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Magellan expedition

The Magellan-Elcano expedition was a 16th-century Spanish expedition planned and led by Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan with the initial objective of reaching the Moluccas. The expedition departed from Spain in 1519, and was completed in 1522 by Spanish navigator Juan Sebastián Elcano after Magellan's death, crossing the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian oceans, culminating in the first circumnavigation of the world.[1]

Magellan Expedition
Nao Victoria, the ship accomplishing the circumnavigation and the only to return from the expedition. Detail from a map by Abraham Ortelius.
CountrySpain
LeaderFerdinand Magellan (succeeded by Juan Sebastián Elcano)
StartSanlúcar de Barrameda September 20, 1519; 504 years ago (1519-09-20)
EndSanlúcar de Barrameda September 6, 1522; 501 years ago (1522-09-06)
GoalFind a western maritime route to the Spice Islands
Ships
Crewapprox. 270
Survivors18 arrived with Elcano, 12 were captured by the Portuguese in Cape Verde, 55 returned with the San Antonio in 1521, 4 (or 5) from Trinidad returned in Europe after hard labor in East Indies
Achievements
Route

Route taken by the expedition, with milestones marked

The expedition accomplished its primary goal – to find a western route to the Moluccas (Spice Islands). The fleet left Spain on 20 September 1519, sailed across the Atlantic ocean and south along the eastern coast of South America, eventually discovering the Strait of Magellan, allowing them to pass through to the Pacific Ocean (which Magellan named). The fleet completed the first Pacific crossing, stopping in the Philippines, and eventually reached the Moluccas after two years. A much-depleted crew led by Elcano finally returned to Spain on 6 September 1522, having sailed west across the great Indian Ocean, then around the Cape of Good Hope through waters controlled by the Portuguese and north along the West African coast to eventually arrive in Spain.

The fleet initially consisted of five ships and about 270 men. The expedition faced numerous hardships including sabotage and mutinies by the mostly-Spanish crew (and Elcano himself), starvation, scurvy, storms, and hostile encounters with indigenous people. Only 18 men and one ship (the Victoria) completed the return trip to Spain.[n 1] Magellan himself died in battle in the Philippines and was succeeded as captain-general by a series of officers, with Elcano eventually leading the Victoria's return trip.

The expedition was funded mostly by King Charles I of Spain, with the hope that it would discover a profitable western route to the Moluccas, as the eastern route was controlled by Portugal under the Treaty of Tordesillas. Though the expedition did find a route, it was much longer and more arduous than expected and was therefore not commercially useful. Nevertheless, the expedition is regarded as one of the greatest achievements in seamanship and had a significant impact on the European understanding of the world.[2][3]

Background edit

 
King Charles of Spain was 18 years old when he agreed to finance Magellan's expedition to the Spice Islands in 1518. He is pictured here in a painting by Bernard van Orley c. 1517

Christopher Columbus's voyages to the West (1492–1503) had the goal of reaching the Indies and establishing direct commercial relations between Spain and the Asian kingdoms. The Spanish soon realized that the lands of the Americas were not a part of Asia, but another continent. The 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas reserved for Portugal the eastern routes that went around Africa, and Vasco da Gama and the Portuguese arrived in India in 1498.

Given the economic importance of the spice trade, Castile (Spain) urgently needed to find a new commercial route to Asia. After the Junta de Toro conference of 1505, the Spanish Crown commissioned expeditions to discover a route to the west. Spanish explorer Vasco Núñez de Balboa reached the Pacific Ocean in 1513 after crossing the Isthmus of Panama, and Juan Díaz de Solís died in Río de la Plata in 1516 while exploring South America in the service of Spain.

Ferdinand Magellan was a Portuguese sailor with previous military experience in India, Malacca, and Morocco. A friend, and possible cousin, with whom Magellan sailed, Francisco Serrão, was part of the first expedition to the Moluccas, leaving from Malacca in 1511.[4] Serrão reached the Moluccas, going on to stay on the island of Ternate and take a wife.[5] Serrão sent letters to Magellan from Ternate, extolling the beauty and richness of the Spice Islands. These letters likely motivated Magellan to plan an expedition to the islands and would later be presented to Spanish officials when Magellan sought their sponsorship.[6]

Historians speculate that, beginning in 1514, Magellan repeatedly petitioned King Manuel I of Portugal to fund an expedition to the Moluccas, though records are unclear.[7] It is known that Manuel repeatedly denied Magellan's requests for a token increase to his pay, and that in late 1515 or early 1516, Manuel granted Magellan's request to be allowed to serve another master. Around this time, Magellan met the cosmographer Rui Faleiro, another Portuguese subject nursing resentment towards Manuel.[8] The two men acted as partners in planning a voyage to the Moluccas which they would propose to the king of Spain. Magellan relocated to Seville, Spain in 1517, with Faleiro following two months later.

On arrival in Seville, Magellan contacted Juan de Aranda, factor of the Casa de Contratación. Following the arrival of his partner Rui Faleiro, and with the support of Aranda, they presented their project to the king Charles I of Castile and Aragon (future Holy Roman Emperor Charles V). Magellan's project, if successful, would realise Columbus' plan of a spice route by sailing west without damaging relations with the Portuguese. The idea was in tune with the times and had already been discussed after Balboa's discovery of the Pacific. On 22 March 1518, the king named Magellan and Faleiro captains so that they could travel in search of the Spice Islands in July. He raised them to the rank of Commander of the Order of Santiago. They reached an agreement with King Charles which granted them, among other things:[9]

  • Monopoly of the discovered route for a period of ten years.[10][11]
  • Their appointment as governors (adelantado) of the lands and islands found, with 5% of the resulting net gains, inheritable by their partners or heirs.[10][12]
  • A fifth of the gains from the expedition.[10]
  • The right to ship 1,000 ducats worth of goods from the Moluccas to Spain annually exempt from most taxes.[11]
  • In the event that they discovered more than six islands, one fifteenth of the trading profits with two of their choice,[10] and a twenty-fifth from the others.[13]

The expedition was funded largely by the Spanish Crown, which provided ships carrying supplies for two years of travel. Though King Charles I was supposed to pay for the fleet he was deeply in debt, and he turned to the House of Fugger.[citation needed] Through archbishop Juan Rodríguez de Fonseca, head of the Casa de Contratación, the Crown obtained the participation of merchant Cristóbal de Haro, who provided a quarter of the funds and goods to barter.

Expert cartographers Jorge Reinel and Diego Ribero, a Portuguese who had started working for King Charles in 1518[14] as a cartographer at the Casa de Contratación, took part in the development of the maps to be used in the travel. Several problems arose during the preparation of the trip, including lack of money, the king of Portugal trying to stop them, Magellan and other Portuguese incurring suspicion from the Spanish, and the difficult nature of Faleiro.[15]

Construction and provisions edit

 
A modern replica of the Victoria in the Nao Victoria Museum, Punta Arenas, Chile

The fleet, consisting of five ships with supplies for two years of travel, was called Armada del Maluco, after the Indonesian name for the Spice Islands.[16] The ships were mostly black, due to the tar covering most of their surface. The official accounting of the expedition put the cost at 8,751,125 maravedis, including the ships, provisions, and salaries.[17]

Food was a hugely important part of the provisioning. It cost 1,252,909 maravedis, almost as much as the cost of the ships. Four-fifths of the food on the ship consisted of just two items – wine and hardtack.[18]

The fleet also carried flour and salted meat. Some of the ships' meat came in the form of livestock; the ship carried seven cows and three pigs. Cheese, almonds, mustard, and figs were also present.[19] Carne de membrillo,[20] made from preserved quince, was a delicacy enjoyed by captains which may have unknowingly aided in the prevention of scurvy.[21]

Ships edit

The fleet initially consisted of five ships, with Trinidad being the flagship. All or most were carracks (Spanish "carraca" or "nao"; Portuguese "nau").[n 2] The Victoria was the only ship to complete the circumnavigation. Details of the ships' configuration are not known, as no contemporary illustrations exist of any of the ships.[24] The official accounting of the Casa de Contratación put the cost of the ships at 1,369,808 maravedis, with another 1,346,781 spent on outfitting and transporting them.[25]

Ships of Magellan's expedition
Ship Captain Crew Tonnage[n 3]
(tonels)
Fate
Trinidad Ferdinand Magellan 62 then 61 after a stop-over in Tenerife[28] 110 Departed Seville with other four ships 10 August 1519. Broke down in Moluccas, December 1521
San Antonio Juan de Cartagena 55[29] 120 Deserted in the Strait of Magellan, November 1520,[30] returned to Spain on 6 May 1521[31]
Concepción Gaspar de Quesada 44 then 45 after a stop-over in Tenerife[32] 90 Scuttled in the Philippines, May 1521
Santiago João Serrão 31 then 33 after a stop-over in Tenerife[33] 75 Wrecked in storm at Santa Cruz River, on 22 May 1520[34][35]
Victoria Luis Mendoza 45 then 46 after a stop-over in Tenerife[36] 85 Successfully completed circumnavigation, returning to Spain in September 1522, captained by Juan Sebastián Elcano. Mendoza was killed during a mutiny attempt.

Crew edit

The crew consisted of about 270 men,[37] mostly Spaniards. Spanish authorities were wary of Magellan, so that they almost prevented him from sailing, switching his mostly Portuguese crew to mostly men of Spain. In the end, the fleet included about 40 Portuguese,[38] among them Magellan's brother-in-law Duarte Barbosa, João Serrão, Estêvão Gomes and Magellan's indentured servant Enrique of Malacca. Crew members of other nations were also recorded, including 29 Italians, 17 French, and a smaller number of Flemish, Greek, Irish, English, Asian, and black sailors.[39] Counted among the Spanish crew members were at least 29 Basques (including Juan Sebastián Elcano), some of whom did not speak Spanish fluently.[39]

Ruy Faleiro, who had initially been named co-captain with Magellan, developed mental health problems prior to departure (or, as other sources state, chose to remain behind after performing a horoscope reading indicating that the voyage would be fatal for him[40]) and was removed from the expedition by the king. He was replaced as the fleet's joint commander by Juan de Cartagena and as cosmographer/astrologer by Andrés de San Martín.

Juan Sebastián Elcano, a Spanish merchant ship captain living in Seville, embarked seeking the king's pardon for previous misdeeds. Antonio Pigafetta, a Venetian scholar and traveller, asked to be on the voyage, accepting the title of "supernumerary" and a modest salary. He became a strict assistant of Magellan and kept a journal. The only other sailor to keep a running account during the voyage would be Francisco Albo, who kept a formal nautical logbook. Juan de Cartagena, suspected illegitimate son of archbishop Fonseca, was named Inspector General of the expedition, responsible for its financial and trading operations.[41]

Crossing the Atlantic edit

On 10 August 1519, the five ships under Magellan's command left Seville and descended the Guadalquivir River to Sanlúcar de Barrameda, at the mouth of the river. There they remained more than five weeks. Finally they set sail on 20 September 1519 and left Spain.[42]

On 26 September, the fleet stopped at Tenerife in the Canary Islands, where they took in supplies (including vegetable and pitch, which were cheaper to acquire there than in Spain).[43] During the stop, Magellan received a secret message from his father-in-law, Diogo Barbosa, warning him that some of the Castilian captains were planning a mutiny, with Juan de Cartagena (captain of the San Antonio) being the ring-leader of the conspiracy.[44] He also learned that the King of Portugal had sent two fleets of caravels to arrest him.

On 3 October, the fleet departed the Canary Islands, sailing south along the coast of Africa. There was some disagreement over directions, with Cartagena arguing for a more westerly bearing.[45] Magellan made the unorthodox decision to follow the African coast in order to evade the Portuguese caravels which were pursuing him.[46]

Toward the end of October, as the Armada approached the equator, they experienced a series of storms, with such intense squalls that they were sometimes forced to strike their sails.[47] Pigafetta recorded the appearance of St. Elmo's fire during some of these storms, which was regarded as a good omen by the crew:

During these storms the body of St. Anselme appeared to us several times; amongst others, one night that it was very dark on account of the bad weather, the said saint appeared in the form of a fire lighted at the summit of the mainmast, and remained there near two hours and a half, which comforted us greatly, for we were in tears, only expecting the hour of perishing; and when that holy light was going away from us it gave out so great a brilliancy in the eyes of each, that we were near a quarter-of-an-hour like people blinded, and calling out for mercy. For without any doubt nobody hoped to escape from that storm.[48]

After two weeks of storms, the fleet spent some time stalled in calm, equatorial waters before being carried west by the South Equatorial Current to the vicinity of the trade winds.

Sodomy trial and failed mutiny edit

During the ocean crossing, the Victoria's Sicilian master, Salomon Antón was caught in an act of sodomy with a Genoese apprentice sailor, António Varesa, off the coast of Guinea.[49][50][48] At the time, homosexuality was punishable by death in Spain, though in practice, sex between men was a common occurrence on long naval voyages.[51] Magellan held a trial on board the Trinidad and found Antón guilty, sentencing him to death by strangulation. Antón was later executed on 20 December 1519, after the fleet's landfall in Brazil at Santa Lucia (present-day Rio de Janeiro), his strangled body being burnt.[49][48] Varesa drowned after going overboard on 27 April 1520, having been thrown off by his shipmates.[52][49][53]

In a meeting following the trial, Magellan's captains challenged his leadership. Cartagena accused Magellan of risking the King's ships by his choice of route, sailing South along the African coast. When Cartagena declared that he would no longer follow Magellan's command, Magellan gave the signal for a number of armed loyalists to enter the room and take hold of Cartagena. Magellan called Cartagena a "rebel" and branded his behaviour as mutinous. Cartagena called on the other two Castilian captains (Quesada and Mendoza) to stab Magellan, but they held back.

Immediately following the episode, Cartagena was placed in stocks. Magellan could have tried Cartagena for mutiny and sentenced him to death, but at the urging of Quesada and Mendoza, he agreed to merely relieve Cartagena of his command of the San Antonio and allow him to move freely within the confines of the Victoria. Antonio de Coca replaced Cartagena as captain of the San Antonio.[54]

Some details about the sodomy trial and its aftermath are disputed. Salomon Antón's name is also given in some sources as Antonio Salamón, Antonio Salamone, and Antonio Salomón, with his job being alternatively listed as boatswain and quartermaster.[48][52][55] António Varesa's name is also given as Antonio Ginovés, with his job also being listed as cabin boy, "ship's boy", or "grummet".[52][55][49] Varesa's death is also sometimes described as a suicide from being ridiculed or that he too was outright sentenced to death during the trial.[48][56] The date of the trial is also given as September.[56]

Passage through South America edit

Arrival in Brazil edit

 
Pedro Álvares Cabral had claimed Brazil for Portugal in 1500, 20 years before Magellan's voyage. This 1922 painting depicts his arrival in Porto Seguro and first encounter with the natives.

On 29 November, the fleet reached the approximate latitude of Cape Saint Augustine.[57] The coastline of Brazil (which Pigafetta refers to as Verzin in his diary, after the Italian term for brazilwood[58]) had been known to the Spanish and Portuguese since about 1500, and in the intervening decades, European powers (particularly Portugal) had been sending ships to Brazil to collect valuable brazilwood. The Armada carried a map of the Brazilian coastline, the Livro da Marinharia (the "Book of the Sea"), and also had a crew member, the Concepción's pilot, João Lopes Carvalho, who had previously visited Rio de Janeiro. Carvalho was enlisted to lead the fleet's navigation down the Brazilian coastline to Rio, aboard the Trinidad, and also helped communicate with the locals, as he had some rudimentary knowledge of their Guarani language.[59]

On 13 December, the fleet reached Rio de Janeiro. Though nominally Portuguese territory, they maintained no permanent settlement there at the time. Seeing no Portuguese ships in the harbour, Magellan knew it would be safe to stop.[60] Pigafetta wrote of a coincidence of weather that caused the armada to be warmly received by the indigenous people:

It is to be known that it happened that it had not rained for two months before we came there, and the day that we arrived it began to rain, on which account the people of the said place said that we came from heaven, and had brought the rain with us, which was great simplicity, and these people were easily converted to the Christian faith.[48]

The fleet spent 13 days in Rio, during which they repaired their ships, stocked up on water and food (such as yam, cassava, and pineapple), and interacted with the locals. The expedition had brought with them a great quantity of trinkets intended for trade, such as mirrors, combs, knives and bells. The locals readily exchanged food and local goods (such as parrot feathers) for such items. The crew also found they could purchase sexual favours from the local women. Historian Ian Cameron described the crew's time in Rio as "a saturnalia of feasting and lovemaking".[61]

On 27 December, the fleet left Rio de Janeiro. Pigafetta wrote that the natives were disappointed to see them leave, and that some followed them in canoes trying to entice them to stay.[62]

Río de la Plata edit

The fleet sailed south along the South American coast, hoping to reach el paso, the fabled strait that would allow them passage past South America to the Spice Islands. On 11 January[n 4], a headland marked by three hills was sighted, which the crew believed to be "Cape Santa Maria". Around the headland, they found a wide body of water that extended as far as the eye could see in a west-by-southwest direction. Magellan believed he had found el paso, though in fact he had reached the Río de la Plata. Magellan directed the Santiago, commanded by Juan Serrano, to probe the 'strait', and led the other ships south hoping to find Terra Australis, the southern continent which was then widely supposed to exist south of South America. They failed to find the southern continent, and when they regrouped with the Santiago a few days later, Serrano reported that the hoped-for strait was in fact the mouth of a river. Incredulous, Magellan led the fleet through the western waters again, taking frequent soundings. Serrano's claim was confirmed when the men eventually found themselves in fresh water.[62]

Search for strait edit

On 3 February, the fleet continued south along the South American coast.[63] Magellan believed they would find a strait (or the southern terminus of the continent) within a short distance.[64] In fact, the fleet would sail south for another eight weeks without finding passage, before stopping to overwinter at St. Julian.

Not wanting to miss the strait, the fleet sailed as close to the coast as feasible, heightening the danger of running aground on shoals. The ships sailed only during the day, with lookouts carefully watching the coast for signs of a passage. In addition to the hazards of shallow waters, the fleet encountered squalls, storms, and dropping temperatures as they continued south and winter set in.

Overwintering edit

By the third week of March, weather conditions had become so desperate that Magellan decided they should find a safe harbour in which to wait out the winter before resuming the search for a passage in spring. On 31 March 1520, a break in the coast was spotted. There, the fleet found a natural harbour which they called Port St. Julian.[65]

The men remained at St. Julian for five months, before resuming their search for the strait.

Easter mutiny edit

 
Artist's depiction of the fatal stabbing of captain Luis Mendoza, one of the architects of the attempted mutiny at Saint Julian.

Within a day of landing at St. Julian, there was another mutiny attempt. Like the one during the Atlantic crossing, it was led by Juan de Cartagena (former captain of the San Antonio), aided by Gaspar de Quesada and Luis Mendoza, captains of the Concepción and Victoria, respectively. As before, the Castilian captains questioned Magellan's leadership and accused him of recklessly endangering the fleet's crew and ships.

The mutiny at St. Julian was more calculated than the fracas that had followed the sodomy trial during the Atlantic crossing. Around midnight of Easter Sunday, 1 April, Cartagena and Quesada covertly led thirty armed men, their faces covered with charcoal, aboard the San Antonio, where they ambushed Álvaro de Mezquita, the recently named captain of the ship. Mezquita was Magellan's cousin and sympathetic to the captain general. Juan de Elorriaga, the ship's boatswain, resisted the mutineers and attempted to alert the other ships. For this reason, Quesada stabbed him repeatedly (he would die from his wounds months later).[66]

With the San Antonio subdued, the mutineers controlled three of the fleet's five ships. Only the Santiago (commanded by Juan Serrano) remained loyal to Magellan, along with the flag ship, the Trinidad, which Magellan commanded. The mutineers aimed the San Antonio's cannon at the Trinidad but made no further overtures during the night.

The following morning (2 April), while the mutineers attempted to consolidate their forces aboard the San Antonio and the Victoria, a longboat of sailors drifted off course into the vicinity of the Trinidad. The men were brought aboard and persuaded to divulge the details of the mutineers' plans to Magellan.

Magellan subsequently launched a counteroffensive against the mutineers aboard the Victoria. He had some marines from the Trinidad switch clothing with the stray sailors and approach the Victoria in their longboat. His alguacil, Gonzalo de Espinosa, also approached the Victoria in a skiff and announced that he had a message for the captain, Luis Mendoza. Espinosa was allowed aboard, and into the captain's chambers, based on his claim that he had a confidential letter. There, Espinosa stabbed Mendoza in the throat with his poignard, killing him instantly. At the same time, the disguised marines came aboard the Victoria to support the alguacil.[67]

With the Victoria lost and Mendoza dead, the remaining mutineers realised they were outmanoeuvred. Cartagena conceded and begged Magellan for mercy. Quesada attempted to flee but was prevented from doing so – sailors loyal to Magellan had cut the San Antonio's cables, causing it to drift toward the Trinidad, and Cartagena was captured.

Mutiny trial edit

The trial of the mutineers was headed by Magellan's cousin Álvaro de Mezquita and lasted five days. On 7 April, Quesada was beheaded by his foster-brother and secretary, Luis Molina, who acted as executioner in exchange for clemency. The bodies of Quesada and Mendoza were drawn and quartered and displayed on gibbets for the following three months. San Martín, suspected of involvement in the conspiracy, was tortured by strappado, but afterwards was allowed to continue his service as cosmographer.[68] Cartagena, along with a priest, Pedro Sanchez de Reina, were sentenced to be marooned.[69] On 11 August, two weeks before the fleet left St. Julian, the two were taken to a small nearby island and left to die.[70] More than forty[71] other conspirators, including Juan Sebastián Elcano,[72] were put in chains for much of the winter and made to perform the hard work of careening the ships, repairing their structure and scrubbing the bilge.[73]

Loss of Santiago edit

In late April, Magellan dispatched the Santiago, captained by Juan Serrano, from St. Julian to scout to the south for a strait. On 3 May, they reached the estuary of a river which Serrano named Santa Cruz River.[74] The estuary provided shelter and was well situated with natural resources including fish, penguins, and wood.[75]

After more than a week exploring Santa Cruz, Serrano set out to return to St. Julian on 22 May, but was caught in a sudden storm while leaving the harbour.[34][35] The Santiago was tossed about by strong winds and currents before running aground on a sandbar. All (or nearly all[n 5]) of the crew were able to clamber ashore before the ship capsized. Two men volunteered to set off on foot for St. Julian to get help. After 11 days of hard trekking, the men arrived at St. Julian, exhausted and emaciated. Magellan sent a rescue party of 24 men over land to Santa Cruz.

The other 35 survivors from the Santiago remained at Santa Cruz for two weeks. They were unable to retrieve any supplies from the wreck of the Santiago, but managed to build huts and fire, and subsist on a diet of shellfish and local vegetation. The rescue party found them all alive but exhausted, and they returned to St. Julian safely.[76]

Move to Santa Cruz edit

After learning of the favourable conditions that Serrano found at Santa Cruz, Magellan decided to move the fleet there for the rest of the austral winter. After almost four months at St. Julian, the fleet left for Santa Cruz around 24 August. They spent six weeks at Santa Cruz before resuming their search for the strait.[77]

Strait of Magellan edit

 
The Strait of Magellan cuts through the southern tip of South America connecting the Atlantic Ocean and Pacific Ocean.
 
An allegorical depiction of Magellan discovering the strait that would bear his name, created around 1592 by Flemish artist Johannes Stradanus.

On 18 October, the fleet left Santa Cruz heading south, resuming their search for a passage. Soon after, on 21 October 1520, they spotted a headland at 52°S latitude which they named Cape Virgenes. Past the cape, they found a large bay. While they were exploring the bay, a storm erupted. The Trinidad and Victoria made it out to open seas, but the Concepción and San Antonio were driven deeper into the bay, toward a promontory. Three days later, the fleet was reunited, and the Concepción and San Antonio reported that the storm drew them through a narrow passage, not visible from sea, which continued for some distance. Hoping they had finally found their sought-after strait, the fleet retraced the path taken by the Concepción and San Antonio. Unlike at Río de la Plata earlier, the water did not lose its salinity as they progressed, and soundings indicated that the waters were consistently deep. This was the passage they sought, which would come to be known as the Strait of Magellan. At the time, Magellan referred to it as the Estrecho (Canal) de Todos los Santos ("All Saints' Channel") because the fleet travelled through it on 1 November or All Saints' Day.

On 28 October, the fleet reached an island in the strait (likely Isabel Island or Dawson Island), which could be passed in one of two directions. Magellan directed the fleet to split up to explore the respective paths. They were meant to regroup within a few days, but the San Antonio would never rejoin the fleet.[78] While the rest of the fleet waited for the return of the San Antonio, Gonzalo de Espinosa led a small ship to explore the further reaches of the strait. After three days of sailing, they reached the end of the strait and the mouth of the Pacific Ocean. After another three days, Espinosa returned. Pigafetta writes that, on hearing the news of Espinosa's discovery, Magellan wept tears of joy.[79] The fleet's remaining three ships completed the journey to the Pacific by 28 November after weeks of fruitlessly searching for the San Antonio.[80] Magellan named the waters the Mar Pacifico (Pacific Ocean) because of its apparent stillness.[81]

Desertion of San Antonio edit

 
Descubrimiento del estrecho de Magallanes (Discovery of the Strait of Magellan), oil painting by Álvaro Casanova Zenteno.

The San Antonio failed to rejoin the rest of Magellan's fleet in the strait. At some point, they reversed course and sailed back to Spain. The ship's officers later testified that they had arrived early at the appointed rendezvous location, but it's not clear whether this is true.[82] The pilot of the San Antonio at the time, Álvaro de Mezquita, was Magellan's cousin and loyal to the captain-general. He directed attempts to rejoin the fleet, firing cannons and setting off smoke signals. At some point he was overpowered in yet another mutiny attempt, this one successful. He was stabbed by the pilot of the San Antonio, Estêvão Gomes, and put in chains for the remainder of the journey.[83] Gomes was known to have feelings of animosity towards Magellan (as documented by Pigafetta, who wrote that "Gomes... hated the Captain General exceedingly", because he had hoped to have his own expedition to the Moluccas funded instead of Magellan's[84]), and shortly before the fleet was separated, had argued with him about their next course of action. While Magellan and the other officers agreed to continue west to the Moluccas, thinking that their 2–3 months of rations would be sufficient for the journey, Gomes argued that they should return to Spain the way they had come, to muster more supplies for another journey through the strait.[85]

The San Antonio reached Seville approximately six months later, on 8 May 1521, with 55 survivors.[86] There ensued a trial of the ship's men which lasted six months. With Mezquita being the only one loyal to Magellan, the majority of testimony produced a villainous and distorted picture of Magellan's actions. In particular, in justifying the mutiny at St. Julian, the men claimed that Magellan had tortured Spanish seamen (during the return journey across the Atlantic, Mezquita was tortured into signing a statement to this effect) and claimed that they were merely trying to make Magellan follow the king's orders. Ultimately, none of the mutineers faced charges in Spain. Magellan's reputation suffered as a result, as did his friends and family. Mezquita was kept in jail for a year following the trial, and Magellan's wife, Beatriz, had her financial resources cut off and was placed under house arrest along with their son.[87]

Pacific crossing edit

 
The western hemisphere of Johannes Schöner's globe, created in 1520, reflects Europeans' misconception of the proximity of South America and Asia. (Zipangri, the large island outlined in yellow, is Japan)

Magellan (along with contemporary geographers) had no conception of the vastness of the Pacific Ocean. He imagined that South America was separated from the Spice Islands by a small sea, which he expected to cross in as little as three or four days.[88] In fact, they spent three months and twenty days at sea, before reaching Guam and then the Philippines.

The fleet entered the Pacific from the Strait of Magellan on 28 November 1520 and initially sailed north, following the coast of Chile. By mid-December, they altered their course to west-north-west.[89] They were unfortunate in that, had their course differed slightly, they might have encountered a number of Pacific islands which would have offered fresh food and water, such as the Marshall Islands, the Society Islands, the Solomon Islands or the Marquesas Islands. As it was, they encountered only two small uninhabited islands during the crossing, at which they were unable to land, the reason why they named them Islas Infortunadas. The first, sighted 24 January, they named San Pablo (likely Puka-Puka).[90] The second, which they sighted 21 February, was likely Caroline Island.[91] They crossed the equator on 13 February.

Not expecting such a long journey, the ships were not stocked with adequate food and water, and much of the seal meat they had stocked putrefied in the equatorial heat. Pigafetta described the desperate conditions in his journal:

we only ate old biscuit reduced to powder, and full of grubs, and stinking from the dirt which the rats had made on it when eating the good biscuit, and we drank water that was yellow and stinking. We also ate the ox hides which were under the main-yard, so that the yard should not break the rigging: they were very hard on account of the sun, rain, and wind, and we left them for four or five days in the sea, and then we put them a little on the embers, and so ate them; also the sawdust of wood, and rats which cost half-a-crown each, moreover enough of them were not to be got.[48]

Moreover, most of the men suffered from symptoms of scurvy, whose cause was not understood at the time. Pigafetta reported that, of the 166 men[92][93][need quotation to verify] who embarked on the Pacific crossing, 19 died and "twenty-five or thirty fell ill of diverse sicknesses".[48] Magellan, Pigafetta, and other officers were not afflicted with scorbutic symptoms, which may have been because they ate preserved quince which (unbeknownst to them) contained the vitamin C necessary to protect against scurvy.[94]

Guam and the Philippines edit

On 6 March 1521, the fleet reached the Mariana Islands. The first land they spotted was likely the island of Rota, but the ships were unable to land there. Instead, they dropped anchor thirty hours later on Guam, where they were met by native Chamorro people in proas, a type of outrigger canoe then unknown to Europeans. Dozens of Chamorros came aboard and began taking items from the ship, including rigging, knives, and any items made of iron. At some point, there was a physical confrontation between the crew and the natives, and at least one Chamorro was killed. The remaining natives fled with the goods they had obtained, also taking Magellan's bergantina (the ship's boat kept on the Trinidad) as they retreated.[95][96] For this act, Magellan called the island Isla de los Ladrones (Island of Thieves).[97]

The next day, Magellan retaliated, sending a raiding party ashore which looted and burned forty or fifty Chamorro houses and killed seven men.[98] They recovered the bergantina and left Guam the next day, 9 March, continuing westward.[99]

The Philippines edit

The fleet reached the Philippines on 16 March, and remained there until 1 May. The expedition represented the first documented European contact with the Philippines.[100] Although the stated goals of Magellan's expedition were to find a passage through South America to the Moluccas and return to Spain laden with spices, at this point in the journey, Magellan seemed to acquire a zeal for converting the local tribes to Christianity. In doing so, Magellan eventually became embroiled in a local political dispute, and died in the Philippines, along with dozens of other officers and crew.

On 16 March, a week after leaving Guam, the fleet first sighted the island of Samar, then landed on the island of Homonhon, which was then uninhabited. They encountered friendly locals from the nearby island of Suluan and traded supplies with them. They spent nearly two weeks on Homonhon, resting and gathering fresh food and water, before leaving on 27 March.[101] On the morning of 28 March, they neared the island of Limasawa and encountered some natives in canoes who then alerted balangay warships of two local rulers from Mindanao who were on a hunting expedition in Limasawa. For the first time on the journey, Magellan's slave Enrique of Malacca found that he was able to communicate with the natives in Malay (an indication that they had indeed completed a circumnavigation, and were approaching familiar lands).[101] They exchanged gifts with the natives (receiving porcelain jars painted with Chinese designs), and later that day, Magellan was introduced to their leaders, Rajah Kolambu[n 6] and Rajah Siawi. Afterwards, Magellan would become a "blood brother" to Kolambu, undergoing the local blood compact ritual with him.[102]

Magellan and his men noted that the Rajahs had golden body ornaments and served food on golden plates. They were told by the Rajahs that gold was plentiful in their homelands in Butuan and Calagan (Surigao), and found that the locals were eager to trade it for iron at par. While at Limasawa, Magellan gave some of the natives a demonstration of Spanish armour, weapons, and artillery, by which they were apparently impressed.[103]

First mass edit

On Sunday, 31 March, Easter Day, Magellan and fifty of his men came ashore to Limasawa to participate in the first Catholic Mass in the Philippines, given by the armada's chaplain. Kolambu, his brother (who was also a local leader), and other islanders joined in the ceremony and expressed an interest in their religion. Following Mass, Magellan's men raised a cross on the highest hill on the island, and formally declared the island, and the entire archipelago of the Philippines (which he called the Islands of St Lazarus) as a possession of Spain.[104]

Cebu edit

On 2 April, Magellan held a conference to decide the fleet's next course of action. His officers urged him to head south-west for the Mollucas, but instead he decided to press further into the Philippines. On 3 April, the fleet sailed north-west from Limasawa towards the island of Cebu, which Magellan learned of from Kolambu. The fleet was guided to Cebu by some of Kolambu's men.[105] They sighted Cebu 6 April, and made landfall the next day. Cebu had regular contact with Chinese and Arab traders and normally required that visitors pay tribute in order to trade. Magellan convinced the island's leader, Rajah Humabon, to waive this requirement.

As he had in Limasawa, Magellan gave a demonstration of the fleet's arms in order to impress the locals. Again, he also preached Christianity to the natives, and on 14 April, Humabon and his family were baptised and given an image of the Holy Child (later known as Santo Niño de Cebu). In the coming days, other local chieftains were baptised, and in total, 2,200 locals from Cebu and other nearby islands were converted.[106]

When Magellan learned that a group on the island of Mactan, led by Lapu-Lapu, resisted Christian conversion, he ordered his men to burn their homes. When they continued to resist, Magellan informed his council on 26 April that he would bring an armed contingent to Mactan and make them submit under threat of force.[107]

Battle of Mactan edit

 
19th-century artist's depiction of Magellan's death at the hands of Mactan warriors.

Magellan mustered a force of 60 armed men from his crew to oppose Lapu-Lapu's forces. Some Cebuano men followed Magellan to Mactan, but were instructed by Magellan not to join the fight, but merely to watch.[108] He first sent an envoy to Lapu-Lapu, offering him a last chance to accept the king of Spain as their ruler and avoid bloodshed. Lapu-Lapu refused. Magellan took 49 men to the shore while 11 remained to guard the boats. Though they had the benefit of relatively advanced armour and weaponry, Magellan's forces were greatly outnumbered. Pigafetta (who was present on the battlefield) estimated the enemy's number at 1,500.[109] Magellan's forces were driven back and decisively defeated. Magellan died in battle, along with several comrades, including Cristóvão Rebelo, Magellan's illegitimate son.[110]

1 May Massacre edit

Following Magellan's death, the remaining men held an election to select a new leader for the expedition. They selected two co-commanders: Duarte Barbosa, Magellan's brother-in-law, and Juan Serrano. Magellan's will called for the liberation of his slave, Enrique, but Barbosa and Serrano demanded that he continue his duties as an interpreter for them, and follow their orders. Enrique had some secret communication with Humabon which caused him to betray the Spaniards.[111]

On 1 May, Humabon invited the men ashore for a great feast. It was attended by around thirty men, mostly officers, including Serrano and Barbosa. Towards the end of the meal, armed Cebuanos entered the hall and murdered the Europeans. Twenty-seven men were killed. Juan Serrano, one of the newly elected co-commanders, was left alive and brought to the shore facing the Spanish ships. Serrano begged the men on board to pay a ransom to the Cebuanos. The Spanish ships left port, and Serrano was (presumably) killed. In his account, Pigafetta speculates that João Carvalho, who became first in command in the absence of Barbosa and Serrano, abandoned Serrano (his one-time friend) so that he could remain in command of the fleet.[112]

Moluccas edit

With just 115 surviving men, out of the 277 who had sailed from Seville, it was decided the fleet did not have enough men to continue operating three ships. On 2 May, the Concepción was emptied and set on fire.[112] With Carvalho as the new captain-general, the remaining two ships, the Trinidad and Victoria, spent the next six months meandering through Southeast Asia in search of the Moluccas. On the way, they stopped at several islands including Mindanao and Brunei. During this time, they engaged in acts of piracy, including robbing a junk bound for China from the Moluccas.[113]

On 21 September, Carvalho was made to step down as captain-general. He was replaced by Martin Mendez, with Gonzalo de Espinosa and Juan Sebastián Elcano as captains of the Trinidad and Victoria, respectively.

Aganduru Moriz' account of the expedition[114] describes how Elcano's crew was attacked somewhere off the southeastern tip of Borneo by a Bruneian fleet commanded by one of the Luzones. Historians such as William Henry Scott and Luis Camara Dery assert that this commander of the Bruneian Fleet was actually the young prince Ache of Maynila (Manila) a grandson of the Bruneian sultan who would later become Maynila's Rajah Matanda.[114][115]

Elcano, however, was able to defeat and capture Ache.[114] According to Scott, Ache was eventually released after a ransom was paid.[116] Nevertheless, Ache left a Spanish speaking Moor in Elcano's crew to assist the ship on the way back to Spain, "a Moor who understood something of our Castilian language, who was called Pazeculan."[117] This knowledge of the Spanish language was scattered across the Indian Ocean and even into Southeast Asia after the Castilian conquest of the Emirate of Granada forced the Spanish speaking Granadan Muslims to migrate across the Muslim world even as far as Islamic Manila.[118]

The ships finally reached the Moluccas on 8 November, when they reached the island of Tidore. They were greeted by the island's leader, al-Mansur (known to the officers by the Spanish name Almanzor).[119] Almanzor was a friendly host to the men, and readily claimed loyalty to the king of Spain. A trading post was established in Tidore and the men set about purchasing massive quantities of cloves in exchange for goods such as cloth, knives, and glassware.[120]

Around 15 December, the ships attempted to set sail from Tidore, laden with cloves. But the Trinidad, which had fallen into disrepair, was found to be taking on water. The departure was postponed while the men, aided by the locals, attempted to find and repair the leak. When these attempts were unsuccessful, it was decided that the Victoria would leave for Spain via a western route, and that the Trinidad would remain behind for some time to be refitted, before heading back to Spain by an eastern route, involving an overland passage across the American continent.[121] Several weeks later, Trinidad departed and attempted to return to Spain via the Pacific route. This attempt failed. Trinidad was captured by the Portuguese, and was eventually wrecked in a storm while at anchor under Portuguese control.[122]

Return to Spain edit

The Victoria set sail via the Indian Ocean route home on 21 December 1521, commanded by Juan Sebastián Elcano. By 6 May 1522 the Victoria rounded the Cape of Good Hope, with only rice for rations. Twenty crewmen died of starvation by 9 July 1522, when Elcano put into Portuguese Cape Verde for provisions. The crew was surprised to learn that the date was actually 10 July 1522,[123] a day after their own meticulous records indicated. They had no trouble making purchases at first, using the cover story that they were returning to Spain from the Americas. However, the Portuguese detained 13 crew members after discovering that Victoria was carrying spices from the East Indies.[55][124] The Victoria managed to escape with its cargo of 26 tons of spices (cloves and cinnamon).

On 6 September 1522, Elcano and the remaining crew of Magellan's voyage arrived in Sanlúcar de Barrameda in Spain aboard Victoria, almost exactly three years after they departed. They then sailed upriver to Seville, and from there overland to Valladolid, where they appeared before the Emperor.

Survivors edit

When Victoria, the one surviving ship and the smallest carrack in the fleet, returned to the harbour of departure after completing the first circumnavigation of the Earth, only 18 men out of the original 270 men were on board. In addition to the returning Europeans, the Victoria had aboard three Moluccans who came aboard at Tidore.[125]

18 men returned to Seville aboard Victoria in 1522[126]
Name Origin Final rank
Juan Sebastián Elcano Getaria Captain
Francisco Albo Chios Pilot
Miguel de Rodas Rhodes Shipmaster
Juan de Acurio Bermeo Boatswain
Martín de Judicibus Savona Sailor
Hernándo de Bustamante Mérida Barber
Antonio Pigafetta Vicenza Man-At-Arms
Maestre Anes [de] (Hans)[127] Aachen Gunner
Diego Gallego Bayona Sailor
Antonio Hernández Colmenero Huelva Sailor
Nícolas de Napolés Nafplio Sailor
Francisco Rodríguez Sevilla Sailor
Juan Rodríguez de Huelva Huelva Sailor
Miguel de Rodas Rhodes Sailor
Juan de Arratía Bilbao Shipboy
Juan de Santander (Sant Andrés) Cueto Shipboy
Vasco Gómez Gallego Bayona Shipboy
Juan de Zubileta Barakaldo Page

King Charles pressed for the release of the 12 men held captive by the Portuguese in Cape Verde, and they were eventually returned to Spain in small groups over the course of the following year.[128] They were:

12 men returned to Spain from Cape Verde[129]
Name Origin Final rank
Martín Méndez Sevilla Scrivener
Pedro de Tolosa Tolosa Sailor
Richard de Normandía Normandy, France Carpenter
Roldán de Argote Bruges Gunner
Felipe de Rodas Rhodes Sailor
Gómez Hernández Huelva Sailor
Ocacio Alonso Bollullos Sailor
Pedro de Chindurza Galvey Shipboy
Vasquito Gallego Bayona Shipboy
Juan Martín Bayona Man-At-Arms
Pedro de Tenerife Tenerife Man-At-Arms
Simon de Burgos Burgos Man-At-Arms

Between 1525 and 1526, the survivors of the Trinidad, who had been captured by the Portuguese in the Moluccas, were transported to a prison in Portugal and eventually released after a seven-month negotiation. Only five survived:[130]

5 men returning between 1525 and 1526[129]
Name Origin Final rank
Ginés de Mafra Jerez Sailor
Leone Pancaldo Genoa Sailor
Hans Varga (Hans Barge [de])[n 7] Germany Constable
Juan Rodríguez "El Sordo" Sevilla Sailor
Gonzalo Gómez de Espinosa Burgos Alguacil Mayor

The following five nonsurvivors are considered to have successfully circumnavigated since they died after the Victoria and Trinidad had crossed the tracks of the outbound fleet.[130]

5 men buried at sea after completing the circumnavigation[130]
Name Origin Final rank
Diego Garcia de Trigueros Huelva Sailor
Pedro de Valpuesta Burgos Man-At-Arms
Martín de Magallanes Lisbon Man-At-Arms
Estevan Villon Trosic, Brittany Sailor
Andrés Blanco Tenerife Shipboy

Accounts of voyage edit

 
Cover page of Roman edition of Maximilianus Transylvanus's De Moluccis Insulis.... Initially published in Cologne in January 1523, it was the first account of the Magellan expedition to appear in print.[131]

Antonio Pigafetta's journal, later published as Relazione del primo viaggio intorno al mondo, is the main primary source for much of what is known about Magellan's expedition.[132] The first published report of the circumnavigation was a letter written by Maximilianus Transylvanus, a relative of sponsor Cristóbal de Haro, who interviewed survivors in 1522 and published his account in 1523 under the title De Moluccis Insulis....[131][133] Initially published in Latin, other editions later appeared in Italian, Spanish, and English.[131]

In addition, there is an extant chronicle from Peter Martyr d'Anghiera, which was written in Spanish in 1522 or 1523, misplaced, then published again in 1530.[134]

Another reliable secondary source is the 1601 chronicle and the longer 1615 version, both by Spanish historian Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas. Herrera's account is all the more accurate as he had access to Spanish and Portuguese sources that are nowhere to be found today, not least Andrés de San Martín's navigational notes and papers. San Martin, the chief pilot-cosmographer (astrologer) of the Armada, disappeared in the Cebu massacre on 1 May 1521.[135][136]

In addition to Pigafetta's surviving journal, 11 other crew members kept written accounts of the voyage:

  • Francisco Albo: the Victoria's pilot logbook ("Diario ó derrotero"), first referred to in 1788, and first published in its entirety in 1837[137][138] and a deposition on 18 October 1522[139]
  • Martín de Ayamonte: a short account first published in 1933[140][141]
  • Giovanni Battista: two letters dating from the 21 December 1521[142] and 25 October 1525[143][144] respectively
  • Hernando de Bustamante: a deposition on 18 October 1522[139][145]
  • Juan Sebastián Elcano: a letter written on 6 September 1522[146] and a deposition on 18 October 1522[139][147]
  • Gonzalo Gómez de Espinosa: a letter written on 12 January 1525,[148] a statement on 2 August 1527[149] and a deposition from the 2nd to the 5 September 1527[150][151]
  • Ginés de Mafra: a detailed account first published in 1920,[152] a statement on 2 August 1527[149] and a deposition from 2 to 5 September 1527[150][153]
  • Martín Méndez : the Victoria's logbook[154][155]
  • Leone Pancaldo: a long logbook 'by the Genoese pilot' (first published in 1826),[156] a letter written on 25 October 1525,[157] a statement on 2 August 1527[158] and a deposition from 2 to 5 September 1527[159][160]
  • an anonymous Portuguese crew member: a long manuscript, first published in 1937, known as "the Leiden manuscript", possibly written by Gonzalo Gómez de Espinosa and, in all likelihood, a Trinidad crew member[161][151]
  • and another anonymous Portuguese crew member: a very short account, first published in 1554, written by a Trinidad crew member[162]

Legacy edit

Subsequent expeditions edit

Since there was not a set limit to the east, in 1524 both Portugal and Spain had tried to find the exact location of the antimeridian of Tordesillas, which would divide the world into two equal hemispheres and to resolve the "Moluccas issue". A board met several times without reaching an agreement: the knowledge at that time was insufficient for an accurate calculation of longitude, and each gave the islands to their sovereign.

In 1525, soon after the return of Magellan's expedition, Charles V sent an expedition led by García Jofre de Loaísa to occupy the Moluccas, claiming that they were in his zone of the Treaty of Tordesillas. This expedition included the most notable Spanish navigators, including Juan Sebastián Elcano, who, along with many other sailors, died during the voyage and the young Andrés de Urdaneta. They had difficulty reaching the Moluccas, docking at Tidore. The Portuguese were already established in nearby Ternate and the two nations had nearly a decade of skirmishing over the possession, which was still occupied by indigenous people.[citation needed] An agreement was reached only with the Treaty of Zaragoza, signed in 1529 between Spain and Portugal. It assigned the Moluccas to Portugal and the Philippines to Spain.

In 1565, Andrés de Urdaneta discovered the Manila-Acapulco route.

The course that Magellan charted was later followed by other navigators, such as Sir Francis Drake during his circumnavigation in 1578.[163] In 1960, the route was retraced completely submerged (with minor variations in course) by USS Triton.

Scientific accomplishments edit

Magellan's expedition was the first to circumnavigate the globe and the first to navigate the strait in South America connecting the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans. Magellan's name for the Pacific was adopted by other Europeans.

Magellan's crew observed several animals that were entirely new to European science, including a "camel without humps", which was probably a guanaco, whose range extends to Tierra del Fuego. The llama, vicuña and alpaca natural ranges were in the Andes mountains. A black "goose" that had to be skinned instead of plucked was a penguin.[citation needed]

The full extent of the globe was realised, since their voyage was 14,460 Spanish leagues (60,440 km or 37,560 mi). The global expedition showed the need for an International Date Line to be established. Upon arrival at Cape Verde, the crew was surprised to learn that the ship's date of 9 July 1522 was one day behind the local date of 10 July 1522, even though they had recorded every day of the three-year journey without omission. They lost one day because they travelled west during their circumnavigation of the globe, in the same direction as the apparent motion of the sun across the sky.[164] Although the Kurdish geographer Abu'l-Fida (1273–1331) had predicted that circumnavigators would accumulate a one-day offset,[165] Cardinal Gasparo Contarini was the first European to give a correct explanation of the discrepancy.[166]

Quincentenary edit

In 2017, Portugal submitted an application to UNESCO to honour the circumnavigation route; the proposal was for a World Heritage Site called "Route of Magellan".[167]

In 2019, there were a number of events to mark the 500th anniversary of the voyage including exhibitions in various Spanish cities.[168]

To commemorate the 500th anniversary of Magellan's arrival in the Philippines, the National Quincentennial Committee put up monuments to mark the points where the fleet anchored.[169][170]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ 18 men returned on 6 September 1522 aboard the Victoria. Another 12 who had been captured by the Portuguese in Cape Verde made their way back to Spain over the following year. A few other survivors who had been stranded in the Moluccas were returned years later as Portuguese prisoners.
  2. ^ Bergreen 2003 says that the Santiago was a caravel and the other four were carracks.[22] Joyner 1992 labels all five ships as carracks.[23]
  3. ^ Note that many English sources such as Joyner[26] provide these numbers calqued as "tons" without converting their values from the actual unit, the Biscayan tonel ("tun"). At the time of Magellan's voyage, this tonel was reckoned as 1.2 toneladas[27] or roughly 1.7 , 60.1 cu. ft., or 0.6 English shipping tons.
  4. ^ (Cameron 1974, p. 96) gives a date of 11 January for this, whereas (Bergreen 2003, p. 105) gives 10 January.
  5. ^ (Cameron 1974, p. 156) says that "all her crew except one were able to leap ashore". (Bergreen 2003, p. 157) says "all the men aboard ship survived".
  6. ^ Variously romanised in different sources as Kolambu, Colembu, Kulambu, Calambu etc.
  7. ^ A German (before 1500-1527), captured at Tidore 1522 and spent the rest of his live in Portuguese captivity, died in Portugal.

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Ferdinand Magellan - Early Years, Expedition & Legacy". HISTORY. 6 June 2023. Retrieved 10 September 2023.
  2. ^ Cameron 1974, pp. 211, 214.
  3. ^ Bergreen 2006.
  4. ^ Joyner 1992, p. 48.
  5. ^ Joyner 1992, p. 49.
  6. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 30.
  7. ^ Joyner 1992, p. 56: "While court chronicles do not state so clearly, he likely implored the king to allow him to take men, arms, and supplies to the Moluccas..."
  8. ^ Joyner 1992, p. 66.
  9. ^ Joyner 1992, pp. 87, 296–298.
  10. ^ a b c d Beaglehole 1966, pp. 19–20.
  11. ^ a b Joyner 1992, pp. 87, 296.
  12. ^ Joyner 1992, p. 296.
  13. ^ Joyner 1992, p. 297.
  14. ^ Ehrenberg, Ralph E. (2002). . Archived from the original on 12 March 2008.
  15. ^ Castro et al. 2010, pp. 61, 331 footnote 2.
  16. ^ González, Fernando (2018). "Los barcos de la armada del Maluco" (PDF). Congreso Internacional de Historia "Primus Circumdedisti Me". Valladolid: Ministerio de Defensa. pp. 179–188. ISBN 978-84-9091-390-1. (PDF) from the original on 22 September 2019. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
  17. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 38.
  18. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 57.
  19. ^ Vial, Ignacio Fernandez (2001). La Primera Vuelta al Mundo: La Nao Victoria. Servilla: Munoz Moya Editores.
  20. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 58.
  21. ^ Joyner 1992, p. 170.
  22. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 36.
  23. ^ Joyner 1992, pp. 93, 245.
  24. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 74.
  25. ^ Joyner 1992, p. 94.
  26. ^ Joyner 1992, p. 93.
  27. ^ Walls y Merino 1899, Annex 3, p. 174.
  28. ^ Castro 2018, p. 336.
  29. ^ Castro 2018, p. 337.
  30. ^ Castro 2018, p. 43.
  31. ^ Castro 2018, pp. 49, 337.
  32. ^ Castro 2018, p. 338.
  33. ^ Castro 2018, p. 339.
  34. ^ a b Joyner 1992, p. 146.
  35. ^ a b Bergreen 2003, p. 156.
  36. ^ Castro 2018, p. 335.
  37. ^ Nancy Smiler Levinson (2001). Magellan and the First Voyage Around the World. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-395-98773-5. Retrieved 31 July 2010. Personnel records are imprecise. The most accepted total number is 270.
  38. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 61.
  39. ^ a b Joyner 1992, p. 104.
  40. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Magellan, Ferdinand" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  41. ^ Joyner 1992, p. 90.
  42. ^ Beaglehole 1966, p. 22.
  43. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 84.
  44. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 87.
  45. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 86.
  46. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 91.
  47. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 88–89.
  48. ^ a b c d e f g h Pigafetta, Antonio. The First Voyage Round the World. Translated by Stanley, Henry. Archived from the original on 12 November 2020. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
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  50. ^ Reyes, Raquel A. G.; Clarence-Smith, William G. (26 July 2012). Sexual Diversity in Asia, c. 600 - 1950. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-29721-2.
  51. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 92–93.
  52. ^ a b c Kelsey 2016, p. 20.
  53. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 103.
  54. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 94–95.
  55. ^ a b c Morison, Samuel Eliot (1986). The Great Explorers: The European Discovery of America. Oxford University Press. p. 667. ISBN 978-0-19-504222-1.
  56. ^ a b Giraldez, Arturo (19 March 2015). The Age of Trade: The Manila Galleons and the Dawn of the Global Economy. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 45. ISBN 978-1-4422-4352-1.
  57. ^ "Log-Book of Francisco Alvo or Alvaro". The First Voyage Round the World. Translated by Stanley, Henry Edward John. Archived from the original on 16 April 2019. Retrieved 25 September 2019.
  58. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 97.
  59. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 95–98.
  60. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 98.
  61. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 95.
  62. ^ a b Cameron 1974, p. 96.
  63. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 123.
  64. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 97.
  65. ^ Cameron 1974, pp. 101–103.
  66. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 115–117.
  67. ^ Cameron 1974, pp. 108–109.
  68. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 148–149.
  69. ^ Cameron 1974, pp. 109–111.
  70. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 170.
  71. ^ Hildebrand, Arthur Sturges (1925). Magellan. A general account of the life and times and remarkable adventures ... of ... Ferdinand Magellan, etc. [With a portrait.] London. OCLC 560368881.
  72. ^ Murphy, Patrick J.; Coye, Ray W. (2013). Mutiny and Its Bounty: Leadership Lessons from the Age of Discovery. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300170283. from the original on 26 May 2019. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
  73. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 113.
  74. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 155–156.
  75. ^ Cameron 1974, pp. 116–117.
  76. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 157–159.
  77. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 170–173.
  78. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 189–190.
  79. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 133.
  80. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 136.
  81. ^ "Ferdinand Magellan". Catholic Encyclopedia. New Advent. from the original on 13 January 2007. Retrieved 14 January 2007.
  82. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 191.
  83. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 192.
  84. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 188.
  85. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 187–188.
  86. ^ "Carta de los oficiales de la Casa de la Contratación de las Indias al emperador Carlos V, sobre regreso de la nao "San Antonio" y denuncias de sus mandos de los excesos de Fernando de Magallanes" (in Spanish). Consejo de Indias. 1521. from the original on 17 March 2022. Retrieved 17 March 2022.
  87. ^ Bergreen 2003, pp. 297–312.
  88. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 145.
  89. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 149.
  90. ^ Cameron 1974, p. 159.
  91. ^ Bergreen 2003, p. 218.
  92. ^ Castro et al. 2010, p. 538.
  93. ^ Castro 2018, p. 44.
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Bibliography edit

English

  • Beaglehole, J.C. (1966). The Exploration of the Pacific (3rd ed.). London: Adam & Charles Black. OCLC 253002380.
  • Bergreen, Laurence (2003). Over the Edge of the World: Magellan's Terrifying Circumnavigation of the Globe. William Morrow. ISBN 978-0-06-093638-9.
  • Bergreen, Laurence (2006). Over the Edge of the World: Magellan's Terrifying Circumnavigation of the Globe (audio book). Blackstone Audio. ISBN 978-0-7927-4395-8. OCLC 1011550094.
  • Cameron, Ian (1974). Magellan and the first circumnavigation of the world. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 029776568X. OCLC 842695.
  • Cunnigham, Robert Oliver (1871). Notes on the natural history of the Strait of Magellan and west coast of Patagonia made during the voyage of H.M.S. Nassau in the years 1866, 67, 68, & 69. Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas.
  • Fitzpatrick, Scott M.; Callaghan, Richard (September 2008). "Magellan's Crossing of the Pacific". The Journal of Pacific History. 43 (2): 145–165. doi:10.1080/00223340802303611. S2CID 161223057.
  • Joyner, Tim (1992). Magellan. International Marine. OCLC 25049890.
  • Kelsey, Harry (2016). The First Circumnavigators: Unsung Heroes of the Age of Discovery. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-22086-5. OCLC 950613571.
  • Mawer, Granville Allen (2022). East by West, The New Navigation of Ferdinand Magellan. Kew (Vic): Australian Scholarly Publishing. ISBN 9781922669407. OCLC 1338665936.
  • 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.
  • Suárez, Thomas (1999). Early Mapping of Southeast Asia: The Epic Story of Seafarers, Adventurers, and Cartographers Who First Mapped the Regions Between China and India. Hong Kong: Periplus Editions (HK). ISBN 9789625934709.
  • Torodash, Martin (1971). "Magellan Historiography". The Hispanic American Historical Review. 51 (2): 313–335. doi:10.2307/2512478. JSTOR 2512478. from the original on 22 September 2022. Retrieved 2 November 2022.

French

  • Castro, Xavier de; Hamon, Jocelyne; 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 978-2915540-57-4.
  • Castro, Xavier (2018). Le Voyage de Magellan : la relation d'Antonio Pigafetta du premier voyage autour du monde (in French). Paris: Éditions Chandeigne, collection " Magellane poche". ISBN 978-2-36732-125-7.
  • Couto, Dejanirah (2013). Autour du Globe? La carte Hazine n°1825 de la bibliothèque du Palais de Topkapi, Istanbul (PDF) (in French). CFC, volume 216 (June 2013), pages 119-134. (PDF) from the original on 28 July 2019.
  • Castro, Xavier de; Duviols, Jean-Paul (2019). Idées reçues sur les Grandes Découvertes: XVe-XVIe siècles (2e éd.) (in French). Paris: Éditions Chandeigne, collection "Magellane poche". ISBN 978-236732-188-2.
  • Heers, Jacques (1991). La découverte de l'Amérique: 1492 (in French). Bruxelles: Éditions Complexe. ISBN 9782870274088.

Portuguese

  • Garcia, José Manuel (2007). A Viagem de Fernão de Magalhães e os Portugueses (in Portuguese). Lisboa: Presença. ISBN 978-9722337519.
  • Garcia, José Manuel (2019). Fernão e Magalhães - Herói, Traidor ou Mito: a História do Primeiro Homem a Abraçar o Mundo (in Portuguese). Manuscrito: Queluz de Baixo. ISBN 9789898975256., . Archived from the original on 16 February 2020.
  • Mota, Alvelino Teixeira da (1975). (in Portuguese). Lisboa, Junta de Investigação Ultramarina-Centro de Cartografia Antiga. Archived from the original on 26 July 2022.
  • Thomaz, Luís Filipe (2018). O drama de Magalhães e a volta ao mundo sem querer (in Portuguese). Lisboa: Gradiva. ISBN 9789896168599.

Spanish

  • Las Casas, Bartolomé de (2002). Histoire des Indes (in French). Paris : Seuil. Historia de las Indias (vol. 3 de 5) - Bartolomé De Las Casas (in Spanish)
  • Toribio Medina, José (1888–1902). Colección de documentos inéditos para la historia de Chile : desde el viaje de Magallanes hasta la batalla de Maipo : 1518-1818 (in Spanish). Santiago: Imprenta Ercilla. ISBN 9781390781601. Colección de documentos inéditos para la historia de Chile: desde el viaje de Magallanes hasta la batalla de Maipo: 1518-1818: tomo 7 - Memoria Chilena 19 October 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Walls y Merino, ed. (1899). Primer Viaje Alrededor del Mundo... (PDF) (in Spanish). Translated by Carlos Amoretti. Madrid: n/a. (PDF) from the original on 31 January 2023. Retrieved 31 January 2023.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Magellan-Elcano circumnavigation at Wikimedia Commons
  • (in Spanish) Primera vuelta al mundo Magallanes-Elcano. V Centenario. Official site for the 5th centenary of the expedition.

magellan, expedition, magellan, elcano, expedition, 16th, century, spanish, expedition, planned, portuguese, explorer, ferdinand, magellan, with, initial, objective, reaching, moluccas, expedition, departed, from, spain, 1519, completed, 1522, spanish, navigat. The Magellan Elcano expedition was a 16th century Spanish expedition planned and led by Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan with the initial objective of reaching the Moluccas The expedition departed from Spain in 1519 and was completed in 1522 by Spanish navigator Juan Sebastian Elcano after Magellan s death crossing the Atlantic Pacific and Indian oceans culminating in the first circumnavigation of the world 1 Magellan ExpeditionNao Victoria the ship accomplishing the circumnavigation and the only to return from the expedition Detail from a map by Abraham Ortelius CountrySpainLeaderFerdinand Magellan succeeded by Juan Sebastian Elcano StartSanlucar de Barrameda September 20 1519 504 years ago 1519 09 20 EndSanlucar de Barrameda September 6 1522 501 years ago 1522 09 06 GoalFind a western maritime route to the Spice IslandsShipsTrinidadSan AntonioConcepcionVictoriaSantiagoCrewapprox 270Survivors18 arrived with Elcano 12 were captured by the Portuguese in Cape Verde 55 returned with the San Antonio in 1521 4 or 5 from Trinidad returned in Europe after hard labor in East IndiesAchievementsFirst world circumnavigation started by Magellan completed by Elcano First European Pacific crossing First to navigate from the Atlantic to the Pacific Discovery of the Strait of Magellan RouteRoute taken by the expedition with milestones markedThe expedition accomplished its primary goal to find a western route to the Moluccas Spice Islands The fleet left Spain on 20 September 1519 sailed across the Atlantic ocean and south along the eastern coast of South America eventually discovering the Strait of Magellan allowing them to pass through to the Pacific Ocean which Magellan named The fleet completed the first Pacific crossing stopping in the Philippines and eventually reached the Moluccas after two years A much depleted crew led by Elcano finally returned to Spain on 6 September 1522 having sailed west across the great Indian Ocean then around the Cape of Good Hope through waters controlled by the Portuguese and north along the West African coast to eventually arrive in Spain The fleet initially consisted of five ships and about 270 men The expedition faced numerous hardships including sabotage and mutinies by the mostly Spanish crew and Elcano himself starvation scurvy storms and hostile encounters with indigenous people Only 18 men and one ship the Victoria completed the return trip to Spain n 1 Magellan himself died in battle in the Philippines and was succeeded as captain general by a series of officers with Elcano eventually leading the Victoria s return trip The expedition was funded mostly by King Charles I of Spain with the hope that it would discover a profitable western route to the Moluccas as the eastern route was controlled by Portugal under the Treaty of Tordesillas Though the expedition did find a route it was much longer and more arduous than expected and was therefore not commercially useful Nevertheless the expedition is regarded as one of the greatest achievements in seamanship and had a significant impact on the European understanding of the world 2 3 Contents 1 Background 2 Construction and provisions 2 1 Ships 2 2 Crew 3 Crossing the Atlantic 3 1 Sodomy trial and failed mutiny 4 Passage through South America 4 1 Arrival in Brazil 4 2 Rio de la Plata 4 3 Search for strait 4 4 Overwintering 4 4 1 Easter mutiny 4 4 2 Mutiny trial 4 4 3 Loss of Santiago 4 4 4 Move to Santa Cruz 4 5 Strait of Magellan 4 5 1 Desertion of San Antonio 5 Pacific crossing 6 Guam and the Philippines 6 1 The Philippines 6 2 First mass 6 3 Cebu 6 4 Battle of Mactan 6 5 1 May Massacre 7 Moluccas 8 Return to Spain 8 1 Survivors 9 Accounts of voyage 10 Legacy 10 1 Subsequent expeditions 10 2 Scientific accomplishments 10 3 Quincentenary 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Bibliography 14 External linksBackground edit nbsp King Charles of Spain was 18 years old when he agreed to finance Magellan s expedition to the Spice Islands in 1518 He is pictured here in a painting by Bernard van Orley c 1517Christopher Columbus s voyages to the West 1492 1503 had the goal of reaching the Indies and establishing direct commercial relations between Spain and the Asian kingdoms The Spanish soon realized that the lands of the Americas were not a part of Asia but another continent The 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas reserved for Portugal the eastern routes that went around Africa and Vasco da Gama and the Portuguese arrived in India in 1498 Given the economic importance of the spice trade Castile Spain urgently needed to find a new commercial route to Asia After the Junta de Toro conference of 1505 the Spanish Crown commissioned expeditions to discover a route to the west Spanish explorer Vasco Nunez de Balboa reached the Pacific Ocean in 1513 after crossing the Isthmus of Panama and Juan Diaz de Solis died in Rio de la Plata in 1516 while exploring South America in the service of Spain Ferdinand Magellan was a Portuguese sailor with previous military experience in India Malacca and Morocco A friend and possible cousin with whom Magellan sailed Francisco Serrao was part of the first expedition to the Moluccas leaving from Malacca in 1511 4 Serrao reached the Moluccas going on to stay on the island of Ternate and take a wife 5 Serrao sent letters to Magellan from Ternate extolling the beauty and richness of the Spice Islands These letters likely motivated Magellan to plan an expedition to the islands and would later be presented to Spanish officials when Magellan sought their sponsorship 6 Historians speculate that beginning in 1514 Magellan repeatedly petitioned King Manuel I of Portugal to fund an expedition to the Moluccas though records are unclear 7 It is known that Manuel repeatedly denied Magellan s requests for a token increase to his pay and that in late 1515 or early 1516 Manuel granted Magellan s request to be allowed to serve another master Around this time Magellan met the cosmographer Rui Faleiro another Portuguese subject nursing resentment towards Manuel 8 The two men acted as partners in planning a voyage to the Moluccas which they would propose to the king of Spain Magellan relocated to Seville Spain in 1517 with Faleiro following two months later On arrival in Seville Magellan contacted Juan de Aranda factor of the Casa de Contratacion Following the arrival of his partner Rui Faleiro and with the support of Aranda they presented their project to the king Charles I of Castile and Aragon future Holy Roman Emperor Charles V Magellan s project if successful would realise Columbus plan of a spice route by sailing west without damaging relations with the Portuguese The idea was in tune with the times and had already been discussed after Balboa s discovery of the Pacific On 22 March 1518 the king named Magellan and Faleiro captains so that they could travel in search of the Spice Islands in July He raised them to the rank of Commander of the Order of Santiago They reached an agreement with King Charles which granted them among other things 9 Monopoly of the discovered route for a period of ten years 10 11 Their appointment as governors adelantado of the lands and islands found with 5 of the resulting net gains inheritable by their partners or heirs 10 12 A fifth of the gains from the expedition 10 The right to ship 1 000 ducats worth of goods from the Moluccas to Spain annually exempt from most taxes 11 In the event that they discovered more than six islands one fifteenth of the trading profits with two of their choice 10 and a twenty fifth from the others 13 The expedition was funded largely by the Spanish Crown which provided ships carrying supplies for two years of travel Though King Charles I was supposed to pay for the fleet he was deeply in debt and he turned to the House of Fugger citation needed Through archbishop Juan Rodriguez de Fonseca head of the Casa de Contratacion the Crown obtained the participation of merchant Cristobal de Haro who provided a quarter of the funds and goods to barter Expert cartographers Jorge Reinel and Diego Ribero a Portuguese who had started working for King Charles in 1518 14 as a cartographer at the Casa de Contratacion took part in the development of the maps to be used in the travel Several problems arose during the preparation of the trip including lack of money the king of Portugal trying to stop them Magellan and other Portuguese incurring suspicion from the Spanish and the difficult nature of Faleiro 15 Construction and provisions edit nbsp A modern replica of the Victoria in the Nao Victoria Museum Punta Arenas ChileThe fleet consisting of five ships with supplies for two years of travel was called Armada del Maluco after the Indonesian name for the Spice Islands 16 The ships were mostly black due to the tar covering most of their surface The official accounting of the expedition put the cost at 8 751 125 maravedis including the ships provisions and salaries 17 Food was a hugely important part of the provisioning It cost 1 252 909 maravedis almost as much as the cost of the ships Four fifths of the food on the ship consisted of just two items wine and hardtack 18 The fleet also carried flour and salted meat Some of the ships meat came in the form of livestock the ship carried seven cows and three pigs Cheese almonds mustard and figs were also present 19 Carne de membrillo 20 made from preserved quince was a delicacy enjoyed by captains which may have unknowingly aided in the prevention of scurvy 21 Ships edit The fleet initially consisted of five ships with Trinidad being the flagship All or most were carracks Spanish carraca or nao Portuguese nau n 2 The Victoria was the only ship to complete the circumnavigation Details of the ships configuration are not known as no contemporary illustrations exist of any of the ships 24 The official accounting of the Casa de Contratacion put the cost of the ships at 1 369 808 maravedis with another 1 346 781 spent on outfitting and transporting them 25 Ships of Magellan s expedition Ship Captain Crew Tonnage n 3 tonels FateTrinidad Ferdinand Magellan 62 then 61 after a stop over in Tenerife 28 110 Departed Seville with other four ships 10 August 1519 Broke down in Moluccas December 1521San Antonio Juan de Cartagena 55 29 120 Deserted in the Strait of Magellan November 1520 30 returned to Spain on 6 May 1521 31 Concepcion Gaspar de Quesada 44 then 45 after a stop over in Tenerife 32 90 Scuttled in the Philippines May 1521Santiago Joao Serrao 31 then 33 after a stop over in Tenerife 33 75 Wrecked in storm at Santa Cruz River on 22 May 1520 34 35 Victoria Luis Mendoza 45 then 46 after a stop over in Tenerife 36 85 Successfully completed circumnavigation returning to Spain in September 1522 captained by Juan Sebastian Elcano Mendoza was killed during a mutiny attempt Crew edit The crew consisted of about 270 men 37 mostly Spaniards Spanish authorities were wary of Magellan so that they almost prevented him from sailing switching his mostly Portuguese crew to mostly men of Spain In the end the fleet included about 40 Portuguese 38 among them Magellan s brother in law Duarte Barbosa Joao Serrao Estevao Gomes and Magellan s indentured servant Enrique of Malacca Crew members of other nations were also recorded including 29 Italians 17 French and a smaller number of Flemish Greek Irish English Asian and black sailors 39 Counted among the Spanish crew members were at least 29 Basques including Juan Sebastian Elcano some of whom did not speak Spanish fluently 39 Ruy Faleiro who had initially been named co captain with Magellan developed mental health problems prior to departure or as other sources state chose to remain behind after performing a horoscope reading indicating that the voyage would be fatal for him 40 and was removed from the expedition by the king He was replaced as the fleet s joint commander by Juan de Cartagena and as cosmographer astrologer by Andres de San Martin Juan Sebastian Elcano a Spanish merchant ship captain living in Seville embarked seeking the king s pardon for previous misdeeds Antonio Pigafetta a Venetian scholar and traveller asked to be on the voyage accepting the title of supernumerary and a modest salary He became a strict assistant of Magellan and kept a journal The only other sailor to keep a running account during the voyage would be Francisco Albo who kept a formal nautical logbook Juan de Cartagena suspected illegitimate son of archbishop Fonseca was named Inspector General of the expedition responsible for its financial and trading operations 41 Crossing the Atlantic editOn 10 August 1519 the five ships under Magellan s command left Seville and descended the Guadalquivir River to Sanlucar de Barrameda at the mouth of the river There they remained more than five weeks Finally they set sail on 20 September 1519 and left Spain 42 On 26 September the fleet stopped at Tenerife in the Canary Islands where they took in supplies including vegetable and pitch which were cheaper to acquire there than in Spain 43 During the stop Magellan received a secret message from his father in law Diogo Barbosa warning him that some of the Castilian captains were planning a mutiny with Juan de Cartagena captain of the San Antonio being the ring leader of the conspiracy 44 He also learned that the King of Portugal had sent two fleets of caravels to arrest him On 3 October the fleet departed the Canary Islands sailing south along the coast of Africa There was some disagreement over directions with Cartagena arguing for a more westerly bearing 45 Magellan made the unorthodox decision to follow the African coast in order to evade the Portuguese caravels which were pursuing him 46 Toward the end of October as the Armada approached the equator they experienced a series of storms with such intense squalls that they were sometimes forced to strike their sails 47 Pigafetta recorded the appearance of St Elmo s fire during some of these storms which was regarded as a good omen by the crew During these storms the body of St Anselme appeared to us several times amongst others one night that it was very dark on account of the bad weather the said saint appeared in the form of a fire lighted at the summit of the mainmast and remained there near two hours and a half which comforted us greatly for we were in tears only expecting the hour of perishing and when that holy light was going away from us it gave out so great a brilliancy in the eyes of each that we were near a quarter of an hour like people blinded and calling out for mercy For without any doubt nobody hoped to escape from that storm 48 After two weeks of storms the fleet spent some time stalled in calm equatorial waters before being carried west by the South Equatorial Current to the vicinity of the trade winds Sodomy trial and failed mutiny edit During the ocean crossing the Victoria s Sicilian master Salomon Anton was caught in an act of sodomy with a Genoese apprentice sailor Antonio Varesa off the coast of Guinea 49 50 48 At the time homosexuality was punishable by death in Spain though in practice sex between men was a common occurrence on long naval voyages 51 Magellan held a trial on board the Trinidad and found Anton guilty sentencing him to death by strangulation Anton was later executed on 20 December 1519 after the fleet s landfall in Brazil at Santa Lucia present day Rio de Janeiro his strangled body being burnt 49 48 Varesa drowned after going overboard on 27 April 1520 having been thrown off by his shipmates 52 49 53 In a meeting following the trial Magellan s captains challenged his leadership Cartagena accused Magellan of risking the King s ships by his choice of route sailing South along the African coast When Cartagena declared that he would no longer follow Magellan s command Magellan gave the signal for a number of armed loyalists to enter the room and take hold of Cartagena Magellan called Cartagena a rebel and branded his behaviour as mutinous Cartagena called on the other two Castilian captains Quesada and Mendoza to stab Magellan but they held back Immediately following the episode Cartagena was placed in stocks Magellan could have tried Cartagena for mutiny and sentenced him to death but at the urging of Quesada and Mendoza he agreed to merely relieve Cartagena of his command of the San Antonio and allow him to move freely within the confines of the Victoria Antonio de Coca replaced Cartagena as captain of the San Antonio 54 Some details about the sodomy trial and its aftermath are disputed Salomon Anton s name is also given in some sources as Antonio Salamon Antonio Salamone and Antonio Salomon with his job being alternatively listed as boatswain and quartermaster 48 52 55 Antonio Varesa s name is also given as Antonio Ginoves with his job also being listed as cabin boy ship s boy or grummet 52 55 49 Varesa s death is also sometimes described as a suicide from being ridiculed or that he too was outright sentenced to death during the trial 48 56 The date of the trial is also given as September 56 Passage through South America editArrival in Brazil edit nbsp Pedro Alvares Cabral had claimed Brazil for Portugal in 1500 20 years before Magellan s voyage This 1922 painting depicts his arrival in Porto Seguro and first encounter with the natives On 29 November the fleet reached the approximate latitude of Cape Saint Augustine 57 The coastline of Brazil which Pigafetta refers to as Verzin in his diary after the Italian term for brazilwood 58 had been known to the Spanish and Portuguese since about 1500 and in the intervening decades European powers particularly Portugal had been sending ships to Brazil to collect valuable brazilwood The Armada carried a map of the Brazilian coastline the Livro da Marinharia the Book of the Sea and also had a crew member the Concepcion s pilot Joao Lopes Carvalho who had previously visited Rio de Janeiro Carvalho was enlisted to lead the fleet s navigation down the Brazilian coastline to Rio aboard the Trinidad and also helped communicate with the locals as he had some rudimentary knowledge of their Guarani language 59 On 13 December the fleet reached Rio de Janeiro Though nominally Portuguese territory they maintained no permanent settlement there at the time Seeing no Portuguese ships in the harbour Magellan knew it would be safe to stop 60 Pigafetta wrote of a coincidence of weather that caused the armada to be warmly received by the indigenous people It is to be known that it happened that it had not rained for two months before we came there and the day that we arrived it began to rain on which account the people of the said place said that we came from heaven and had brought the rain with us which was great simplicity and these people were easily converted to the Christian faith 48 The fleet spent 13 days in Rio during which they repaired their ships stocked up on water and food such as yam cassava and pineapple and interacted with the locals The expedition had brought with them a great quantity of trinkets intended for trade such as mirrors combs knives and bells The locals readily exchanged food and local goods such as parrot feathers for such items The crew also found they could purchase sexual favours from the local women Historian Ian Cameron described the crew s time in Rio as a saturnalia of feasting and lovemaking 61 On 27 December the fleet left Rio de Janeiro Pigafetta wrote that the natives were disappointed to see them leave and that some followed them in canoes trying to entice them to stay 62 Rio de la Plata edit The fleet sailed south along the South American coast hoping to reach el paso the fabled strait that would allow them passage past South America to the Spice Islands On 11 January n 4 a headland marked by three hills was sighted which the crew believed to be Cape Santa Maria Around the headland they found a wide body of water that extended as far as the eye could see in a west by southwest direction Magellan believed he had found el paso though in fact he had reached the Rio de la Plata Magellan directed the Santiago commanded by Juan Serrano to probe the strait and led the other ships south hoping to find Terra Australis the southern continent which was then widely supposed to exist south of South America They failed to find the southern continent and when they regrouped with the Santiago a few days later Serrano reported that the hoped for strait was in fact the mouth of a river Incredulous Magellan led the fleet through the western waters again taking frequent soundings Serrano s claim was confirmed when the men eventually found themselves in fresh water 62 Search for strait edit On 3 February the fleet continued south along the South American coast 63 Magellan believed they would find a strait or the southern terminus of the continent within a short distance 64 In fact the fleet would sail south for another eight weeks without finding passage before stopping to overwinter at St Julian Not wanting to miss the strait the fleet sailed as close to the coast as feasible heightening the danger of running aground on shoals The ships sailed only during the day with lookouts carefully watching the coast for signs of a passage In addition to the hazards of shallow waters the fleet encountered squalls storms and dropping temperatures as they continued south and winter set in Overwintering edit By the third week of March weather conditions had become so desperate that Magellan decided they should find a safe harbour in which to wait out the winter before resuming the search for a passage in spring On 31 March 1520 a break in the coast was spotted There the fleet found a natural harbour which they called Port St Julian 65 The men remained at St Julian for five months before resuming their search for the strait Easter mutiny edit nbsp Artist s depiction of the fatal stabbing of captain Luis Mendoza one of the architects of the attempted mutiny at Saint Julian Within a day of landing at St Julian there was another mutiny attempt Like the one during the Atlantic crossing it was led by Juan de Cartagena former captain of the San Antonio aided by Gaspar de Quesada and Luis Mendoza captains of the Concepcion and Victoria respectively As before the Castilian captains questioned Magellan s leadership and accused him of recklessly endangering the fleet s crew and ships The mutiny at St Julian was more calculated than the fracas that had followed the sodomy trial during the Atlantic crossing Around midnight of Easter Sunday 1 April Cartagena and Quesada covertly led thirty armed men their faces covered with charcoal aboard the San Antonio where they ambushed Alvaro de Mezquita the recently named captain of the ship Mezquita was Magellan s cousin and sympathetic to the captain general Juan de Elorriaga the ship s boatswain resisted the mutineers and attempted to alert the other ships For this reason Quesada stabbed him repeatedly he would die from his wounds months later 66 With the San Antonio subdued the mutineers controlled three of the fleet s five ships Only the Santiago commanded by Juan Serrano remained loyal to Magellan along with the flag ship the Trinidad which Magellan commanded The mutineers aimed the San Antonio s cannon at the Trinidad but made no further overtures during the night The following morning 2 April while the mutineers attempted to consolidate their forces aboard the San Antonio and the Victoria a longboat of sailors drifted off course into the vicinity of the Trinidad The men were brought aboard and persuaded to divulge the details of the mutineers plans to Magellan Magellan subsequently launched a counteroffensive against the mutineers aboard the Victoria He had some marines from the Trinidad switch clothing with the stray sailors and approach the Victoria in their longboat His alguacil Gonzalo de Espinosa also approached the Victoria in a skiff and announced that he had a message for the captain Luis Mendoza Espinosa was allowed aboard and into the captain s chambers based on his claim that he had a confidential letter There Espinosa stabbed Mendoza in the throat with his poignard killing him instantly At the same time the disguised marines came aboard the Victoria to support the alguacil 67 With the Victoria lost and Mendoza dead the remaining mutineers realised they were outmanoeuvred Cartagena conceded and begged Magellan for mercy Quesada attempted to flee but was prevented from doing so sailors loyal to Magellan had cut the San Antonio s cables causing it to drift toward the Trinidad and Cartagena was captured Mutiny trial edit The trial of the mutineers was headed by Magellan s cousin Alvaro de Mezquita and lasted five days On 7 April Quesada was beheaded by his foster brother and secretary Luis Molina who acted as executioner in exchange for clemency The bodies of Quesada and Mendoza were drawn and quartered and displayed on gibbets for the following three months San Martin suspected of involvement in the conspiracy was tortured by strappado but afterwards was allowed to continue his service as cosmographer 68 Cartagena along with a priest Pedro Sanchez de Reina were sentenced to be marooned 69 On 11 August two weeks before the fleet left St Julian the two were taken to a small nearby island and left to die 70 More than forty 71 other conspirators including Juan Sebastian Elcano 72 were put in chains for much of the winter and made to perform the hard work of careening the ships repairing their structure and scrubbing the bilge 73 Loss of Santiago edit In late April Magellan dispatched the Santiago captained by Juan Serrano from St Julian to scout to the south for a strait On 3 May they reached the estuary of a river which Serrano named Santa Cruz River 74 The estuary provided shelter and was well situated with natural resources including fish penguins and wood 75 After more than a week exploring Santa Cruz Serrano set out to return to St Julian on 22 May but was caught in a sudden storm while leaving the harbour 34 35 The Santiago was tossed about by strong winds and currents before running aground on a sandbar All or nearly all n 5 of the crew were able to clamber ashore before the ship capsized Two men volunteered to set off on foot for St Julian to get help After 11 days of hard trekking the men arrived at St Julian exhausted and emaciated Magellan sent a rescue party of 24 men over land to Santa Cruz The other 35 survivors from the Santiago remained at Santa Cruz for two weeks They were unable to retrieve any supplies from the wreck of the Santiago but managed to build huts and fire and subsist on a diet of shellfish and local vegetation The rescue party found them all alive but exhausted and they returned to St Julian safely 76 Move to Santa Cruz edit After learning of the favourable conditions that Serrano found at Santa Cruz Magellan decided to move the fleet there for the rest of the austral winter After almost four months at St Julian the fleet left for Santa Cruz around 24 August They spent six weeks at Santa Cruz before resuming their search for the strait 77 Strait of Magellan edit nbsp The Strait of Magellan cuts through the southern tip of South America connecting the Atlantic Ocean and Pacific Ocean nbsp An allegorical depiction of Magellan discovering the strait that would bear his name created around 1592 by Flemish artist Johannes Stradanus On 18 October the fleet left Santa Cruz heading south resuming their search for a passage Soon after on 21 October 1520 they spotted a headland at 52 S latitude which they named Cape Virgenes Past the cape they found a large bay While they were exploring the bay a storm erupted The Trinidad and Victoria made it out to open seas but the Concepcion and San Antonio were driven deeper into the bay toward a promontory Three days later the fleet was reunited and the Concepcion and San Antonio reported that the storm drew them through a narrow passage not visible from sea which continued for some distance Hoping they had finally found their sought after strait the fleet retraced the path taken by the Concepcion and San Antonio Unlike at Rio de la Plata earlier the water did not lose its salinity as they progressed and soundings indicated that the waters were consistently deep This was the passage they sought which would come to be known as the Strait of Magellan At the time Magellan referred to it as the Estrecho Canal de Todos los Santos All Saints Channel because the fleet travelled through it on 1 November or All Saints Day On 28 October the fleet reached an island in the strait likely Isabel Island or Dawson Island which could be passed in one of two directions Magellan directed the fleet to split up to explore the respective paths They were meant to regroup within a few days but the San Antonio would never rejoin the fleet 78 While the rest of the fleet waited for the return of the San Antonio Gonzalo de Espinosa led a small ship to explore the further reaches of the strait After three days of sailing they reached the end of the strait and the mouth of the Pacific Ocean After another three days Espinosa returned Pigafetta writes that on hearing the news of Espinosa s discovery Magellan wept tears of joy 79 The fleet s remaining three ships completed the journey to the Pacific by 28 November after weeks of fruitlessly searching for the San Antonio 80 Magellan named the waters the Mar Pacifico Pacific Ocean because of its apparent stillness 81 Desertion of San Antonio edit nbsp Descubrimiento del estrecho de Magallanes Discovery of the Strait of Magellan oil painting by Alvaro Casanova Zenteno The San Antonio failed to rejoin the rest of Magellan s fleet in the strait At some point they reversed course and sailed back to Spain The ship s officers later testified that they had arrived early at the appointed rendezvous location but it s not clear whether this is true 82 The pilot of the San Antonio at the time Alvaro de Mezquita was Magellan s cousin and loyal to the captain general He directed attempts to rejoin the fleet firing cannons and setting off smoke signals At some point he was overpowered in yet another mutiny attempt this one successful He was stabbed by the pilot of the San Antonio Estevao Gomes and put in chains for the remainder of the journey 83 Gomes was known to have feelings of animosity towards Magellan as documented by Pigafetta who wrote that Gomes hated the Captain General exceedingly because he had hoped to have his own expedition to the Moluccas funded instead of Magellan s 84 and shortly before the fleet was separated had argued with him about their next course of action While Magellan and the other officers agreed to continue west to the Moluccas thinking that their 2 3 months of rations would be sufficient for the journey Gomes argued that they should return to Spain the way they had come to muster more supplies for another journey through the strait 85 The San Antonio reached Seville approximately six months later on 8 May 1521 with 55 survivors 86 There ensued a trial of the ship s men which lasted six months With Mezquita being the only one loyal to Magellan the majority of testimony produced a villainous and distorted picture of Magellan s actions In particular in justifying the mutiny at St Julian the men claimed that Magellan had tortured Spanish seamen during the return journey across the Atlantic Mezquita was tortured into signing a statement to this effect and claimed that they were merely trying to make Magellan follow the king s orders Ultimately none of the mutineers faced charges in Spain Magellan s reputation suffered as a result as did his friends and family Mezquita was kept in jail for a year following the trial and Magellan s wife Beatriz had her financial resources cut off and was placed under house arrest along with their son 87 Pacific crossing edit nbsp The western hemisphere of Johannes Schoner s globe created in 1520 reflects Europeans misconception of the proximity of South America and Asia Zipangri the large island outlined in yellow is Japan Magellan along with contemporary geographers had no conception of the vastness of the Pacific Ocean He imagined that South America was separated from the Spice Islands by a small sea which he expected to cross in as little as three or four days 88 In fact they spent three months and twenty days at sea before reaching Guam and then the Philippines The fleet entered the Pacific from the Strait of Magellan on 28 November 1520 and initially sailed north following the coast of Chile By mid December they altered their course to west north west 89 They were unfortunate in that had their course differed slightly they might have encountered a number of Pacific islands which would have offered fresh food and water such as the Marshall Islands the Society Islands the Solomon Islands or the Marquesas Islands As it was they encountered only two small uninhabited islands during the crossing at which they were unable to land the reason why they named them Islas Infortunadas The first sighted 24 January they named San Pablo likely Puka Puka 90 The second which they sighted 21 February was likely Caroline Island 91 They crossed the equator on 13 February Not expecting such a long journey the ships were not stocked with adequate food and water and much of the seal meat they had stocked putrefied in the equatorial heat Pigafetta described the desperate conditions in his journal we only ate old biscuit reduced to powder and full of grubs and stinking from the dirt which the rats had made on it when eating the good biscuit and we drank water that was yellow and stinking We also ate the ox hides which were under the main yard so that the yard should not break the rigging they were very hard on account of the sun rain and wind and we left them for four or five days in the sea and then we put them a little on the embers and so ate them also the sawdust of wood and rats which cost half a crown each moreover enough of them were not to be got 48 Moreover most of the men suffered from symptoms of scurvy whose cause was not understood at the time Pigafetta reported that of the 166 men 92 93 need quotation to verify who embarked on the Pacific crossing 19 died and twenty five or thirty fell ill of diverse sicknesses 48 Magellan Pigafetta and other officers were not afflicted with scorbutic symptoms which may have been because they ate preserved quince which unbeknownst to them contained the vitamin C necessary to protect against scurvy 94 Guam and the Philippines editOn 6 March 1521 the fleet reached the Mariana Islands The first land they spotted was likely the island of Rota but the ships were unable to land there Instead they dropped anchor thirty hours later on Guam where they were met by native Chamorro people in proas a type of outrigger canoe then unknown to Europeans Dozens of Chamorros came aboard and began taking items from the ship including rigging knives and any items made of iron At some point there was a physical confrontation between the crew and the natives and at least one Chamorro was killed The remaining natives fled with the goods they had obtained also taking Magellan s bergantina the ship s boat kept on the Trinidad as they retreated 95 96 For this act Magellan called the island Isla de los Ladrones Island of Thieves 97 The next day Magellan retaliated sending a raiding party ashore which looted and burned forty or fifty Chamorro houses and killed seven men 98 They recovered the bergantina and left Guam the next day 9 March continuing westward 99 The Philippines edit The fleet reached the Philippines on 16 March and remained there until 1 May The expedition represented the first documented European contact with the Philippines 100 Although the stated goals of Magellan s expedition were to find a passage through South America to the Moluccas and return to Spain laden with spices at this point in the journey Magellan seemed to acquire a zeal for converting the local tribes to Christianity In doing so Magellan eventually became embroiled in a local political dispute and died in the Philippines along with dozens of other officers and crew On 16 March a week after leaving Guam the fleet first sighted the island of Samar then landed on the island of Homonhon which was then uninhabited They encountered friendly locals from the nearby island of Suluan and traded supplies with them They spent nearly two weeks on Homonhon resting and gathering fresh food and water before leaving on 27 March 101 On the morning of 28 March they neared the island of Limasawa and encountered some natives in canoes who then alerted balangay warships of two local rulers from Mindanao who were on a hunting expedition in Limasawa For the first time on the journey Magellan s slave Enrique of Malacca found that he was able to communicate with the natives in Malay an indication that they had indeed completed a circumnavigation and were approaching familiar lands 101 They exchanged gifts with the natives receiving porcelain jars painted with Chinese designs and later that day Magellan was introduced to their leaders Rajah Kolambu n 6 and Rajah Siawi Afterwards Magellan would become a blood brother to Kolambu undergoing the local blood compact ritual with him 102 Magellan and his men noted that the Rajahs had golden body ornaments and served food on golden plates They were told by the Rajahs that gold was plentiful in their homelands in Butuan and Calagan Surigao and found that the locals were eager to trade it for iron at par While at Limasawa Magellan gave some of the natives a demonstration of Spanish armour weapons and artillery by which they were apparently impressed 103 First mass edit Main article First Mass in the Philippines On Sunday 31 March Easter Day Magellan and fifty of his men came ashore to Limasawa to participate in the first Catholic Mass in the Philippines given by the armada s chaplain Kolambu his brother who was also a local leader and other islanders joined in the ceremony and expressed an interest in their religion Following Mass Magellan s men raised a cross on the highest hill on the island and formally declared the island and the entire archipelago of the Philippines which he called the Islands of St Lazarus as a possession of Spain 104 Cebu edit On 2 April Magellan held a conference to decide the fleet s next course of action His officers urged him to head south west for the Mollucas but instead he decided to press further into the Philippines On 3 April the fleet sailed north west from Limasawa towards the island of Cebu which Magellan learned of from Kolambu The fleet was guided to Cebu by some of Kolambu s men 105 They sighted Cebu 6 April and made landfall the next day Cebu had regular contact with Chinese and Arab traders and normally required that visitors pay tribute in order to trade Magellan convinced the island s leader Rajah Humabon to waive this requirement As he had in Limasawa Magellan gave a demonstration of the fleet s arms in order to impress the locals Again he also preached Christianity to the natives and on 14 April Humabon and his family were baptised and given an image of the Holy Child later known as Santo Nino de Cebu In the coming days other local chieftains were baptised and in total 2 200 locals from Cebu and other nearby islands were converted 106 When Magellan learned that a group on the island of Mactan led by Lapu Lapu resisted Christian conversion he ordered his men to burn their homes When they continued to resist Magellan informed his council on 26 April that he would bring an armed contingent to Mactan and make them submit under threat of force 107 Battle of Mactan edit Main article Battle of Mactan nbsp 19th century artist s depiction of Magellan s death at the hands of Mactan warriors Magellan mustered a force of 60 armed men from his crew to oppose Lapu Lapu s forces Some Cebuano men followed Magellan to Mactan but were instructed by Magellan not to join the fight but merely to watch 108 He first sent an envoy to Lapu Lapu offering him a last chance to accept the king of Spain as their ruler and avoid bloodshed Lapu Lapu refused Magellan took 49 men to the shore while 11 remained to guard the boats Though they had the benefit of relatively advanced armour and weaponry Magellan s forces were greatly outnumbered Pigafetta who was present on the battlefield estimated the enemy s number at 1 500 109 Magellan s forces were driven back and decisively defeated Magellan died in battle along with several comrades including Cristovao Rebelo Magellan s illegitimate son 110 1 May Massacre edit Following Magellan s death the remaining men held an election to select a new leader for the expedition They selected two co commanders Duarte Barbosa Magellan s brother in law and Juan Serrano Magellan s will called for the liberation of his slave Enrique but Barbosa and Serrano demanded that he continue his duties as an interpreter for them and follow their orders Enrique had some secret communication with Humabon which caused him to betray the Spaniards 111 On 1 May Humabon invited the men ashore for a great feast It was attended by around thirty men mostly officers including Serrano and Barbosa Towards the end of the meal armed Cebuanos entered the hall and murdered the Europeans Twenty seven men were killed Juan Serrano one of the newly elected co commanders was left alive and brought to the shore facing the Spanish ships Serrano begged the men on board to pay a ransom to the Cebuanos The Spanish ships left port and Serrano was presumably killed In his account Pigafetta speculates that Joao Carvalho who became first in command in the absence of Barbosa and Serrano abandoned Serrano his one time friend so that he could remain in command of the fleet 112 Moluccas editWith just 115 surviving men out of the 277 who had sailed from Seville it was decided the fleet did not have enough men to continue operating three ships On 2 May the Concepcion was emptied and set on fire 112 With Carvalho as the new captain general the remaining two ships the Trinidad and Victoria spent the next six months meandering through Southeast Asia in search of the Moluccas On the way they stopped at several islands including Mindanao and Brunei During this time they engaged in acts of piracy including robbing a junk bound for China from the Moluccas 113 On 21 September Carvalho was made to step down as captain general He was replaced by Martin Mendez with Gonzalo de Espinosa and Juan Sebastian Elcano as captains of the Trinidad and Victoria respectively Aganduru Moriz account of the expedition 114 describes how Elcano s crew was attacked somewhere off the southeastern tip of Borneo by a Bruneian fleet commanded by one of the Luzones Historians such as William Henry Scott and Luis Camara Dery assert that this commander of the Bruneian Fleet was actually the young prince Ache of Maynila Manila a grandson of the Bruneian sultan who would later become Maynila s Rajah Matanda 114 115 Elcano however was able to defeat and capture Ache 114 According to Scott Ache was eventually released after a ransom was paid 116 Nevertheless Ache left a Spanish speaking Moor in Elcano s crew to assist the ship on the way back to Spain a Moor who understood something of our Castilian language who was called Pazeculan 117 This knowledge of the Spanish language was scattered across the Indian Ocean and even into Southeast Asia after the Castilian conquest of the Emirate of Granada forced the Spanish speaking Granadan Muslims to migrate across the Muslim world even as far as Islamic Manila 118 The ships finally reached the Moluccas on 8 November when they reached the island of Tidore They were greeted by the island s leader al Mansur known to the officers by the Spanish name Almanzor 119 Almanzor was a friendly host to the men and readily claimed loyalty to the king of Spain A trading post was established in Tidore and the men set about purchasing massive quantities of cloves in exchange for goods such as cloth knives and glassware 120 Around 15 December the ships attempted to set sail from Tidore laden with cloves But the Trinidad which had fallen into disrepair was found to be taking on water The departure was postponed while the men aided by the locals attempted to find and repair the leak When these attempts were unsuccessful it was decided that the Victoria would leave for Spain via a western route and that the Trinidad would remain behind for some time to be refitted before heading back to Spain by an eastern route involving an overland passage across the American continent 121 Several weeks later Trinidad departed and attempted to return to Spain via the Pacific route This attempt failed Trinidad was captured by the Portuguese and was eventually wrecked in a storm while at anchor under Portuguese control 122 Return to Spain editThe Victoria set sail via the Indian Ocean route home on 21 December 1521 commanded by Juan Sebastian Elcano By 6 May 1522 the Victoria rounded the Cape of Good Hope with only rice for rations Twenty crewmen died of starvation by 9 July 1522 when Elcano put into Portuguese Cape Verde for provisions The crew was surprised to learn that the date was actually 10 July 1522 123 a day after their own meticulous records indicated They had no trouble making purchases at first using the cover story that they were returning to Spain from the Americas However the Portuguese detained 13 crew members after discovering that Victoria was carrying spices from the East Indies 55 124 The Victoria managed to escape with its cargo of 26 tons of spices cloves and cinnamon On 6 September 1522 Elcano and the remaining crew of Magellan s voyage arrived in Sanlucar de Barrameda in Spain aboard Victoria almost exactly three years after they departed They then sailed upriver to Seville and from there overland to Valladolid where they appeared before the Emperor Survivors edit When Victoria the one surviving ship and the smallest carrack in the fleet returned to the harbour of departure after completing the first circumnavigation of the Earth only 18 men out of the original 270 men were on board In addition to the returning Europeans the Victoria had aboard three Moluccans who came aboard at Tidore 125 18 men returned to Seville aboard Victoria in 1522 126 Name Origin Final rankJuan Sebastian Elcano Getaria CaptainFrancisco Albo Chios PilotMiguel de Rodas Rhodes ShipmasterJuan de Acurio Bermeo BoatswainMartin de Judicibus Savona SailorHernando de Bustamante Merida BarberAntonio Pigafetta Vicenza Man At ArmsMaestre Anes de Hans 127 Aachen GunnerDiego Gallego Bayona SailorAntonio Hernandez Colmenero Huelva SailorNicolas de Napoles Nafplio SailorFrancisco Rodriguez Sevilla SailorJuan Rodriguez de Huelva Huelva SailorMiguel de Rodas Rhodes SailorJuan de Arratia Bilbao ShipboyJuan de Santander Sant Andres Cueto ShipboyVasco Gomez Gallego Bayona ShipboyJuan de Zubileta Barakaldo PageKing Charles pressed for the release of the 12 men held captive by the Portuguese in Cape Verde and they were eventually returned to Spain in small groups over the course of the following year 128 They were 12 men returned to Spain from Cape Verde 129 Name Origin Final rankMartin Mendez Sevilla ScrivenerPedro de Tolosa Tolosa SailorRichard de Normandia Normandy France CarpenterRoldan de Argote Bruges GunnerFelipe de Rodas Rhodes SailorGomez Hernandez Huelva SailorOcacio Alonso Bollullos SailorPedro de Chindurza Galvey ShipboyVasquito Gallego Bayona ShipboyJuan Martin Bayona Man At ArmsPedro de Tenerife Tenerife Man At ArmsSimon de Burgos Burgos Man At ArmsBetween 1525 and 1526 the survivors of the Trinidad who had been captured by the Portuguese in the Moluccas were transported to a prison in Portugal and eventually released after a seven month negotiation Only five survived 130 5 men returning between 1525 and 1526 129 Name Origin Final rankGines de Mafra Jerez SailorLeone Pancaldo Genoa SailorHans Varga Hans Barge de n 7 Germany ConstableJuan Rodriguez El Sordo Sevilla SailorGonzalo Gomez de Espinosa Burgos Alguacil MayorThe following five nonsurvivors are considered to have successfully circumnavigated since they died after the Victoria and Trinidad had crossed the tracks of the outbound fleet 130 5 men buried at sea after completing the circumnavigation 130 Name Origin Final rankDiego Garcia de Trigueros Huelva SailorPedro de Valpuesta Burgos Man At ArmsMartin de Magallanes Lisbon Man At ArmsEstevan Villon Trosic Brittany SailorAndres Blanco Tenerife ShipboyAccounts of voyage edit nbsp Cover page of Roman edition of Maximilianus Transylvanus s De Moluccis Insulis Initially published in Cologne in January 1523 it was the first account of the Magellan expedition to appear in print 131 Antonio Pigafetta s journal later published as Relazione del primo viaggio intorno al mondo is the main primary source for much of what is known about Magellan s expedition 132 The first published report of the circumnavigation was a letter written by Maximilianus Transylvanus a relative of sponsor Cristobal de Haro who interviewed survivors in 1522 and published his account in 1523 under the title De Moluccis Insulis 131 133 Initially published in Latin other editions later appeared in Italian Spanish and English 131 In addition there is an extant chronicle from Peter Martyr d Anghiera which was written in Spanish in 1522 or 1523 misplaced then published again in 1530 134 Another reliable secondary source is the 1601 chronicle and the longer 1615 version both by Spanish historian Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas Herrera s account is all the more accurate as he had access to Spanish and Portuguese sources that are nowhere to be found today not least Andres de San Martin s navigational notes and papers San Martin the chief pilot cosmographer astrologer of the Armada disappeared in the Cebu massacre on 1 May 1521 135 136 In addition to Pigafetta s surviving journal 11 other crew members kept written accounts of the voyage Francisco Albo the Victoria s pilot logbook Diario o derrotero first referred to in 1788 and first published in its entirety in 1837 137 138 and a deposition on 18 October 1522 139 Martin de Ayamonte a short account first published in 1933 140 141 Giovanni Battista two letters dating from the 21 December 1521 142 and 25 October 1525 143 144 respectively Hernando de Bustamante a deposition on 18 October 1522 139 145 Juan Sebastian Elcano a letter written on 6 September 1522 146 and a deposition on 18 October 1522 139 147 Gonzalo Gomez de Espinosa a letter written on 12 January 1525 148 a statement on 2 August 1527 149 and a deposition from the 2nd to the 5 September 1527 150 151 Gines de Mafra a detailed account first published in 1920 152 a statement on 2 August 1527 149 and a deposition from 2 to 5 September 1527 150 153 Martin Mendez the Victoria s logbook 154 155 Leone Pancaldo a long logbook by the Genoese pilot first published in 1826 156 a letter written on 25 October 1525 157 a statement on 2 August 1527 158 and a deposition from 2 to 5 September 1527 159 160 an anonymous Portuguese crew member a long manuscript first published in 1937 known as the Leiden manuscript possibly written by Gonzalo Gomez de Espinosa and in all likelihood a Trinidad crew member 161 151 and another anonymous Portuguese crew member a very short account first published in 1554 written by a Trinidad crew member 162 Legacy editSubsequent expeditions edit Since there was not a set limit to the east in 1524 both Portugal and Spain had tried to find the exact location of the antimeridian of Tordesillas which would divide the world into two equal hemispheres and to resolve the Moluccas issue A board met several times without reaching an agreement the knowledge at that time was insufficient for an accurate calculation of longitude and each gave the islands to their sovereign In 1525 soon after the return of Magellan s expedition Charles V sent an expedition led by Garcia Jofre de Loaisa to occupy the Moluccas claiming that they were in his zone of the Treaty of Tordesillas This expedition included the most notable Spanish navigators including Juan Sebastian Elcano who along with many other sailors died during the voyage and the young Andres de Urdaneta They had difficulty reaching the Moluccas docking at Tidore The Portuguese were already established in nearby Ternate and the two nations had nearly a decade of skirmishing over the possession which was still occupied by indigenous people citation needed An agreement was reached only with the Treaty of Zaragoza signed in 1529 between Spain and Portugal It assigned the Moluccas to Portugal and the Philippines to Spain In 1565 Andres de Urdaneta discovered the Manila Acapulco route The course that Magellan charted was later followed by other navigators such as Sir Francis Drake during his circumnavigation in 1578 163 In 1960 the route was retraced completely submerged with minor variations in course by USS Triton Scientific accomplishments edit Magellan s expedition was the first to circumnavigate the globe and the first to navigate the strait in South America connecting the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans Magellan s name for the Pacific was adopted by other Europeans Magellan s crew observed several animals that were entirely new to European science including a camel without humps which was probably a guanaco whose range extends to Tierra del Fuego The llama vicuna and alpaca natural ranges were in the Andes mountains A black goose that had to be skinned instead of plucked was a penguin citation needed The full extent of the globe was realised since their voyage was 14 460 Spanish leagues 60 440 km or 37 560 mi The global expedition showed the need for an International Date Line to be established Upon arrival at Cape Verde the crew was surprised to learn that the ship s date of 9 July 1522 was one day behind the local date of 10 July 1522 even though they had recorded every day of the three year journey without omission They lost one day because they travelled west during their circumnavigation of the globe in the same direction as the apparent motion of the sun across the sky 164 Although the Kurdish geographer Abu l Fida 1273 1331 had predicted that circumnavigators would accumulate a one day offset 165 Cardinal Gasparo Contarini was the first European to give a correct explanation of the discrepancy 166 Quincentenary edit In 2017 Portugal submitted an application to UNESCO to honour the circumnavigation route the proposal was for a World Heritage Site called Route of Magellan 167 In 2019 there were a number of events to mark the 500th anniversary of the voyage including exhibitions in various Spanish cities 168 To commemorate the 500th anniversary of Magellan s arrival in the Philippines the National Quincentennial Committee put up monuments to mark the points where the fleet anchored 169 170 See also editAge of Discovery Timeline of the Magellan expedition Chronology of European exploration of Asia History of the Philippines Military history of the Philippines Spanish colonization attempt of the Strait of Magellan Spanish Empire Magallanica hypothetical continent south of the Strait of MagellanNotes edit 18 men returned on 6 September 1522 aboard the Victoria Another 12 who had been captured by the Portuguese in Cape Verde made their way back to Spain over the following year A few other survivors who had been stranded in the Moluccas were returned years later as Portuguese prisoners Bergreen 2003 says that the Santiago was a caravel and the other four were carracks 22 Joyner 1992 labels all five ships as carracks 23 Note that many English sources such as Joyner 26 provide these numbers calqued as tons without converting their values from the actual unit the Biscayan tonel tun At the time of Magellan s voyage this tonel was reckoned as 1 2 toneladas 27 or roughly 1 7 m 60 1 cu ft or 0 6 English shipping tons Cameron 1974 p 96 gives a date of 11 January for this whereas Bergreen 2003 p 105 gives 10 January Cameron 1974 p 156 says that all her crew except one were able to leap ashore Bergreen 2003 p 157 says all the men aboard ship survived Variously romanised in different sources as Kolambu Colembu Kulambu Calambu etc A German before 1500 1527 captured at Tidore 1522 and spent the rest of his live in Portuguese captivity died in Portugal References editCitations edit Ferdinand Magellan Early Years Expedition amp Legacy HISTORY 6 June 2023 Retrieved 10 September 2023 Cameron 1974 pp 211 214 Bergreen 2006 Joyner 1992 p 48 Joyner 1992 p 49 Bergreen 2003 p 30 Joyner 1992 p 56 While court chronicles do not state so clearly he likely implored the king to allow him to take men arms and supplies to the Moluccas Joyner 1992 p 66 Joyner 1992 pp 87 296 298 a b c d Beaglehole 1966 pp 19 20 a b Joyner 1992 pp 87 296 Joyner 1992 p 296 Joyner 1992 p 297 Ehrenberg Ralph E 2002 Marvellous countries and lands Notable Maps of Florida 1507 1846 Archived from the original on 12 March 2008 Castro et al 2010 pp 61 331 footnote 2 Gonzalez Fernando 2018 Los barcos de la armada del Maluco PDF Congreso Internacional de Historia Primus Circumdedisti Me Valladolid Ministerio de Defensa pp 179 188 ISBN 978 84 9091 390 1 Archived PDF from the original on 22 September 2019 Retrieved 7 October 2019 Bergreen 2003 p 38 Bergreen 2003 p 57 Vial Ignacio Fernandez 2001 La Primera Vuelta al Mundo La Nao Victoria Servilla Munoz Moya Editores Bergreen 2003 p 58 Joyner 1992 p 170 Bergreen 2003 p 36 Joyner 1992 pp 93 245 Cameron 1974 p 74 Joyner 1992 p 94 Joyner 1992 p 93 Walls y Merino 1899 Annex 3 p 174 Castro 2018 p 336 Castro 2018 p 337 Castro 2018 p 43 Castro 2018 pp 49 337 Castro 2018 p 338 Castro 2018 p 339 a b Joyner 1992 p 146 a b Bergreen 2003 p 156 Castro 2018 p 335 Nancy Smiler Levinson 2001 Magellan and the First Voyage Around the World Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 39 ISBN 978 0 395 98773 5 Retrieved 31 July 2010 Personnel records are imprecise The most accepted total number is 270 Bergreen 2003 p 61 a b Joyner 1992 p 104 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Magellan Ferdinand Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Joyner 1992 p 90 Beaglehole 1966 p 22 Cameron 1974 p 84 Bergreen 2003 p 87 Cameron 1974 p 86 Bergreen 2003 p 91 Bergreen 2003 pp 88 89 a b c d e f g h Pigafetta Antonio The First Voyage Round the World Translated by Stanley Henry Archived from the original on 12 November 2020 Retrieved 9 April 2019 a b c d Carvajal Federico Garza 1 January 2010 Butterflies Will Burn Prosecuting Sodomites in Early Modern Spain and Mexico University of Texas Press p 59 ISBN 978 0 292 77994 5 Reyes Raquel A G Clarence Smith William G 26 July 2012 Sexual Diversity in Asia c 600 1950 Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 29721 2 Bergreen 2003 pp 92 93 a b c Kelsey 2016 p 20 Bergreen 2003 p 103 Bergreen 2003 pp 94 95 a b c Morison Samuel Eliot 1986 The Great Explorers The European Discovery of America Oxford University Press p 667 ISBN 978 0 19 504222 1 a b Giraldez Arturo 19 March 2015 The Age of Trade The Manila Galleons and the Dawn of the Global Economy Rowman amp Littlefield p 45 ISBN 978 1 4422 4352 1 Log Book of Francisco Alvo or Alvaro The First Voyage Round the World Translated by Stanley Henry Edward John Archived from the original on 16 April 2019 Retrieved 25 September 2019 Bergreen 2003 p 97 Bergreen 2003 pp 95 98 Bergreen 2003 p 98 Cameron 1974 p 95 a b Cameron 1974 p 96 Bergreen 2003 p 123 Cameron 1974 p 97 Cameron 1974 pp 101 103 Bergreen 2003 pp 115 117 Cameron 1974 pp 108 109 Bergreen 2003 pp 148 149 Cameron 1974 pp 109 111 Bergreen 2003 p 170 Hildebrand Arthur Sturges 1925 Magellan A general account of the life and times and remarkable adventures of Ferdinand Magellan etc With a portrait London OCLC 560368881 Murphy Patrick J Coye Ray W 2013 Mutiny and Its Bounty Leadership Lessons from the Age of Discovery Yale University Press ISBN 9780300170283 Archived from the original on 26 May 2019 Retrieved 26 May 2019 Cameron 1974 p 113 Bergreen 2003 pp 155 156 Cameron 1974 pp 116 117 Bergreen 2003 pp 157 159 Bergreen 2003 pp 170 173 Bergreen 2003 pp 189 190 Cameron 1974 p 133 Cameron 1974 p 136 Ferdinand Magellan Catholic Encyclopedia New Advent Archived from the original on 13 January 2007 Retrieved 14 January 2007 Bergreen 2003 p 191 Bergreen 2003 p 192 Bergreen 2003 p 188 Bergreen 2003 pp 187 188 Carta de los oficiales de la Casa de la Contratacion de las Indias al emperador Carlos V sobre regreso de la nao San Antonio y denuncias de sus mandos de los excesos de Fernando de Magallanes in Spanish Consejo de Indias 1521 Archived from the original on 17 March 2022 Retrieved 17 March 2022 Bergreen 2003 pp 297 312 Cameron 1974 p 145 Cameron 1974 p 149 Cameron 1974 p 159 Bergreen 2003 p 218 Castro et al 2010 p 538 Castro 2018 p 44 Bergreen 2003 pp 217 218 Bergreen 2003 pp 224 226 Cameron 1974 pp 167 169 Bergreen 2003 p 229 Bergreen 2003 p 226 Bergreen 2003 pp 229 231 Suarez 1999 p 138 a b Cameron 1974 p 173 Bergreen 2003 pp 244 245 Bergreen 2003 pp 243 245 Cameron 1974 p 177 Cameron 1974 p 180 Bergreen 2003 p 271 Cameron 1974 p 187 Bergreen 2003 p 277 Bergreen 2003 p 279 Bergreen 2003 p 281 Bergreen 2003 p 292 a b Cameron 1974 p 197 Cameron 1974 p 198 a b c de Aganduru Moriz Rodrigo 1882 Historia general de las Islas Occidentales a la Asia adyacentes llamadas Philipinas Coleccion de Documentos ineditos para la historia de Espana v 78 79 Madrid Impr de Miguel Ginesta Bergreen 2003 p 330 Scott William Henry 1994 Barangay Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society Quezon City Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 971 550 135 4 El libro que trajo la nao Vitoria de las amistades que hitieron con 10s Reyes de Maluco Archivo General de Indias Indiferente General 1528 text in Mauricio Obregon La primera vuelta al Mundo Bogota 1984 p 300 Damiao de Gois Cronica do felicissimo rei de Manuel Lisboa 1566 part 2 p 113 Bergreen 2003 p 341 Bergreen 2003 pp 349 350 Bergreen 2003 pp 363 365 Bergreen 2003 pp 381 Bergreen 2003 p 386 Koch Peter O 2015 To the Ends of the Earth The Age of the European Explorers McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 8380 8 Joyner 1992 p 264 Kelsey 2016 pp 141 Lived ca 1500 1545 also took part in the Loaisa expedition of 1525 was saved by the Saavedra expedition and returned to Europe in 1534 He was the first human to circumvent the earth two times Bergreen 2003 p 406 a b Kelsey 2016 p 146 a b c Kelsey 2016 p 148 a b c Joyner 1992 p 349 Bergreen 2003 p 63 Castro et al 2010 pp 23 71 883 918 1033 1034 Castro et al 2010 pp 71 919 942 1021 Castro et al 2010 pp 506 945 1015 Fitzpatrick amp Callaghan 2008 pp 149 150 159 Castro et al 2010 pp 659 amp 660 696 Castro 2018 p 300 a b c Castro et al 2010 pp 618 630 Castro et al 2010 pp 603 612 Castro 2018 p 302 Castro et al 2010 pp 599 601 Castro et al 2010 pp 841 845 Castro 2018 p 303 Castro 2018 pp 304 305 Castro et al 2010 pp 613 616 Castro 2018 pp 308 309 Castro et al 2010 pp 837 840 a b Castro et al 2010 pp 845 858 a b Castro et al 2010 pp 859 880 a b Castro 2018 pp 313 314 Castro et al 2010 pp 697 732 Castro 2018 pp 317 318 Castro et al 2010 pp 631 657 Castro 2018 pp 319 320 Castro et al 2010 pp 733 755 Castro et al 2010 pp 841 858 Castro et al 2010 pp 859 861 Castro et al 2010 pp 861 880 Castro 2018 pp 323 324 Castro et al 2010 pp 757 782 Castro et al 2010 pp 783 787 Wagner Henry R 1926 Sir Francis Drake s Voyage Around the World Its Aims and Achievements San Francisco John Howell Maps of the Magellan Strait and a brief history of Ferdinand Magellan London Archived from the original on 18 December 2010 Retrieved 10 March 2006 Gunn Geoffrey C 15 October 2018 Overcoming Ptolemy The Revelation of an Asian World Region Lanham Maryland Lexington Books pp 47 48 ISBN 9781498590143 Winfree Arthur T 2001 The Geometry of Biological Time 2nd ed New York Springer Science amp Business Media p 10 ISBN 978 1 4757 3484 3 Route of Magellan Archived from the original on 23 October 2019 Retrieved 23 October 2019 Minder Raphael 20 September 2019 Who First Circled the Globe Not Magellan Spain Wants You to Know The New York Times Archived from the original on 24 September 2019 Retrieved 1 October 2019 PH to mark Filipino centric circumnavigation quincentennial Philippine News Agency Archived from the original on 21 July 2020 Retrieved 21 July 2020 Quincentennial marker unveiled in Homonhon Island CNN Philippines 18 March 2021 Archived from the original on 17 April 2023 Retrieved 17 April 2023 Bibliography edit English Beaglehole J C 1966 The Exploration of the Pacific 3rd ed London Adam amp Charles Black OCLC 253002380 Bergreen Laurence 2003 Over the Edge of the World Magellan s Terrifying Circumnavigation of the Globe William Morrow ISBN 978 0 06 093638 9 Bergreen Laurence 2006 Over the Edge of the World Magellan s Terrifying Circumnavigation of the Globe audio book Blackstone Audio ISBN 978 0 7927 4395 8 OCLC 1011550094 Cameron Ian 1974 Magellan and the first circumnavigation of the world London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 029776568X OCLC 842695 Cunnigham Robert Oliver 1871 Notes on the natural history of the Strait of Magellan and west coast of Patagonia made during the voyage of H M S Nassau in the years 1866 67 68 amp 69 Edinburgh Edmonston and Douglas Fitzpatrick Scott M Callaghan Richard September 2008 Magellan s Crossing of the Pacific The Journal of Pacific History 43 2 145 165 doi 10 1080 00223340802303611 S2CID 161223057 Joyner Tim 1992 Magellan International Marine OCLC 25049890 Kelsey Harry 2016 The First Circumnavigators Unsung Heroes of the Age of Discovery New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 22086 5 OCLC 950613571 Mawer Granville Allen 2022 East by West The New Navigation of Ferdinand Magellan Kew Vic Australian Scholarly Publishing ISBN 9781922669407 OCLC 1338665936 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 Suarez Thomas 1999 Early Mapping of Southeast Asia The Epic Story of Seafarers Adventurers and Cartographers Who First Mapped the Regions Between China and India Hong Kong Periplus Editions HK ISBN 9789625934709 Torodash Martin 1971 Magellan Historiography The Hispanic American Historical Review 51 2 313 335 doi 10 2307 2512478 JSTOR 2512478 Archived from the original on 22 September 2022 Retrieved 2 November 2022 French Castro Xavier de Hamon Jocelyne 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 2915540 57 4 Castro Xavier 2018 Le Voyage de Magellan la relation d Antonio Pigafetta du premier voyage autour du monde in French Paris Editions Chandeigne collection Magellane poche ISBN 978 2 36732 125 7 Couto Dejanirah 2013 Autour du Globe La carte Hazine n 1825 de la bibliotheque du Palais de Topkapi Istanbul PDF in French CFC volume 216 June 2013 pages 119 134 Archived PDF from the original on 28 July 2019 Castro Xavier de Duviols Jean Paul 2019 Idees recues sur les Grandes Decouvertes XVe XVIe siecles 2e ed in French Paris Editions Chandeigne collection Magellane poche ISBN 978 236732 188 2 Heers Jacques 1991 La decouverte de l Amerique 1492 in French Bruxelles Editions Complexe ISBN 9782870274088 Portuguese Garcia Jose Manuel 2007 A Viagem de Fernao de Magalhaes e os Portugueses in Portuguese Lisboa Presenca ISBN 978 9722337519 Garcia Jose Manuel 2019 Fernao e Magalhaes Heroi Traidor ou Mito a Historia do Primeiro Homem a Abracar o Mundo in Portuguese Manuscrito Queluz de Baixo ISBN 9789898975256 Jose Manuel Garcia International Congress of History Primus Circumdedisti Me Archived from the original on 16 February 2020 Mota Alvelino Teixeira da 1975 A viagem de Fernao de Magalhaes e a questao das Molucas Actas do II coloquio luso espahnol de Historia ultramarina in Portuguese Lisboa Junta de Investigacao Ultramarina Centro de Cartografia Antiga Archived from the original on 26 July 2022 Thomaz Luis Filipe 2018 O drama de Magalhaes e a volta ao mundo sem querer in Portuguese Lisboa Gradiva ISBN 9789896168599 Spanish Las Casas Bartolome de 2002 Histoire des Indes in French Paris Seuil Historia de las Indias vol 3 de 5 Bartolome De Las Casas in Spanish Toribio Medina Jose 1888 1902 Coleccion de documentos ineditos para la historia de Chile desde el viaje de Magallanes hasta la batalla de Maipo 1518 1818 in Spanish Santiago Imprenta Ercilla ISBN 9781390781601 Coleccion de documentos ineditos para la historia de Chile desde el viaje de Magallanes hasta la batalla de Maipo 1518 1818 tomo 7 Memoria Chilena Archived 19 October 2019 at the Wayback Machine Walls y Merino ed 1899 Primer Viaje Alrededor del Mundo PDF in Spanish Translated by Carlos Amoretti Madrid n a Archived PDF from the original on 31 January 2023 Retrieved 31 January 2023 External links edit nbsp Media related to Magellan Elcano circumnavigation at Wikimedia Commons in Spanish Primera vuelta al mundo Magallanes Elcano V Centenario Official site for the 5th centenary of the expedition Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Magellan expedition amp oldid 1194945107, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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