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Lançarote de Freitas

Lançarote de Freitas, better known as Lançarote de Lagos or Lançarote da Ilha, was a 15th-century Portuguese explorer and slave trader from Lagos, Portugal. He was the leader of two large Portuguese slaving raids on the West African coast in 1444–46.

Background edit

 
Old Customs house of Lagos, Portugal, site of the first African slave market in Portugal

Lançarote de Freitas, better known as Lançarote da Ilha or simply Lançarote de Lagos, was trained as a squire and chamberlain in the household of the Portuguese prince Henry the Navigator. Lançarote was appointed as almoxarife (customs-collector) of Lagos, Portugal in April 1443, succeeding his father-in-law Soeiro da Costa, who resigned the position in his favor.[1]

Prince Henry the Navigator had been sending maritime expeditions down the West African coast since at least the early 1430s (see Portuguese discoveries). But they had yielded very little profit. The expeditions had sailed mostly along the stark Sahara desert coast, with no human settlements in sight nor encounters worth reporting. But in 1443, one of Henry's captains, Nuno Tristão, returned from an expedition with some 14 captive African natives, Sanhaja Berbers seized from small native fishing village he found in the Bay of Arguin (in modern Mauritania). The elevated banks of Arguin bay were replete with fish, attracting poor desert-dwelling Sanhaja Berbers to set up numerous little fishing settlements on islands and promontories all around the bay. It was the first human habitations that Henry's captains had come across after a decade of exploring, and they seemed weak and vulnerable. The prospect of easy and profitable slave-raiding grounds around the Arguin banks aroused the interest of many Portuguese merchants and fortune-seeking adventurers.[2]

To immediately secure his title, in October 1443, Henry the Navigator received from his brother, the regent prince Peter of Coimbra, letters patent granting him an exclusive monopoly over all navigation south of Cape Bojador, whether for the purpose of war or trade. Any ship sailing south of it without Henry's license could be confiscated. Peter's letters also granted Henry the royal fifth and customs duties (tenth on imports) normally due to the Portuguese crown, on any African goods or slaves brought back to metropolitan Portugal.[3]

A consortium of merchants of Lagos, sometimes referred to as the Companhia de Lagos ('Lagos Company', although it was probably little more than a temporary association of merchants, rather than an incorporated company in the proper sense),[4] applied to Henry for a license. Probably on account of his intimate relationship with Henry, the Lagos merchants elected Lançarote as their head.

First slave raid (1444) edit

 
Map of the Bay of Arguin

Having acquired their license, the Lagos company equipped a fleet of six slave ships and about thirty men that set out for the Arguin banks in the spring of 1444. The six captains are usually recorded as:[5]

  • 1. Lançarote de Freitas
  • 2. Gil Eanes
  • 3. Estêvão Afonso
  • 4. Rodrigo Álvares
  • 5. João Dias
  • 6. Uncertain (variously given as Martim Vicente, Gil Vasques, João Bernaldez or even Gonçalo de Sintra).

In his own later memoir, Diogo Gomes identifies himself as having participating in this expedition.[6]

Lançarote's fleet headed straight to the southern end of the Arguin Bay, where they had been told by Nuno Tristão's captives that populous fishing settlements could be found. They arrived in Arguin in June, 1444. A pre-dawn raid on Nar (Nair island) yielded the first set of victims. This was followed up by raids on the larger neighboring island of Tider (Tidra island) and Cerina (Serenni peninsula). In just a few days, the Lagos fleet had kidnapped some 235 hapless Berber people.[7] The remaining population having fled the coastal settlements and hidden in the hinterlands, there was little point remaining in the area. By early August, 1444, the fleet had arrived back in Lagos with their human cargo.

The spectacle of the disembarkation, partition and sale of the Arguin slaves in Lagos, in the presence of Prince Henry, mounted on his horse, is described in heart-breaking detail in Zurara's Crónica.[8][9] For this lucrative enterprise, Lançarote was knighted by Henry on the spot (August 8, 1444) (even though, according to Zurara, Henry gave away his own allotment - some 46 enslaved people, to which he was entitled as licenser of the expedition - among his captains and household servants).

Second slave raid (1445/1446) edit

Lançarote organized a second Lagos fleet for another large slave raid in 1445 (or 1446).[10] The Lagos fleet was composed of 14 ships, the captains normally given as:[11]

  • 1. Lançarote de Freitas
  • 2. Soeiro da Costa (alcaide of Lagos and Lançarote's father-in-law)
  • 3. Álvaro de Freitas (probably a relative of Lançarote)
  • 4. Gomes Pires (captain of the king's caravel)
  • 5. Rodrigo Eanes Travassos (of the household of the regent Peter of Coimbra),
  • 6. a knight known as Palançano (aboard a fusta)[12]
  • 7. Vicente Dias of Lagos
  • 8. Martim Vicente
  • 9. a captain nicknamed Picanço (speculated to be Diogo Gomes)[13]
  • 10. Lourenço Dias

and, more speculatively:

  • 11. Diogo Gonçalves,
  • 12. Pedro Alemão,
  • 13. Gil Gonçalves,
  • 14. Leonel Gil (son of Gil Eanes).

This fleet is said to have carried Gil Eanes and Estêvão Afonso as passengers.[14]

Setting out in August, 1445 (or 1446), Lançarote's Lagos fleet was just one of several fleets that set out from Portugal for the Arguin banks that year. Caught by bad weather, Lançarote arrived at Cape Blanc with only nine ships still together, the remaining having strayed off. He proceeded to the northern end of the Arguin banks, anchoring in at ilha das Graças (uncertain, possibly Madeleine island or Pelicans island). There, Lançarote was met by one of his missing ships, Vicente Dias, that had gone on ahead to Arguin island and stumbled across a small fleet of three Lisbon ships, headed by Dinis Eanes de Grã, who had preceded them and devastated the remaining settlements on the northern end of the bay, kidnapping some 100 people. At Grã's suggestion, Lançarote's fleet, now thirteen strong (only Palançano's fusta remained unaccounted for) attacked Arguin island again, taking four captives. They then headed to the southern end of Arguin Bay, kidnapping 57 Tider people and an additional five people somewhere further down (possibly around Cape Timris). The element of surprise being gone and the bulk of the population having already evacuated the coast, Lançarote's captives were principally Sanhaja Berber tribesmen who had decided to stay and put up a fight.[15]

Dissatisfied with the "meager" number of human beings they had taken, and realizing that Arguin Bay was too thoroughly deserted to yield up any more, Lançarote decided to take his fleet south to raid the Wolof lands of Senegal, which had been discovered (but not yet raided) by Nuno Tristão and Dinis Dias the previous year. However, not all his ships were up for the journey, several of them running short on supplies. As a result, Lançarote partitioned his fleet, taking only six or seven caravels with him, sending the remaining ships back to Lagos under the command of Soeiro da Costa (a few of which would conduct an unauthorized slave raid on the Canary islands of La Palma and Gomera on their way home).[16]

Lançarote's squadron soon arrived at Barbary Point, the mouth of the Senegal River, which had not yet been explored by Europeans.[17] Lançarote dispatched Estêvão Afonso and Vicente Dias on a launch to search upriver for settlements. The exploration didn't get very far. Venturing ashore at one point along the river bank, Afonso abducted two Wolof children from a local woodsman's hut, only to be chased down and furiously beaten by their father. Having barely escaped with their lives, the launch immediately returned (with the two kidnapped children) to the waiting caravels.[18]

After sending back yet another caravel to Lagos, Lançarote proceeded with his five remaining ships to sail around Cape Vert and enter Dakar Bay. While rounding the Cape, the squadron made a brief stop on an island (probably Madeleine islands), where they found a bunch of wild goats and some fresh water. They then proceed into the bay and landed on a second island - Gorée island (marked on Portuguese maps as Bezeguiche). The island was uninhabited, and they marveled at the large wide trees there (probably baobab trees).[19] But they also found signs of prior human presence - some goat skins and a carved marker with Henry the Navigator's motto (Talent de bien faire). These had been left behind on the Gorée island by Álvaro Fernandes, a Portuguese explorer from Madeira who had preceded them there only a few weeks earlier.[20] During his stay, Alvaro Fernandes had attempted to seize a couple of native canoes in Dakar Bay, with the result that the Wolof (or more probably Lebou) tribesmen of the mainland were already alert and in arms against the arriving ships of Lançarote's fleet. With the Wolof warriors mustered on the beach, the Portuguese did not dare land for another day and night. Finally, to break the impasse, Lançarote sent out Gomes Pires on a launch to the mainland, hoping to open negotiations with the local chieftains. Pires managed to lay out some gift goods (mirror, cake, paper, etc.) on the beach and withdraw. But rather than curiosity or delight, the Wolof warriors came out and angrily destroyed the gift goods with their spears.[21] Gomes Pires ordered the Portuguese on the launch to ready their crossbows. They approached the beach again, but they were greeted with a hail of thrown assegais and poisoned arrows and forced to retreat.

Their first strategy foiled, Lançarote and the Portuguese captains held a conference on Gorée. According to Barros, the captains agreed to launch a raid on the mainland Wolof villages 'in the style' of Arguin. But this came to naught. Before being able to organize the attack, a sudden storm enveloped the area (a Cape Verde hurricane?), and forced the Portuguese caravels out of Dakar bay, scattering them in various directions.[22] (Zurara makes no report of the planned attack or storm; he says merely the Portuguese captains decided they ought to depart and sail back north and try their luck at the Senegal River again).[23]

Bad weather overtook them upon leaving Dakar bay and split the fleet. Lançarote managed to hold two caravels (Álvaro de Freitas and Vicente Dias) together with his own, but lost sight of the remaining two ships. Perhaps realizing they were now too few to launch an attack on the Wolof mainland, Lançarote's trio skipped past the Senegal River, and set sail back to the Arguin banks. The trio anchored in again at Tider and took an additional 59 captives, before returning to Lagos. The remaining two ships (Gomes Pires and Lourenço Dias) had to make their way back to Portugal by themselves. On his way, Gomes Pires made a brief stop in Cape Blanc, and bought some seal pelts and a Black slave from some Berber traders. Before proceeding back to Portugal, Pires promised to return to the same spot next year, and the Berber traders promised to bring him enough slaves, gold and other goods to fill his ship. Only Lourenço Dias actually made it inside the Senegal River, but realizing he was alone, decided to turn around and sailed back home by himself.[24]

Aftermath edit

In number of captives, the second 1445/6 slaving expedition had been somewhat of a "disappointment" (at least relative to the first 1444 attack). The prospect for future slave raids seemed dim. The Arguin banks were devastated and it was unlikely the Berber populations would return to the coasts in significant numbers, or allow themselves to be taken by surprise. The Wolof-dominated coasts of Senegal were too strong and alert for small groups of venturing Portuguese slave-raiders. If slave raids were to have any prospect of kidnapping people, the element of surprise was necessary, which now meant sailing well below Senegal to new "hunting grounds" - lengthier expeditions which required probably more supplies and capital than what Lagos merchants were willing to front or captains willing to sail. The killing of Nuno Tristão and his crew the next year (1446 or 1447) probably dampened any remaining enthusiasm among Lagos merchants for renewing the slave raids.[25]

Portuguese slave-raiding expeditions seem to have been suspended after 1447 (Zurara's chronicle ends here). Given the growing expenses and casualties, it seems the Portuguese switched from slave-raiding to slave-trading after this.[26] Prince Henry ordered the erection of a permanent factory on Arguin island by 1450, to tap into the Trans-Saharan trade traffic in slaves and gold coming up overland from Guinea.[27] The slave-trader and explorer Alvise Cadamosto, who travelled to West Africa in 1455 with Henry's license, provides some details of trade at Arguin.[28] He noted that to keep the peace around Arguin, Prince Henry had instituted a prohibition on any further kidnapping of Berber Sanhaja people, and only allowed the acquisition of pagan Black African slaves by trade.[29]

In his memoir, Cadamosto claims that the Portuguese had also negotiated the establishment of trading posts with the Wolof kingdoms of Waalo and Kayor along the Grande Côte of Senegal.[30] It has been suggested that Lourenço Dias, one of the captains of Lançarote's slave raid of 1445/46, returned to the Senegal region (sometime between 1448 and 1455), and negotiated peace and trade agreements with the Wolof statelets.[31] Regular trade subsequently opened in the area, the Portuguese exchanging Mediterranean goods (notably, horses) for slaves and gold.[32] This can be said to be the beginning of the Atlantic slave trade.[33]

The new trading stations at Arguin and Senegal were estimated by Cadamosto have to have bought 700-800 African slaves annually to metropolitan Portugal by the mid-1450s.[34] But there would be no resumption of the slave razzias of 1444–47.[35] There is no record of any Portuguese ship sailing below Cape Vert again for nearly a decade (until Cadamosto in 1455).[36]

Later life edit

Little more is heard about Lançarote de Lagos after his second raiding expedition of 1445/46. He continued as customs-collector (almoxarife) in Lagos. Having been knighted after his first expedition, Lançarote was promoted by the regent Peter as "caudel" of Lagos in May, 1446. There are documents suggesting Lançarote was organizing and sending provisions supply ships from Lagos to Ceuta between 1452 and 1455. Records show Lançarote was still alive in May, 1463, after which there is no further trace.[37]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The letter from regent Peter of Coimbra appointing "Lançarote da Ilha" as almoxarife (dated April 6, 1443) is found in A.J. Dias Dinis, editor, (1967), Monumenta Henricina, vol. 8, April 6, 1443 p.45. After resigning the almoxarife position, Soeiro da Costa was appointed alcaide of the castle of Lagos (by October 1443, see MH, p.339)
  2. ^ Zurara (1453, p.61)
  3. ^ Barros (1552: p.60); Quintella (1839: p.104). A copy of the letter patent of Peter of Coimbra (dated October 22, 1443) is found in A.J. Dias Dinis, editor, (1967), Monumenta Henricina, vol. 8, p.107
  4. ^ Rau and Diffie (1953)
  5. ^ Zurara (1453: p.60-86), Barros (1552: p.65), Quintella (1889: p.106), Diffie and Winius (1977: p.80-81). See also Russell (2000: 239-40)
  6. ^ Gomes (1499: p.274)
  7. ^ Zurara (p.80) reports Lançarote's first fleet brought back 235 captives. Magalhães Godinho (1983, v.4, p.157) considers that an underestimate, and prefers the higher estimate of almost 650 captives, as reported by Diogo Gomes (see Gomes, p.274). Gomes claimed to have captured 22 people himself.
  8. ^ Zurara, p.79-86
  9. ^ Thomas, Hugh (1997). "What Heart Could Be So Hard?". The Slave Trade. Simon & Schuster Ltd. ISBN 978-0684810638.
  10. ^ Cortesão (p.18) and Diffie and Winius (p. 84, p. 467), following Zurara, place this in 1445. Quintella (p.139), following Barros, places it in 1446. Faria e Sousa (527-28) places it in 1447.
  11. ^ This list is drawn mainly from Faria e Sousa (p.527) Both Zurara (p.152) and Barros (p.85-86) explicitly mention only 1-6 in their lists, referring to the rest merely as 'other honorable persons of Lagos'. However, some names, e.g. Lourenço Dias and Vicente Dias, are mentioned later in their narratives.
  12. ^ Possibly the same person as "Alvaro Fernandes Palenco", who had been earlier nominated by the regent Peter of Coimbra in January 23, 1444 as a master of royal galleys. See MH, v.8 p.121
  13. ^ Although he doesn't mention this expedition in his own account, Diogo Gomes (1499: p.278) claims he later captained a Lagos ship called Piconso on an expedition to Guinea. So it is possible he may have captained it on this expedition too. See Oliveira (2002) However, Barros (1552: p.88) identifies 'Picanço" as the nickname of Gomes Pires.
  14. ^ Zurara (p.152).
  15. ^ Zurara (p.161-71), Barros (p.88-91), Quintella (p.140-41)
  16. ^ Zurara (p.173) lists the returning names as 1. Soeiro da Costa, 2. Vicente Dias, 3. Gil Eanes, 4. Martim Vicente pilot and 5. João de Dias owner. Barros (p.92) lists them as 1. Soeiro da Costa, 2. Vicente Dias, 3. Rodrigo Eanes (!), 4. Martim Vicente and 5. Picanço. For the ships going with Lançarote to Senegal, Zurara (p.174) lists 1. Lançarote, 2. Gomes Pires, captain of the king's caravel, 3. Álvaro de Freitas, 4. Rodrigo Eanes de Travassos, 5. Lourenço Dias and 6. Vicente Dias 'the trader', plus 7. the ship of Tavilla (Tavira?) and 8. Picanço, although the latter two turned back before reaching Senegal. For the Senegal squadron, Barros (p.92) mentions 1. Lançarote, 2. Gomes Pires, 3. Álvaro de Freitas, 4. Rodrigo Eanes Travassos, 5. Lourenço Dias, and mentions later 6. Vicente Dias 'the trader' and 7. 'Dinis Dias' (sic, 'who turned back'). Zurara (p.175) mentions six arrived at Senegal, five at Gorée, which seems consistent with Barros's numbers.
  17. ^ Zurara (p.176, p.183ff.); Barros (p.108)
  18. ^ Zurara (p.178-83), Barros (p.110-12), Quintella (p.144-45)
  19. ^ Beazley's note No.156 in Zurara p.342
  20. ^ Zurara (p.192), Barros (p.113), Quintella (p.145)
  21. ^ Zurara (p.192); Barros, (p.114)
  22. ^ Barros (1552: p.114)
  23. ^ Zurara (1453, p.193)
  24. ^ Zurara (p.193-94), Barros (p.115), Quintella (p.146)
  25. ^ Teixeira da Mota (1946, Pt.2, p.315-16).
  26. ^ Teixeira da Mota (1946, Pt.2, p.310) and (p.315-16); Godinho (1983: p.156)
  27. ^ Russell (2000: p.206) notes that Henry leased the operation of Arguin factory to a private merchant consortium for ten years.
  28. ^ Cadamosto (1460s: Eng. p.211)
  29. ^ Cadamosto (p.213)
  30. ^ Cadamosto (p.220); Russell (2000: p.297)
  31. ^ Russell (2000: p.297), citing a later document from 1489.
  32. ^ Russell (2000: p.299-300).
  33. ^ Russell (2000: p.247)
  34. ^ Cadamosto (1460s: p.213). Godinho (1983: p.157) puts the estimate a little bit higher at 800-1000 annually.
  35. ^ Teixeira da Mota (1946, Pt.2, p.310)
  36. ^ Diffie and Winius (1977; p.468)
  37. ^ See footnote in Monumenta Henricina, vol. 8, p.45-46.

Sources edit

Chronicles edit

  • Alvise Cadamosto (wr. 1460s, pub. 1507) "Il Libro di Messer Alvise Ca da Mosto Gentilhuomo Venetiano", as printed in Venice (1550), by Giovanni Battista Ramusio, ed., Primo volume delle navigationi et viaggi nel qua si contine la descrittione dell'Africa. online (English translation: "Original Journals of the Voyages of Cada Mosto and Piedro de Cintra to the Coast of Africa, the former in the years 1455 and 1456, and the latter soon afterwards", in R. Kerr, 1811, A General History of Voyages and Travels to the end of the 18th century, vol. 2, Edinburgh: Blackwood. online)
  • Diogo Gomes (c.1499) De prima inventione Guineae [trans. by Gabriel Pereira (1898–99) as "As Relações do Descobrimento da Guiné e das ilhas dos Açores, Madeira e Cabo Verde" in Boletim da Sociedade de Geografia de Lisboa, no. 5.
  • João de Barros (1552–59) Décadas da Ásia: Dos feitos, que os Portuguezes fizeram no descubrimento, e conquista, dos mares, e terras do Oriente. Vol. 1 (Dec I, Lib.1-5)
  • Gomes Eanes de Zurara (1453) Crónica dos feitos notáveis que se passaram na Conquista da Guiné por mandado do Infante D. Henrique or Chronica do descobrimento e conquista da Guiné. [Trans. 1896-99 by C.R. Beazley and E. Prestage, The Chronicle of the Discovery and Conquest of Guinea, London: Halykut]
  • Manuel de Faria e Sousa (1675) "Empieça la Memoria de todas las Armadas", in Asia Portuguesa, Vol. 3, p.525-61

Secondary edit

  • Cortesão, Armando (1931) "Subsídios para a história do Descobrimento de Cabo Verde e Guiné", Boletim da Agencia Geral das Colonias, No. 75. As reprinted in 1975, Esparsos, vol. 1, Coimbra
  • Diffie, Bailey W., and George D. Winius (1977) Foundations of the Portuguese empire, 1415-1580 Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press
  • Magalhães Godinho, Vitorino (1983) Os descobrimentos e a economia mundial, 2nd ed., v.4.
  • Quintella, Ignaco da Costa (1839–40) Annaes da Marinha Portugueza, 2 vols, Lisbon: Academia Real das Sciencias. vol. 1
  • Oliveira, Aurelio de (2002) ""Diogo Gomes: trato e diplomacia ao serviço da Expansão", Revista da Faculdade de Letras, Porto, p. 163.
  • Rau, Virginia, and Diffie, B. W. (1953) "Alleged Fifteenth - Century Portuguese Joint - Stock Companies and the Articles of Dr. Fitzler" , Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, v.26, p. 181
  • Russell, Peter E. (2000) Prince Henry 'the Navigator': a life. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press.
  • Teixera da Mota, Avelino (1946) "A descoberta da Guiné", Boletim cultural da Guiné Portuguesa, Vol. 1. No. 1 (Jan), p. 11-68, No. 2 (Apr), p. 273-326; No. 3 (Jul), p. 457-509.

lançarote, freitas, better, known, lançarote, lagos, lançarote, ilha, 15th, century, portuguese, explorer, slave, trader, from, lagos, portugal, leader, large, portuguese, slaving, raids, west, african, coast, 1444, contents, background, first, slave, raid, 14. Lancarote de Freitas better known as Lancarote de Lagos or Lancarote da Ilha was a 15th century Portuguese explorer and slave trader from Lagos Portugal He was the leader of two large Portuguese slaving raids on the West African coast in 1444 46 Contents 1 Background 2 First slave raid 1444 3 Second slave raid 1445 1446 4 Aftermath 5 Later life 6 Notes 7 Sources 7 1 Chronicles 7 2 SecondaryBackground edit nbsp Old Customs house of Lagos Portugal site of the first African slave market in PortugalLancarote de Freitas better known as Lancarote da Ilha or simply Lancarote de Lagos was trained as a squire and chamberlain in the household of the Portuguese prince Henry the Navigator Lancarote was appointed as almoxarife customs collector of Lagos Portugal in April 1443 succeeding his father in law Soeiro da Costa who resigned the position in his favor 1 Prince Henry the Navigator had been sending maritime expeditions down the West African coast since at least the early 1430s see Portuguese discoveries But they had yielded very little profit The expeditions had sailed mostly along the stark Sahara desert coast with no human settlements in sight nor encounters worth reporting But in 1443 one of Henry s captains Nuno Tristao returned from an expedition with some 14 captive African natives Sanhaja Berbers seized from small native fishing village he found in the Bay of Arguin in modern Mauritania The elevated banks of Arguin bay were replete with fish attracting poor desert dwelling Sanhaja Berbers to set up numerous little fishing settlements on islands and promontories all around the bay It was the first human habitations that Henry s captains had come across after a decade of exploring and they seemed weak and vulnerable The prospect of easy and profitable slave raiding grounds around the Arguin banks aroused the interest of many Portuguese merchants and fortune seeking adventurers 2 To immediately secure his title in October 1443 Henry the Navigator received from his brother the regent prince Peter of Coimbra letters patent granting him an exclusive monopoly over all navigation south of Cape Bojador whether for the purpose of war or trade Any ship sailing south of it without Henry s license could be confiscated Peter s letters also granted Henry the royal fifth and customs duties tenth on imports normally due to the Portuguese crown on any African goods or slaves brought back to metropolitan Portugal 3 A consortium of merchants of Lagos sometimes referred to as the Companhia de Lagos Lagos Company although it was probably little more than a temporary association of merchants rather than an incorporated company in the proper sense 4 applied to Henry for a license Probably on account of his intimate relationship with Henry the Lagos merchants elected Lancarote as their head First slave raid 1444 edit nbsp Map of the Bay of ArguinHaving acquired their license the Lagos company equipped a fleet of six slave ships and about thirty men that set out for the Arguin banks in the spring of 1444 The six captains are usually recorded as 5 1 Lancarote de Freitas 2 Gil Eanes 3 Estevao Afonso 4 Rodrigo Alvares 5 Joao Dias 6 Uncertain variously given as Martim Vicente Gil Vasques Joao Bernaldez or even Goncalo de Sintra In his own later memoir Diogo Gomes identifies himself as having participating in this expedition 6 Lancarote s fleet headed straight to the southern end of the Arguin Bay where they had been told by Nuno Tristao s captives that populous fishing settlements could be found They arrived in Arguin in June 1444 A pre dawn raid on Nar Nair island yielded the first set of victims This was followed up by raids on the larger neighboring island of Tider Tidra island and Cerina Serenni peninsula In just a few days the Lagos fleet had kidnapped some 235 hapless Berber people 7 The remaining population having fled the coastal settlements and hidden in the hinterlands there was little point remaining in the area By early August 1444 the fleet had arrived back in Lagos with their human cargo The spectacle of the disembarkation partition and sale of the Arguin slaves in Lagos in the presence of Prince Henry mounted on his horse is described in heart breaking detail in Zurara s Cronica 8 9 For this lucrative enterprise Lancarote was knighted by Henry on the spot August 8 1444 even though according to Zurara Henry gave away his own allotment some 46 enslaved people to which he was entitled as licenser of the expedition among his captains and household servants Second slave raid 1445 1446 editLancarote organized a second Lagos fleet for another large slave raid in 1445 or 1446 10 The Lagos fleet was composed of 14 ships the captains normally given as 11 1 Lancarote de Freitas 2 Soeiro da Costa alcaide of Lagos and Lancarote s father in law 3 Alvaro de Freitas probably a relative of Lancarote 4 Gomes Pires captain of the king s caravel 5 Rodrigo Eanes Travassos of the household of the regent Peter of Coimbra 6 a knight known as Palancano aboard a fusta 12 7 Vicente Dias of Lagos 8 Martim Vicente 9 a captain nicknamed Picanco speculated to be Diogo Gomes 13 10 Lourenco Diasand more speculatively 11 Diogo Goncalves 12 Pedro Alemao 13 Gil Goncalves 14 Leonel Gil son of Gil Eanes This fleet is said to have carried Gil Eanes and Estevao Afonso as passengers 14 Setting out in August 1445 or 1446 Lancarote s Lagos fleet was just one of several fleets that set out from Portugal for the Arguin banks that year Caught by bad weather Lancarote arrived at Cape Blanc with only nine ships still together the remaining having strayed off He proceeded to the northern end of the Arguin banks anchoring in at ilha das Gracas uncertain possibly Madeleine island or Pelicans island There Lancarote was met by one of his missing ships Vicente Dias that had gone on ahead to Arguin island and stumbled across a small fleet of three Lisbon ships headed by Dinis Eanes de Gra who had preceded them and devastated the remaining settlements on the northern end of the bay kidnapping some 100 people At Gra s suggestion Lancarote s fleet now thirteen strong only Palancano s fusta remained unaccounted for attacked Arguin island again taking four captives They then headed to the southern end of Arguin Bay kidnapping 57 Tider people and an additional five people somewhere further down possibly around Cape Timris The element of surprise being gone and the bulk of the population having already evacuated the coast Lancarote s captives were principally Sanhaja Berber tribesmen who had decided to stay and put up a fight 15 Dissatisfied with the meager number of human beings they had taken and realizing that Arguin Bay was too thoroughly deserted to yield up any more Lancarote decided to take his fleet south to raid the Wolof lands of Senegal which had been discovered but not yet raided by Nuno Tristao and Dinis Dias the previous year However not all his ships were up for the journey several of them running short on supplies As a result Lancarote partitioned his fleet taking only six or seven caravels with him sending the remaining ships back to Lagos under the command of Soeiro da Costa a few of which would conduct an unauthorized slave raid on the Canary islands of La Palma and Gomera on their way home 16 Lancarote s squadron soon arrived at Barbary Point the mouth of the Senegal River which had not yet been explored by Europeans 17 Lancarote dispatched Estevao Afonso and Vicente Dias on a launch to search upriver for settlements The exploration didn t get very far Venturing ashore at one point along the river bank Afonso abducted two Wolof children from a local woodsman s hut only to be chased down and furiously beaten by their father Having barely escaped with their lives the launch immediately returned with the two kidnapped children to the waiting caravels 18 After sending back yet another caravel to Lagos Lancarote proceeded with his five remaining ships to sail around Cape Vert and enter Dakar Bay While rounding the Cape the squadron made a brief stop on an island probably Madeleine islands where they found a bunch of wild goats and some fresh water They then proceed into the bay and landed on a second island Goree island marked on Portuguese maps as Bezeguiche The island was uninhabited and they marveled at the large wide trees there probably baobab trees 19 But they also found signs of prior human presence some goat skins and a carved marker with Henry the Navigator s motto Talent de bien faire These had been left behind on the Goree island by Alvaro Fernandes a Portuguese explorer from Madeira who had preceded them there only a few weeks earlier 20 During his stay Alvaro Fernandes had attempted to seize a couple of native canoes in Dakar Bay with the result that the Wolof or more probably Lebou tribesmen of the mainland were already alert and in arms against the arriving ships of Lancarote s fleet With the Wolof warriors mustered on the beach the Portuguese did not dare land for another day and night Finally to break the impasse Lancarote sent out Gomes Pires on a launch to the mainland hoping to open negotiations with the local chieftains Pires managed to lay out some gift goods mirror cake paper etc on the beach and withdraw But rather than curiosity or delight the Wolof warriors came out and angrily destroyed the gift goods with their spears 21 Gomes Pires ordered the Portuguese on the launch to ready their crossbows They approached the beach again but they were greeted with a hail of thrown assegais and poisoned arrows and forced to retreat Their first strategy foiled Lancarote and the Portuguese captains held a conference on Goree According to Barros the captains agreed to launch a raid on the mainland Wolof villages in the style of Arguin But this came to naught Before being able to organize the attack a sudden storm enveloped the area a Cape Verde hurricane and forced the Portuguese caravels out of Dakar bay scattering them in various directions 22 Zurara makes no report of the planned attack or storm he says merely the Portuguese captains decided they ought to depart and sail back north and try their luck at the Senegal River again 23 Bad weather overtook them upon leaving Dakar bay and split the fleet Lancarote managed to hold two caravels Alvaro de Freitas and Vicente Dias together with his own but lost sight of the remaining two ships Perhaps realizing they were now too few to launch an attack on the Wolof mainland Lancarote s trio skipped past the Senegal River and set sail back to the Arguin banks The trio anchored in again at Tider and took an additional 59 captives before returning to Lagos The remaining two ships Gomes Pires and Lourenco Dias had to make their way back to Portugal by themselves On his way Gomes Pires made a brief stop in Cape Blanc and bought some seal pelts and a Black slave from some Berber traders Before proceeding back to Portugal Pires promised to return to the same spot next year and the Berber traders promised to bring him enough slaves gold and other goods to fill his ship Only Lourenco Dias actually made it inside the Senegal River but realizing he was alone decided to turn around and sailed back home by himself 24 Aftermath editIn number of captives the second 1445 6 slaving expedition had been somewhat of a disappointment at least relative to the first 1444 attack The prospect for future slave raids seemed dim The Arguin banks were devastated and it was unlikely the Berber populations would return to the coasts in significant numbers or allow themselves to be taken by surprise The Wolof dominated coasts of Senegal were too strong and alert for small groups of venturing Portuguese slave raiders If slave raids were to have any prospect of kidnapping people the element of surprise was necessary which now meant sailing well below Senegal to new hunting grounds lengthier expeditions which required probably more supplies and capital than what Lagos merchants were willing to front or captains willing to sail The killing of Nuno Tristao and his crew the next year 1446 or 1447 probably dampened any remaining enthusiasm among Lagos merchants for renewing the slave raids 25 Portuguese slave raiding expeditions seem to have been suspended after 1447 Zurara s chronicle ends here Given the growing expenses and casualties it seems the Portuguese switched from slave raiding to slave trading after this 26 Prince Henry ordered the erection of a permanent factory on Arguin island by 1450 to tap into the Trans Saharan trade traffic in slaves and gold coming up overland from Guinea 27 The slave trader and explorer Alvise Cadamosto who travelled to West Africa in 1455 with Henry s license provides some details of trade at Arguin 28 He noted that to keep the peace around Arguin Prince Henry had instituted a prohibition on any further kidnapping of Berber Sanhaja people and only allowed the acquisition of pagan Black African slaves by trade 29 In his memoir Cadamosto claims that the Portuguese had also negotiated the establishment of trading posts with the Wolof kingdoms of Waalo and Kayor along the Grande Cote of Senegal 30 It has been suggested that Lourenco Dias one of the captains of Lancarote s slave raid of 1445 46 returned to the Senegal region sometime between 1448 and 1455 and negotiated peace and trade agreements with the Wolof statelets 31 Regular trade subsequently opened in the area the Portuguese exchanging Mediterranean goods notably horses for slaves and gold 32 This can be said to be the beginning of the Atlantic slave trade 33 The new trading stations at Arguin and Senegal were estimated by Cadamosto have to have bought 700 800 African slaves annually to metropolitan Portugal by the mid 1450s 34 But there would be no resumption of the slave razzias of 1444 47 35 There is no record of any Portuguese ship sailing below Cape Vert again for nearly a decade until Cadamosto in 1455 36 Later life editLittle more is heard about Lancarote de Lagos after his second raiding expedition of 1445 46 He continued as customs collector almoxarife in Lagos Having been knighted after his first expedition Lancarote was promoted by the regent Peter as caudel of Lagos in May 1446 There are documents suggesting Lancarote was organizing and sending provisions supply ships from Lagos to Ceuta between 1452 and 1455 Records show Lancarote was still alive in May 1463 after which there is no further trace 37 Notes edit The letter from regent Peter of Coimbra appointing Lancarote da Ilha as almoxarife dated April 6 1443 is found in A J Dias Dinis editor 1967 Monumenta Henricina vol 8 April 6 1443 p 45 After resigning the almoxarife position Soeiro da Costa was appointed alcaide of the castle of Lagos by October 1443 see MH p 339 Zurara 1453 p 61 Barros 1552 p 60 Quintella 1839 p 104 A copy of the letter patent of Peter of Coimbra dated October 22 1443 is found in A J Dias Dinis editor 1967 Monumenta Henricina vol 8 p 107 Rau and Diffie 1953 Zurara 1453 p 60 86 Barros 1552 p 65 Quintella 1889 p 106 Diffie and Winius 1977 p 80 81 See also Russell 2000 239 40 Gomes 1499 p 274 Zurara p 80 reports Lancarote s first fleet brought back 235 captives Magalhaes Godinho 1983 v 4 p 157 considers that an underestimate and prefers the higher estimate of almost 650 captives as reported by Diogo Gomes see Gomes p 274 Gomes claimed to have captured 22 people himself Zurara p 79 86 Thomas Hugh 1997 What Heart Could Be So Hard The Slave Trade Simon amp Schuster Ltd ISBN 978 0684810638 Cortesao p 18 and Diffie and Winius p 84 p 467 following Zurara place this in 1445 Quintella p 139 following Barros places it in 1446 Faria e Sousa 527 28 places it in 1447 This list is drawn mainly from Faria e Sousa p 527 Both Zurara p 152 and Barros p 85 86 explicitly mention only 1 6 in their lists referring to the rest merely as other honorable persons of Lagos However some names e g Lourenco Dias and Vicente Dias are mentioned later in their narratives Possibly the same person as Alvaro Fernandes Palenco who had been earlier nominated by the regent Peter of Coimbra in January 23 1444 as a master of royal galleys See MH v 8 p 121 Although he doesn t mention this expedition in his own account Diogo Gomes 1499 p 278 claims he later captained a Lagos ship called Piconso on an expedition to Guinea So it is possible he may have captained it on this expedition too See Oliveira 2002 However Barros 1552 p 88 identifies Picanco as the nickname of Gomes Pires Zurara p 152 Zurara p 161 71 Barros p 88 91 Quintella p 140 41 Zurara p 173 lists the returning names as 1 Soeiro da Costa 2 Vicente Dias 3 Gil Eanes 4 Martim Vicente pilot and 5 Joao de Dias owner Barros p 92 lists them as 1 Soeiro da Costa 2 Vicente Dias 3 Rodrigo Eanes 4 Martim Vicente and 5 Picanco For the ships going with Lancarote to Senegal Zurara p 174 lists 1 Lancarote 2 Gomes Pires captain of the king s caravel 3 Alvaro de Freitas 4 Rodrigo Eanes de Travassos 5 Lourenco Dias and 6 Vicente Dias the trader plus 7 the ship of Tavilla Tavira and 8 Picanco although the latter two turned back before reaching Senegal For the Senegal squadron Barros p 92 mentions 1 Lancarote 2 Gomes Pires 3 Alvaro de Freitas 4 Rodrigo Eanes Travassos 5 Lourenco Dias and mentions later 6 Vicente Dias the trader and 7 Dinis Dias sic who turned back Zurara p 175 mentions six arrived at Senegal five at Goree which seems consistent with Barros s numbers Zurara p 176 p 183ff Barros p 108 Zurara p 178 83 Barros p 110 12 Quintella p 144 45 Beazley s note No 156 in Zurara p 342 Zurara p 192 Barros p 113 Quintella p 145 Zurara p 192 Barros p 114 Barros 1552 p 114 Zurara 1453 p 193 Zurara p 193 94 Barros p 115 Quintella p 146 Teixeira da Mota 1946 Pt 2 p 315 16 Teixeira da Mota 1946 Pt 2 p 310 and p 315 16 Godinho 1983 p 156 Russell 2000 p 206 notes that Henry leased the operation of Arguin factory to a private merchant consortium for ten years Cadamosto 1460s Eng p 211 Cadamosto p 213 Cadamosto p 220 Russell 2000 p 297 Russell 2000 p 297 citing a later document from 1489 Russell 2000 p 299 300 Russell 2000 p 247 Cadamosto 1460s p 213 Godinho 1983 p 157 puts the estimate a little bit higher at 800 1000 annually Teixeira da Mota 1946 Pt 2 p 310 Diffie and Winius 1977 p 468 See footnote in Monumenta Henricina vol 8 p 45 46 Sources editChronicles edit Alvise Cadamosto wr 1460s pub 1507 Il Libro di Messer Alvise Ca da Mosto Gentilhuomo Venetiano as printed in Venice 1550 by Giovanni Battista Ramusio ed Primo volume delle navigationi et viaggi nel qua si contine la descrittione dell Africa online English translation Original Journals of the Voyages of Cada Mosto and Piedro de Cintra to the Coast of Africa the former in the years 1455 and 1456 and the latter soon afterwards in R Kerr 1811 A General History of Voyages and Travels to the end of the 18th century vol 2 Edinburgh Blackwood online Diogo Gomes c 1499 De prima inventione Guineae trans by Gabriel Pereira 1898 99 as As Relacoes do Descobrimento da Guine e das ilhas dos Acores Madeira e Cabo Verde in Boletim da Sociedade de Geografia de Lisboa no 5 Joao de Barros 1552 59 Decadas da Asia Dos feitos que os Portuguezes fizeram no descubrimento e conquista dos mares e terras do Oriente Vol 1 Dec I Lib 1 5 Gomes Eanes de Zurara 1453 Cronica dos feitos notaveis que se passaram na Conquista da Guine por mandado do Infante D Henrique or Chronica do descobrimento e conquista da Guine Trans 1896 99 by C R Beazley and E Prestage The Chronicle of the Discovery and Conquest of Guinea London Halykut Manuel de Faria e Sousa 1675 Empieca la Memoria de todas las Armadas in Asia Portuguesa Vol 3 p 525 61Secondary edit Cortesao Armando 1931 Subsidios para a historia do Descobrimento de Cabo Verde e Guine Boletim da Agencia Geral das Colonias No 75 As reprinted in 1975 Esparsos vol 1 Coimbra Diffie Bailey W and George D Winius 1977 Foundations of the Portuguese empire 1415 1580 Minneapolis MN University of Minnesota Press Magalhaes Godinho Vitorino 1983 Os descobrimentos e a economia mundial 2nd ed v 4 Quintella Ignaco da Costa 1839 40 Annaes da Marinha Portugueza 2 vols Lisbon Academia Real das Sciencias vol 1 Oliveira Aurelio de 2002 Diogo Gomes trato e diplomacia ao servico da Expansao Revista da Faculdade de Letras Porto p 163 Rau Virginia and Diffie B W 1953 Alleged Fifteenth Century Portuguese Joint Stock Companies and the Articles of Dr Fitzler Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research v 26 p 181 Russell Peter E 2000 Prince Henry the Navigator a life New Haven Conn Yale University Press Teixera da Mota Avelino 1946 A descoberta da Guine Boletim cultural da Guine Portuguesa Vol 1 No 1 Jan p 11 68 No 2 Apr p 273 326 No 3 Jul p 457 509 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lancarote de Freitas amp oldid 1191980687, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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