Portugal's
maritime expansion began in 1415 when João I seized
Ceuta in Morocco, the western depot for the spice trade. The
military campaign against Ceuta was launched for several
reasons. First, war in Morocco was seen as a new crusade
against the Muslims that would stand Portugal well with the
church. Second, there was a need to suppress Moroccan
pirates who were threatening Portuguese ships. Third, the
Portuguese wanted the economic benefit that controlling
Ceuta's vast market would bring to the crown. Finally, the
campaign against Ceuta was seen as preparatory to an attack
on Muslims still holding Granada. The possession of Ceuta
allowed the Portuguese to dominate the Straits of
Gibraltar. After the
conquest of Ceuta, Prince Henry the Navigator, who had
participated in the campaign as an armed knight, settled at
Sagres on the extreme end of Cape St. Vincent, where in 1418
he founded a naval school. He continued to direct Portugal's
early maritime activity. As the master of the Order of
Christ, Prince Henry was able to draw on the vast resources
of this group to equip ships and pay the expenses of the
early maritime expeditions. Prince Henry was motivated by
scientific curiosity and religious fervor, seeing the
voyages as a continuation of the crusades against the
Muslims and the conversion of new peoples to Christianity,
as well as by the desire to open a sea route to
India. Shortly after
establishing his school, two of Prince Henry's captains
discovered the island of Porto Santo, and the following year
the Madeira Islands were discovered. In 1427 Diogo de
Silves, sailing west, discovered the Azores archipelago,
also uninhabited. Both Madeira and Porto Santo were
colonized immediately and divided into captaincies. These
were distributed to Prince Henry's captains, who in turn had
the power to distribute land to settlers according to the
Law of the Sesmarias. Prince Henry's
plan required the circumnavigation of Africa. His early
voyages stayed close to the African coast. After repeated
attempts, Gil Eanes finally rounded Cape Bojador on the west
coast of Africa in present-day Western Sahara in 1434, a
psychological, as well as physical, barrier that was thought
to be the outer boundary of the knowable world. After
passing Cape Bojador, the exploration of the coast southward
proceeded very rapidly. In 1436 Gil Eanes and Afonso Baldaia
arrived at the Senegal River, which they called the River of
Gold when two Africans they had captured were ransomed with
gold dust. In 1443 Nuno Tristão arrived at the Bay of
Arguin off the coast of present-day Mauritania. These
voyages returned African slaves to Portugal, which sparked
an interest in the commercial value of the explorations, and
a factory was established at Arguin as an entrepôt for
human cargo. In 1444 Dinis Dias discovered the Cape Verde
Islands, then heavily forested, and Nuno Tristão
explored the mouth of the Senegal River. In 1445 Cape Verde
was rounded, and in 1456 Portuguese arrived at the coast of
present-day Guinea. The following year, they reached
present-day Sierra Leone. Thus, when Prince Henry died in
1460, the Portuguese had explored the coast of Africa down
to Sierra Leone and discovered the archipelagoes of Madeira,
the Azores, and the Cape Verde Islands.
Library of Congress Country StudyEarly
Voyages
Library of Congress Country Study
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