Ferdinand Magellan
Who was the first explorer
to circumnavigate the globe and cross the Pacific Ocean? Ferdinand Magellan did
it on his famous voyage in search of a westward route to the Moluccas (now
Melaka). This is one of the greatest Portuguese explorers to ever sail the
ocean. Ferdinand Magellan was born in about 1480 in Sabrosa
of a noble family, and he spent his years as a court page. He ran errands and
helped out with general chores but he was still looking for something more. He
wanted to see the world and find out what there was to explore. In 1506 he went
to the East Indies, participating in many military and exploratory expeditions
in Malacca and the Moluccas, know as the Spice
Islands, and by 1510 he had been promoted to the rank of captain. He returned
to Portugal in 1512 and in 1513 was stationed in Morocco, where he got wounds
that maimed him for life. He requested an increase in his royal allowance but
was rejected by Emanuel, king of Portugal, who didn't agree with Magellan's
plan to find a westward route to the Moluccas. This made Magellan renounce his
Portuguese nationality. In 1517 he offered his services to the king of Spain,
Charles I (later Holy Roman Emperor Charles V). With his good salesmanship
skills, Magellan convinced Charles to fund the expedition to find a westward
route to the Moluccas. If Magellan could reach the Moluccas from the West,
Spain's wealth would surpass all other countries. On September 20,1519 Magellan
started his great journey to the Moluccas from Sanlucar
de Barrameda with five ships. In November of that
year he reached South America. In February 1520 he explored the Rio de la Plata
estuary, and on March 31, 1520 his fleet put in to port at San Julian. His
fleet remained there for six months because of disease and complications. One
ship was wrecked causing a mutiny. After the mutiny had been settled, Magellan
sailed the passage to the Pacific Ocean named after him, the Strait of
Magellan, losing another ship by desertion, en route. After 38 days and
traveling 330 miles, on November 28, 1520, his three great ships sailed into
the ocean, which Magellan named "Pacific" because it was so calm. He
reached the Marianas, or Ladrone, Islands on March 6,
1521, and ten days later he discovered the Philippines. He landed on the island
of Cebu on April 7. There he made an alliance with the ruler of the island and
agreed to help him attack the neighboring natives on the island of Mactan. Magellan was killed on April 27, 1521 during the Mactan expedition. What happens to the crew now that their
leader is dead? A young Spanish navigator named Juan Sebastian del Cano takes
over. Meanwhile two ships escaped and the other one was burned. The last ship,
Victoria, was commanded by del Cano through the Cape of Good Hope route to
Seville on September 6,1522. Although Magellan did not live to make the journey
home he did circumnavigate the globe by passing the easternmost point he had
visited on an earlier voyage. The cargo of spices brought back to Spain on the
Victoria alone paid for the expenses of the Expedition. The passage through the
Strait of Magellan was too long and difficult to be a practical trade route
from Europe to the Moluccas, however, and Spain sold her interests there to
Portugal. The voyage laid a foundation for trade in the Pacific between the New
World and the East. Though Spain did not recognize the importance of the
Philippines immediately, before the end of the century, Manila became the
greatest Spanish trading center in the East. Ferdinand Magellan proved to the world
and all those who rejected his ideas that one could circumnavigate the world.
His discoveries and passages opened new doors to a larger world. He will always
be remembered as the first man who sailed around the world.
1.Christopher Columbus, he thought that he had found a part of Asia. His
entire life he thought he had reached one part of Asia but that was the case.
As he went west he found a new land that wasn’t known before. He thought Cuba
was China, Haiti Japan. He thought if he kept traveling through the lands he
would find a way to India. He never did. Credit should be given to his idea
which makes sense, going around the globe. But credit should also be given to
Vasco Da Gama who was the only sailor of the time to reach India.
2.Ferdinand Magellan, when someone says Marco Polo ventured the entire
world, you reply no it was Magellan. But your both wrong, Magellan did go out
to go around the world but he never got to finish his mission. In the near end
of his voyage he got into a fight in 1521, in a fight against 2 tribes of the
Philippines. It proved unwise as he paid for it with his life.
3.Juan Ponce De Leon, he was with Columbus in his second journey. But he
left Columbus to settle and rule over Hispaniola, which was the island of
Dominican and Haiti. He later also became the governor of Puerto Rico. The
natives of the latter told him that there was an fountain of youth in the
Island of Bimini, Bahamas. He searched for it, but landed on Florida instead.
He named it Pascua Florida which meant flowers Easter in Spanish. In his next
visit, he sought to find the fountain but died of a Seminole Arrow.