11/15/2023

Explorer Bios: João Vaz Corte-Real

João Vaz Corte-Real
Corte-Real (Source.)
  • João Vaz Corte-Real (c. 1420–1496). João Vaz Corte-Real was a Portuguese sailor who according to some accounts reached Greenland and possibly even Newfoundland two decades before Christopher Columbus's voyages to the Americas. Corte-Real's 1873 expedition was possibly a joint venture between the kings of Portugal and Denmark, possibly German-led, and may have included the German privateer Didrik Pining and the Portuguese Álvaro Martins. Danish involvement here is a reminder of Denmark's early colonial presence, which later extended to colonies across four continents.




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By EnriqueOfMalacca.com.



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Map of Enrique of Malacca's circumnavigation
Map of Enrique of Malacca's circumnavigation: Malacca, Lisbon, Seville,
Rio de Janeiro, Puerto San Julián, Guam, Limasawa, Cebu.[1]


On March 28, 1521, Enrique of Malacca became the first person to complete a linguistic circumnavigation of the globe—he traveled so far in one direction that he reached a point where his own language was spoken. Enrique’s journey began a decade earlier following the sack of Malacca, when he was taken as a slave by Ferdinand Magellan. A teenager, he accompanied Magellan back to Portugal, then to Spain, and finally on the Armada de Molucca to locate a westward route to the Spice Islands. More about Enrique of Malacca.





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By John Sailors, EnriqueOfMalacca.com.




(C) 2023 by Enrique of Malacca's Voyage. All rights reserved.


Map of Enrique of Malacca's circumnavigation
Map of Enrique of Malacca's circumnavigation: Malacca, Lisbon, Seville,
Rio de Janeiro, Puerto San Julián, Guam, Limasawa, Cebu.[1]


On March 28, 1521, Enrique of Malacca became the first person to complete a linguistic circumnavigation of the globe—he traveled so far in one direction that he reached a point where his own language was spoken. Enrique’s journey began a decade earlier following the sack of Malacca, when he was taken as a slave by Ferdinand Magellan. A teenager, he accompanied Magellan back to Portugal, then to Spain, and finally on the Armada de Molucca to locate a westward route to the Spice Islands. More about Enrique of Malacca.





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