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Ferdinand Magellan

Ferdinand Magellan (/məˈɡɛlən/ mə-GHEL-ən[3] or /məˈɛlən/ mə-JEL-ən;[4] Portuguese: Fernão de Magalhães, IPA: [fɨɾˈnɐ̃w dɨ mɐɣɐˈʎɐ̃jʃ]; Spanish: Fernando de Magallanes, IPA: [feɾˈnando ðe maɣaˈʎanes]; 4 February 1480 – 27 April 1521) was a Portuguese explorer. He is best known for having planned and led the 1519 Spanish expedition to the East Indies across the Pacific Ocean to open a maritime trade route, during which he discovered the interoceanic passage bearing thereafter his name and achieved the first European navigation from the Atlantic to Asia.

Ferdinand Magellan
Ferdinand Magellan, in a 16th or 17th century anonymous portrait
Born
Fernão de Magalhães

(1480-02-04)4 February 1480
Died27 April 1521(1521-04-27) (aged 41)
Chiefdom of Mactan
(now Cebu, Philippines)
NationalityPortuguese (renounced in 1517)[1][2]
Known for
Signature

During this voyage, Magellan was killed in the Battle of Mactan in 1521 in the present-day Philippines, after running into resistance from the indigenous population led by Lapulapu, who consequently became a Philippine national symbol of resistance to colonialism. After Magellan's death, Juan Sebastián Elcano took the lead of the expedition, and with its few other surviving members in one of the two remaining ships, completed the first circumnavigation of Earth when they returned to Spain in 1522.[5][6]

Born on 4 February 1480 into a family of minor Portuguese nobility, Magellan became a skilled sailor and naval officer in service of the Portuguese Crown in Asia. King Manuel refused to support Magellan's plan to reach the Maluku Islands (the "Spice Islands") by sailing westwards around the American continent. Facing criminal charges, Magellan left Portugal and proposed the same expedition to King Charles I of Spain, who accepted it. Consequently, many in Portugal considered him a traitor and he never returned.[7][8] In Seville he married, fathered two children, and organised the expedition.[9] For his allegiance to the Hispanic Monarchy, in 1518, Magellan was appointed an admiral of the Spanish fleet and given command of the expedition – the five-ship Armada of Molucca. He was also made Commander of the Order of Santiago, one of the highest military ranks of the Spanish Empire.[10]

Granted special powers and privileges by the King, he led the Armada from Sanlucar de Barrameda southwest across the Atlantic Ocean, to the eastern coast of South America, and down to Patagonia. Despite a series of storms and mutinies, the expedition successfully passed through the Strait of Magellan (as it is now named) into the Mar del Sur, which Magellan renamed the Mar Pacifico (the modern Pacific Ocean).[11] The expedition reached Guam and, shortly after, the Philippine islands. There Magellan was killed in the Battle of Mactan in April 1521. Under the command of captain Juan Sebastian Elcano, the expedition later reached the Spice Islands. To navigate back to Spain and avoid seizure by the Portuguese, the expedition's two remaining ships split, one attempting, unsuccessfully, to reach New Spain by sailing eastwards across the Pacific, while the other, commanded by Elcano, sailed westwards via the Indian Ocean and up the Atlantic coast of Africa, finally arriving at the expedition's port of departure and thereby completing the first complete circuit of the globe.

While in the Kingdom of Portugal's service, Magellan had already reached the Malay Archipelago in Southeast Asia on previous voyages traveling east (from 1505 to 1511–1512). By visiting this area again but now traveling west, Magellan achieved a nearly complete personal circumnavigation of the globe for the first time in history.[12][13]

Early life and travels

 
House where Magellan lived, in Sabrosa, Portugal

Magellan was born in the Portuguese town of Sabrosa on 4 February 1480.[14] His father, Pedro de Magalhães, was a minor member of Portuguese nobility[14] and mayor of the town. His mother was Alda de Mezquita.[15] Magellan's siblings included Diego de Sosa and Isabel Magellan.[16] He was brought up as a page of Queen Eleanor, consort of King John II. In 1495 he entered the service of Manuel I, John's successor.[17]

In March 1505, at the age of 25, Magellan enlisted in the fleet of 22 ships sent to host Francisco de Almeida as the first viceroy of Portuguese India. Although his name does not appear in the chronicles, it is known that he remained there eight years, in Goa, Cochin and Quilon. He participated in several battles, including the battle of Cannanore in 1506, where he was wounded. In 1509 he also fought in what is considered one of the six battles that changed the world,[18] the Battle of Diu.[19]

 
Effigy of Ferdinand Magellan in the Monument of the Discoveries, in Lisbon, Portugal

He later sailed under Diogo Lopes de Sequeira in the first Portuguese embassy to Malacca, with Francisco Serrão, his friend and possibly cousin.[20] In September, after arriving at Malacca, the expedition fell victim to a conspiracy and ended in retreat. Magellan had a crucial role, warning Sequeira and risking his life to rescue Francisco Serrão and others who had landed.[21][22]

In 1511, under the new governor Afonso de Albuquerque, Magellan and Serrão participated in the conquest of Malacca. After the conquest their ways parted: Magellan was promoted, with a rich plunder. In the company of a Malay he had indentured and baptized, Enrique of Malacca, he returned to Portugal in 1512 or 1513.[23] Serrão departed in the first expedition sent to find the "Spice Islands" in the Moluccas, where he remained. He married a woman from Amboina and became a military advisor to the Sultan of Ternate, Bayan Sirrullah. His letters to Magellan later proved decisive, giving information about the spice-producing territories.[24][25]

After taking a leave without permission, Magellan fell out of favour. Serving in Morocco, he was wounded, resulting in a permanent limp. He was accused of trading illegally with the Moors. The accusations were proven false, but he received no further offers of employment after 15 May 1514. Later in 1515, he was offered employment as a crew member on a Portuguese ship, but rejected this. In 1517, after a quarrel with Manuel I of Portugal, who denied his persistent requests to lead an expedition to reach the Spice Islands from the east (i.e., while sailing westwards, thus avoiding the need to sail around the tip of Africa[26]), he left for Spain. In Seville he befriended his countryman Diogo Barbosa and soon married the daughter of Diogo's second wife, Maria Caldera Beatriz Barbosa.[27] They had two children: Rodrigo de Magallanes[28] and Carlos de Magallanes, both of whom died at a young age. His wife died in Seville around 1521.

Meanwhile, Magellan devoted himself to studying the most recent charts, investigating, in partnership with cosmographer Rui Faleiro, a gateway from the Atlantic to the South Pacific and the possibility that the Moluccas were Spanish under the demarcations of the Treaty of Tordesillas.

Voyage of circumnavigation

Background and preparations

 
Victoria, the sole ship of Magellan's fleet to complete the circumnavigation. Detail from a map by Ortelius, 1590.

After having his proposed expeditions to the Spice Islands—the Moluccas beside New Guinea—repeatedly rejected by King Manuel I of Portugal, Magellan renounced his Portuguese nationality and turned to Charles I, the young king of Spain (later emperor Charles V of the Holy Roman Empire). Under the terms of the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas, Portugal was to control the eastern routes to Asia that went around the Cape of Good Hope in Africa. Magellan instead proposed to seek a southwestern passage around South America to reach the Spice Islands by a western route, a feat never before accomplished. Bergreen further states that Magellan claimed to Charles that his Malaccan or Sumatran slave Enrique had been a native of the Spice Islands and used Enrique and letters from Serrão to "prove" that the islands were so far east that they would fall within the Spanish sphere of influence if the world were truly to be divided in half.[29] (The details of the eastern division implicit in the Tordesillas treaty would later be formalized in the 1529 Treaty of Zaragoza.)

King Manuel saw all of this as an insult and did everything in his power to disrupt Magellan's arrangements for the voyage. The Portuguese king allegedly ordered that Magellan's properties be vandalized as it was the coat of arms of the Magellan displayed at the family house's façade in Sabrosa, his home town, and may have even requested the assassination of the navigator. When Magellan eventually sailed to the open seas in August 1519, a Portuguese fleet was sent after him, though it failed to capture him.[30][better source needed]

Magellan's fleet consisted of five ships carrying supplies for two years of travel. The crew consisted of about 270 men of different origins,[31] though the numbers may vary downwards among scholars based on contradicting data from the many documents available. About 60 percent of the crew were Spaniards from virtually all regions of Castile. Portuguese and Italian followed with 28 and 27 seamen respectively, while mariners from France (15), Greece (8), Flanders (5), Germany (3), Ireland (2), England and Malaysia (one each) and other people of unidentified origin completed the crew.[32][33]

Voyage

 
Magellan's voyages; the double line represents Magellan's trip from Portugal to the Moluccas. The single line traces his long, continuous voyage from Spain to the Philippines.[2]

The fleet left Spain on 20 September 1519, sailing west across the Atlantic toward South America. In December, they made landfall at Rio de Janeiro. From there, they sailed south along the coast, searching for a way through or around the continent. After three months of searching (including a false start in the estuary of Río de la Plata), weather conditions forced the fleet to stop their search to wait out the winter. They found a sheltered natural harbor at the port of Saint Julian, and remained there for five months. Shortly after landing at St. Julian, there was a mutiny attempt led by the Spanish captains Juan de Cartagena, Gaspar de Quesada and Luis de Mendoza. Magellan barely managed to quell the mutiny, despite at one point losing control of three of his five ships to the mutineers. Mendoza was killed during the conflict, and Magellan sentenced Quesada and Cartagena to being beheaded and marooned, respectively. Lower-level conspirators were made to do hard labor in chains over the winter, but were later freed.[34]

During the winter, one of the fleet's ships, the Santiago, was lost in a storm while surveying nearby waters, though no men were killed. Following the winter, the fleet resumed their search for a passage to the Pacific in October 1520. Three days later, they found a bay which eventually led them to a strait, now known as the Strait of Magellan, which allowed them passage through to the Pacific. While exploring the strait, one of the remaining four ships, the San Antonio, deserted the fleet, returning east to Spain. The fleet reached the Pacific by the end of November 1520. Based on the incomplete understanding of world geography at the time, Magellan expected a short journey to Asia, perhaps taking as little as three or four days.[35] In fact, the Pacific crossing took three months and twenty days. The long journey exhausted their supply of food and water, and around 30 men died, mostly of scurvy.[36] Magellan himself remained healthy, perhaps because of his personal supply of preserved quince.

On 6 March 1521, the exhausted fleet made landfall at the island of Guam and were met by native Chamorro people who came aboard the ships and took items such as rigging, knives, and a ship's boat. The Chamorro people may have thought they were participating in a trade exchange (as they had already given the fleet some supplies), but the crew interpreted their actions as theft.[37] Magellan sent a raiding party ashore to retaliate, killing several Chamorro men, burning their houses, and recovering the stolen goods.[38]

On 16 March, the fleet sighted the island of Samar ("Zamal") in the eastern Philippine Islands. They weighed anchor in the small (then uninhabited) island of Homonhon ("Humunu"), where they would remain for a week while their sick crew members recuperated. Magellan befriended the tattooed locals of the neighboring island of Suluan ("Zuluan") and traded goods and supplies and learned of the names of neighboring islands and local customs.[39]

After resting and resupplying, Magellan sailed on deeper into the Visayan Islands. On 28 March, they anchored off the island of Limasawa ("Mazaua") where they encountered a small outrigger boat ("boloto"). After talking with the crew of the boat via Enrique of Malacca (Magellan's slave-interpreter who was originally from Sumatra), they were met by the two large balangay warships ("balanghai") of Rajah Kulambo ("Colambu") of Butuan, and one of his sons. They went ashore to Limasawa where they met Kulambo's brother, another leader, Rajah Siawi ("Siaui") of Surigao ("Calagan"). The rulers were on a hunting expedition on Limasawa. They received Magellan as their guest and told him of their customs and of the regions they controlled in northeastern Mindanao. The tattooed rulers and the locals also wore and used a great amount of golden jewelry and golden artifacts, which piqued Magellan's interest. On 31 March, Magellan's crew held the first Mass in the Philippines, planting a cross on the island's highest hill. Before leaving, Magellan asked the rulers for the next nearest trading ports. They recommended he visit the Rajahnate of Cebu ("Zubu"), because it was the largest. They set off for Cebu, accompanied by the balangays of Rajah Kulambo and reached its port on 7 April.[39]: 141–150 

Magellan met with the King of Cebu, Rajah Humabon, who asked them for tribute as a trade, thinking they were traders bartering with them. Magellan and his men insisted that they did not need to pay tribute as they were sent by the king of Spain, "the most powerful king in the world", and that they were willing to give peace to them if they wanted peace and war if they wanted war. Humabon then decided not to ask for any more tribute and welcomed them instead to the Kingdom of Cebu (Sugbo). To mark the arrival of Christianity in the Far East, Magellan then planted a Cross on the shorelines of the kingdom. Magellan set about converting the locals, including the king and his wife, Queen Humamay, to Christianity. Rajah Humabon was renamed "Carlos" and Queen Humamay was renamed "Juana" after the king and queen of Spain. After her baptism, the queen asked the Spaniards for the image of the Child Jesus (Santo Niño), which she was drawn to, and begged them for the image in contrition, amidst her tears. Magellan then gave the image of the Child Jesus, along with an image of the Virgin Mary, and a small cross to the queen as a gesture of goodwill for accepting the new faith. The king then had a Blood Compact with Magellan in order to cement the allegiance of the Spaniards and the Cebuanos. The king then told the Spaniards to go to the island of Mactan to kill his enemy Lapulapu.

 
Magellan's Cross in present-day Cebu
 
The original image of Santo Niño de Cebú, an image of the Child Jesus given by Magellan to the Cebuanos, now enshrined at the Basilica Minore del Santo Niño.

The Spaniards went to the island of Mactan just as Rajah Humabon told them to. However, they did not initially come by force and wanted to Christianize them. Unlike the people of Cebu who accepted the new religion readily, the King of Mactan, Datu Lapulapu, and the rest of the island of Mactan resisted. On 27 April, Magellan and members of his crew attempted to subdue the Mactan natives by force, but in the ensuing battle, the Europeans were overpowered and Magellan was killed by Lapulapu and his men.

Following his death, Magellan was initially succeeded by co-commanders Juan Serrano and Duarte Barbosa (with a series of other officers later leading). The fleet left the Philippines (following a bloody betrayal by former ally Rajah Humabon, who had poisoned many Spanish soldiers on a banquet ruse on the night after the battle for being easily defeated by Lapulapu and the people of Mactan and failing to kill Lapulapu) and eventually made their way to the Moluccas in November 1521. Laden with spices, they attempted to set sail for Spain in December, but found that only one of their remaining two ships, the Victoria, was seaworthy. The Victoria, captained by Juan Sebastián Elcano, finally returned to Spain by 6 September 1522, completing the circumnavigation. Of the 270 men who left with the expedition, only 18 or 19 survivors returned.[40]

Death

After several weeks in the Philippines, Magellan had converted as many as 2,200 locals to Christianity, including Rajah Humabon of Cebu and most leaders of the islands around Cebu.[41] However, Lapulapu, the leader of Mactan,[42] resisted conversion.[43][44] In order to gain the trust of Rajah Humabon,[45][46] Magellan sailed to Mactan with a small force on the morning of 27 April 1521. During the resulting battle against Lapulapu's troops, Magellan was struck by a "bamboo" spear (bangkaw, which are actually metal-tipped fire-hardened rattan), and later surrounded and finished off with other weapons.[47][48]

Antonio Pigafetta and Ginés de Mafra provided written documents of the events culminating in Magellan's death:

When morning came forty-nine of us leaped into the water up to our thighs, and walked through water for more than two crossbow flights before we could reach the shore. The boats could not approach nearer because of certain rocks in the water. The other eleven men remained behind to guard the boats. When we reached land, those men had formed in three divisions to the number of more than one thousand five hundred persons. When they saw us, they charged down upon us with exceeding loud cries.... The musketeers and crossbowmen shot from a distance for about a half-hour, but uselessly; for the shots only passed through the shields.... Recognizing the captain, so many turned upon him that they knocked his helmet off his head twice.... An Indian hurled a bamboo spear into the captain's face, but the latter immediately killed him with his lance, which he left in the Indian's body. Then, trying to lay hand on sword, he could draw it out but halfway, because he had been wounded in the arm with a bamboo spear. When the natives saw that, they all hurled themselves upon him. One of them wounded him on the left leg with a large cutlass, which resembles a scimitar, only being larger. That caused the captain to fall face downward, when immediately they rushed upon him with iron and bamboo spears and with their cutlasses, until they killed our mirror, our light, our comfort, and our true guide.

— Antonio Pigafetta[47]: 173–177 

Nothing of Magellan's body survived, that afternoon the grieving rajah-king, hoping to recover his remains, offered Mactan's victorious chief a handsome ransom of copper and iron for them but Datu Lapulapu refused. He intended to keep the body as a war trophy. Since his wife and child died in Seville before any member of the expedition could return to Spain, it seemed that every evidence of Ferdinand Magellan's existence had vanished from the earth.

— Ginés de Mafra[49]

Reputation following circumnavigation

In the immediate aftermath of the circumnavigation, few celebrated Magellan for his accomplishments, and he was widely discredited and reviled in Spain and his native Portugal.[50][51] The Portuguese regarded Magellan as a traitor for having sailed for Spain. In Spain, Magellan's reputation suffered due to the largely unflattering accounts of his actions given by the survivors of the expedition.

The first news of the expedition came from the crew of the San Antonio, led by Estêvão Gomes, which deserted the fleet in the Strait of Magellan and returned to Seville 6 May 1521. The deserters were put on trial, but eventually exonerated after producing a distorted version of the mutiny at Saint Julian, and depicting Magellan as disloyal to the king. The expedition was assumed to have perished.[52] The Casa de Contratación withheld Magellan's salary from his wife, Beatriz "considering the outcome of the voyage", and she was placed under house arrest with their young son on the orders of Archbishop Fonseca.[53]

The 18 survivors who eventually returned aboard the Victoria in September 1522 were also largely unfavourable to Magellan. Many, including the captain, Juan Sebastián Elcano, had participated in the mutiny at Saint Julian. On the ship's return, Charles summoned Elcano to Valladolid, inviting him to bring two guests. He brought sailors Francisco Albo and Hernándo de Bustamante, pointedly not including Antonio Pigafetta, the expedition's chronicler. Under questioning by Valladolid's mayor, the men claimed that Magellan refused to follow the king's orders (and gave this as the cause for the mutiny at Saint Julian), and that he unfairly favoured his relatives among the crew, and disfavoured the Spanish captains.[54]

One of the few survivors loyal to Magellan was Antonio Pigafetta. Though not invited to testify with Elcano, Pigafetta made his own way to Valladolid and presented Charles with a hand-written copy of his notes from the journey. He would later travel through Europe giving copies to other royals including John III of Portugal, Francis I of France, and Philippe Villiers de L'Isle-Adam. After returning to his home of Venice, Pigafetta published his diary (as Relazione del primo viaggio intorno al mondo) around 1524. Scholars have come to view Pigafetta's diary as the most thorough and reliable account of the circumnavigation, and its publication helped to eventually counter the misinformation spread by Elcano and the other surviving mutineers.[55] In an often-cited passage following his description of Magellan's death in the Battle of Mactan, Pigafetta eulogizes the captain-general:

Magellan's main virtues were courage and perseverance, in even the most difficult situations; for example he bore hunger and fatigue better than all the rest of us. He was a magnificent practical seaman, who understood navigation better than all his pilots. The best proof of his genius is that he circumnavigated the world, none having preceded him.[56]

Legacy

 
A 1561 map of America showing Magellan's name for the Pacific, Mare pacificum, and the Strait of Magellan, labelled Frenum Magaliani

Magellan has come to be renowned for his navigational skill and tenacity. The first circumnavigation has been called "the greatest sea voyage in the Age of Discovery",[57] and even "the most important maritime voyage ever undertaken".[58] Appreciation of Magellan's accomplishments may have been enhanced over time by the failure of subsequent expeditions which attempted to retrace his route, beginning with the Loaísa expedition in 1525 (which featured Juan Sebastián Elcano as second-in-command).[59] The next expedition to successfully complete a circumnavigation, led by Francis Drake, would not occur until 1580, 58 years after the return of the Victoria.[60]

Magellan named the Pacific Ocean (which was sometimes referred to as the Sea of Magellan, in his honor, until the eighteenth century[61]), and lends his name to the Strait of Magellan. His name has also since been applied to a variety of other entities, including the Magellanic Clouds (two dwarf galaxies visible in the night sky of the southern hemisphere), Project Magellan (a Cold War-era US Navy project to circumnavigate the world by submarine), and NASA's Magellan spacecraft.

Quincentenary

Even though Magellan did not survive the trip, he has received more recognition for the expedition than Elcano has. Since Magellan was the one who began it, Portugal wanted to recognize a Portuguese explorer, and Spain feared Basque nationalism. In 2019, the 500th anniversary of the voyage, Spain and Magellan's native Portugal submitted a new joint application to UNESCO to honour the circumnavigation route.[62] Commemorations of the circumnavigation include:

See also

References

  1. ^ "Ferdinand Magellan". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 23 July 2021.
  2. ^ a b Smith, Lucy Humphrey (1920). "Magellan". St. Nicholas Magazine. Vol. 48, no. 1. p. [1] – via Scribner.
  3. ^ "Magellan". Collins English Dictionary. Retrieved 8 October 2019.
  4. ^ "Magellan". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary. Retrieved 8 October 2019.
  5. ^ Pigafetta, Antonio. Magellan's Voyage: A Narrative Account of the First Circumnavigation, trans. and ed. Skelton, R.A. (2 vols., New Haven, CT, 1969).
  6. ^ Mitchell, Mairin. Elcano: The First Circumnavigator (London, 1958)
  7. ^ A typical evaluation of Magellan by a contemporary Portuguese historian is that given by Damião de Goes, Crónica do felicissimo rei Dom Emanuel, edited by Texeira de Carvalho e Lopes (4 vols., Coimbra, 1926; originally published 1556), IV, 83–84, who considered Magellan “a disgruntled man who planned the voyage for Castile principally to spite the Portuguese sovereign Manuel”.
  8. ^ Torodash, Martin (1971). "Magellan Historiography". Hispanic American Historical Review. 51 (2): 313–335. doi:10.1215/00182168-51.2.313.
  9. ^ Kinsella, Pat (27 April 2021). "Dire Straits: the story of Ferdinand Magellan's fatal voyage of discovery". BBC History Magazine. Retrieved 23 July 2021.
  10. ^ Castro, Xavier de (dir.); Carmen Bernand; Hamon, Jocelyne et Thomaz, Luiz Filipe (2010). Le voyage de Magellan (1519–1522). La relation d'Antonio Pigafetta et autres témoignages (in French). Paris: Éditions Chandeigne, collection " Magellane ". ISBN 978-2915540574
  11. ^ Hartig, Otto (1 October 1910). "Ferdinand Magellan". Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 9. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 31 October 2010 – via NewAdvent.org.
  12. ^ Miller, Gordon (2011). Voyages: To the New World and Beyond (1st ed.). University of Washington Press. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-295-99115-3.
  13. ^ Dutch, Steve (21 May 1997). . University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. Archived from the original on 23 October 2014. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  14. ^ a b Bergreen 2003, p. 17.
  15. ^ Hartig, Otto (1913). "Ferdinand Magellan" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  16. ^ Ocampo 2019.
  17. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainBeazley, Charles Raymond (1911). "Magellan, Ferdinand". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 302–304.
  18. ^ Weir, William (2018). 50 Battles That Changed the World. Permuted Press.
  19. ^ James A. Patrick, Renaissance and Reformation, p. 787, Marshall Cavendish, 2007, ISBN 0-7614-7650-4
  20. ^ William J. Bernstein, A Splendid Exchange: How Trade Shaped the World, pp. 183–185, Grove Press, 2009, ISBN 0-8021-4416-0
  21. ^ Zweig, Stefan, "Conqueror of the Seas – The Story of Magellan", pp. 44–45, Read Books, 2007, ISBN 1-4067-6006-4
  22. ^ Joyner 1992, pp. 42–43.
  23. ^ Joyner 1992, p. 50.
  24. ^ Zweig, Stefan, "Conqueror of the Seas – The Story of Magellan", p. 51, Read Books, 2007, ISBN 1-4067-6006-4
  25. ^ R.A. Donkin, "Between East and West: The Moluccas and the Traffic in Spices up to the Arrival of Europeans", p. 29, Volume 248 of Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society, Diane Publishing, 2003 ISBN 0-87169-248-1
  26. ^ Mervyn D. Kaufman (2004), Ferdinand Magellan, Capstone Press, pp. 13, ISBN 978-0-7368-2487-3
  27. ^ "Beatriz Barbosa, 1495". Geneall.net.
  28. ^ Noronha 1921.
  29. ^ Bergreen (2003), pp. 30–33.
  30. ^ Galván, Javier (7 September 2020). "That small superpower where Magellan was born". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 23 July 2021.
  31. ^ Levinson, Nancy Smiler (2001), Magellan and the First Voyage Around the World, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, p. 39, ISBN 978-0-395-98773-5
  32. ^ Serrano, Tomás Mazón (2020). "T. Elcano, Journey to History".
  33. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 61.
  34. ^ "Ferdinand Magellan – Allegiance to Spain". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
  35. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 145.
  36. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 215.
  37. ^ George Bryan Souza, Jeffrey S. Turley (2016). The Boxer Codex Transcription and Translation of an Illustrated Late Sixteenth-Century Spanish Manuscript Concerning the Geography, History and Ethnography of the Pacific, South-East and East Asia. Brill. p. 303. ISBN 978-90-04-29273-4. OCLC 932684337.
  38. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 224–231.
  39. ^ a b Nowell, C.E. (1962). "Antonio Pigafetta's account". Magellan's Voyage Around the World. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press. hdl:2027/mdp.39015008001532. OCLC 347382.
  40. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 209.
  41. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 271.
  42. ^ ABS-CBN News (1 May 2019). "It's Lapulapu: Gov't committee weighs in on correct spelling of Filipino hero's name". ABS-CBN News. ABS-CBN Corporation. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  43. ^ David, Hawthorne (1964). Ferdinand Magellan. Doubleday & Company, Inc.
  44. ^ "Battle of Mactan Marks Start of Organized Filipino Resistance Vs. Foreign Aggression". Retrieved 9 April 2009.
  45. ^ Ocampo, Ambeth (13 November 2019). "Lapu-Lapu, Magellan and blind patriotism". Inquirer.net. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  46. ^ Mojarro, Jorge (10 November 2019). "[Opinion] The anger toward the 'Elcano & Magellan' film is unjustified". Rappler. Rappler Inc. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  47. ^ a b Pigafetta, Antonio (1906). Magellan's Voyage Around the World (1906 ed.). tr. James Alexander Robertson
  48. ^ Monteclar, Arthur Paul (25 May 2021). "Cebuano Weapons Used During the Battle of Mactan". Sugbo.ph. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  49. ^ Manchester, William (1993). A World Lit Only by Fire. Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 978-0-316-54556-3.[page needed]
  50. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 406.
  51. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 210.
  52. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 299.
  53. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 305.
  54. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 399–402.
  55. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 403–405.
  56. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 215.
  57. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 414.
  58. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 2.
  59. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 412.
  60. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 413.
  61. ^ Camino, Mercedes Maroto. Producing the Pacific: Maps and Narratives of Spanish Exploration (1567–1606), p. 76. 2005.
  62. ^ Minder, Raphael (20 September 2019). "Who First Circled the Globe? Not Magellan, Spain Wants You to Know". The New York Times.
  63. ^ "King and Queen of Spain open commemorative exhibition on first circumnavigation by Magellan and Elcano". 2019. Retrieved 22 October 2019.
  64. ^ "Pigafetta: cronista de la primera vuelta al mundo Magallanes Elcano".

Sources

  • Beaglehole, J.C. (1966), The Exploration of the Pacific, London: Adam & Charles Black, OCLC 253002380
  • Castro, Xavier de; Hamon, Jocelynn; Thomaz, Luis Filipe de Castro (2007). Le voyage de Magellan (1519–1522). La relation d'Antonio Pigafetta & autres témoignages. Paris: Chandeigne, coll. "Magellane". ISBN 978-2-915540-32-1.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Cliffe, Edward (1885). Hakluyt, Richard (ed.). "The voyage of M. John Winter into the South sea by the Streight of Magellan, in consort with M. Francis Drake, begun in the yeere 1577". The principal navigations, voyages, traffiques and discoveries of the English nation. Edinburgh: E. & G. Goldsmid.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Drake, Francis (1628), The world encompassed by Sir Francis Drake: being his next voyage to that to Nombre de Dios Elibron, Classics series, Issue 16 of Works issued by the Hakluyt Society, Adamant Media Corporation, ISBN 978-1-4021-9567-9
  • Hogan, C. Michael (2008). N. Stromberg (ed.). . GlobalTwitcher.com. Archived from the original on 23 August 2011.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Noronha, Dom José Manoel de (1921). Imprensa da Universidade (ed.). (in Portuguese). Coimbra: Biblioteca Genealogica de Lisboa. Archived from the original on 7 March 2010.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Stefoff, Rebecca (1990), Ferdinand Magellan and the Discovery of the World Ocean, Chelsea House Publishers, ISBN 978-0-7910-1291-8
  • Suárez, Thomas (1999). Early mapping of Southeast Asia. Tuttle Publishing. ISBN 978-962-593-470-9.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)

Online sources

  • Ocampo, Ambeth (5 July 2019), "Magellan's last will and testament", INQUIRER.net, INQUIRER.net, retrieved 5 July 2019
  • Swenson, Tait M. (2005). "First Circumnavigation of the Globe by Magellan 1519–1522". The Web Chronology project. Retrieved 14 March 2006.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)

Further reading

Primary sources

  • Pigafetta, Antonio (1906), Magellan's Voyage around the World, Arthur A. Clark (orig. Primer viaje en torno del globo Retrieved on 2009-04-08)
  • Magellan (Francis Guillemard, Antonio Pigafetta, Francisco Albo, Gaspar Correa) [2008] Viartis ISBN 978-1-906421-00-7
  • Maximilianus Transylvanus, De Moluccis insulis, 1523, 1542
  • Nowell, Charles E., ed. (1962), Magellan's Voyage around the World: Three Contemporary Accounts, Evanston: NU Press
  • The First Voyage Round the World, by Magellan, full text, English translation by Lord Stanley of Alderley, London: Hakluyt, [1874] – six contemporary accounts of his voyage

Secondary sources

  • Beazley, Charles Raymond (1911). "Magellan, Ferdinand" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 302–304.
  • Bergreen, Laurence (2003), Over the Edge of the World: Magellan's Terrifying Circumnavigation of the Globe, William Morrow, ISBN 978-0-06-093638-9
  • Cameron, Ian (1974). Magellan and the first circumnavigation of the world. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 029776568X. OCLC 842695.
  • Guillemard, Francis Henry Hill (1890), The life of Ferdinand Magellan, and the first circumnavigation of the globe, 1480–1521, G. Philip, retrieved 8 April 2009
  • Hildebrand, Arthur Sturges (1924), Magellan, New York: Harcourt, Brace & Co, ISBN 978-1-4179-1413-5
  • Joyner, Tim (1992), Magellan, Camden, Me.: International Marine Publishing, ISBN 978-0-07-033128-0
  • Nunn, George E. (1932), The Columbus and Magellan Concepts of South American Geography
  • Parr, Charles M. (1953), So Noble a Captain: The Life and Times of Ferdinand Magellan, New York: Crowell, ISBN 978-0-8371-8521-7
  • Parry, J.H. (1979), The Discovery of South America, New York: Taplinger
  • Parry, J.H. (1981), The Discovery of the Sea, Berkeley: University of California Press, ISBN 978-0-520-04236-0
  • Parry, J.H. (1970), The Spanish Seaborne Empire, New York: Knopf, ISBN 978-0-520-07140-7
  • Pérez-Mallaína, Pablo E. (1998), Spain's Men of the Sea: Daily Life on the Indies Fleets in the Sixteenth Century, translated by Carla Rahn Phillips, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, ISBN 978-0-8018-5746-1
  • Roditi, Edouard (1972), Magellan of the Pacific, London: Faber & Faber, ISBN 978-0-571-08945-1
  • Schurz, William L. (May 1922), "The Spanish Lake", Hispanic American Historical Review, 5 (2): 181–194, doi:10.2307/2506024, JSTOR 2506024.
  • Salonia, Matteo (2022), "Encompassing the Earth: Magellan's Voyage from Its Political Context to Its Expansion of Knowledge", International Journal of Maritime History, 34 (4): 543–560, doi:10.1177/08438714221123468, S2CID 252451072
  • Thatcher, Oliver J., ed. (1907), "Magellan's Voyage Round the World", The Library of Original Sources, vol. V, University Research Extension, pp. 41–57, hdl:2027/nyp.33433067371306
  • Wilford, John Noble (2000), The Mapmakers, New York: Knopf, ISBN 978-0-375-70850-3, archived from the original on 9 December 2012
  • Zweig, Stefan (2007), Conqueror of the Seas – The Story of Magellan, Read Books, ISBN 978-1-4067-6006-4

External links

  • Ferdinand Magellan on history.com
  • PBS Secrets of the Dead: Magellan's Crossing
  • Magellan's untimely demise on Cebu in the Philippines from History House
  • Expedición Magallanes – Juan Sebastian Elcano
  • Encyclopædia Britannica Ferdinand Magellan
  • Ferdinand Magellan (Bibliotheca Augustana)

ferdinand, magellan, magellan, redirects, here, railcar, railcar, other, uses, magellan, disambiguation, ghel, portuguese, fernão, magalhães, fɨɾˈnɐ, mɐɣɐˈʎɐ, spanish, fernando, magallanes, feɾˈnando, maɣaˈʎanes, february, 1480, april, 1521, portuguese, explor. Magellan redirects here For the railcar see Ferdinand Magellan railcar For other uses see Magellan disambiguation Ferdinand Magellan m e ˈ ɡ ɛ l e n me GHEL en 3 or m e ˈ dʒ ɛ l e n me JEL en 4 Portuguese Fernao de Magalhaes IPA fɨɾˈnɐ w dɨ mɐɣɐˈʎɐ jʃ Spanish Fernando de Magallanes IPA feɾˈnando de maɣaˈʎanes 4 February 1480 27 April 1521 was a Portuguese explorer He is best known for having planned and led the 1519 Spanish expedition to the East Indies across the Pacific Ocean to open a maritime trade route during which he discovered the interoceanic passage bearing thereafter his name and achieved the first European navigation from the Atlantic to Asia Ferdinand MagellanFerdinand Magellan in a 16th or 17th century anonymous portraitBornFernao de Magalhaes 1480 02 04 4 February 1480Sabrosa Kingdom of PortugalDied27 April 1521 1521 04 27 aged 41 Chiefdom of Mactan now Cebu Philippines NationalityPortuguese renounced in 1517 1 2 Known forThe Magellan expedition Finding the Strait of Magellan First European Pacific Ocean crossingSignatureDuring this voyage Magellan was killed in the Battle of Mactan in 1521 in the present day Philippines after running into resistance from the indigenous population led by Lapulapu who consequently became a Philippine national symbol of resistance to colonialism After Magellan s death Juan Sebastian Elcano took the lead of the expedition and with its few other surviving members in one of the two remaining ships completed the first circumnavigation of Earth when they returned to Spain in 1522 5 6 Born on 4 February 1480 into a family of minor Portuguese nobility Magellan became a skilled sailor and naval officer in service of the Portuguese Crown in Asia King Manuel refused to support Magellan s plan to reach the Maluku Islands the Spice Islands by sailing westwards around the American continent Facing criminal charges Magellan left Portugal and proposed the same expedition to King Charles I of Spain who accepted it Consequently many in Portugal considered him a traitor and he never returned 7 8 In Seville he married fathered two children and organised the expedition 9 For his allegiance to the Hispanic Monarchy in 1518 Magellan was appointed an admiral of the Spanish fleet and given command of the expedition the five ship Armada of Molucca He was also made Commander of the Order of Santiago one of the highest military ranks of the Spanish Empire 10 Granted special powers and privileges by the King he led the Armada from Sanlucar de Barrameda southwest across the Atlantic Ocean to the eastern coast of South America and down to Patagonia Despite a series of storms and mutinies the expedition successfully passed through the Strait of Magellan as it is now named into the Mar del Sur which Magellan renamed the Mar Pacifico the modern Pacific Ocean 11 The expedition reached Guam and shortly after the Philippine islands There Magellan was killed in the Battle of Mactan in April 1521 Under the command of captain Juan Sebastian Elcano the expedition later reached the Spice Islands To navigate back to Spain and avoid seizure by the Portuguese the expedition s two remaining ships split one attempting unsuccessfully to reach New Spain by sailing eastwards across the Pacific while the other commanded by Elcano sailed westwards via the Indian Ocean and up the Atlantic coast of Africa finally arriving at the expedition s port of departure and thereby completing the first complete circuit of the globe While in the Kingdom of Portugal s service Magellan had already reached the Malay Archipelago in Southeast Asia on previous voyages traveling east from 1505 to 1511 1512 By visiting this area again but now traveling west Magellan achieved a nearly complete personal circumnavigation of the globe for the first time in history 12 13 Contents 1 Early life and travels 2 Voyage of circumnavigation 2 1 Background and preparations 2 2 Voyage 3 Death 4 Reputation following circumnavigation 5 Legacy 5 1 Quincentenary 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life and travels House where Magellan lived in Sabrosa Portugal Magellan was born in the Portuguese town of Sabrosa on 4 February 1480 14 His father Pedro de Magalhaes was a minor member of Portuguese nobility 14 and mayor of the town His mother was Alda de Mezquita 15 Magellan s siblings included Diego de Sosa and Isabel Magellan 16 He was brought up as a page of Queen Eleanor consort of King John II In 1495 he entered the service of Manuel I John s successor 17 In March 1505 at the age of 25 Magellan enlisted in the fleet of 22 ships sent to host Francisco de Almeida as the first viceroy of Portuguese India Although his name does not appear in the chronicles it is known that he remained there eight years in Goa Cochin and Quilon He participated in several battles including the battle of Cannanore in 1506 where he was wounded In 1509 he also fought in what is considered one of the six battles that changed the world 18 the Battle of Diu 19 Effigy of Ferdinand Magellan in the Monument of the Discoveries in Lisbon Portugal He later sailed under Diogo Lopes de Sequeira in the first Portuguese embassy to Malacca with Francisco Serrao his friend and possibly cousin 20 In September after arriving at Malacca the expedition fell victim to a conspiracy and ended in retreat Magellan had a crucial role warning Sequeira and risking his life to rescue Francisco Serrao and others who had landed 21 22 In 1511 under the new governor Afonso de Albuquerque Magellan and Serrao participated in the conquest of Malacca After the conquest their ways parted Magellan was promoted with a rich plunder In the company of a Malay he had indentured and baptized Enrique of Malacca he returned to Portugal in 1512 or 1513 23 Serrao departed in the first expedition sent to find the Spice Islands in the Moluccas where he remained He married a woman from Amboina and became a military advisor to the Sultan of Ternate Bayan Sirrullah His letters to Magellan later proved decisive giving information about the spice producing territories 24 25 After taking a leave without permission Magellan fell out of favour Serving in Morocco he was wounded resulting in a permanent limp He was accused of trading illegally with the Moors The accusations were proven false but he received no further offers of employment after 15 May 1514 Later in 1515 he was offered employment as a crew member on a Portuguese ship but rejected this In 1517 after a quarrel with Manuel I of Portugal who denied his persistent requests to lead an expedition to reach the Spice Islands from the east i e while sailing westwards thus avoiding the need to sail around the tip of Africa 26 he left for Spain In Seville he befriended his countryman Diogo Barbosa and soon married the daughter of Diogo s second wife Maria Caldera Beatriz Barbosa 27 They had two children Rodrigo de Magallanes 28 and Carlos de Magallanes both of whom died at a young age His wife died in Seville around 1521 Meanwhile Magellan devoted himself to studying the most recent charts investigating in partnership with cosmographer Rui Faleiro a gateway from the Atlantic to the South Pacific and the possibility that the Moluccas were Spanish under the demarcations of the Treaty of Tordesillas Voyage of circumnavigationMain article Armada de Molucca See also Timeline of the Magellan Elcano circumnavigation Background and preparations Victoria the sole ship of Magellan s fleet to complete the circumnavigation Detail from a map by Ortelius 1590 After having his proposed expeditions to the Spice Islands the Moluccas beside New Guinea repeatedly rejected by King Manuel I of Portugal Magellan renounced his Portuguese nationality and turned to Charles I the young king of Spain later emperor Charles V of the Holy Roman Empire Under the terms of the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas Portugal was to control the eastern routes to Asia that went around the Cape of Good Hope in Africa Magellan instead proposed to seek a southwestern passage around South America to reach the Spice Islands by a western route a feat never before accomplished Bergreen further states that Magellan claimed to Charles that his Malaccan or Sumatran slave Enrique had been a native of the Spice Islands and used Enrique and letters from Serrao to prove that the islands were so far east that they would fall within the Spanish sphere of influence if the world were truly to be divided in half 29 The details of the eastern division implicit in the Tordesillas treaty would later be formalized in the 1529 Treaty of Zaragoza King Manuel saw all of this as an insult and did everything in his power to disrupt Magellan s arrangements for the voyage The Portuguese king allegedly ordered that Magellan s properties be vandalized as it was the coat of arms of the Magellan displayed at the family house s facade in Sabrosa his home town and may have even requested the assassination of the navigator When Magellan eventually sailed to the open seas in August 1519 a Portuguese fleet was sent after him though it failed to capture him 30 better source needed Magellan s fleet consisted of five ships carrying supplies for two years of travel The crew consisted of about 270 men of different origins 31 though the numbers may vary downwards among scholars based on contradicting data from the many documents available About 60 percent of the crew were Spaniards from virtually all regions of Castile Portuguese and Italian followed with 28 and 27 seamen respectively while mariners from France 15 Greece 8 Flanders 5 Germany 3 Ireland 2 England and Malaysia one each and other people of unidentified origin completed the crew 32 33 Voyage This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ferdinand Magellan news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Magellan s voyages the double line represents Magellan s trip from Portugal to the Moluccas The single line traces his long continuous voyage from Spain to the Philippines 2 The fleet left Spain on 20 September 1519 sailing west across the Atlantic toward South America In December they made landfall at Rio de Janeiro From there they sailed south along the coast searching for a way through or around the continent After three months of searching including a false start in the estuary of Rio de la Plata weather conditions forced the fleet to stop their search to wait out the winter They found a sheltered natural harbor at the port of Saint Julian and remained there for five months Shortly after landing at St Julian there was a mutiny attempt led by the Spanish captains Juan de Cartagena Gaspar de Quesada and Luis de Mendoza Magellan barely managed to quell the mutiny despite at one point losing control of three of his five ships to the mutineers Mendoza was killed during the conflict and Magellan sentenced Quesada and Cartagena to being beheaded and marooned respectively Lower level conspirators were made to do hard labor in chains over the winter but were later freed 34 During the winter one of the fleet s ships the Santiago was lost in a storm while surveying nearby waters though no men were killed Following the winter the fleet resumed their search for a passage to the Pacific in October 1520 Three days later they found a bay which eventually led them to a strait now known as the Strait of Magellan which allowed them passage through to the Pacific While exploring the strait one of the remaining four ships the San Antonio deserted the fleet returning east to Spain The fleet reached the Pacific by the end of November 1520 Based on the incomplete understanding of world geography at the time Magellan expected a short journey to Asia perhaps taking as little as three or four days 35 In fact the Pacific crossing took three months and twenty days The long journey exhausted their supply of food and water and around 30 men died mostly of scurvy 36 Magellan himself remained healthy perhaps because of his personal supply of preserved quince On 6 March 1521 the exhausted fleet made landfall at the island of Guam and were met by native Chamorro people who came aboard the ships and took items such as rigging knives and a ship s boat The Chamorro people may have thought they were participating in a trade exchange as they had already given the fleet some supplies but the crew interpreted their actions as theft 37 Magellan sent a raiding party ashore to retaliate killing several Chamorro men burning their houses and recovering the stolen goods 38 On 16 March the fleet sighted the island of Samar Zamal in the eastern Philippine Islands They weighed anchor in the small then uninhabited island of Homonhon Humunu where they would remain for a week while their sick crew members recuperated Magellan befriended the tattooed locals of the neighboring island of Suluan Zuluan and traded goods and supplies and learned of the names of neighboring islands and local customs 39 After resting and resupplying Magellan sailed on deeper into the Visayan Islands On 28 March they anchored off the island of Limasawa Mazaua where they encountered a small outrigger boat boloto After talking with the crew of the boat via Enrique of Malacca Magellan s slave interpreter who was originally from Sumatra they were met by the two large balangay warships balanghai of Rajah Kulambo Colambu of Butuan and one of his sons They went ashore to Limasawa where they met Kulambo s brother another leader Rajah Siawi Siaui of Surigao Calagan The rulers were on a hunting expedition on Limasawa They received Magellan as their guest and told him of their customs and of the regions they controlled in northeastern Mindanao The tattooed rulers and the locals also wore and used a great amount of golden jewelry and golden artifacts which piqued Magellan s interest On 31 March Magellan s crew held the first Mass in the Philippines planting a cross on the island s highest hill Before leaving Magellan asked the rulers for the next nearest trading ports They recommended he visit the Rajahnate of Cebu Zubu because it was the largest They set off for Cebu accompanied by the balangays of Rajah Kulambo and reached its port on 7 April 39 141 150 Magellan met with the King of Cebu Rajah Humabon who asked them for tribute as a trade thinking they were traders bartering with them Magellan and his men insisted that they did not need to pay tribute as they were sent by the king of Spain the most powerful king in the world and that they were willing to give peace to them if they wanted peace and war if they wanted war Humabon then decided not to ask for any more tribute and welcomed them instead to the Kingdom of Cebu Sugbo To mark the arrival of Christianity in the Far East Magellan then planted a Cross on the shorelines of the kingdom Magellan set about converting the locals including the king and his wife Queen Humamay to Christianity Rajah Humabon was renamed Carlos and Queen Humamay was renamed Juana after the king and queen of Spain After her baptism the queen asked the Spaniards for the image of the Child Jesus Santo Nino which she was drawn to and begged them for the image in contrition amidst her tears Magellan then gave the image of the Child Jesus along with an image of the Virgin Mary and a small cross to the queen as a gesture of goodwill for accepting the new faith The king then had a Blood Compact with Magellan in order to cement the allegiance of the Spaniards and the Cebuanos The king then told the Spaniards to go to the island of Mactan to kill his enemy Lapulapu Magellan s Cross in present day Cebu The original image of Santo Nino de Cebu an image of the Child Jesus given by Magellan to the Cebuanos now enshrined at the Basilica Minore del Santo Nino The Spaniards went to the island of Mactan just as Rajah Humabon told them to However they did not initially come by force and wanted to Christianize them Unlike the people of Cebu who accepted the new religion readily the King of Mactan Datu Lapulapu and the rest of the island of Mactan resisted On 27 April Magellan and members of his crew attempted to subdue the Mactan natives by force but in the ensuing battle the Europeans were overpowered and Magellan was killed by Lapulapu and his men Following his death Magellan was initially succeeded by co commanders Juan Serrano and Duarte Barbosa with a series of other officers later leading The fleet left the Philippines following a bloody betrayal by former ally Rajah Humabon who had poisoned many Spanish soldiers on a banquet ruse on the night after the battle for being easily defeated by Lapulapu and the people of Mactan and failing to kill Lapulapu and eventually made their way to the Moluccas in November 1521 Laden with spices they attempted to set sail for Spain in December but found that only one of their remaining two ships the Victoria was seaworthy The Victoria captained by Juan Sebastian Elcano finally returned to Spain by 6 September 1522 completing the circumnavigation Of the 270 men who left with the expedition only 18 or 19 survivors returned 40 DeathFurther information Battle of Mactan After several weeks in the Philippines Magellan had converted as many as 2 200 locals to Christianity including Rajah Humabon of Cebu and most leaders of the islands around Cebu 41 However Lapulapu the leader of Mactan 42 resisted conversion 43 44 In order to gain the trust of Rajah Humabon 45 46 Magellan sailed to Mactan with a small force on the morning of 27 April 1521 During the resulting battle against Lapulapu s troops Magellan was struck by a bamboo spear bangkaw which are actually metal tipped fire hardened rattan and later surrounded and finished off with other weapons 47 48 Antonio Pigafetta and Gines de Mafra provided written documents of the events culminating in Magellan s death When morning came forty nine of us leaped into the water up to our thighs and walked through water for more than two crossbow flights before we could reach the shore The boats could not approach nearer because of certain rocks in the water The other eleven men remained behind to guard the boats When we reached land those men had formed in three divisions to the number of more than one thousand five hundred persons When they saw us they charged down upon us with exceeding loud cries The musketeers and crossbowmen shot from a distance for about a half hour but uselessly for the shots only passed through the shields Recognizing the captain so many turned upon him that they knocked his helmet off his head twice An Indian hurled a bamboo spear into the captain s face but the latter immediately killed him with his lance which he left in the Indian s body Then trying to lay hand on sword he could draw it out but halfway because he had been wounded in the arm with a bamboo spear When the natives saw that they all hurled themselves upon him One of them wounded him on the left leg with a large cutlass which resembles a scimitar only being larger That caused the captain to fall face downward when immediately they rushed upon him with iron and bamboo spears and with their cutlasses until they killed our mirror our light our comfort and our true guide Antonio Pigafetta 47 173 177 Nothing of Magellan s body survived that afternoon the grieving rajah king hoping to recover his remains offered Mactan s victorious chief a handsome ransom of copper and iron for them but Datu Lapulapu refused He intended to keep the body as a war trophy Since his wife and child died in Seville before any member of the expedition could return to Spain it seemed that every evidence of Ferdinand Magellan s existence had vanished from the earth Gines de Mafra 49 Reputation following circumnavigationIn the immediate aftermath of the circumnavigation few celebrated Magellan for his accomplishments and he was widely discredited and reviled in Spain and his native Portugal 50 51 The Portuguese regarded Magellan as a traitor for having sailed for Spain In Spain Magellan s reputation suffered due to the largely unflattering accounts of his actions given by the survivors of the expedition The first news of the expedition came from the crew of the San Antonio led by Estevao Gomes which deserted the fleet in the Strait of Magellan and returned to Seville 6 May 1521 The deserters were put on trial but eventually exonerated after producing a distorted version of the mutiny at Saint Julian and depicting Magellan as disloyal to the king The expedition was assumed to have perished 52 The Casa de Contratacion withheld Magellan s salary from his wife Beatriz considering the outcome of the voyage and she was placed under house arrest with their young son on the orders of Archbishop Fonseca 53 The 18 survivors who eventually returned aboard the Victoria in September 1522 were also largely unfavourable to Magellan Many including the captain Juan Sebastian Elcano had participated in the mutiny at Saint Julian On the ship s return Charles summoned Elcano to Valladolid inviting him to bring two guests He brought sailors Francisco Albo and Hernando de Bustamante pointedly not including Antonio Pigafetta the expedition s chronicler Under questioning by Valladolid s mayor the men claimed that Magellan refused to follow the king s orders and gave this as the cause for the mutiny at Saint Julian and that he unfairly favoured his relatives among the crew and disfavoured the Spanish captains 54 One of the few survivors loyal to Magellan was Antonio Pigafetta Though not invited to testify with Elcano Pigafetta made his own way to Valladolid and presented Charles with a hand written copy of his notes from the journey He would later travel through Europe giving copies to other royals including John III of Portugal Francis I of France and Philippe Villiers de L Isle Adam After returning to his home of Venice Pigafetta published his diary as Relazione del primo viaggio intorno al mondo around 1524 Scholars have come to view Pigafetta s diary as the most thorough and reliable account of the circumnavigation and its publication helped to eventually counter the misinformation spread by Elcano and the other surviving mutineers 55 In an often cited passage following his description of Magellan s death in the Battle of Mactan Pigafetta eulogizes the captain general Magellan s main virtues were courage and perseverance in even the most difficult situations for example he bore hunger and fatigue better than all the rest of us He was a magnificent practical seaman who understood navigation better than all his pilots The best proof of his genius is that he circumnavigated the world none having preceded him 56 Legacy A 1561 map of America showing Magellan s name for the Pacific Mare pacificum and the Strait of Magellan labelled Frenum Magaliani Magellan has come to be renowned for his navigational skill and tenacity The first circumnavigation has been called the greatest sea voyage in the Age of Discovery 57 and even the most important maritime voyage ever undertaken 58 Appreciation of Magellan s accomplishments may have been enhanced over time by the failure of subsequent expeditions which attempted to retrace his route beginning with the Loaisa expedition in 1525 which featured Juan Sebastian Elcano as second in command 59 The next expedition to successfully complete a circumnavigation led by Francis Drake would not occur until 1580 58 years after the return of the Victoria 60 Magellan named the Pacific Ocean which was sometimes referred to as the Sea of Magellan in his honor until the eighteenth century 61 and lends his name to the Strait of Magellan His name has also since been applied to a variety of other entities including the Magellanic Clouds two dwarf galaxies visible in the night sky of the southern hemisphere Project Magellan a Cold War era US Navy project to circumnavigate the world by submarine and NASA s Magellan spacecraft Quincentenary Even though Magellan did not survive the trip he has received more recognition for the expedition than Elcano has Since Magellan was the one who began it Portugal wanted to recognize a Portuguese explorer and Spain feared Basque nationalism In 2019 the 500th anniversary of the voyage Spain and Magellan s native Portugal submitted a new joint application to UNESCO to honour the circumnavigation route 62 Commemorations of the circumnavigation include An exhibition titled The Longest Journey the first circumnavigation was opened at the General Archive of the Indies in Seville by the King and Queen of Spain It was scheduled to be transferred to the San Telmo Museum in San Sebastian in 2020 63 An exhibition entitled Pigafetta cronista de la primera vuelta al mundo Magallanes Elcano opened at the library of the Spanish Agency for International Development Cooperation in Madrid It gave prominence to Pigafetta the chronicler of the expedition 64 See also Portugal portal Spain portal Philippines portal South America portal Biography portalList of things named after Ferdinand Magellan Age of Discovery Chronology of European exploration of Asia History of the Philippines Military history of the Philippines Portuguese Empire Spanish EmpireReferences Ferdinand Magellan Oxford Reference Retrieved 23 July 2021 a b Smith Lucy Humphrey 1920 Magellan St Nicholas Magazine Vol 48 no 1 p 1 via Scribner Magellan Collins English Dictionary Retrieved 8 October 2019 Magellan Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary Retrieved 8 October 2019 Pigafetta Antonio Magellan s Voyage A Narrative Account of the First Circumnavigation trans and ed Skelton R A 2 vols New Haven CT 1969 Mitchell Mairin Elcano The First Circumnavigator London 1958 A typical evaluation of Magellan by a contemporary Portuguese historian is that given by Damiao de Goes Cronica do felicissimo rei Dom Emanuel edited by Texeira de Carvalho e Lopes 4 vols Coimbra 1926 originally published 1556 IV 83 84 who considered Magellan a disgruntled man who planned the voyage for Castile principally to spite the Portuguese sovereign Manuel Torodash Martin 1971 Magellan Historiography Hispanic American Historical Review 51 2 313 335 doi 10 1215 00182168 51 2 313 Kinsella Pat 27 April 2021 Dire Straits the story of Ferdinand Magellan s fatal voyage of discovery BBC History Magazine Retrieved 23 July 2021 Castro Xavier de dir Carmen Bernand Hamon Jocelyne et Thomaz Luiz Filipe 2010 Le voyage de Magellan 1519 1522 La relation d Antonio Pigafetta et autres temoignages in French Paris Editions Chandeigne collection Magellane ISBN 978 2915540574 Hartig Otto 1 October 1910 Ferdinand Magellan Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 9 New York Robert Appleton Company Retrieved 31 October 2010 via NewAdvent org Miller Gordon 2011 Voyages To the New World and Beyond 1st ed University of Washington Press p 30 ISBN 978 0 295 99115 3 Dutch Steve 21 May 1997 Circumnavigations of the Globe to 1800 University of Wisconsin Green Bay Archived from the original on 23 October 2014 Retrieved 11 October 2014 a b Bergreen 2003 p 17 Hartig Otto 1913 Ferdinand Magellan In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Ocampo 2019 One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Beazley Charles Raymond 1911 Magellan Ferdinand In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 302 304 Weir William 2018 50 Battles That Changed the World Permuted Press James A Patrick Renaissance and Reformation p 787 Marshall Cavendish 2007 ISBN 0 7614 7650 4 William J Bernstein A Splendid Exchange How Trade Shaped the World pp 183 185 Grove Press 2009 ISBN 0 8021 4416 0 Zweig Stefan Conqueror of the Seas The Story of Magellan pp 44 45 Read Books 2007 ISBN 1 4067 6006 4 Joyner 1992 pp 42 43 Joyner 1992 p 50 Zweig Stefan Conqueror of the Seas The Story of Magellan p 51 Read Books 2007 ISBN 1 4067 6006 4 R A Donkin Between East and West The Moluccas and the Traffic in Spices up to the Arrival of Europeans p 29 Volume 248 of Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society Diane Publishing 2003 ISBN 0 87169 248 1 Mervyn D Kaufman 2004 Ferdinand Magellan Capstone Press pp 13 ISBN 978 0 7368 2487 3 Beatriz Barbosa 1495 Geneall net Noronha 1921 Bergreen 2003 pp 30 33 Galvan Javier 7 September 2020 That small superpower where Magellan was born Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved 23 July 2021 Levinson Nancy Smiler 2001 Magellan and the First Voyage Around the World Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 39 ISBN 978 0 395 98773 5 Serrano Tomas Mazon 2020 T Elcano Journey to History Bergreen 2003 p 61 Ferdinand Magellan Allegiance to Spain Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 31 March 2021 Cameron 1974 p 145 Bergreen 2003 p 215 George Bryan Souza Jeffrey S Turley 2016 The Boxer Codex Transcription and Translation of an Illustrated Late Sixteenth Century Spanish Manuscript Concerning the Geography History and Ethnography of the Pacific South East and East Asia Brill p 303 ISBN 978 90 04 29273 4 OCLC 932684337 Bergreen 2003 pp 224 231 a b Nowell C E 1962 Antonio Pigafetta s account Magellan s Voyage Around the World Evanston IL Northwestern University Press hdl 2027 mdp 39015008001532 OCLC 347382 Cameron 1974 p 209 Bergreen 2003 p 271 ABS CBN News 1 May 2019 It s Lapulapu Gov t committee weighs in on correct spelling of Filipino hero s name ABS CBN News ABS CBN Corporation Retrieved 22 November 2019 David Hawthorne 1964 Ferdinand Magellan Doubleday amp Company Inc Battle of Mactan Marks Start of Organized Filipino Resistance Vs Foreign Aggression Retrieved 9 April 2009 Ocampo Ambeth 13 November 2019 Lapu Lapu Magellan and blind patriotism Inquirer net Retrieved 22 November 2019 Mojarro Jorge 10 November 2019 Opinion The anger toward the Elcano amp Magellan film is unjustified Rappler Rappler Inc Retrieved 22 November 2019 a b Pigafetta Antonio 1906 Magellan s Voyage Around the World 1906 ed tr James Alexander Robertson Monteclar Arthur Paul 25 May 2021 Cebuano Weapons Used During the Battle of Mactan Sugbo ph Retrieved 22 March 2022 Manchester William 1993 A World Lit Only by Fire Little Brown and Company ISBN 978 0 316 54556 3 page needed Bergreen 2003 p 406 Cameron 1974 p 210 Bergreen 2003 p 299 Bergreen 2003 p 305 Bergreen 2003 pp 399 402 Bergreen 2003 pp 403 405 Cameron 1974 p 215 Bergreen 2003 p 414 Bergreen 2003 p 2 Bergreen 2003 p 412 Bergreen 2003 p 413 Camino Mercedes Maroto Producing the Pacific Maps and Narratives of Spanish Exploration 1567 1606 p 76 2005 Minder Raphael 20 September 2019 Who First Circled the Globe Not Magellan Spain Wants You to Know The New York Times King and Queen of Spain open commemorative exhibition on first circumnavigation by Magellan and Elcano 2019 Retrieved 22 October 2019 Pigafetta cronista de la primera vuelta al mundo Magallanes Elcano Sources Beaglehole J C 1966 The Exploration of the Pacific London Adam amp Charles Black OCLC 253002380 Castro Xavier de Hamon Jocelynn Thomaz Luis Filipe de Castro 2007 Le voyage de Magellan 1519 1522 La relation d Antonio Pigafetta amp autres temoignages Paris Chandeigne coll Magellane ISBN 978 2 915540 32 1 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint postscript link Cliffe Edward 1885 Hakluyt Richard ed The voyage of M John Winter into the South sea by the Streight of Magellan in consort with M Francis Drake begun in the yeere 1577 The principal navigations voyages traffiques and discoveries of the English nation Edinburgh E amp G Goldsmid a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint postscript link Drake Francis 1628 The world encompassed by Sir Francis Drake being his next voyage to that to Nombre de Dios Elibron Classics series Issue 16 of Works issued by the Hakluyt Society Adamant Media Corporation ISBN 978 1 4021 9567 9 Hogan C Michael 2008 N Stromberg ed Magellanic Penguin GlobalTwitcher com Archived from the original on 23 August 2011 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint postscript link Noronha Dom Jose Manoel de 1921 Imprensa da Universidade ed Algumas Observacoes sobre a Naturalidade e a Familia de Fernao de Magalhaes in Portuguese Coimbra Biblioteca Genealogica de Lisboa Archived from the original on 7 March 2010 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint postscript link Stefoff Rebecca 1990 Ferdinand Magellan and the Discovery of the World Ocean Chelsea House Publishers ISBN 978 0 7910 1291 8 Suarez Thomas 1999 Early mapping of Southeast Asia Tuttle Publishing ISBN 978 962 593 470 9 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint postscript link Online sources Ocampo Ambeth 5 July 2019 Magellan s last will and testament INQUIRER net INQUIRER net retrieved 5 July 2019 Swenson Tait M 2005 First Circumnavigation of the Globe by Magellan 1519 1522 The Web Chronology project Retrieved 14 March 2006 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint postscript link Further readingPrimary sources Pigafetta Antonio 1906 Magellan s Voyage around the World Arthur A Clark orig Primer viaje en torno del globo Retrieved on 2009 04 08 Magellan Francis Guillemard Antonio Pigafetta Francisco Albo Gaspar Correa 2008 Viartis ISBN 978 1 906421 00 7 Maximilianus Transylvanus De Moluccis insulis 1523 1542 Nowell Charles E ed 1962 Magellan s Voyage around the World Three Contemporary Accounts Evanston NU Press The First Voyage Round the World by Magellan full text English translation by Lord Stanley of Alderley London Hakluyt 1874 six contemporary accounts of his voyage Secondary sources Beazley Charles Raymond 1911 Magellan Ferdinand In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 302 304 Bergreen Laurence 2003 Over the Edge of the World Magellan s Terrifying Circumnavigation of the Globe William Morrow ISBN 978 0 06 093638 9 Cameron Ian 1974 Magellan and the first circumnavigation of the world London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 029776568X OCLC 842695 Guillemard Francis Henry Hill 1890 The life of Ferdinand Magellan and the first circumnavigation of the globe 1480 1521 G Philip retrieved 8 April 2009 Hildebrand Arthur Sturges 1924 Magellan New York Harcourt Brace amp Co ISBN 978 1 4179 1413 5 Joyner Tim 1992 Magellan Camden Me International Marine Publishing ISBN 978 0 07 033128 0 Nunn George E 1932 The Columbus and Magellan Concepts of South American Geography Parr Charles M 1953 So Noble a Captain The Life and Times of Ferdinand Magellan New York Crowell ISBN 978 0 8371 8521 7 Parry J H 1979 The Discovery of South America New York Taplinger Parry J H 1981 The Discovery of the Sea Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 04236 0 Parry J H 1970 The Spanish Seaborne Empire New York Knopf ISBN 978 0 520 07140 7 Perez Mallaina Pablo E 1998 Spain s Men of the Sea Daily Life on the Indies Fleets in the Sixteenth Century translated by Carla Rahn Phillips Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 5746 1 Roditi Edouard 1972 Magellan of the Pacific London Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 08945 1 Schurz William L May 1922 The Spanish Lake Hispanic American Historical Review 5 2 181 194 doi 10 2307 2506024 JSTOR 2506024 Salonia Matteo 2022 Encompassing the Earth Magellan s Voyage from Its Political Context to Its Expansion of Knowledge International Journal of Maritime History 34 4 543 560 doi 10 1177 08438714221123468 S2CID 252451072 Thatcher Oliver J ed 1907 Magellan s Voyage Round the World The Library of Original Sources vol V University Research Extension pp 41 57 hdl 2027 nyp 33433067371306 Wilford John Noble 2000 The Mapmakers New York Knopf ISBN 978 0 375 70850 3 archived from the original on 9 December 2012 Zweig Stefan 2007 Conqueror of the Seas The Story of Magellan Read Books ISBN 978 1 4067 6006 4External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ferdinand Magellan Wikiquote has quotations related to Ferdinand Magellan Ferdinand Magellan on history com PBS Secrets of the Dead Magellan s Crossing Magellan s untimely demise on Cebu in the Philippines from History House Expedicion Magallanes Juan Sebastian Elcano Encyclopaedia Britannica Ferdinand Magellan Ferdinand Magellan Bibliotheca Augustana Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ferdinand Magellan amp oldid 1145945404, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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