages en Afrique Noire d'Alvise Ca'da Mosto (1455 & 1456). Paris: Chandeigne.)
  • Italian (Ramusio ed.): "Il Libro di Messer Alvise Ca da Mosto Gentilhuomo Venetiano" & "Navigatione del Capitano Pietro di Sintra Portoghese scritta per il medesimo M. Alvise da Ca da Mosto", as printed in Venice (1550), by Giovanni Battista Ramusio, ed., Primo volume delle navigationi et viaggi nel qua si contine la descrittione dell'Africa, et del paese del Prete Ianni, on varii viaggi, dal mar Rosso a Calicut,& infin all'isole Molucche, dove nascono le Spetierie et la navigatione attorno il mondo. online
  • English: "Original Journals of the Voyages of Cada Mosto and Piedro de Cintra to the Coast of Africa, the former in the years 1455 and 1456, and the latter soon afterwards", reprinted in R. Kerr, 1811, A General History of Voyages and Travels to the end of the 18th century, vol. 2, Edinburgh: Blackwood. Ch.4 [Another English edition is found G.R. Crone, ed, 1937, The Voyages of Cadamosto, London: Haklyut]
  • Portuguese: "Navegações de Luiz de Cadamosto, a que se ajuntou a viagem de Pedro de Cintra, capitão Portuguez, traduzidas to Italiano.", in Academia Real das Sciencias, 1812, Collecção de noticias para a historia e geografia das nações ultramarinas: que vivem nos dominios portuguezes, ou lhes são visinhas, vol. 2, Pt.1 offprint

Apocryphal (not Cadamosto, but attributed to him in the past):

  • Unknown (1490) Il Portolano del mare di Alvise da Mosto, nobile Veneto, nel qual si dichiara minutamente del sito di tutti i Porti, quali sono da Venezia in Levante et in Ponente et d'altre cose utilissime & necessarie ai naviganti. 1806 ed., Venice: Silvestro Gnoato. online

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Alvise da Cadamosto Summary.
  2. ^ Verrier (1994: p.7)
  3. ^ Verrier (1994: p.7). Long-range Venetian galleys typically carried a marine corps of 20–30 crossbowmen, commanded by one or two noblemen. Cadamosto qualified for that position, passing a special examination, that same year.
  4. ^ Verrier, 1994: p.8
  5. ^ See Russell (2000: p.292) for the identities of the Henry's emissaries.
  6. ^ Cadamosto, in Kerr, p.204
  7. ^ Damião de Góis (1567) Chronica do prinçipe Dom Ioam (1905 ed.: p.20-21)
  8. ^ e.g. Quintella (1839: p.114) follows Gois's dating, placing Cadamosto's first trip in 1445. See the review in Cortesão (1931:p.27)
  9. ^ Russell, 2000: p.294
  10. ^ Cadamosto (Kerr, p.225 Ital: p.111; Port: p.33). Cadamosto places it 64 miles south of the mouth of the Senegal river and 32 miles north of Cape Vert. Russell (2000: p.299) tentatively locates it at or around modern Mboro town.
  11. ^ Cadamosto (Kerr, p.220; Ital: p.110; Port: p.27 ) The chronicle of the Henrican discoveries by Gomes Eanes de Zurara ends in 1448, with hostilities still raging between the Wolofs and the Portuguese. How it transitioned to peace and trade is uncertain. Russell (2000: p.297), citing a later document (f. 1489), suggests trade was opened up by a certain Lourenço Dias. This is possibly the same Lourenço Dias that participated in the flopped slave raid of Lançarote de Freitas in 1445/46, and returned later (sometime between 1448 and 1450) and managed to set things on a new footing. He may be related to Cadamosto's ship-master Vincente Dias (who also might have travelled with Lançarote). Later in his account (Kerr, p.232), Cadamosto notes that, prior to his journey, he had consulted with a Genoese trader in Portugal (name not given) who had come to Palma di Budomel the year before, and gave him an account of trade and reception he might encounter at this anchorage.
  12. ^ Verrier (1994: p.136), Russell (2000: p.299-300).
  13. ^ Cadamosto (Kerr, p.226; Ital: p.111r, Port:p.34) says he spent the month of November in Budomel's village. Given that the next date he reports is June (when he meets Antoniotto (Kerr p.238)), this implies June 1456. This is undoubtedly a transcription error, as we know (from, e.g. Usodimare's letter) they were back in Portugal before the end of 1455 (moreover, it would also imply he stayed an entire year hanging around Cayor with a cargo of slaves, which is highly unlikely). It is probable that Cadamosto meant to say he spent all of May 1455 (not November) in Budomel's village and met Usodimare in June, 1455. See Quintella (p.121-22n), Verrier (1994: p.136).
  14. ^ In another error, Cadamosto (Kerr, p.237) reports Cape Vert peninsula was discovered by the Portuguese "about a year before". This is untrue – it was discovered a decade before, around 1446, by Dinis Dias (or Dinis Fernandes). However, there had not been many voyages below it since.
  15. ^ Cadamosto (Kerr, p.237; Ital: p.114; Port, p.49)
  16. ^ Sometimes erroneously reported as June, 1456, on account of a dating error in the original account on his stay in Budomel's village.
  17. ^ As proposed in Kerr (p.238n) and Verrier (1994: p.139). Russell (2000: p.304) cites only nearby Gorée, but Cadamosto mention a cluster of islands, so it must include the Madeleines.
  18. ^ Cadamosto (Kerr, p.239; Ital, p.115; Port: p.51).
  19. ^ The term Barbacini is evidently derived from the Wolof appellation, Bor-ba-Sine, i.e. the river of the king (bor) of Sine, the kingdom on the north side of the Saloum, the name probably used by his Wolof interpreters. Curiously, Cadamosto distinguishes between the Sereri and the Barbacini, insinuating they are different peoples, when in fact the Kingdom of Sine was itself a Serer kingdom. He seems 'Sereri' to denote merely the unorganized Serer tribes "without king" on the Wolof-Serer frontier, as distinct from the 'Barbacini', the Serer of the 'organized' Kingdom of Sine. Given that he never set foot in Serer country, he was doubtlessly drawing this characterization from his Wolof interpreters.
  20. ^ Cadamosto Kerr, p.243; Ital: p.116r ; Port: p.57
  21. ^ Cadamosto (Kerr, p.244; Ital: p.116r Port: p.57
  22. ^ See Mauro (1988) for a fuller discussion.
  23. ^ Cadamosto (Kerr: p.246; Ital: p.119; Port: p.59.
  24. ^ The feast SS. Philip and James actually fell on May 1 in the liturgical calendar of the time. But Cadmosto reports they departed Portugal already in May. An alternative proposal (e.g. Quintella, p.129) is that it is his departure date that is mistakenly written – that Cadamosto really departed in March or April, 1456 and reached Cape Verde islands before May 1. Damião de Góis writes that on their second trip, they took "sixteen days" to reach Cape Vert, and claims they called the islands Boa Vista, the second Santiago & São Felipe "on account of it being 1st of May" and a third island Maio "in memory of the month they discovered it." (Gois, 1567: p.22)
  25. ^ R.H. Major (1868: p.277) and Armando Cortesão (1931: p.35) are among those who express strong doubts that Cadamosto ever saw the Cape Verde islands, and suggest instead that Cadamosto was trying to retroactively abscond with the credit due properly to Gomes and Noli. Among the inconsistencies noted by Major (p.286-87): (1) the feast of SS. James & Philip is on May 1st, inconsistent with Cadamosto's departure date; (2) Cadamosto claims he was driven to the islands by a southwesterly wind – an impossibility as Boa Vista lies southwest from Cape Vert; (3) that he visibly saw several islands from a hilltop on Boa Vista – they could not have seen more than one (Sal island); (4) that he found a freshwater river big enough for a large ship to enter – the islands are parched, there are no streams anywhere on the islands "big enough to float a canoe"; (5) there is no salt lagoons nor turtles on Santiago island, as Cadamosto claims to have found. Cortesão (p.37) goes even further than major, suggesting that the entire second trip of Cadamosto of 1456, including the trip up the river and the dealings with Battimansa, Niumimansa, et al. were all fabricated by Cadamosto, that they were fully pinched from the accounts of Diogo Gomes and his companions.
  26. ^ As identified in Kerr (p.248), LeGrand (1928: p.442), Teixera da Mota (1946), Verrier (1994: p.141). In 1651, colonists from the Duchy of Courland built a fort a little upriver on what is now called Kunta Kinteh Island and was then called "St. Andrew's island"; evidently, Cadamosto's name Santo André got transferred from Dog island to Kunta Kinteh island (until recently known as James Island) sometime in the interim. However, Russell (2000: p.310) and Bühnen (1992: p.95) asserts Cadamosto's original island is modern Kinta Kinteh rather than Dog Island. However, Cadamosto asserts they sailed 10 Italian miles (approximately 12.5–15 km) upriver. Dog Island is 13 km. Kunta Kinteh is 40 km.
  27. ^ 'Forosangoli' (also mentioned by Diogo Gomes as "Farisaigul") was said to have his residence some nine to ten days southwest of the river. Bühnen (1992) believes this is a reference to the faran of Sankola, southeast of the river. A faran is a provincial military governor (akin to a duke), of Mali, Sankola a semi-legendary kingdom deep in the upper Gambia. (see Bühnen, 1992; Wright, 1976). Teixeira da Mota (1946) and Verrier (1994) identify him as Faran Sani Coli on the south bank of the river.
  28. ^ Cadamosto (Kerr, p.249; Ital: p.118 Port. p.63). The identification of Batimansa as the king of Badibu is found in several places, e.g. Teixeira da Mota (1946), Verrier (1994: p.141), A. Hughes and D. Perfect (2008, p.29). However, the distances aren't helpful. Cadamosto cites 60 Italian miles, which is approximately 80–90 km upriver. As a result, Russell (2000: p.311) identifies "Batti" as around Bintang Bolong creek on the south bank of the Gambia 13°19′31″N 16°13′25″W / 13.32528°N 16.22361°W / 13.32528; -16.22361). However, Kerr (p.249) identifies it as 'Devil's Point' on the north bank, much further east 13°28′29″N 15°36′42″W / 13.47472°N 15.61167°W / 13.47472; -15.61167. Although double the distance cited by Cadamosto (around 160 km), it corresponds better with the 'narrowing' of the river he describes and is indeed in the environs of the Badibu kingdom. Taking it even further, Bühnen (1992: p.95-96) identifies Batti with Pating, much further inland, at around 240 km upriver, placing Cadamosto within a stone's throw of the market center of Cantor, which seems unlikely. Diogo Gomes cites Batimansa as being a great lord on the south side of the river.
  29. ^ in Kerr, p.249-50
  30. ^ Teixeira da Mota (p.60) notes that 'Guumimensa' in the text is meant to be 'Gnumimansa', an Italian spelling of Niumimansa. In Mandinka language, Niumi means 'coast' and mansa is 'king', thus 'Niumimansa' is the king of the Mandinka of the Atlantic coast, that is, to the west of Badibu. Da Mota notes this is likely the same king who a little later (c. 1458) met Diogo Gomes and may have earlier (either him or a predecessor, back in the 1440s) been responsible for the death of Portuguese captain Nuno Tristão in 1446 and the defeat of another squadron led by Estêvão Afonso in 1447. Old maps distinguish between two groups, the Niumi-bato (probably ancestral to the modern Niominka people, up near the Diombos river in the Sine-Saloum delta, the likely slayers of Nuno Tristão) and the Niumi-banta (ancestral to the western Mandinka of the "Barra" region at the mouth of the Gambia, defeaters of Afonso, and probably Cadamosto & Gomes's 'Niumimansa'.) Note that the latter Niumimansa is said to have had a seasonal residence right by Dog Island, Cadamosto's first stop (Teixera da Mota, p.63: n.64). Wright (1976) asserts the Niumi Bato, Niumi Banta and Jokadu were all under the same mansa.
  31. ^ Cadamosto (in Kerr, p.255; Ital: p.119r; Port: p.69)
  32. ^ Capo Rosso translates to "Red Cape" in Italian, which has led some Portuguese cartographers to translate it to "Cabo Vermelho". But this should not be confused with another 'Cabo Vermelho' (Cape Rouge, or Red Cape, further up near the Bay of Dakar). To avoid confusion, Portuguese cartographers largely adopted the Cadamosto's Italian label, adjusting it to "Cape Roxo" (which translates to "Cape Purple" in Portuguese). See Quintella (p.133n.)
  33. ^ Alternatively, Rio de Santa Ana could be simply the small river of Rio Sucujaque (12°19′57″N 16°39′26″W / 12.33250°N 16.65722°W / 12.33250; -16.65722), just after Cape Roxo, but that is unlikely to be worth mentioning as "comparable" to Cacheu. R.H. Henry (1868: p.284-5) proposes Cadamosto likely affixed Santa Anna to Cacheu and St. Dominico to Rio Mansoa, and the names got shifted later. However, A.M. Castilho insists on assigning St. Dominico originally to the Cacheu River, noting that in Portuguese maps, the Souta river (now Kalissaye River, 12°41′45″N 16°46′49″W / 12.69583°N 16.78028°W / 12.69583; -16.78028), was called "Rio de Santa Ana". However, the Souta is north of Casamance, suggesting that Cadamosto just confused his account, and placed both after Cape Roxo.(Castilho, p.135). This view is supported by Verrier (1994: p.12, 143)
  34. ^ Although not seeming to witness the famous macareo or tidal bore of the Geba River, Cadamosto does refer to the asymmetry of the tide (4 hours rising, 8 hours falling) and the incredible strength of the current at the beginning of high tide, that even three anchors could barely hold the ship in place.
  35. ^ Curiously, Cadamosto notes that the native canoes approached their ships holding up a white flag as a sign of peace – "levorono un fazzuol bianco, alto ligato ad un remo, quasi a mode di dimandar segurta'" (Cadamosto, Ital: p.120). It is probably a coincidence. It is unlikely the white flag norm of parlay, although already prevalent in the Mediterranean, would have made its way this far south.
  36. ^ See the review of expeditions by Teixeira da Mota (1946).
  37. ^ Teixeira da Mota (1946)
  38. ^ Diogo Gomes, p.282; Russell, 2000 p.331. However, Cortesão (1931: p.37) suggests it was Diogo Gomes is truthful, that Cadamosto never undertook his second trip at all, but pinched the account – including the dealings with Battimansa, Niumimansa etc. – wholesale from Gomes and others. Curiously, Damião de Góis (1567:p.22) credits them with discovering the Cape Verde islands, but makes no mention of their second entry into the Gambia or sojourn there, claiming instead they sailed straight from the islands to Casamance, and went on as far only to Cape Roxo, before turning back.
  39. ^ He does not mention any, although Russell (2000: 296) believes he might have.
  40. ^ Brotton (1998: p.60); Russell, (2000: p.341)
  41. ^ A. da Mosto (1883), Verrier (1994: p.14)
  42. ^ Verrier (1994: p.14)
  43. ^ Verrier (1994: p.15)
  44. ^ Although it is often assumed that Prince Henry must have privately kept records of the expeditions he sent out, no such records have ever been found. It is believed that whatever remained of Henry's private papers (if not already long lost), was destroyed in the 1755 Lisbon earthquake. Cadamosto, Zurara, Gomes and a few scraps in the royal archives (collected in the Monumenta Henricina in the 1960s) are all that remain of the documentary record of the Henrican discoveries.
  45. ^ Russell (2000) is highly laudatory of Cadamosto's account (and, by contrast, distrustful of Diogo Gomes's account). However, some older historians, notably R.H. Major (1868) and Armando Cortesão (1931), take the opposite position, believing Diogo Gomes's account to be the more trustworthy one, and that Cadamosto riddled his account with errors and half-truths, that he stole most of it from others.
  46. ^ Cadamosto (in Kerr, p.215; Ital: p.108; Port: p.21)
  47. ^ Cadamosto (Kerr, p.218; Ital: p.110; Port: p.25)
  48. ^ Cadamosto (Kerr, p.220; Ital: p.110; Port: p.27)
  49. ^ Cadamosto (Kerr, p.221; Ital: p.110; Port: p.28)
  50. ^ Cadamosto (Kerr, p.225-37 ; Ital: p.111-14; Port: p.27-48)
  51. ^ Cadamosto, (Kerr, p.251; Ital: p.118r; Port: p.65)
  52. ^ In Kerr, p.252-53
  53. ^ Review of Cadamosto's editions is found in Schefer (1895)
  54. ^ Mosto, 1883
  55. ^ A copy of the 1507 Paesi can be found at BNF Gallica. [1]. If the entire Paesi is downloaded in PDF form, then Cadamosto's first account is pp.15–95 and his second account (on Pedro de Sintra) starts on p.96. Note that in the Ramusio 1550 collection, Cadamosto's account ends on the middle of p.103 of the Paesi, but seems to continue in the original Paesi on to p.104. This is probably because Ramusio reprinted the account from a later imperect edition of the Paesi. The BNF Gallica also has a downloadable copy of a 1512 Italian reprint of the Paesi (published in Milan) at [2], but it also seems to go further than Ramusio.
  56. ^ in William Reese catalogue 250. 2006-10-16 at the Wayback Machine. A copy of the 1508 Milan edition can be found at BNF Gallica [3]. If the entire Itinerarium is downloaded in PDF form, then Cadamosto's accounts of his own journey ranges pp.23–80 (in the PDF), and Cadamosto's account of Pedro de Sintra is pp.80–84 of the PDF.

Sources Edit

  • J. Brotton (1998) Trading territories: mapping the early modern world, Cornell University Press
  • Bühnen, S. (1992) "Place Names as an Historical Source: An Introduction with Examples from Southern Senegambia and Germany", History in Africa, Vol. 19, pp. 45–101
  • Castilho, A.M. de (1866) Descripção e roteiro da costa occidental de Africa, desde o cabo de Espartel até o das Agulhas. 2 vols, Lisbon: Impresa Nacional. vol. 1
  • Cortesão, Armando (1931) "Subsídios para a história do Descobrimento de Cabo Verde e Guiné", Boletim da Agencia Geral das Colonias, No. 75. As reprinted in 1975, Esparsos, vol. 1, Coimbra. online
  • G.R. Crone, ed. (1937) The Voyages of Cadamosto and other documents on Western Africa in the second half of the fifteenth century, London: Hakluyt.
  • da Mosto, Andrea (1883) "Il portulano attribuito ad Alvise da Cà da Mosto", Bollettino della Società geografica italiana, vol. 30, p. 540 offprint
  • Diffie, Bailey W., and George D. Winius (1977) Foundations of the Portuguese empire, 1415–1580. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press
  • Damião de Góis (1567) Chronica do prinçipe Dom Ioam: rei que foi destes regnos segundo do nome, em que summariamente se trattam has cousas sustançiaes que nelles aconteçerão do dia de seu nasçimento atte ho em que el Rei Dom Afonso seu pai faleçeo, 1905 edition, A.J. Gonçálvez Guimarãis ed. Coimbra: Imprensa da Universidade. online
  • Diogo Gomes De prima inventione Guineae (Portuguese translation by Gabriel Pereira (1898–99) as "As Relações do Descobrimento da Guiné e das ilhas dos Açores, Madeira e Cabo Verde" in Boletim da Sociedade de Geografia de Lisboa, no. 5 online)
  • Hughes, A. and D. Perfect (2008) Historical Dictionary of the Gambia, 4th ed., Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow.
  • LeGrand, G. (1928) "La Gambie: notes historiques et géographiques" Bulletin du Comité d'études historiques et scientifiques de l'Afrique Occidentale Française, Jul-sep, p. 432-84
  • Major, R.H. (1868) The Life of Prince Henry, surnamed the Navigator. London: Asher & Co. 1868 ed.
  • Mauro, Alessandra (1988) "O "Carro do Austro" de Alvise da Ca' da Mosto: observaçoẽs astronómicas e fortuna editorial", Revista da Universidade de Coimbra, vol. 24, p. 463-75. offprint
  • Quintella, Ignacio da Costa (1839) Annaes da Marinha Portugueza, Lisbon: Academia Real das Sciencias, vol. 1.
  • Russell, Peter E. (2000) Prince Henry 'the Navigator': a life. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press.
  • C. Schefer (1895) "Introduction" in Relation des voyages à la côte occidentale d'Afrique d'Alvise de Ca' da Mosto, 1455–1457, Paris: Leroux
  • Teixera da Mota, Avelino (1946) "A descoberta da Guiné", Boletim cultural da Guiné Portuguesa, Vol. 1. Part 1 in No. 1 (Jan), p. 11–68, Pt. 2 in No. 2 (Apr), p. 273–326; Pt. 3 in No. 3 (Jul), p. 457–509.
  • Teixira da Mota, A. (1972) Mar, além Mar: Estudos e ensaios de história e geographia. Lisbon: Junta de Investigações do Ultramar
  • Verrier, F. (1994) "Introduction", in Voyages en Afrique Noire d'Alvise Ca'da Mosto (1455 & 1456). Paris: Chandeigne.
  • Zurla, P. (1815) Dei viaggi e delle scoperte africane di Alvise da Cà da Mosto, Patrizio Veneto, Venice. online
  • Wright, D. (1976), Niumi: the history of a western Mandinka state through the eighteenth century. Bloomington: Indiana University.

External links Edit

alvise, cadamosto, alvise, mosto, portuguese, pronunciation, alˈvizɨ, kɐðaˈmoʃtu, also, known, portuguese, luís, cadamosto, 1432, july, 1488, venetian, explorer, slave, trader, hired, portuguese, prince, henry, navigator, undertook, known, journeys, west, afri. Alvise Cadamosto or Alvise da Ca da Mosto Portuguese pronunciation alˈvizɨ kɐdaˈmoʃtu also known in Portuguese as Luis Cadamosto c 1432 18 July 1488 was a Venetian explorer and slave trader 1 who was hired by the Portuguese prince Henry the Navigator and undertook two known journeys to West Africa in 1455 and 1456 accompanied by the Genoese captain Antoniotto Usodimare Cadamosto and his companions are credited with the discovery of the Cape Verde Islands and the points along the Guinea coast from the Gambia River to the Geba River in Guinea Bissau the greatest leap in the Henrican discoveries since 1446 Cadamosto s accounts of his journeys including his detailed observations of West African societies have proven invaluable to historians Contents 1 Background 2 Expeditions to Africa 2 1 First Journey 1455 2 2 Second Journey 1456 2 3 Achievement 3 Return to Venice 4 The Navigazioni 4 1 Editions 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksBackground EditAlvise was born at the Ca da Mosto a palace on the Grand Canal of Venice from which his name derives His father was Giovanni da Mosto a Venetian civil servant and merchant and his mother Elizabeth Querini from a leading patrician family of Venice Alvise was the eldest of three sons having younger brothers Pietro and Antonio At a remarkably young age Alvise was cast out as a merchant adventurer sailing with Venetian galleys in the Mediterranean From 1442 to 1448 Alvise undertook various trips on Venetian galleys to the Barbary Coast and Crete as a commercial agent of his cousin Andrea Barbarigo 2 In 1451 he was appointed noble officer of the marine corps of crossbowmen on a galley to Alexandria 3 The next year he served the same position on a Venetian galley to Flanders Upon his return he found his family disgraced and dispossessed His father caught in a bribery scandal had been banished from Venice and taken refuge in the Duchy of Modena 4 His Querini relatives took the opportunity to seize possession of his family s property This setback marred the future prospects of Cadamosto s career in Venice and probably encouraged his spirit of adventure hoping to restore his family name and fortune with great feats of his own Expeditions to Africa EditIn August 1454 at the age of 22 Alvise and his brother Antonio embarked on a Venetian merchant galley captained by Marco Zen destined for Flanders On the outward journey the galley was detained by bad weather near Cape St Vincent Portugal While waiting for the weather to improve the Portuguese Prince Henry the Navigator who had his seat nearby at Sagres dispatched a couple of his commercial agents led by his secretary Antao Goncalves and the local Venetian consul Patrizio di Conti to interest the stranded Venetian merchants in opening trade contracts for sugar and other goods from the prince s Madeira island 5 Informed by the visitors of Henry s recent discoveries in Africa Cadamosto inflamed with the desire of visiting these newly discovered regions 6 immediately applied to Prince Henry at his residence at Raposeira to undertake an expedition on his behalf Henry hired him on the spot Note the 16th century Portuguese chronicler Damiao de Gois uniquely among historians mistakenly asserted that Cadamosto s encounter took place in 1444 rather that 1454 7 Given the eminence of Gois this erroneous dating has been cited by others and has been a cause of much confusion for later histories and chronologies 8 First Journey 1455 Edit Alvise Cadamosto set out on 22 March 1455 on a 43 tonne caravel supplied by Prince Henry with Vicente Dias as ship master 9 He proceeded to Porto Santo and Madeira and thereafter weaved his way through the Canary islands making stops in La Gomera El Hierro and La Palma before reaching the African coast around Cape Blanc Cadamosto made note of the existence of the Portuguese factory fort at Arguin but does not seem to have stopped there himself Cadamosto cruised down the west African coast to the mouth of the Senegal River which he calls the Rio do Senega the first recorded use of that name He does not seem to have stopped here his destination being further south at an anchorage point along the Grande Cote he called the Palma di Budomel location uncertain probably around Mboro 15 09 42 N 16 55 45 W 15 16167 N 16 92917 W 15 16167 16 92917 10 Cadamosto notes that this spot or resgate was already used by Portuguese traders He dates that trade between the Portuguese and the Wolof people of the Senegal region was opened around 1450 five years before I went on this voyage 11 Cadamosto had sought to trade Iberian horses for black slaves the principal line of business at this resgate Horses were highly valued on the Senegalese coast and traded at a rate of between 9 and 14 slaves per horse Cadamosto is said to have sold seven horses and some woolen goods a total value of around 300 ducats for about 100 slaves 12 While at the anchorage Cadamosto was surprised to be met by the ruler himself the Damel of Cayor whom he calls Budomel accompanied by his retinue The Damel invited him inland while the details of the trade were finalized Cadamosto spent nearly an entire month in an inland village hosted by the prince Bisboror Budomel s nephew during which time he delighted in observing much about the local country and customs 13 His trade in Cayor completed rather than return home with his human cargo Cadamosto decided to cruise further down the coast towards the Cape Vert peninsula 14 This was intended as a pure exploratory jaunt to discover new countries beyond the Cape more specifically the mysterious kingdom called Gambra where Prince Henry had heard from earlier slave captives that gold was found in abundance 15 Around Cape Vert in June 1455 16 Cadamosto came across two Portuguese caravels one of which was commanded by Antoniotto Usodimare a Genoese captain in Prince Henry s service the other by an unnamed squire of Henry s household They agreed to join forces and proceeded south together After a brief fishing stop on some unnamed islands probably Iles des Madeleines 17 Cadamosto Usodimare and the Portuguese squire sailed south down the Petite Cote until they reached the Sine Saloum delta a stretch inhabited by the Sereri Serer people Cadamosto has nothing good to say about the Serer characterizing them as savage idolaters of great cruelty although we should note at this point his information is being drawn principally from Wolof interpreters 18 Cadamosto claims he was the one who named the Saloum River as the Rio di Barbacini the name by which it would remain known on European maps thereafter 19 Cadamosto and Usodimare tried to put in there but quickly decided against it when an interpreter they landed to make contact with the local Serer natives gathered on the beaches was killed on the spot Pressing south Cadamosto and Usodimare finally discovered the mouth of the Gambia River in late June or early July 1455 They set about sailing upriver but their advance faced unremitting hostility from the Mandinka inhabitants upriver Subjected to intense missile fire they barely fended off a massed canoe attack that sought to trap and board them According to Cadamosto s interpreters the Mandinka believed the Portuguese were cannibals that they had come to the region to buy black men to eat 20 Urged by their frightened crews and probably desirous to keep his human cargo intact he had been carrying a shipload of slaves since Cayor Cadamosto decided to call off venturing further and backed out of the river Cadamosto does not supply details of the return trip to Portugal At the mouth of the Gambia Cadamosto made a note of the near disappearance of the northern Pole Star on the horizon and roughly sketched a bright constellation to the south believed to be the first known depiction of the Southern Cross constellation albeit wrongly positioned and with too many stars a more accurate rendition would have to wait until Mestre Joao Faras in 1500 21 Cadamosto called it the carro dell ostro southern chariot 22 It is known that the fleet was back in Portugal before the end of the year as Antoniotto Usodimare would write a letter dated 12 December 1455 to his creditors back in Genoa reporting the results of his voyage albeit with much exaggeration and without mentioning Cadamosto Second Journey 1456 Edit nbsp Map of the Cape Verde islands and the Guinea coast c 1771Cadamosto set out again from Lagos in May 1456 this time not alone but together with Antoniotto Usodimare and another caravel with an unnamed Portuguese captain another servant of Prince Henry The three vessels made no known trading stops intending to sail straight to the Gambia River probably per Prince Henry s instructions Catching a storm around Cape Vert peninsula the little fleet was forced to sail west away from the coast for two days and three nights about 300 miles and stumbled on the as yet undiscovered archipelago of the Cape Verde Islands 23 Cadamosto Usodimare and the unnamed captain scouted several of the uninhabited islands believing them to be four in number although Cadamosto notes in his account that later explorers would find them to be ten They anchored first on an island which they named Buona Vista Boa Vista before proceeding on to a larger island which they named San Jacobo Santiago according to Cadamosto on account of it being the feast of SS Philip and James probably an error 24 Finding the islands uninteresting they headed on Note although Cadamosto s claims credit for the discovery of the Cape Verde islands this is disputed by Diogo Gomes who claims he discovered the islands together with Antonio da Noli in 1462 sometimes dated 1460 25 Cadamosto Usodimare and the unnamed Portuguese captain proceeded to enter the Gambia River again albeit this time without opposition They sailed about 10 Italian miles 15 km upriver and anchored briefly on a river island they named Santo Andrea to bury a deceased crew member named Andrea the island is believed to be modern Dog Island 26 nbsp Map of the Gambia River and surrounding area c 1732The trio proceeded upriver carefully warily watched by native Mandinka canoes but this time no hostilities or ambushes emerged Eventually one of the interpreters managed to entice some of the canoe borne natives aboard the Portuguese ships and opened peaceful contact The natives identified themselves as subjects of king Forosangoli of the southern bank of the Gambia 27 and that he and most other Mandinka kings along the Gambia river were all vassal subjects of the Emperor of Mali Impatore di Melli and that some of the local kings were willing to meet the Portuguese Following the instructions of his interlocutors Cadamosto sailed some 60 Italian miles up the Gambia river reaching the residence of the Mandinka king he called Battimansa Mandinka for king of the Batti probably Badibu on the north side of the river 28 They were well received but disappointed at the little evidence of the large amounts of gold they had expected to find They engaged in some petty trade with the locals in particular musk invaluable to European perfumers and imply they even acquired live specimens of African civet cat 29 Cadamosto mentions interacting with another lord Guumimensa whose dominion was closer to the mouth of the river This is probably none other than the formidable Niumimansa king of the Niumi Banta of Barra region whose rule extended over Niumi Bato Niominka of the Diombos River shore an old antagonist of Portuguese explorers 30 However Cadamosto reports their relations went quite smoothly Cadamosto and his companions stayed in Badibu for 11 days before departing They did not discover the commercial center of Cantor which was still several miles upriver it was only discovered a couple of years later by Diogo Gomes But he did discover malaria and his crew quickly fell ill with fevers It was probably this epidemic that prompted Cadamosto to cut short his stay and leave the Gambia river back to the ocean where the fevers seemed to have subsided Resolved to continue exploring the West African coast Cadamosto s trio set sail south doubling Cape St Mary 13 29 10 N 16 40 6 W 13 48611 N 16 66833 W 13 48611 16 66833 and carefully navigating the dangerous breakers around Bald Cape 13 22 47 N 16 47 43 W 13 37972 N 16 79528 W 13 37972 16 79528 reporting a couple of rivers along the way none of which he names A few days later Cadamosto and his companions discovered the mouth of the Casamance River 12 33 22 N 16 45 44 W 12 55611 N 16 76222 W 12 55611 16 76222 31 They named the river after the local lord Casamansa king mansa of Kasa called Casangas by later Portuguese a now near extinct people related to the Bainuk people They sent a couple of launches to land to open contact but being told the king was absent on campaign Cadamosto did not linger but decided to continue on Sailing south the fleet reached a red colored headland they named Capo Rosso Cape Roxo 12 20 8 N 16 42 47 W 12 33556 N 16 71306 W 12 33556 16 71306 today marking the border between the republic of Senegal and Guinea Bissau 32 In his account Cadamosto names two large rivers beyond the Cape Roxo promontory Santa Anna and San Dominico which are a little confusing It is believed one is likely to be the Cacheu River 12 10 32 N 16 20 47 W 12 17556 N 16 34639 W 12 17556 16 34639 often indicated in later Portuguese maps as Rio de Sao Domingos while the other river is probably one of the branches Rio de Jatta or Rio das Ancoras of the Mansoa River 11 51 34 N 15 58 24 W 11 85944 N 15 97333 W 11 85944 15 97333 33 A day later Cadamosto discovered a great river grandissimo fiume which they named Rio Grande the Geba River more precisely the wide estuary it forms together with the Corubal River it doesn t seem they actually entered the river itself 11 45 N 15 38 W 11 750 N 15 633 W 11 750 15 633 34 After anchoring near the southern bank of the estuary they were approached by a couple of long native canoes from the mainland no identification given probably Balantas or Biafares 35 A few trinkets were traded with the canoes but they were unable to open communication as their on ship interpreters Wolof and or Mandinka did not understand their native language After a couple of days they lifted anchor and made their way to some of the many islands in the sea the Bissagos Islands but found it just as impossible to communicate with the inhabitants there Given the language barrier they saw no point in proceeding further Cadamosto Usodimare and the unnamed Portuguese captain set sail back to Portugal Achievement Edit The record of Portuguese discoveries prior to Alvise Cadamosto did not seem to have gone beyond the Sine Saloum delta 36 The furthest pre Cadamosto seems to have been the singular expedition of Alvaro Fernandes in 1446 which may have reached as far as Cape Roxo but this was not followed up The 1447 expedition led by Estevao Afonso did not go beyond the beginning of the estuary of the Gambia River and thereafter expeditions below Cape Vert were largely suspended by Prince Henry The principal barrier to the Portuguese seems to have been belligerence of the Niumi Bato Niominka and the Niumi Banta Mandinka of Niumi Barra both led by the same king Niumimansa 37 Cadamosto encountered that hostility on his first expedition of 1455 But on his second trip in 1456 opposition fell away for some reason and he managed to become the first European along with Antoniotto Usodimare and their anonymous companions to sail up the Gambia River It is uncertain what caused this change of attitude from one year to the next a new Niumimansa A shift in senegambian politics The unreliable Diogo Gomes later boasted that he sailed to the Gambia sometime between 1456 and 1458 and single handedly negotiated a peace with the Niumimansa although this is likely exaggerated 38 Once they opened the Gambia River Cadamosto and Usodimare led the next great leap of Henrican discoveries in Africa Cape Verde islands the Casamance River Cape Roxo Cacheu River and finally the Geba River and Bissagos Islands The length of coast they discovered in 1456 was the greatest leap in the Portuguese era of discoveries since 1446 Much the same coast would be covered again by Diogo Gomes around 1458 possibly as early as 1456 probably sent by Henry as a follow up to Cadamosto s report and 1462 Cadamosto s furthest marker would only really be surpassed by Pedro de Sintra in 1461 62 Return to Venice EditAfter his return in 1456 Cadamosto continued to live in Lagos for many years suggesting he must have continued to engage directly or indirectly in West African commerce It is not known whether Cadamosto himself made any further trips down the African coast 39 Cadamosto bluntly states that there were no other voyages of exploratory significance by anyone after 1456 until the expedition of Pedro de Sintra in 1462 Cadamosto acquired the details of that expedition from Sintra s clerk upon its return Cadamosto s patron Prince Henry the Navigator died in November 1460 and the monopoly on African trade reverted to the Portuguese crown and its operations were gradually transferred from Lagos to Lisbon Probably seeing no future for himself in the new order Cadamosto left Portugal and returned to Venice in February 1463 Cadamosto is believed to have brought notes logs and several nautical maps with him Cadamosto used these to compose his famous Navigationi sometime in the mid 1460s The Navigazioni besides generally hailing the Portuguese discoveries and lionizing Prince Henry provided detailed accounts of three expeditions his own voyages of 1455 and 1456 and the voyage of Pedro de Sintra in 1462 He is believed to have delivered much of his primary material to the Venetian cartographer Grazioso Benincasa as Benincasa went on to produce an atlas in 1468 depicting the West African coast with remarkable accuracy 40 The Navigationi were probably written in an effort to advertise his accomplishments and rescue his family name Upon his return Cadamosto managed to recover some of his family s property from his Querini relatives and a couple of years later married Elisabetta di Giorgio Venier a rich noblewoman but of frail health she died without bearing him a child 41 He returned to commerce with trading interests as far afield as Spain Alexandria Syria and England and with fortune and connections restored carved out a diplomatic and administrative career for the Republic of Venice alongside it Cadamosto served as Venetian proveditor in Cattaro then in Corone and was sent on diplomatic missions to Dalmatia and Herzegovina 42 After the fall of Negroponte in 1470 Cadamosto was placed in charge of devising a plan for the defense of Albania against the Ottomans In 1481 Alvise Cadamosto was elected captain of the Venetian Alexandria galley fleet ending his naval career on the same ships where he started He died in 1483 in the Polesine while on diplomatic mission to Rovigo to assess the spoils acquired by the Venetian Republic after their victory over Ercole I d Este Duke of Ferrara in the War of Ferrara 43 although in some accounts the date of his death is sometimes given as early as 1477 and as late as 1488 The Navigazioni EditFor historians of the Portuguese discoveries under Henry the Navigator Alvise Cadamosto s accounts the Navigazioni have proven to be an invaluable document Cadamosto s accounts Gomes Eanes de Zurara s chronicle and the memoirs of Diogo Gomes are practically all that remain of the contemporary written record of the Henrican discoveries 44 Indeed until the publication of Joao de Barros s Decadas da Asia in 1552 which drew on a manuscript draft of Zurara s chronicle Cadamosto s Navigazioni was the only published work circulating in Europe about the Portuguese discoveries Cadamosto emphasized the central role of Prince Henry and was instrumental in building up the image of the Navigator Prince for posterity Compared to the hagiographic Zurara and the fallible Gomes historians have relished and lauded the reliability and detail provided by Cadamosto giving a richer and clearer view of how the Henrican enterprise operated 45 Cadamosto s accounts are also invaluable for historians of Africa providing the first written detailed accounts of the Senegambia region beyond the fringes touched one century earlier by Arab historian Ibn Battuta Cadamosto gives a summary of contemporary European knowledge about West Africa He describes the Mali Empire Melli and the Trans Saharan trade e g how Berber caravans carry the Saharan salt from desert pans like Teghaza Tegazza to frontier cities like Timbuctu Tombutto 46 He goes to explain how gold coming out of the heart of Mali goes out in three parts one to Cochia Kukiya and then eastwards onto Egypt the second via Timbuctu to Toet Tuat and then north towards Tunisia and a third part also via Timbuctu goes west to Hoden Ouadane destined for Morocco part of which is deviated to the Portuguese factory at Arguin 47 Cadamosto is the first known person to refer to the Senegal River by its recognizably modern name Rio di Senega rather than the western Nile Curiously Cadamosto notes that the Senegal was probably the Niger of ancient geographers e g Ptolomey He repeats the old error of assuming that the Senegal river and the actual Niger river are connected to each other forming one great east west river and relates the legend that it was believed to be a tributary of the great Biblical river of Gihon Gion that flowed from the Garden of Eden across the lands of Aethiopia 48 Cadamosto describes the Wolof Gilofi empire which he notes was bound on the east by the Fula Tekrur Toucouleur Tuchusor and to the south by the Mandinka states of the Gambia River Gambra 49 Cadamosto goes into quite some detail on the politics society and culture of the Wolof states He supplies a meticulously detailed eyewitness description of the Cayor village he stayed in 1455 the Damel s court the people customs economy local fauna and flora etc 50 The details demonstrate Cadamosto s sheer curiosity he describes the courtly customs the houses the use of cowrie shells as currency the food and drink the operation of local markets livestock and cultivation the production of palm wine weapons the dances and music the reaction to European novelties clothes ships cannon bag pipes In all this Cadamosto s narrative evinces a degree of honest curiosity and absence of prejudice perhaps surprising for a European of that era Cadamosto attempts a similarly detailed account of the Mandinka people of the Gambia River making particular note of their abundant cotton rare in Wolof areas although not nearly as complete as he did not seem to venture much away from his boats there 51 He does not cease to marvel at the extraordinary wildlife which is far more plentiful around the Gambia notably the hippopotamus which he calls the horse fish and the largely unfamiliar African elephant whose meat he was tempted to taste a piece of which he salted and brought back to Portugal for Prince Henry himself a preserved elephant s foot would be forwarded to Henry s sister Isabella Duchess of Burgundy 52 Editions Edit Alvise Cadamosto s accounts were first published in Italian at the head of the famous 1507 collection Paesi novamente retrovati edited by Francazano Montalboddo and published in Vicenza It was quickly followed by translations into Latin 1508 German 1508 and French 1515 The Italian version was reprinted in the famous Ramusio collection of 1550 Although reprinted and widely disseminated in other countries a Portuguese translation did not appear until 1812 53 Cadamosto was also long alleged to be the author of the Portolano del mare a rutter with sailing directions for the Mediterranean Sea coasts found in the library of St Mark in Venice with the publication stamp of Bernardo Rizzo in 1490 Cadamosto s authorship of the portolano has been generally discarded in modern times 54 Editions of Cadamosto s Navigazioni Original 1507 as opening chapters of Francanzano Montalboddo editor Paesi novamente retrovati et Novo Mondo da Alberico Vesputio Florentino intitulato published in Vicenza 1507 reprinted 1508 1512 1519 1521 Cadamosto s account of his 1455 and 1456 voyages starts with title Libro Primo In comenza el libro de la prima Navigatione per loceano a le terre de Nigri de la Bassa Ethiopia per comandamento del Illust Signor Infante Don Hurich fratello de Don Dourth Re de Portogallo Cap 1 through Cap 47 is the 1455 amp 1456 Cadamosto voyages Cadamosto s account of Pedro de Sintra is at the beginning of the next section Libro Secundo De la Navigatione de Lisbona a Callichut de lengua Portogallese intaliana starting with heading Chi scriprireno noui paesi cum li sui nomi Cap 48 50 55 Latin 1508 trans of Montalboddo s 1507 Paesi by Archangelo Madrigini Abbot of Casalo as Itinerarium Portugallensium e Lusitania in Indiam et Inde in Occidentem et Demum ad Aquilonem published in Milan 1508 56 This Latin translation was reprinted in Simon Grynaeus Novus orbis regnorum et insularum veteribus incognitorum 1532 German 1508 trans by Jobstein Ruchamer in Newe unbekante landte und ein newe weldte in kurt verganger zeythe erfunden published in Nuremberg 1508 French 1515 trans by Mathurin du Redouer Sensuyt le Nouveau monde amp navigations faictes par Emeric Vespuce Florentin Dez pays amp isles nouvellement trouvez auparavant a nous inconneuz tant en l Ethiope que Arrabie Calichut et aultres plusiers regions estranges published in Paris 1515 1916 reprint online Reprint 1895 C Schefer ed Relation des voyages a la cote occidentale d Afrique d Alvise de Ca da Mosto 1455 1457 Paris Leroux online New translation by Frederique Verrier 1994 Voyages en Afrique Noire d Alvise Ca da Mosto 1455 amp 1456 Paris Chandeigne Italian Ramusio ed Il Libro di Messer Alvise Ca da Mosto Gentilhuomo Venetiano amp Navigatione del Capitano Pietro di Sintra Portoghese scritta per il medesimo M Alvise da Ca da Mosto as printed in Venice 1550 by Giovanni Battista Ramusio ed Primo volume delle navigationi et viaggi nel qua si contine la descrittione dell Africa et del paese del Prete Ianni on varii viaggi dal mar Rosso a Calicut amp infin all isole Molucche dove nascono le Spetierie et la navigatione attorno il mondo online English Original Journals of the Voyages of Cada Mosto and Piedro de Cintra to the Coast of Africa the former in the years 1455 and 1456 and the latter soon afterwards reprinted in R Kerr 1811 A General History of Voyages and Travels to the end of the 18th century vol 2 Edinburgh Blackwood Ch 4 Another English edition is found G R Crone ed 1937 The Voyages of Cadamosto London Haklyut Portuguese Navegacoes de Luiz de Cadamosto a que se ajuntou a viagem de Pedro de Cintra capitao Portuguez traduzidas to Italiano in Academia Real das Sciencias 1812 Colleccao de noticias para a historia e geografia das nacoes ultramarinas que vivem nos dominios portuguezes ou lhes sao visinhas vol 2 Pt 1 offprintApocryphal not Cadamosto but attributed to him in the past Unknown 1490 Il Portolano del mare di Alvise da Mosto nobile Veneto nel qual si dichiara minutamente del sito di tutti i Porti quali sono da Venezia in Levante et in Ponente et d altre cose utilissime amp necessarie ai naviganti 1806 ed Venice Silvestro Gnoato onlineSee also EditList of explorers Explorations disambiguation References Edit Alvise da Cadamosto Summary Verrier 1994 p 7 Verrier 1994 p 7 Long range Venetian galleys typically carried a marine corps of 20 30 crossbowmen commanded by one or two noblemen Cadamosto qualified for that position passing a special examination that same year Verrier 1994 p 8 See Russell 2000 p 292 for the identities of the Henry s emissaries Cadamosto in Kerr p 204 Damiao de Gois 1567 Chronica do principe Dom Ioam 1905 ed p 20 21 e g Quintella 1839 p 114 follows Gois s dating placing Cadamosto s first trip in 1445 See the review in Cortesao 1931 p 27 Russell 2000 p 294 Cadamosto Kerr p 225 Ital p 111 Port p 33 Cadamosto places it 64 miles south of the mouth of the Senegal river and 32 miles north of Cape Vert Russell 2000 p 299 tentatively locates it at or around modern Mboro town Cadamosto Kerr p 220 Ital p 110 Port p 27 The chronicle of the Henrican discoveries by Gomes Eanes de Zurara ends in 1448 with hostilities still raging between the Wolofs and the Portuguese How it transitioned to peace and trade is uncertain Russell 2000 p 297 citing a later document f 1489 suggests trade was opened up by a certain Lourenco Dias This is possibly the same Lourenco Dias that participated in the flopped slave raid of Lancarote de Freitas in 1445 46 and returned later sometime between 1448 and 1450 and managed to set things on a new footing He may be related to Cadamosto s ship master Vincente Dias who also might have travelled with Lancarote Later in his account Kerr p 232 Cadamosto notes that prior to his journey he had consulted with a Genoese trader in Portugal name not given who had come to Palma di Budomel the year before and gave him an account of trade and reception he might encounter at this anchorage Verrier 1994 p 136 Russell 2000 p 299 300 Cadamosto Kerr p 226 Ital p 111r Port p 34 says he spent the month of November in Budomel s village Given that the next date he reports is June when he meets Antoniotto Kerr p 238 this implies June 1456 This is undoubtedly a transcription error as we know from e g Usodimare s letter they were back in Portugal before the end of 1455 moreover it would also imply he stayed an entire year hanging around Cayor with a cargo of slaves which is highly unlikely It is probable that Cadamosto meant to say he spent all of May 1455 not November in Budomel s village and met Usodimare in June 1455 See Quintella p 121 22n Verrier 1994 p 136 In another error Cadamosto Kerr p 237 reports Cape Vert peninsula was discovered by the Portuguese about a year before This is untrue it was discovered a decade before around 1446 by Dinis Dias or Dinis Fernandes However there had not been many voyages below it since Cadamosto Kerr p 237 Ital p 114 Port p 49 Sometimes erroneously reported as June 1456 on account of a dating error in the original account on his stay in Budomel s village As proposed in Kerr p 238n and Verrier 1994 p 139 Russell 2000 p 304 cites only nearby Goree but Cadamosto mention a cluster of islands so it must include the Madeleines Cadamosto Kerr p 239 Ital p 115 Port p 51 The term Barbacini is evidently derived from the Wolof appellation Bor ba Sine i e the river of the king bor of Sine the kingdom on the north side of the Saloum the name probably used by his Wolof interpreters Curiously Cadamosto distinguishes between the Sereri and the Barbacini insinuating they are different peoples when in fact the Kingdom of Sine was itself a Serer kingdom He seems Sereri to denote merely the unorganized Serer tribes without king on the Wolof Serer frontier as distinct from the Barbacini the Serer of the organized Kingdom of Sine Given that he never set foot in Serer country he was doubtlessly drawing this characterization from his Wolof interpreters Cadamosto Kerr p 243 Ital p 116r Port p 57 Cadamosto Kerr p 244 Ital p 116r Port p 57 See Mauro 1988 for a fuller discussion Cadamosto Kerr p 246 Ital p 119 Port p 59 The feast SS Philip and James actually fell on May 1 in the liturgical calendar of the time But Cadmosto reports they departed Portugal already in May An alternative proposal e g Quintella p 129 is that it is his departure date that is mistakenly written that Cadamosto really departed in March or April 1456 and reached Cape Verde islands before May 1 Damiao de Gois writes that on their second trip they took sixteen days to reach Cape Vert and claims they called the islands Boa Vista the second Santiago amp Sao Felipe on account of it being 1st of May and a third island Maio in memory of the month they discovered it Gois 1567 p 22 R H Major 1868 p 277 and Armando Cortesao 1931 p 35 are among those who express strong doubts that Cadamosto ever saw the Cape Verde islands and suggest instead that Cadamosto was trying to retroactively abscond with the credit due properly to Gomes and Noli Among the inconsistencies noted by Major p 286 87 1 the feast of SS James amp Philip is on May 1st inconsistent with Cadamosto s departure date 2 Cadamosto claims he was driven to the islands by a southwesterly wind an impossibility as Boa Vista lies southwest from Cape Vert 3 that he visibly saw several islands from a hilltop on Boa Vista they could not have seen more than one Sal island 4 that he found a freshwater river big enough for a large ship to enter the islands are parched there are no streams anywhere on the islands big enough to float a canoe 5 there is no salt lagoons nor turtles on Santiago island as Cadamosto claims to have found Cortesao p 37 goes even further than major suggesting that the entire second trip of Cadamosto of 1456 including the trip up the river and the dealings with Battimansa Niumimansa et al were all fabricated by Cadamosto that they were fully pinched from the accounts of Diogo Gomes and his companions As identified in Kerr p 248 LeGrand 1928 p 442 Teixera da Mota 1946 Verrier 1994 p 141 In 1651 colonists from the Duchy of Courland built a fort a little upriver on what is now called Kunta Kinteh Island and was then called St Andrew s island evidently Cadamosto s name Santo Andre got transferred from Dog island to Kunta Kinteh island until recently known as James Island sometime in the interim However Russell 2000 p 310 and Buhnen 1992 p 95 asserts Cadamosto s original island is modern Kinta Kinteh rather than Dog Island However Cadamosto asserts they sailed 10 Italian miles approximately 12 5 15 km upriver Dog Island is 13 km Kunta Kinteh is 40 km Forosangoli also mentioned by Diogo Gomes as Farisaigul was said to have his residence some nine to ten days southwest of the river Buhnen 1992 believes this is a reference to the faran of Sankola southeast of the river A faran is a provincial military governor akin to a duke of Mali Sankola a semi legendary kingdom deep in the upper Gambia see Buhnen 1992 Wright 1976 Teixeira da Mota 1946 and Verrier 1994 identify him as Faran Sani Coli on the south bank of the river Cadamosto Kerr p 249 Ital p 118 Port p 63 The identification of Batimansa as the king of Badibu is found in several places e g Teixeira da Mota 1946 Verrier 1994 p 141 A Hughes and D Perfect 2008 p 29 However the distances aren t helpful Cadamosto cites 60 Italian miles which is approximately 80 90 km upriver As a result Russell 2000 p 311 identifies Batti as around Bintang Bolong creek on the south bank of the Gambia 13 19 31 N 16 13 25 W 13 32528 N 16 22361 W 13 32528 16 22361 However Kerr p 249 identifies it as Devil s Point on the north bank much further east 13 28 29 N 15 36 42 W 13 47472 N 15 61167 W 13 47472 15 61167 Although double the distance cited by Cadamosto around 160 km it corresponds better with the narrowing of the river he describes and is indeed in the environs of the Badibu kingdom Taking it even further Buhnen 1992 p 95 96 identifies Batti with Pating much further inland at around 240 km upriver placing Cadamosto within a stone s throw of the market center of Cantor which seems unlikely Diogo Gomes cites Batimansa as being a great lord on the south side of the river in Kerr p 249 50 Teixeira da Mota p 60 notes that Guumimensa in the text is meant to be Gnumimansa an Italian spelling of Niumimansa In Mandinka language Niumi means coast and mansa is king thus Niumimansa is the king of the Mandinka of the Atlantic coast that is to the west of Badibu Da Mota notes this is likely the same king who a little later c 1458 met Diogo Gomes and may have earlier either him or a predecessor back in the 1440s been responsible for the death of Portuguese captain Nuno Tristao in 1446 and the defeat of another squadron led by Estevao Afonso in 1447 Old maps distinguish between two groups the Niumi bato probably ancestral to the modern Niominka people up near the Diombos river in the Sine Saloum delta the likely slayers of Nuno Tristao and the Niumi banta ancestral to the western Mandinka of the Barra region at the mouth of the Gambia defeaters of Afonso and probably Cadamosto amp Gomes s Niumimansa Note that the latter Niumimansa is said to have had a seasonal residence right by Dog Island Cadamosto s first stop Teixera da Mota p 63 n 64 Wright 1976 asserts the Niumi Bato Niumi Banta and Jokadu were all under the same mansa Cadamosto in Kerr p 255 Ital p 119r Port p 69 Capo Rosso translates to Red Cape in Italian which has led some Portuguese cartographers to translate it to Cabo Vermelho But this should not be confused with another Cabo Vermelho Cape Rouge or Red Cape further up near the Bay of Dakar To avoid confusion Portuguese cartographers largely adopted the Cadamosto s Italian label adjusting it to Cape Roxo which translates to Cape Purple in Portuguese See Quintella p 133n Alternatively Rio de Santa Ana could be simply the small river of Rio Sucujaque 12 19 57 N 16 39 26 W 12 33250 N 16 65722 W 12 33250 16 65722 just after Cape Roxo but that is unlikely to be worth mentioning as comparable to Cacheu R H Henry 1868 p 284 5 proposes Cadamosto likely affixed Santa Anna to Cacheu and St Dominico to Rio Mansoa and the names got shifted later However A M Castilho insists on assigning St Dominico originally to the Cacheu River noting that in Portuguese maps the Souta river now Kalissaye River 12 41 45 N 16 46 49 W 12 69583 N 16 78028 W 12 69583 16 78028 was called Rio de Santa Ana However the Souta is north of Casamance suggesting that Cadamosto just confused his account and placed both after Cape Roxo Castilho p 135 This view is supported by Verrier 1994 p 12 143 Although not seeming to witness the famous macareo or tidal bore of the Geba River Cadamosto does refer to the asymmetry of the tide 4 hours rising 8 hours falling and the incredible strength of the current at the beginning of high tide that even three anchors could barely hold the ship in place Curiously Cadamosto notes that the native canoes approached their ships holding up a white flag as a sign of peace levorono un fazzuol bianco alto ligato ad un remo quasi a mode di dimandar segurta Cadamosto Ital p 120 It is probably a coincidence It is unlikely the white flag norm of parlay although already prevalent in the Mediterranean would have made its way this far south See the review of expeditions by Teixeira da Mota 1946 Teixeira da Mota 1946 Diogo Gomes p 282 Russell 2000 p 331 However Cortesao 1931 p 37 suggests it was Diogo Gomes is truthful that Cadamosto never undertook his second trip at all but pinched the account including the dealings with Battimansa Niumimansa etc wholesale from Gomes and others Curiously Damiao de Gois 1567 p 22 credits them with discovering the Cape Verde islands but makes no mention of their second entry into the Gambia or sojourn there claiming instead they sailed straight from the islands to Casamance and went on as far only to Cape Roxo before turning back He does not mention any although Russell 2000 296 believes he might have Brotton 1998 p 60 Russell 2000 p 341 A da Mosto 1883 Verrier 1994 p 14 Verrier 1994 p 14 Verrier 1994 p 15 Although it is often assumed that Prince Henry must have privately kept records of the expeditions he sent out no such records have ever been found It is believed that whatever remained of Henry s private papers if not already long lost was destroyed in the 1755 Lisbon earthquake Cadamosto Zurara Gomes and a few scraps in the royal archives collected in the Monumenta Henricina in the 1960s are all that remain of the documentary record of the Henrican discoveries Russell 2000 is highly laudatory of Cadamosto s account and by contrast distrustful of Diogo Gomes s account However some older historians notably R H Major 1868 and Armando Cortesao 1931 take the opposite position believing Diogo Gomes s account to be the more trustworthy one and that Cadamosto riddled his account with errors and half truths that he stole most of it from others Cadamosto in Kerr p 215 Ital p 108 Port p 21 Cadamosto Kerr p 218 Ital p 110 Port p 25 Cadamosto Kerr p 220 Ital p 110 Port p 27 Cadamosto Kerr p 221 Ital p 110 Port p 28 Cadamosto Kerr p 225 37 Ital p 111 14 Port p 27 48 Cadamosto Kerr p 251 Ital p 118r Port p 65 In Kerr p 252 53 Review of Cadamosto s editions is found in Schefer 1895 Mosto 1883 A copy of the 1507 Paesi can be found at BNF Gallica 1 If the entire Paesi is downloaded in PDF form then Cadamosto s first account is pp 15 95 and his second account on Pedro de Sintra starts on p 96 Note that in the Ramusio 1550 collection Cadamosto s account ends on the middle of p 103 of the Paesi but seems to continue in the original Paesi on to p 104 This is probably because Ramusio reprinted the account from a later imperect edition of the Paesi The BNF Gallica also has a downloadable copy of a 1512 Italian reprint of the Paesi published in Milan at 2 but it also seems to go further than Ramusio in William Reese catalogue 250 Archived 2006 10 16 at the Wayback Machine A copy of the 1508 Milan edition can be found at BNF Gallica 3 If the entire Itinerarium is downloaded in PDF form then Cadamosto s accounts of his own journey ranges pp 23 80 in the PDF and Cadamosto s account of Pedro de Sintra is pp 80 84 of the PDF Sources EditJ Brotton 1998 Trading territories mapping the early modern world Cornell University Press Buhnen S 1992 Place Names as an Historical Source An Introduction with Examples from Southern Senegambia and Germany History in Africa Vol 19 pp 45 101 Castilho A M de 1866 Descripcao e roteiro da costa occidental de Africa desde o cabo de Espartel ate o das Agulhas 2 vols Lisbon Impresa Nacional vol 1 Cortesao Armando 1931 Subsidios para a historia do Descobrimento de Cabo Verde e Guine Boletim da Agencia Geral das Colonias No 75 As reprinted in 1975 Esparsos vol 1 Coimbra online G R Crone ed 1937 The Voyages of Cadamosto and other documents on Western Africa in the second half of the fifteenth century London Hakluyt da Mosto Andrea 1883 Il portulano attribuito ad Alvise da Ca da Mosto Bollettino della Societa geografica italiana vol 30 p 540 offprint Diffie Bailey W and George D Winius 1977 Foundations of the Portuguese empire 1415 1580 Minneapolis MN University of Minnesota Press Damiao de Gois 1567 Chronica do principe Dom Ioam rei que foi destes regnos segundo do nome em que summariamente se trattam has cousas sustanciaes que nelles acontecerao do dia de seu nascimento atte ho em que el Rei Dom Afonso seu pai faleceo 1905 edition A J Goncalvez Guimarais ed Coimbra Imprensa da Universidade online Diogo Gomes De prima inventione Guineae Portuguese translation by Gabriel Pereira 1898 99 as As Relacoes do Descobrimento da Guine e das ilhas dos Acores Madeira e Cabo Verde in Boletim da Sociedade de Geografia de Lisboa no 5 online Hughes A and D Perfect 2008 Historical Dictionary of the Gambia 4th ed Lanham Maryland Scarecrow LeGrand G 1928 La Gambie notes historiques et geographiques Bulletin du Comite d etudes historiques et scientifiques de l Afrique Occidentale Francaise Jul sep p 432 84 Major R H 1868 The Life of Prince Henry surnamed the Navigator London Asher amp Co 1868 ed Mauro Alessandra 1988 O Carro do Austro de Alvise da Ca da Mosto observacoẽs astronomicas e fortuna editorial Revista da Universidade de Coimbra vol 24 p 463 75 offprint Quintella Ignacio da Costa 1839 Annaes da Marinha Portugueza Lisbon Academia Real das Sciencias vol 1 Russell Peter E 2000 Prince Henry the Navigator a life New Haven Conn Yale University Press C Schefer 1895 Introduction in Relation des voyages a la cote occidentale d Afrique d Alvise de Ca da Mosto 1455 1457 Paris Leroux Teixera da Mota Avelino 1946 A descoberta da Guine Boletim cultural da Guine Portuguesa Vol 1 Part 1 in No 1 Jan p 11 68 Pt 2 in No 2 Apr p 273 326 Pt 3 in No 3 Jul p 457 509 Teixira da Mota A 1972 Mar alem Mar Estudos e ensaios de historia e geographia Lisbon Junta de Investigacoes do Ultramar Verrier F 1994 Introduction in Voyages en Afrique Noire d Alvise Ca da Mosto 1455 amp 1456 Paris Chandeigne Zurla P 1815 Dei viaggi e delle scoperte africane di Alvise da Ca da Mosto Patrizio Veneto Venice online Wright D 1976 Niumi the history of a western Mandinka state through the eighteenth century Bloomington Indiana University External links EditAlvise Cadamosto article at Citizendium Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alvise Cadamosto amp oldid 1176425716, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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