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Fernão Mendes Pinto

Fernão Mendes Pinto (Portuguese pronunciation: [fɨɾˈnɐ̃w ˈmẽdɨʃ ˈpĩtu]; c.1509 – 8 July 1583) was a Portuguese explorer and writer. His voyages are recorded in Pilgrimage (Portuguese: Peregrinação; 1614), his autobiographical memoir. The historical accuracy of the work is debatable due to the many events that seem far-fetched or at least exaggerated, earning him the nickname Fernão Mentes Minto (wordplay with the Portuguese verb mentir 'lie', meaning "Fernão, are you lying? I am lying."). Many aspects of the work can be verified, particularly through records of Pinto's service to the Portuguese crown and by his association with Jesuit missionaries.

Fernão Mendes Pinto
Possible likeness of Fernão Mendes Pinto in the Visitation altarpiece (Giraldo Fernandes de Prado, 1589–91) of the Church of Misericórdia of Almada, Portugal
Born1509
Died(1583-07-08)8 July 1583
NationalityPortuguese
Occupation(s)explorer and writer
Known forPilgrimage

Early life edit

Pinto was born in about 1509, in Montemor-o-Velho, Portugal, to a poor rural family (or perhaps to a family of minor nobility who had fallen on hard times). Pinto had two brothers and two sisters (and possibly other siblings). In 1551, a brother, Álvaro, was recorded in Portuguese Malacca. Letters also record that a brother died a martyr in Malacca. In 1557, Francisco Garcia de Vargas, Pinto's wealthy cousin is recorded at Cochin.

He was related to the wealthy Mendes family who were descendants of Jewish Marranos who lived in Portugal (which makes him a relative of Gracia Mendes Nasi).[1] They had a monopoly of the black pepper commerce in Portugal and some of them later moved to Antwerp in Belgium

Pinto described his childhood as spartan. In 1521, hoping to improve the boy's prospects, an uncle took him to Lisbon. There, Pinto was employed in the household service of a noblewoman. After eighteen months or so, Pinto fled. At the docks, he was hired as a ship's boy on a cargo vessel bound for Setúbal. On the way, French pirates captured the ship and the passengers were set upon the shore at Alentejo.

Pinto made his way to Setúbal, where he entered the service of Francisco de Faria, a knight of Santiago. He remained there for four years and then joined the service of Jorge de Lencastre, a master of the Order of Santiago (also an illegitimate son of King John II of Portugal). Pinto held that position for a number of years. Although comfortable, it held no promise of advancement. Therefore, at twenty-eight, Pinto left to join the Portuguese India Armadas.

Voyages edit

Pinto's travels can be divided into three phases: firstly, from Portugal to India; secondly, through the region of the Red Sea, from the coast of Africa to the Persian Gulf; and thirdly, from east India to Sumatra, Siam, China, and Japan. Finally, Pinto returned to Europe.

First voyage to India edit

 
Map of India showing Diu

On 11 March 1537, Pinto left Lisbon for India via Portuguese Mozambique. On 5 September that year, he arrived in Diu, a fortified island and town northwest of Bombay (Portuguese since 1535 but under siege by Suleiman the Magnificent).

Pinto joined a Portuguese reconnaissance mission to the Red Sea via Ethiopia. The mission was to deliver a message to Portuguese soldiers guarding the mother of "Prester John" (Emperor Dawit II of Ethiopia) in a mountain fortress. After leaving Massawa, the mission engaged three Turkish galleys in battle. The Portuguese ships were defeated and their crews taken to Mocha to be sold as slaves.

Pinto was sold to a Greek Muslim who was a cruel master. Pinto threatened suicide and was sold to a Jewish merchant for about thirty ducats' worth of dates. With the Jewish merchant, Pinto travelled the caravan route to Hormuz, a leading market town in the Persian Gulf. There, Pinto was freed by way of payment of three hundred ducats from the Portuguese crown. He was made captain of the Fortress of Hormuz and the Portuguese king's special magistrate for Indian affairs.

Second voyage to India edit

Soon after being freed, Pinto sailed on a Portuguese cargo ship to Goa. Against his will, Pinto was transferred en route to a naval fleet bound for the Mughal port city of Debal (modern Karachi) near Thatta. After enduring battles with Ottoman ships, Pinto reached Goa.

Malacca and the Far East edit

 
Malay Peninsula

From 1539, Pinto remained in Malacca under Pedro de Faria, the newly appointed captain of Malacca. Pinto was sent to establish diplomatic contacts, particularly with small kingdoms allied with the Portuguese against the Muslims of northern Sumatra. In 1569, he discovered an Ottoman fleet led by Kurtoğlu Hızır Reis in Aceh.

Patani edit

 
South China Sea

Following Pinto's mission to Sumatra, he was sent to Patani, on the eastern shore of the Malay Peninsula. From there, Pinto made an unsuccessful delivery of merchandise to Siam. The goods were stolen by pirates who were then chased by Pinto and António de Faria. Pinto continued trading operations in the South China Sea, especially in the Gulf of Tonkin.

China edit

Pinto entered China from the Yellow Sea and raided a tomb of the Emperor of China. Pinto was shipwrecked, apprehended by the Chinese and sentenced to one year hard labour on the Great Wall of China. Before completing his sentence, Pinto was taken prisoner by invading Tatars. He became an agent of the Tartars and travelled with them to Cochinchina, the southernmost part of modern-day Cambodia and Vietnam. Pinto describes his encounter with a "pope-like" man, possibly the Dalai Lama, who had never heard of Europe. Pinto and two companions jumped ship to a Chinese pirate junk and were shipwrecked onto the Japanese island of Tanegashima, south of Kyūshū.

Japan edit

 
Japan
 
Peregrinação, Pinto's famous book
 
Japanese arquebus of the Edo era (teppo)
 
Memorial to St. Francis Xavier, Hirado, Nagasaki

Pinto claimed that his 1543 landing made him the first European to set foot in Japan. He also claimed to have introduced the arquebus to Japan. It is widely accepted now, however, that several Portuguese traders, including António Mota and Francisco Zeimoto, visited Japan a year earlier.[2] The firearm was reproduced and used in the Japanese civil wars. It was known as the tanegashima.

Pinto facilitated trade between the Portuguese and Japan. At one point, he was shipwrecked on the Ryukyu Islands. In 1549, Pinto left Kagoshima accompanied by a Japanese fugitive, Anjirō. He returned to Japan with Saint Francis Xavier, a Catholic missionary. In 1554, Pinto joined the Society of Jesus and donated a large sum of his trading wealth to the mission. In a letter, Ōtomo Yoshishige, daimyō of Bungo, offered his conversion and requested Pinto return to Japan. The letter arrived at the same time that Xavier's body was being displayed in Goa. Ōtomo did not convert at that time due to internal difficulties but did so later at the time Pinto was completing his autobiography. Between 1554 and 1556, Pinto returned to Japan with Xavier's successor. He became the Viceroy of Portuguese India's ambassador to the daimyo of Bungo on the island of Kyūshū. Despite Pinto's support of the Church in Japan, he left the Jesuits in 1557.

Martaban edit

Pinto returned to Malacca and was then sent to Martaban. He arrived in the midst of a siege and took refuge in a Portuguese camp of mercenaries who had betrayed the Viceroy. Pinto similarly was betrayed by a mercenary, captured by the Burmese and placed under the charge of the king's treasurer who took him to the kingdom of Calaminham. Pinto fled to Goa.

Java edit

On Pinto's return to Goa, Faria sent him to Bantam, Java, to buy pepper for sale to China. Once again, Pinto was shipwrecked. He may have resorted to cannibalism before submitting to slavery in order to secure passage out of the swampy Java shore. Pinto was bought by a Celebes merchant and resold to the King of Kalapa who returned him to Sunda.

Siam edit

Using borrowed money, Pinto bought passage to Siam where he encountered the King of Siam at war. Pinto's writings contribute to the historical record of the war.

Return to Portugal edit

On 22 September 1558, Pinto returned to Portugal. Fame preceded him in Western Europe due to one of his letters being published by the Society of Jesus in 1555. Pinto spent the years 1562–1566 in court looking for reward or compensation for his years of service to the Crown. He married Maria Correia Barreto with whom he had at least two daughters. In 1562, he purchased a farm in Pragal. Pinto died on 8 July 1583 at his farm.

Memoir Peregrinação edit

Pinto began his memoirs in 1569. The book was published posthumously by friar Belchior Faria in 1614. Although Pinto did not have the education of contemporary authors and did not reveal a knowledge of either classical culture nor aesthetics of the Renaissance, his experiential knowledge and intelligence enabled him to create a meaningful work. Pinto was critical of Portuguese colonialism in the Far East.[3]

The vivid tales of his wanderings were so incredible and far-fetched as to not be believed.[4] They gave rise to the saying "Fernão, Mentes? Minto!", a Portuguese pun on his name meaning "Fernão, do you lie? I do!"[5]

The publication may vary from Pinto's manuscript (some sentences are erased and others are edited). The disappearance of references to the Society of Jesus, one of the most active religious orders in the Orient, is notable, as there are clear indications of Pinto's relationship with the society. Pinto's memoirs are just that, his memories of events, giving rise to doubts regarding historical accuracy. However, it documents the impact of the Asian civilizations on the Europeans and is a reasonable analysis of Portuguese action in the Orient (in comparison to Luís de Camões' Os Lusíadas).

The most controversial of Pinto's claims is his being the first European to visit Japan and his introduction of the arquebus to Japan. Another controversial claim, that he fought in Java against the Muslims, has been analyzed by historians. The Dutch historian, P. A. Tiele, who wrote in 1880, did not believe Pinto was present during the campaign, but rather that he wrote his information from secondhand sources. Even so, Tiele admits Pinto's account cannot be disregarded because of the lack of alternative information about Javanese history during the time. Maurice Collis holds the opinion that Pinto's accounts, while not entirely true, remain compatible with historical events. Collis considers Pinto's work the most complete European account of 16th century Asian history.

Legacy edit

In 1978, a crater on Mercury was named Mendes Pinto after Pinto.[6]

A high school in Almada, Portugal, built in 1965, was named in his honour and in 2011, a 2 euro coin was issued to mark the 500th anniversary of Pinto's birthday.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Rebecca D. Catz page xxxvii
  2. ^ The Southern barbarians: the first Europeans in Japan. Michael Cooper. 1971. ISBN 9780870111389. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
  3. ^ Catz R. "Fernão Mendes Pinto and His Peregrinação." 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Hispania magazine, Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes
  4. ^ Lidin O. "Tanegashima: the arrival of Europe in Japan." Routledge, 2003. p13 ISBN 1135788715, 9781135788711.
  5. ^ "The Travels of Mendes Pinto: Team Game." The Inside Scoop on Gaming, RPGnet
  6. ^ "Craters: Mendes Pinto on Mercury", Planetary Names: Crater

Sources edit

  • Breve História da Literatura Portuguesa, Texto Editora, Lisboa, 1999
  • A. J. Barreiros, História da Literatura Portuguesa, Editora Pax, eleventh edition.
  • A. J. Saraiva, O. Lopes, História da Literatura Portuguesa, Porto Editora, twelfth edition.
  • Enciclopédia Luso-Brasileira de Cultura, Editorial Verbo, Lisboa, Fifteenth edition.
  • Lexicoteca – Moderna Enciclopédia Universal volume 15 Círculo de Leitores, 1987
  • The Travels of Mendes Pinto, Edited and translated by Rebecca D. Catz, The University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0-226-66951-3
  • Collis, M. The Grand Peregrination Faber and Faber 1949 ISBN 0-85635-850-9
  • Fernão Mendes Pinto and the Peregrinação – studies, restored Portuguese text, notes and indexes, directed by Jorge Santos Alves, Fundação Oriente, Lisbon, 2010, ISBN 978-972-785-096-9

Online edit

Rebecca Catz. "Hispania". Fernão Mendes Pinto and His Peregrinação. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)

External links edit

  • Works by or about Fernão Mendes Pinto at Internet Archive
  • Prestage, Edgar (1911). "Pinto, Fernão Mendes" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 21 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 629.
  • Catz R. "Hispania" 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Virtual Cervantes website. Accessed 30 August 2005.
  • from the Catholic Encyclopedia
  • Hispania – American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese, Inc. 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  • English Translation by Henry Cogan, of Nichibunken database
  • Boris Filatov's Private Collection of Netsuke 17 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine

fernão, mendes, pinto, mendes, pinto, redirects, here, crater, mercury, mendes, pinto, crater, peregrinação, redirects, here, 2017, film, peregrinação, film, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, addin. Mendes Pinto redirects here For the crater on Mercury see Mendes Pinto crater Peregrinacao redirects here For the 2017 film see Peregrinacao film This article 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 Fernao Mendes Pinto news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Fernao Mendes Pinto Portuguese pronunciation fɨɾˈnɐ w ˈmẽdɨʃ ˈpĩtu c 1509 8 July 1583 was a Portuguese explorer and writer His voyages are recorded in Pilgrimage Portuguese Peregrinacao 1614 his autobiographical memoir The historical accuracy of the work is debatable due to the many events that seem far fetched or at least exaggerated earning him the nickname Fernao Mentes Minto wordplay with the Portuguese verb mentir lie meaning Fernao are you lying I am lying Many aspects of the work can be verified particularly through records of Pinto s service to the Portuguese crown and by his association with Jesuit missionaries Fernao Mendes PintoPossible likeness of Fernao Mendes Pinto in the Visitation altarpiece Giraldo Fernandes de Prado 1589 91 of the Church of Misericordia of Almada PortugalBorn1509Montemor o Velho Kingdom of PortugalDied 1583 07 08 8 July 1583Pragal Almada Kingdom of PortugalNationalityPortugueseOccupation s explorer and writerKnown forPilgrimage Contents 1 Early life 2 Voyages 2 1 First voyage to India 2 2 Second voyage to India 2 3 Malacca and the Far East 2 3 1 Patani 2 3 2 China 2 3 3 Japan 2 3 4 Martaban 2 3 5 Java 2 3 6 Siam 2 4 Return to Portugal 3 Memoir Peregrinacao 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 7 1 Online 8 External linksEarly life editPinto was born in about 1509 in Montemor o Velho Portugal to a poor rural family or perhaps to a family of minor nobility who had fallen on hard times Pinto had two brothers and two sisters and possibly other siblings In 1551 a brother Alvaro was recorded in Portuguese Malacca Letters also record that a brother died a martyr in Malacca In 1557 Francisco Garcia de Vargas Pinto s wealthy cousin is recorded at Cochin He was related to the wealthy Mendes family who were descendants of Jewish Marranos who lived in Portugal which makes him a relative of Gracia Mendes Nasi 1 They had a monopoly of the black pepper commerce in Portugal and some of them later moved to Antwerp in BelgiumPinto described his childhood as spartan In 1521 hoping to improve the boy s prospects an uncle took him to Lisbon There Pinto was employed in the household service of a noblewoman After eighteen months or so Pinto fled At the docks he was hired as a ship s boy on a cargo vessel bound for Setubal On the way French pirates captured the ship and the passengers were set upon the shore at Alentejo Pinto made his way to Setubal where he entered the service of Francisco de Faria a knight of Santiago He remained there for four years and then joined the service of Jorge de Lencastre a master of the Order of Santiago also an illegitimate son of King John II of Portugal Pinto held that position for a number of years Although comfortable it held no promise of advancement Therefore at twenty eight Pinto left to join the Portuguese India Armadas Voyages editPinto s travels can be divided into three phases firstly from Portugal to India secondly through the region of the Red Sea from the coast of Africa to the Persian Gulf and thirdly from east India to Sumatra Siam China and Japan Finally Pinto returned to Europe First voyage to India edit nbsp Map of India showing DiuOn 11 March 1537 Pinto left Lisbon for India via Portuguese Mozambique On 5 September that year he arrived in Diu a fortified island and town northwest of Bombay Portuguese since 1535 but under siege by Suleiman the Magnificent Pinto joined a Portuguese reconnaissance mission to the Red Sea via Ethiopia The mission was to deliver a message to Portuguese soldiers guarding the mother of Prester John Emperor Dawit II of Ethiopia in a mountain fortress After leaving Massawa the mission engaged three Turkish galleys in battle The Portuguese ships were defeated and their crews taken to Mocha to be sold as slaves Pinto was sold to a Greek Muslim who was a cruel master Pinto threatened suicide and was sold to a Jewish merchant for about thirty ducats worth of dates With the Jewish merchant Pinto travelled the caravan route to Hormuz a leading market town in the Persian Gulf There Pinto was freed by way of payment of three hundred ducats from the Portuguese crown He was made captain of the Fortress of Hormuz and the Portuguese king s special magistrate for Indian affairs Second voyage to India edit Soon after being freed Pinto sailed on a Portuguese cargo ship to Goa Against his will Pinto was transferred en route to a naval fleet bound for the Mughal port city of Debal modern Karachi near Thatta After enduring battles with Ottoman ships Pinto reached Goa Malacca and the Far East edit nbsp Malay PeninsulaFrom 1539 Pinto remained in Malacca under Pedro de Faria the newly appointed captain of Malacca Pinto was sent to establish diplomatic contacts particularly with small kingdoms allied with the Portuguese against the Muslims of northern Sumatra In 1569 he discovered an Ottoman fleet led by Kurtoglu Hizir Reis in Aceh Patani edit nbsp South China SeaFollowing Pinto s mission to Sumatra he was sent to Patani on the eastern shore of the Malay Peninsula From there Pinto made an unsuccessful delivery of merchandise to Siam The goods were stolen by pirates who were then chased by Pinto and Antonio de Faria Pinto continued trading operations in the South China Sea especially in the Gulf of Tonkin China edit Pinto entered China from the Yellow Sea and raided a tomb of the Emperor of China Pinto was shipwrecked apprehended by the Chinese and sentenced to one year hard labour on the Great Wall of China Before completing his sentence Pinto was taken prisoner by invading Tatars He became an agent of the Tartars and travelled with them to Cochinchina the southernmost part of modern day Cambodia and Vietnam Pinto describes his encounter with a pope like man possibly the Dalai Lama who had never heard of Europe Pinto and two companions jumped ship to a Chinese pirate junk and were shipwrecked onto the Japanese island of Tanegashima south of Kyushu Japan edit nbsp Japan nbsp Peregrinacao Pinto s famous book nbsp Japanese arquebus of the Edo era teppo nbsp Memorial to St Francis Xavier Hirado NagasakiPinto claimed that his 1543 landing made him the first European to set foot in Japan He also claimed to have introduced the arquebus to Japan It is widely accepted now however that several Portuguese traders including Antonio Mota and Francisco Zeimoto visited Japan a year earlier 2 The firearm was reproduced and used in the Japanese civil wars It was known as the tanegashima Pinto facilitated trade between the Portuguese and Japan At one point he was shipwrecked on the Ryukyu Islands In 1549 Pinto left Kagoshima accompanied by a Japanese fugitive Anjirō He returned to Japan with Saint Francis Xavier a Catholic missionary In 1554 Pinto joined the Society of Jesus and donated a large sum of his trading wealth to the mission In a letter Ōtomo Yoshishige daimyō of Bungo offered his conversion and requested Pinto return to Japan The letter arrived at the same time that Xavier s body was being displayed in Goa Ōtomo did not convert at that time due to internal difficulties but did so later at the time Pinto was completing his autobiography Between 1554 and 1556 Pinto returned to Japan with Xavier s successor He became the Viceroy of Portuguese India s ambassador to the daimyo of Bungo on the island of Kyushu Despite Pinto s support of the Church in Japan he left the Jesuits in 1557 Martaban edit Pinto returned to Malacca and was then sent to Martaban He arrived in the midst of a siege and took refuge in a Portuguese camp of mercenaries who had betrayed the Viceroy Pinto similarly was betrayed by a mercenary captured by the Burmese and placed under the charge of the king s treasurer who took him to the kingdom of Calaminham Pinto fled to Goa Java edit On Pinto s return to Goa Faria sent him to Bantam Java to buy pepper for sale to China Once again Pinto was shipwrecked He may have resorted to cannibalism before submitting to slavery in order to secure passage out of the swampy Java shore Pinto was bought by a Celebes merchant and resold to the King of Kalapa who returned him to Sunda Siam edit Using borrowed money Pinto bought passage to Siam where he encountered the King of Siam at war Pinto s writings contribute to the historical record of the war Return to Portugal edit On 22 September 1558 Pinto returned to Portugal Fame preceded him in Western Europe due to one of his letters being published by the Society of Jesus in 1555 Pinto spent the years 1562 1566 in court looking for reward or compensation for his years of service to the Crown He married Maria Correia Barreto with whom he had at least two daughters In 1562 he purchased a farm in Pragal Pinto died on 8 July 1583 at his farm Memoir Peregrinacao editPinto began his memoirs in 1569 The book was published posthumously by friar Belchior Faria in 1614 Although Pinto did not have the education of contemporary authors and did not reveal a knowledge of either classical culture nor aesthetics of the Renaissance his experiential knowledge and intelligence enabled him to create a meaningful work Pinto was critical of Portuguese colonialism in the Far East 3 The vivid tales of his wanderings were so incredible and far fetched as to not be believed 4 They gave rise to the saying Fernao Mentes Minto a Portuguese pun on his name meaning Fernao do you lie I do 5 The publication may vary from Pinto s manuscript some sentences are erased and others are edited The disappearance of references to the Society of Jesus one of the most active religious orders in the Orient is notable as there are clear indications of Pinto s relationship with the society Pinto s memoirs are just that his memories of events giving rise to doubts regarding historical accuracy However it documents the impact of the Asian civilizations on the Europeans and is a reasonable analysis of Portuguese action in the Orient in comparison to Luis de Camoes Os Lusiadas The most controversial of Pinto s claims is his being the first European to visit Japan and his introduction of the arquebus to Japan Another controversial claim that he fought in Java against the Muslims has been analyzed by historians The Dutch historian P A Tiele who wrote in 1880 did not believe Pinto was present during the campaign but rather that he wrote his information from secondhand sources Even so Tiele admits Pinto s account cannot be disregarded because of the lack of alternative information about Javanese history during the time Maurice Collis holds the opinion that Pinto s accounts while not entirely true remain compatible with historical events Collis considers Pinto s work the most complete European account of 16th century Asian history Legacy editIn 1978 a crater on Mercury was named Mendes Pinto after Pinto 6 A high school in Almada Portugal built in 1965 was named in his honour and in 2011 a 2 euro coin was issued to mark the 500th anniversary of Pinto s birthday See also editExploration of AsiaReferences edit Rebecca D Catz page xxxvii The Southern barbarians the first Europeans in Japan Michael Cooper 1971 ISBN 9780870111389 Retrieved 8 April 2018 Catz R Fernao Mendes Pinto and His Peregrinacao Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Hispania magazine Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes Lidin O Tanegashima the arrival of Europe in Japan Routledge 2003 p13 ISBN 1135788715 9781135788711 The Travels of Mendes Pinto Team Game The Inside Scoop on Gaming RPGnet Craters Mendes Pinto on Mercury Planetary Names CraterSources editBreve Historia da Literatura Portuguesa Texto Editora Lisboa 1999 A J Barreiros Historia da Literatura Portuguesa Editora Pax eleventh edition A J Saraiva O Lopes Historia da Literatura Portuguesa Porto Editora twelfth edition Enciclopedia Luso Brasileira de Cultura Editorial Verbo Lisboa Fifteenth edition Lexicoteca Moderna Enciclopedia Universal volume 15 Circulo de Leitores 1987 The Travels of Mendes Pinto Edited and translated by Rebecca D Catz The University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 66951 3 Collis M The Grand Peregrination Faber and Faber 1949 ISBN 0 85635 850 9 Fernao Mendes Pinto and the Peregrinacao studies restored Portuguese text notes and indexes directed by Jorge Santos Alves Fundacao Oriente Lisbon 2010 ISBN 978 972 785 096 9Online edit Rebecca Catz Hispania Fernao Mendes Pinto and His Peregrinacao a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help External links editWorks by or about Fernao Mendes Pinto at Internet Archive Prestage Edgar 1911 Pinto Fernao Mendes In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 21 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 629 Catz R Hispania Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Virtual Cervantes website Accessed 30 August 2005 from the Catholic Encyclopedia Hispania American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese Inc Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine The voyages and adventures of Ferdinand Mendez Pinto 1692 English Translation by Henry Cogan of Nichibunken database Boris Filatov s Private Collection of Netsuke Archived 17 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fernao Mendes Pinto amp oldid 1180871191, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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