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Cape of Good Hope

The Cape of Good Hope (Afrikaans: Kaap die Goeie Hoop [ˌkɑːp di ˌχujə ˈɦuəp])[a] is a rocky headland on the Atlantic coast of the Cape Peninsula in South Africa.

The Cape of Good Hope looking towards the west, from the coastal cliffs above Cape Point, overlooking Dias beach

A common misconception is that the Cape of Good Hope is the southern tip of Africa, based on the misbelief that the Cape was the dividing point between the Atlantic and Indian oceans. In fact, the southernmost point of Africa is Cape Agulhas about 150 kilometres (90 mi) to the east-southeast.[1] The currents of the two oceans meet at the point where the warm-water Agulhas current meets the cold-water Benguela current and turns back on itself. That oceanic meeting point fluctuates between Cape Agulhas and Cape Point (about 1.2 kilometres (0.75 mi) east of the Cape of Good Hope).

The Cape of Good Hope at the southern tip of the Cape Peninsula, approximately 50 km (31 mi) south of Cape Town, South Africa. Cape Agulhas is the southernmost part of South Africa.

When following the western side of the African coastline from the equator, however, the Cape of Good Hope marks the point where a ship begins to travel more eastward than southward. Thus, the first modern rounding of the cape in 1487 by Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias was a milestone in the attempts by the Portuguese to establish direct trade relations with the Far East (although Herodotus mentioned a claim that the Phoenicians had done so far earlier).[2] Dias called the cape Cabo das Tormentas ("Cape of Storms"; Dutch: Stormkaap), which was the original name of the "Cape of Good Hope".[3]

As one of the great capes of the South Atlantic Ocean, the Cape of Good Hope has long been of special significance to sailors, many of whom refer to it simply as "the Cape".[4] It is a waypoint on the Cape Route and the clipper route followed by clipper ships to the Far East and Australia, and still followed by several offshore yacht races.

The term Cape of Good Hope is also used in three other ways:

  • It is a section of the Table Mountain National Park, within which the cape of the same name, as well as Cape Point, falls. Prior to its incorporation into the national park, this section constituted the Cape Point Nature Reserve.[5]
  • It was the name of the early Cape Colony established by the Dutch East Indies Company in 1652, on the Cape Peninsula.
  • Just before the Union of South Africa was formed, the term referred to the entire region that in 1910 was to become the Cape of Good Hope Province (usually shortened to the Cape Province).

History

Eudoxus of Cyzicus (/ˈjuːdəksəs/; Greek: Εὔδοξος, Eúdoxos; fl. c. 130 BC) was a Greek navigator for Ptolemy VIII, king of the Hellenistic Ptolemaic dynasty in Egypt, who found the wreck of a ship in the Indian Ocean that appeared to have come from Gades (today's Cádiz in Spain), rounding the Cape.

When Eudoxus was returning from his second voyage to India, the wind forced him south of the Gulf of Aden and down the coast of Africa for some distance. Somewhere along the coast of East Africa, he found the remains of the ship. Due to its appearance and the story told by the natives, Eudoxus concluded that the ship was from Gades and had sailed anti-clockwise around Africa, passing the Cape and entering the Indian Ocean. This inspired him to repeat the voyage and attempt a circumnavigation of the continent. Organising the expedition on his own account he set sail from Gades and began to work down the African coast. The difficulties were too great, however, and he was obliged to return to Europe.[6]

After this failure he again set out to circumnavigate Africa. His eventual fate is unknown. Although some, such as Pliny, claimed that Eudoxus did achieve his goal, the most probable conclusion is that he perished on the journey.[7]

In the 1450 Fra Mauro map, the Indian Ocean is depicted as connected to the Atlantic. Fra Mauro puts the following inscription by the southern tip of Africa, which he names the "Cape of Diab", describing the exploration by a ship from the East around 1420:[8][9]

 
Detail of the Fra Mauro Map describing the construction of the junks that navigate in the Indian Ocean.

Around 1420 a ship, or junk, from India crossed the Sea of India towards the Island of Men and the Island of Women, off Cape Diab, between the Green Islands and the shadows. It sailed for 40 days in a south-westerly direction without ever finding anything other than wind and water. According to these people themselves, the ship went some 2,000 miles ahead until — once favourable conditions came to an end — it turned round and sailed back to Cape Diab in 70 days.

The ships called junks (lit. "Zonchi") that navigate these seas carry four masts or more, some of which can be raised or lowered, and have 40 to 60 cabins for the merchants and only one tiller. They can navigate without a compass, because they have an astrologer, who stands on the side and, with an astrolabe in hand, gives orders to the navigator.

—Text from the Fra Mauro map, 09-P25

Fra Mauro explained that he obtained the information from "a trustworthy source", who traveled with the expedition, possibly the Venetian explorer Niccolò da Conti who happened to be in Calicut, India at the time the expedition left:

What is more, I have spoken with a person worthy of trust, who says that he sailed in an Indian ship caught in the fury of a tempest for 40 days out in the Sea of India, beyond the Cape of Soffala and the Green Islands towards west-southwest; and according to the astrologers who act as their guides, they had advanced almost 2,000 miles. Thus one can believe and confirm what is said by both these and those, and that they had therefore sailed 4,000 miles.

Fra Mauro also comments that the account of the expedition, together with the relation by Strabo of the travels of Eudoxus of Cyzicus from Arabia to Gibraltar through the southern Ocean in Antiquity, led him to believe that the Indian Ocean was not a closed sea and that Africa could be circumnavigated by her southern end (Text from Fra Mauro map, 11, G2). This knowledge, together with the map depiction of the African continent, probably encouraged the Portuguese to intensify their effort to round the tip of Africa.

In 1511, Afonso de Albuquerque conquered Malacca, the Portuguese recovered a chart from a Javanese maritime pilot, which according to Albuquerque already included the Cape of Good hope and part of the Americas (see proven Pre-Columbian contact). Regarding the chart Albuquerque said:[10]

"...a large map of a Javanese pilot, containing the Cape of Good Hope, Portugal and the land of Brazil, the Red Sea and the Sea of Persia, the Clove Islands, the navigation of the Chinese and the Gom, with their rhumbs and direct routes followed by the ships, and the hinterland, and how the kingdoms border on each other. It seems to me. Sir, that this was the best thing I have ever seen, and Your Highness will be very pleased to see it; it had the names in Javanese writing, but I had with me a Javanese who could read and write. I send this piece to Your Highness, which Francisco Rodrigues traced from the other, in which Your Highness can truly see where the Chinese and Gores come from, and the course your ships must take to the Clove Islands, and where the gold mines lie, and the islands of Java and Banda."

— Letter of Albuquerque to King Manuel I of Portugal, 1 April 1512.

European exploration

 
Cross of Bartholomew Dias at Cape of Good Hope.

In the Early Modern Era, the first European to reach the cape was the Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias on 12 March 1488, who named it the "Cape of Storms" (Cabo das Tormentas). It was later renamed by John II of Portugal as "Cape of Good Hope" (Cabo da Boa Esperança) because of the great optimism engendered by the opening of a sea route to India and the East.

The Khoikhoi people lived in the cape area when the Dutch first settled there in 1652. The Khoikhoi had arrived in this area about fifteen hundred years before.[11] The Dutch called them Hottentots, a term that has now come to be regarded as pejorative.

In 1652, the Dutch East India Company's administrator Jan van Riebeeck established a resupply camp for the Dutch East India Company some 50 km north of the cape in Table Bay on 6 April 1652, and this eventually developed into Cape Town. Supplies of fresh food were vital on the long journey around Africa and Cape Town became known as "The Tavern of the Seas".

On 31 December 1687 a community of Huguenots (French Protestants) arrived at the Cape of Good Hope from the Netherlands. They had escaped from France and fled to the Netherlands to flee religious persecution in France. One example was Pierre Joubert who came from La Motte-d'Aigues. Another example is Jean Roy. The Dutch East India Company needed skilled farmers at the Cape of Good Hope and the Dutch Government saw opportunities to settle Huguenots at the Cape and sent them there. The Cape Colony gradually grew over the next 150 years or so until it extended hundreds of kilometres towards the north and north-east.

During the Napoleonic Wars, the Dutch Republic was occupied by the French in 1795. Thus the Cape Colony became a French vassal and enemy of the British. Therefore, the United Kingdom invaded and occupied the Cape Colony that same year. The British relinquished control of the territory in 1803 but returned and reoccupied the Colony on 19 January 1806 following the Battle of Blaauwberg. The Dutch ceded the territory to the British in the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1814. The Cape was then administered as the Cape Colony and it remained a British colony until it was incorporated into the independent Union of South Africa in 1910 (now known as the Republic of South Africa).

The Portuguese government erected two navigational beacons, Dias Cross and da Gama Cross, to commemorate Bartolomeu Dias and Vasco da Gama, who were the first modern European explorers to reach the cape. When lined up, these crosses point to Whittle Rock, a large, permanently submerged shipping hazard in False Bay. Two other beacons in Simon's Town provide the intersection.

Contemporary

 
Sign at the Cape of Good Hope, 2018

The Cape of Good Hope saw an increase of ship activity after the 2021 Suez canal obstruction, with ships needing a different route from the Indian Ocean.[12][13][14]

Geography

 
Map showing the Cape Peninsula, illustrating the position of the Cape of Good Hope. The main mountains and their peaks, including Table Mountain, and its relation to the City of Cape Town are shown.
 
Map of the Cape of Good Hope and Cape Agulhas, the southernmost point of Africa.

The Cape of Good Hope is at the southern tip of the Cape Peninsula, about 2.3 kilometres (1.4 mi) west and a little south of Cape Point on the south-east corner. Cape Town is about 50 kilometres to the north of the Cape, in Table Bay at the north end of the peninsula. The peninsula forms the western boundary of False Bay. Geologically, the rocks found at the two capes, and indeed over much of the peninsula, are part of the Cape Supergroup, and are formed of the same type of sandstones as Table Mountain itself. Both the Cape of Good Hope and Cape Point offer spectacular scenery; the whole of the southernmost portion of the Cape Peninsula is a wild, rugged, scenic and generally unspoiled national park.

The term "the Cape" has also been used in a wider sense, to indicate the area of the European colony centred on Cape Town, and the later South African province. Since 1994, it has been broken up into three smaller provinces: the Western Cape, Eastern Cape and Northern Cape; parts of the province were also absorbed into the North West.

Fauna

With its diverse habitat, ranging from rocky mountain tops to beaches and open sea, the Cape of Good Hope is home to at least 250 species of birds including one of the two mainland colonies of African penguins. "Bush birds" tend to be rather scarce because of the coarse, scrubby nature of fynbos vegetation. When flowering, however, proteas and ericas attract sunbirds, sugarbirds, and other species in search of nectar. For most of the year, there are more small birds in coastal thicket than in fynbos. The Cape of Good Hope section of Table Mountain National Park is home to several species of antelope. Bontebok and eland are easily seen, and red hartebeest can be seen in the grazing lawns in Smitswinkel Flats. Grey rhebok are less commonly seen and are scarce, but may be observed along the beach hills at Olifantsbos. Most visitors are unlikely to ever see either Cape grysbok or klipspringer. The Cape of Good Hope section is home to four Cape mountain zebra. They might be seen by the attentive or lucky visitor, usually in Smitswinkel Flats. There are a wealth of small animals such as lizards, snakes, tortoises and insects. Small mammals include rock hyrax, four-striped grass mouse, water mongoose, Cape clawless otter and fallow deer. The area offers excellent vantage points for whale watching. The southern right whale is the species most likely to be seen in False Bay between June and November. Other species are the humpback whale and Bryde's whale. Seals, dusky dolphins and orcas have also been seen. The strategic position of the Cape of Good Hope between two major ocean currents, ensures a rich diversity of marine life. There is a difference between the sea life west of Cape Point and that to the east due to the markedly differing sea temperatures. The South African Marine Living Resources Act is strictly enforced throughout the Table Mountain National Park, and especially in marine protected areas. Disturbance or removal of any marine organisms is strictly prohibited between Schusters Bay and Hoek van Bobbejaan, but is allowed in other areas during season and with relevant permits.[citation needed]

Chacma baboons (Papio ursinus) are the mammals most intimately associated with the Cape of Good Hope. Baboons inside the Cape of Good Hope section of the park are a major tourist attraction. There are 11 troops consisting of about 375 individuals throughout the entire Cape Peninsula. Six of these 11 troops either live entirely within the Cape of Good Hope section of the park, or use the section as part of their range. The Cape Point, Kanonkop, Klein Olifantsbos, and Buffels Bay troops live entirely inside the Cape of Good Hope section of the Park. The Groot Olifantsbos and Plateau Road troops range into the park. Chacma baboons are widely distributed across southern Africa and are classified as ″least concern" in the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. However, the South African Parks Department states in its publication Mountains in the Sea that the baboon population on the Cape is "critically endangered." This is due to habitat loss, genetic isolation, and conflicts with humans. Cape baboons have been eliminated from the majority of their range across the Cape Peninsula, and the Cape of Good Hope section of Table Mountain National Park provides a sanctuary for the troops that live within its boundaries. It provides relative safety from nearby towns, where people have killed many baboons after the baboons raid their houses looking for food. Baboons are also frequently injured or killed outside of the park by cars and by electrocution on power lines. Inside the park, some management policies such as allowing barbecues and picnics in the baboon home ranges cause detriment to the troops, as they become embroiled in conflicts with guests to the park.[citation needed] At the Cape in particular, the baboon is known for eating shellfish and other marine invertebrates.[15]

In 1842, Charles Hamilton Smith had described a black-maned lion from the Cape under the scientific name Felis (Leo) melanochaita.[16] No longer seen as a subspecies of its own,[17] the Cape lion as a population is now extinct in the wilderness,[18] though descendants could exist in captivity.[19][20][21]

Flora

 
Fynbos at Cape Peninsula

The Cape of Good Hope is an integral part of the Cape Floristic Kingdom, the smallest but richest of the world's six floral kingdoms. This comprises a treasure trove of 1100 species of indigenous plants, of which a number are endemic (occur naturally nowhere else on earth). The main type of fynbos ("fine bush") vegetation at the Cape of Good Hope is Peninsula Sandstone Fynbos, an endangered vegetation type that is endemic to the Cape Peninsula. Coastal Hangklip Sand Fynbos grows on low-lying alkaline sands and, right by the sea, small patches of Cape Flats Dune Strandveld can be found.[22][23]

Characteristic fynbos plants include proteas, ericas (heath), and restios (reeds). Some of the most striking and well-known members belong to the Proteacae family, of which up to 24 species occur. These include king protea, sugarbush, tree pincushion and golden cone bush (Leucadendron laureolum).

Many popular horticultural plants like pelargoniums, freesias, daisies, lilies and irises also have their origins in fynbos.

Legends

 
Cape of Good Hope panorama – the cape at centre, and the conical Vasco da Gama Peak (266 metres) at right
  • The Cape of Good Hope is the legendary home of The Flying Dutchman. According to the legend, crewed by tormented and damned ghostly sailors, it is doomed forever to beat its way through the adjacent waters without ever succeeding in rounding the headland.
  • Adamastor is a Greek-type mythological character invented by the Portuguese poet Luís de Camões in his epic poem Os Lusíadas (first printed in 1572), as a symbol of the forces of nature Portuguese navigators had to overcome during their discoveries and more specifically of the dangers they faced when trying to round the Cape of Storms.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Dutch: Kaap de Goede Hoop [ˌkaːb də ˌɣudə ˈɦoːp] ( listen);Kaap in isolation: [kaːp] ( listen) Portuguese: Cabo da Boa Esperança [ˈkaβu ðɐ ˈβoɐ (ɨ)ʃpɨˈɾɐ̃sɐ]

References

  1. ^ "Cape of Good Hope, South Africa - 360° Aerial Panoramas".
  2. ^ The first circumnavigation of Africa 2015-10-16 at the Wayback Machine. livius.org
  3. ^ Sarah Mytton Maury (1848). Englishwoman In America. p. 33.
  4. ^ Along the Clipper Way, Francis Chichester; page 78. Hodder & Stoughton, 1966. ISBN 978-0-340-00191-2
  5. ^ Map of the Park, showing the Cape of Good Hope section (retrieved 27 March 2010).
  6. ^ Tozer, Henry F. (1997). History of Ancient Geography. Biblo & Tannen. pp. 189–190. ISBN 978-0-8196-0138-4 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ Tozer, Henry F. (1997). History of Ancient Geography. Biblo & Tannen. pp. xxiii. ISBN 978-0-8196-0138-4 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ Marco Polo, p. 409
  9. ^ Needham 1971, p. 501
  10. ^ Carta IX, 1 April 1512. In Pato, Raymundo Antonio de Bulhão (1884). Cartas de Affonso de Albuquerque, Seguidas de Documentos que as Elucidam tomo I (pp. 29–65). Lisboa: Typographia da Academia Real das Sciencas. p. 64.
  11. ^ Ehret, Christopher (2001). An African Classical Age. Charlottesville, Virginia: University of Virginia Press. p. 219. ISBN 978-0-8139-2057-3.
  12. ^ Farrer, Martin; Safi, Michael (26 March 2021). "Suez canal: Japanese owner of stricken ship talks of plan to refloat it". The Guardian.
  13. ^ El Wardany, Salma; Magdy, Mirette (27 March 2001). "Ships Divert From Canal; More Tugs Coming: Suez Update". MSN. Bloomberg News.
  14. ^ "Container ships turn to Cape of Good Hope as Suez issues continue: cFlow". Bunker World.
  15. ^ Davidge, C. (1978). "Ecology of baboons (Papio ursinus) at Cape Point". Zoologica Africana. 13 (2): 329–350. doi:10.1080/00445096.1978.11447633.
  16. ^ Smith, C.H. (1842). "Black maned lion Leo melanochaita". In Jardine, W. (ed.). The Naturalist's Library. Vol. 15 Mammalia. London: Chatto and Windus. p. Plate X, 177.
  17. ^ Kitchener, A. C.; Breitenmoser-Würsten, C.; Eizirik, E.; Gentry, A.; Werdelin, L.; Wilting, A.; Yamaguchi, N.; Abramov, A. V.; Christiansen, P.; Driscoll, C.; Duckworth, J. W.; Johnson, W.; Luo, S.-J.; Meijaard, E.; O’Donoghue, P.; Sanderson, J.; Seymour, K.; Bruford, M.; Groves, C.; Hoffmann, M.; Nowell, K.; Timmons, Z.; Tobe, S. (2017). "A revised taxonomy of the Felidae: The final report of the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN Cat Specialist Group" (PDF). Cat News (Special Issue 11). ISSN 1027-2992.
  18. ^ Yamaguchi, N. (2000). (PDF). African Lion Working Group News. Vol. 1. pp. 9–11. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2019-08-18.
  19. ^ "'Extinct' lions (Cape lion) surface in Siberia". The BBC. 2000. Retrieved 2012-12-31.
  20. ^ . Sibzoo.narod.ru. Archived from the original on March 29, 2009. Retrieved January 28, 2010.
  21. ^ "South Africa: Lion Cubs Thought to Be Cape Lions". AP Archive, The Associated Press. 2000. (with 2-minute video of cubs at zoo with John Spence, 3 sound-bites, and 15 photos)
  22. ^ "Peninsula Sandstone Fynbos. Cape Town Biodiversity Factsheets" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2011-11-01.[dead link]
  23. ^ "Cape Flats Dune Strandveld. Cape Town Biodiversity Factsheets" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2011-11-17.[dead link]

Bibliography

  • Marco Polo (1875), Yule, Henry (ed.), The Book of Ser Marco Polo, the Venetian: Concerning the Kingdoms and Marvels of the East, John Murray
  • Needham, Joseph (1971), Science and Civilisation in China

External links

Coordinates: 34°21′29″S 18°28′32″E / 34.35806°S 18.47556°E / -34.35806; 18.47556 (Cape of Good Hope)

cape, good, hope, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, cape, point, cape, agulhas, afrikaans, kaap, goeie, hoop, ˌkɑːp, ˌχujə, ˈɦuəp, rocky, headland, atlantic, coast, cape, peninsula, south, africa, looking, towards, west, from, coastal, cliffs, above. For other uses see Cape of Good Hope disambiguation Not to be confused with Cape Point or Cape Agulhas The Cape of Good Hope Afrikaans Kaap die Goeie Hoop ˌkɑːp di ˌxuje ˈɦuep a is a rocky headland on the Atlantic coast of the Cape Peninsula in South Africa The Cape of Good Hope looking towards the west from the coastal cliffs above Cape Point overlooking Dias beach A common misconception is that the Cape of Good Hope is the southern tip of Africa based on the misbelief that the Cape was the dividing point between the Atlantic and Indian oceans In fact the southernmost point of Africa is Cape Agulhas about 150 kilometres 90 mi to the east southeast 1 The currents of the two oceans meet at the point where the warm water Agulhas current meets the cold water Benguela current and turns back on itself That oceanic meeting point fluctuates between Cape Agulhas and Cape Point about 1 2 kilometres 0 75 mi east of the Cape of Good Hope Interactive fullscreen map The Cape of Good Hope at the southern tip of the Cape Peninsula approximately 50 km 31 mi south of Cape Town South Africa Cape Agulhas is the southernmost part of South Africa When following the western side of the African coastline from the equator however the Cape of Good Hope marks the point where a ship begins to travel more eastward than southward Thus the first modern rounding of the cape in 1487 by Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias was a milestone in the attempts by the Portuguese to establish direct trade relations with the Far East although Herodotus mentioned a claim that the Phoenicians had done so far earlier 2 Dias called the cape Cabo das Tormentas Cape of Storms Dutch Stormkaap which was the original name of the Cape of Good Hope 3 As one of the great capes of the South Atlantic Ocean the Cape of Good Hope has long been of special significance to sailors many of whom refer to it simply as the Cape 4 It is a waypoint on the Cape Route and the clipper route followed by clipper ships to the Far East and Australia and still followed by several offshore yacht races The term Cape of Good Hope is also used in three other ways It is a section of the Table Mountain National Park within which the cape of the same name as well as Cape Point falls Prior to its incorporation into the national park this section constituted the Cape Point Nature Reserve 5 It was the name of the early Cape Colony established by the Dutch East Indies Company in 1652 on the Cape Peninsula Just before the Union of South Africa was formed the term referred to the entire region that in 1910 was to become the Cape of Good Hope Province usually shortened to the Cape Province Contents 1 History 1 1 European exploration 1 2 Contemporary 2 Geography 3 Fauna 4 Flora 5 Legends 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory EditEudoxus of Cyzicus ˈ juː d e k s e s Greek Eὔdo3os Eudoxos fl c 130 BC was a Greek navigator for Ptolemy VIII king of the Hellenistic Ptolemaic dynasty in Egypt who found the wreck of a ship in the Indian Ocean that appeared to have come from Gades today s Cadiz in Spain rounding the Cape When Eudoxus was returning from his second voyage to India the wind forced him south of the Gulf of Aden and down the coast of Africa for some distance Somewhere along the coast of East Africa he found the remains of the ship Due to its appearance and the story told by the natives Eudoxus concluded that the ship was from Gades and had sailed anti clockwise around Africa passing the Cape and entering the Indian Ocean This inspired him to repeat the voyage and attempt a circumnavigation of the continent Organising the expedition on his own account he set sail from Gades and began to work down the African coast The difficulties were too great however and he was obliged to return to Europe 6 After this failure he again set out to circumnavigate Africa His eventual fate is unknown Although some such as Pliny claimed that Eudoxus did achieve his goal the most probable conclusion is that he perished on the journey 7 In the 1450 Fra Mauro map the Indian Ocean is depicted as connected to the Atlantic Fra Mauro puts the following inscription by the southern tip of Africa which he names the Cape of Diab describing the exploration by a ship from the East around 1420 8 9 Detail of the Fra Mauro Map describing the construction of the junks that navigate in the Indian Ocean Around 1420 a ship or junk from India crossed the Sea of India towards the Island of Men and the Island of Women off Cape Diab between the Green Islands and the shadows It sailed for 40 days in a south westerly direction without ever finding anything other than wind and water According to these people themselves the ship went some 2 000 miles ahead until once favourable conditions came to an end it turned round and sailed back to Cape Diab in 70 days The ships called junks lit Zonchi that navigate these seas carry four masts or more some of which can be raised or lowered and have 40 to 60 cabins for the merchants and only one tiller They can navigate without a compass because they have an astrologer who stands on the side and with an astrolabe in hand gives orders to the navigator Text from the Fra Mauro map 09 P25 Fra Mauro explained that he obtained the information from a trustworthy source who traveled with the expedition possibly the Venetian explorer Niccolo da Conti who happened to be in Calicut India at the time the expedition left What is more I have spoken with a person worthy of trust who says that he sailed in an Indian ship caught in the fury of a tempest for 40 days out in the Sea of India beyond the Cape of Soffala and the Green Islands towards west southwest and according to the astrologers who act as their guides they had advanced almost 2 000 miles Thus one can believe and confirm what is said by both these and those and that they had therefore sailed 4 000 miles Fra Mauro also comments that the account of the expedition together with the relation by Strabo of the travels of Eudoxus of Cyzicus from Arabia to Gibraltar through the southern Ocean in Antiquity led him to believe that the Indian Ocean was not a closed sea and that Africa could be circumnavigated by her southern end Text from Fra Mauro map 11 G2 This knowledge together with the map depiction of the African continent probably encouraged the Portuguese to intensify their effort to round the tip of Africa In 1511 Afonso de Albuquerque conquered Malacca the Portuguese recovered a chart from a Javanese maritime pilot which according to Albuquerque already included the Cape of Good hope and part of the Americas see proven Pre Columbian contact Regarding the chart Albuquerque said 10 a large map of a Javanese pilot containing the Cape of Good Hope Portugal and the land of Brazil the Red Sea and the Sea of Persia the Clove Islands the navigation of the Chinese and the Gom with their rhumbs and direct routes followed by the ships and the hinterland and how the kingdoms border on each other It seems to me Sir that this was the best thing I have ever seen and Your Highness will be very pleased to see it it had the names in Javanese writing but I had with me a Javanese who could read and write I send this piece to Your Highness which Francisco Rodrigues traced from the other in which Your Highness can truly see where the Chinese and Gores come from and the course your ships must take to the Clove Islands and where the gold mines lie and the islands of Java and Banda Letter of Albuquerque to King Manuel I of Portugal 1 April 1512 European exploration Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Dutch Cape Colony and Cape Colony Cross of Bartholomew Dias at Cape of Good Hope In the Early Modern Era the first European to reach the cape was the Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias on 12 March 1488 who named it the Cape of Storms Cabo das Tormentas It was later renamed by John II of Portugal as Cape of Good Hope Cabo da Boa Esperanca because of the great optimism engendered by the opening of a sea route to India and the East The Khoikhoi people lived in the cape area when the Dutch first settled there in 1652 The Khoikhoi had arrived in this area about fifteen hundred years before 11 The Dutch called them Hottentots a term that has now come to be regarded as pejorative In 1652 the Dutch East India Company s administrator Jan van Riebeeck established a resupply camp for the Dutch East India Company some 50 km north of the cape in Table Bay on 6 April 1652 and this eventually developed into Cape Town Supplies of fresh food were vital on the long journey around Africa and Cape Town became known as The Tavern of the Seas On 31 December 1687 a community of Huguenots French Protestants arrived at the Cape of Good Hope from the Netherlands They had escaped from France and fled to the Netherlands to flee religious persecution in France One example was Pierre Joubert who came from La Motte d Aigues Another example is Jean Roy The Dutch East India Company needed skilled farmers at the Cape of Good Hope and the Dutch Government saw opportunities to settle Huguenots at the Cape and sent them there The Cape Colony gradually grew over the next 150 years or so until it extended hundreds of kilometres towards the north and north east During the Napoleonic Wars the Dutch Republic was occupied by the French in 1795 Thus the Cape Colony became a French vassal and enemy of the British Therefore the United Kingdom invaded and occupied the Cape Colony that same year The British relinquished control of the territory in 1803 but returned and reoccupied the Colony on 19 January 1806 following the Battle of Blaauwberg The Dutch ceded the territory to the British in the Anglo Dutch Treaty of 1814 The Cape was then administered as the Cape Colony and it remained a British colony until it was incorporated into the independent Union of South Africa in 1910 now known as the Republic of South Africa The Portuguese government erected two navigational beacons Dias Cross and da Gama Cross to commemorate Bartolomeu Dias and Vasco da Gama who were the first modern European explorers to reach the cape When lined up these crosses point to Whittle Rock a large permanently submerged shipping hazard in False Bay Two other beacons in Simon s Town provide the intersection Contemporary Edit Sign at the Cape of Good Hope 2018 The Cape of Good Hope saw an increase of ship activity after the 2021 Suez canal obstruction with ships needing a different route from the Indian Ocean 12 13 14 Geography EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Map showing the Cape Peninsula illustrating the position of the Cape of Good Hope The main mountains and their peaks including Table Mountain and its relation to the City of Cape Town are shown Map of the Cape of Good Hope and Cape Agulhas the southernmost point of Africa The Cape of Good Hope is at the southern tip of the Cape Peninsula about 2 3 kilometres 1 4 mi west and a little south of Cape Point on the south east corner Cape Town is about 50 kilometres to the north of the Cape in Table Bay at the north end of the peninsula The peninsula forms the western boundary of False Bay Geologically the rocks found at the two capes and indeed over much of the peninsula are part of the Cape Supergroup and are formed of the same type of sandstones as Table Mountain itself Both the Cape of Good Hope and Cape Point offer spectacular scenery the whole of the southernmost portion of the Cape Peninsula is a wild rugged scenic and generally unspoiled national park The term the Cape has also been used in a wider sense to indicate the area of the European colony centred on Cape Town and the later South African province Since 1994 it has been broken up into three smaller provinces the Western Cape Eastern Cape and Northern Cape parts of the province were also absorbed into the North West Fauna Edit Male ostrich at the Cape Dassie Cape chacma baboon Captive Cape lion at Jardin des plantes Paris With its diverse habitat ranging from rocky mountain tops to beaches and open sea the Cape of Good Hope is home to at least 250 species of birds including one of the two mainland colonies of African penguins Bush birds tend to be rather scarce because of the coarse scrubby nature of fynbos vegetation When flowering however proteas and ericas attract sunbirds sugarbirds and other species in search of nectar For most of the year there are more small birds in coastal thicket than in fynbos The Cape of Good Hope section of Table Mountain National Park is home to several species of antelope Bontebok and eland are easily seen and red hartebeest can be seen in the grazing lawns in Smitswinkel Flats Grey rhebok are less commonly seen and are scarce but may be observed along the beach hills at Olifantsbos Most visitors are unlikely to ever see either Cape grysbok or klipspringer The Cape of Good Hope section is home to four Cape mountain zebra They might be seen by the attentive or lucky visitor usually in Smitswinkel Flats There are a wealth of small animals such as lizards snakes tortoises and insects Small mammals include rock hyrax four striped grass mouse water mongoose Cape clawless otter and fallow deer The area offers excellent vantage points for whale watching The southern right whale is the species most likely to be seen in False Bay between June and November Other species are the humpback whale and Bryde s whale Seals dusky dolphins and orcas have also been seen The strategic position of the Cape of Good Hope between two major ocean currents ensures a rich diversity of marine life There is a difference between the sea life west of Cape Point and that to the east due to the markedly differing sea temperatures The South African Marine Living Resources Act is strictly enforced throughout the Table Mountain National Park and especially in marine protected areas Disturbance or removal of any marine organisms is strictly prohibited between Schusters Bay and Hoek van Bobbejaan but is allowed in other areas during season and with relevant permits citation needed Chacma baboons Papio ursinus are the mammals most intimately associated with the Cape of Good Hope Baboons inside the Cape of Good Hope section of the park are a major tourist attraction There are 11 troops consisting of about 375 individuals throughout the entire Cape Peninsula Six of these 11 troops either live entirely within the Cape of Good Hope section of the park or use the section as part of their range The Cape Point Kanonkop Klein Olifantsbos and Buffels Bay troops live entirely inside the Cape of Good Hope section of the Park The Groot Olifantsbos and Plateau Road troops range into the park Chacma baboons are widely distributed across southern Africa and are classified as least concern in the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species However the South African Parks Department states in its publication Mountains in the Sea that the baboon population on the Cape is critically endangered This is due to habitat loss genetic isolation and conflicts with humans Cape baboons have been eliminated from the majority of their range across the Cape Peninsula and the Cape of Good Hope section of Table Mountain National Park provides a sanctuary for the troops that live within its boundaries It provides relative safety from nearby towns where people have killed many baboons after the baboons raid their houses looking for food Baboons are also frequently injured or killed outside of the park by cars and by electrocution on power lines Inside the park some management policies such as allowing barbecues and picnics in the baboon home ranges cause detriment to the troops as they become embroiled in conflicts with guests to the park citation needed At the Cape in particular the baboon is known for eating shellfish and other marine invertebrates 15 In 1842 Charles Hamilton Smith had described a black maned lion from the Cape under the scientific name Felis Leo melanochaita 16 No longer seen as a subspecies of its own 17 the Cape lion as a population is now extinct in the wilderness 18 though descendants could exist in captivity 19 20 21 Flora Edit Fynbos at Cape Peninsula The Cape of Good Hope is an integral part of the Cape Floristic Kingdom the smallest but richest of the world s six floral kingdoms This comprises a treasure trove of 1100 species of indigenous plants of which a number are endemic occur naturally nowhere else on earth The main type of fynbos fine bush vegetation at the Cape of Good Hope is Peninsula Sandstone Fynbos an endangered vegetation type that is endemic to the Cape Peninsula Coastal Hangklip Sand Fynbos grows on low lying alkaline sands and right by the sea small patches of Cape Flats Dune Strandveld can be found 22 23 Characteristic fynbos plants include proteas ericas heath and restios reeds Some of the most striking and well known members belong to the Proteacae family of which up to 24 species occur These include king protea sugarbush tree pincushion and golden cone bush Leucadendron laureolum Many popular horticultural plants like pelargoniums freesias daisies lilies and irises also have their origins in fynbos Legends Edit Cape of Good Hope panorama the cape at centre and the conical Vasco da Gama Peak 266 metres at right The Cape of Good Hope is the legendary home of The Flying Dutchman According to the legend crewed by tormented and damned ghostly sailors it is doomed forever to beat its way through the adjacent waters without ever succeeding in rounding the headland Adamastor is a Greek type mythological character invented by the Portuguese poet Luis de Camoes in his epic poem Os Lusiadas first printed in 1572 as a symbol of the forces of nature Portuguese navigators had to overcome during their discoveries and more specifically of the dangers they faced when trying to round the Cape of Storms See also Edit Geography portal South Africa portal Africa portalCape Horn Headland of the Tierra del Fuego archipelago located in Chile its South American counterpart Western Cape Province of South Africa on the south western coast History of Cape Colony British colony from 1806 to 1910Pages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Simon s Town Seaside town in the Western Cape South Africa Postage stamps and postal history of the Cape of Good HopeNotes Edit Dutch Kaap de Goede Hoop ˌkaːb de ˌɣude ˈɦoːp listen Kaap in isolation kaːp listen Portuguese Cabo da Boa Esperanca ˈkabu dɐ ˈboɐ ɨ ʃpɨˈɾɐ sɐ References Edit Cape of Good Hope South Africa 360 Aerial Panoramas The first circumnavigation of Africa Archived 2015 10 16 at the Wayback Machine livius org Sarah Mytton Maury 1848 Englishwoman In America p 33 Along the Clipper Way Francis Chichester page 78 Hodder amp Stoughton 1966 ISBN 978 0 340 00191 2 Map of the Park showing the Cape of Good Hope section retrieved 27 March 2010 Tozer Henry F 1997 History of Ancient Geography Biblo amp Tannen pp 189 190 ISBN 978 0 8196 0138 4 via Google Books Tozer Henry F 1997 History of Ancient Geography Biblo amp Tannen pp xxiii ISBN 978 0 8196 0138 4 via Google Books Marco Polo p 409 Needham 1971 p 501 Carta IX 1 April 1512 In Pato Raymundo Antonio de Bulhao 1884 Cartas de Affonso de Albuquerque Seguidas de Documentos que as Elucidam tomo I pp 29 65 Lisboa Typographia da Academia Real das Sciencas p 64 Ehret Christopher 2001 An African Classical Age Charlottesville Virginia University of Virginia Press p 219 ISBN 978 0 8139 2057 3 Farrer Martin Safi Michael 26 March 2021 Suez canal Japanese owner of stricken ship talks of plan to refloat it The Guardian El Wardany Salma Magdy Mirette 27 March 2001 Ships Divert From Canal More Tugs Coming Suez Update MSN Bloomberg News Container ships turn to Cape of Good Hope as Suez issues continue cFlow Bunker World Davidge C 1978 Ecology of baboons Papio ursinus at Cape Point Zoologica Africana 13 2 329 350 doi 10 1080 00445096 1978 11447633 Smith C H 1842 Black maned lion Leo melanochaita In Jardine W ed The Naturalist s Library Vol 15 Mammalia London Chatto and Windus p Plate X 177 Kitchener A C Breitenmoser Wursten C Eizirik E Gentry A Werdelin L Wilting A Yamaguchi N Abramov A V Christiansen P Driscoll C Duckworth J W Johnson W Luo S J Meijaard E O Donoghue P Sanderson J Seymour K Bruford M Groves C Hoffmann M Nowell K Timmons Z Tobe S 2017 A revised taxonomy of the Felidae The final report of the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN Cat Specialist Group PDF Cat News Special Issue 11 ISSN 1027 2992 Yamaguchi N 2000 The Barbary lion and the Cape lion their phylogenetic places and conservation PDF African Lion Working Group News Vol 1 pp 9 11 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2019 08 18 Extinct lions Cape lion surface in Siberia The BBC 2000 Retrieved 2012 12 31 Lev Sibzoo narod ru Archived from the original on March 29 2009 Retrieved January 28 2010 South Africa Lion Cubs Thought to Be Cape Lions AP Archive The Associated Press 2000 with 2 minute video of cubs at zoo with John Spence 3 sound bites and 15 photos Peninsula Sandstone Fynbos Cape Town Biodiversity Factsheets PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2011 11 01 dead link Cape Flats Dune Strandveld Cape Town Biodiversity Factsheets PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2011 11 17 dead link Bibliography Edit Marco Polo 1875 Yule Henry ed The Book of Ser Marco Polo the Venetian Concerning the Kingdoms and Marvels of the East John Murray Needham Joseph 1971 Science and Civilisation in ChinaExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cape of Good Hope List of birds of the Cape of Good Hope Nature Reserve with paragraph describing each species Cape of Good Hope Panoramic view Cape of Good Hope is a map by John Arrowsmith in 1842Coordinates 34 21 29 S 18 28 32 E 34 35806 S 18 47556 E 34 35806 18 47556 Cape of Good Hope Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cape of Good Hope amp oldid 1135513858, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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