Manuel hoped to displace the Moslem (and thus the Venetian) middlemen and to establish Portuguese hegemony over the Oriental oceanic trades. This trade had fallen under the control of Moslem merchants the Venetians were only the final distributors to Europe of these valuable commodities. Manuel, against the advice of a majority of his counselors, had decided to follow up Bartolomeu Dias's triumphal voyage round the Cape of Good Hope (1487-1488) with a well-planned attempt to reach all the way to the Malabar Coast of India, the ports of which were the major entrepôts for the Western spice trade with southeastern Asia. When he was commissioned for his famous voyage, he was a gentleman at the court of King Manuel I.
He first comes to historical notice in 1492, when he seized French ships in Portuguese ports as reprisal for piratical raids. His expeditions helped Portugal develop into a major colonial power over the following decades.Little is known of the early life of Vasco da Gama his father was governor of Sines, Portugal, where Vasco was born. Unfortunately da Gama contracted malaria shortly after arriving in India and died on Christmas Eve, 1524. He stayed away from the sea for over 20 years, until 1524, when the king appointed him viceroy of India and sent him to govern the crown’s colonial possessions in the Indian Ocean. As a reward, da Gama was nominated Count of Vidigueira. He shelled the port of Calicut and imposed a treaty guaranteeing Portuguese commercial hegemony over the Indian Ocean. In 1502 da Gama was sent back to India, this time with a fleet of 20 warships. But the Portuguese trading post in Calicut wound up in Arab hands. He returned to Lisbon in September 1499, triumphant. An unknown world unfolded before Vasco da Gama’s eyes: no European had ever sailed into the Indian Ocean.Īfter six more months at sea, the Portuguese ships berthed at the port of Calicut, on the western coast of the Indian peninsula.Īrab merchants had a monopoly on the area, but after long negotiations da Gama managed to create a Portuguese settlement as a base for future trade. Vasco da Gama had studied the best route for a long time and managed to lead his four ships beyond the Cape. But this meant giving up the coast as a reference point in waters for which there were no available maps. To avoid them it was necessary to navigate on the open sea. The currents connecting the Atlantic Ocean to the Indian Ocean are extremely strong. Four months later he reached the Cape of Good Hope, Africa’s extreme south western tip. On JVasco da Gama sailed from Lisbon with four ships and a crew of around 160 men. Vasco da Gama’s idea was to circumnavigate Africa. In 1497 the Royal Authority entrusted da Gama, by then an expert navigator, with an extremely important task: to open a new route from Portugal to the spice markets in India.Īt the time, Arabs, Venetians and Persians already controlled land routes like the Silk Road. Da Gama probably joined his father on various expeditions along the western coasts of Africa. His father Estêvão was a naval explorer for the Portuguese Crown.
Born in Sines, Portugal, around 1460, Vasco da Gama was the first navigator to sail to India from the Old Continent.ĭa Gama started sailing at a young age.