Question: Amerigo Vespucci ?
Ans:
Born:
March 9, 1451 (Florence, Italy) - Died: February 22, 1512 (Seville, Spain).
A
Florentine navigator and pilot major of Castile, Spain, Amerigo Vespucci, for
whom America is named, played a major part in exploring the New World.
Early life:
The father of Amerigo Vespucci was Nastagio Vespucci, and
his uncle was the learned Dominican Giorgio Antonio Vespucci, who had charge of
Amerigo's education. The entire family was cultured and friendly with the
Medici rulers of Florence, a family that ruled Italy from the 1400s to 1737.
Domenico Ghirlandaio (1449–1494) painted Amerigo in a family portrait when the
youth was about nineteen. However, the explorer had reached his forties by the
time he began his voyage to America, so Ghirlandaio's painting shows only an
approximate idea of Vespucci's mature appearance.
First voyage
According to a controversial letter, Vespucci embarked from
Cadiz, Spain, in a Spanish fleet on May 10, 1497. Serious doubts have been
raised about the letter's authenticity (based on fact), because dates in the
letter do not coordinate with authenticated events, and because the voyage, if
made, presents serious geographical problems and seems to have passed unnoticed
by the cartographers (mapmakers) and historians of the time.
If the letter is real, the ships passed through the West
Indies—sighting no islands—and in thirty-seven days reached the mainland
somewhere in Central America. This would predate Columbus's discovery of the mainland
of Venezuela by a year. On their return to Spain, Vespucci's men discovered the
inhabited island of "Iti," identified by some as Bermuda. However, by
1522 the Bermudas were unpopulated. The expedition returned to Cadiz in October
1498.
Vespucci, in all probability, voyaged to America at the time
noted, but he did not have command and as yet had had no practical experience
piloting a ship. Inexperience could explain many of the errors in the letter,
but the strong likelihood remains that the letter was altered.
In 1499 Vespucci sailed again, and this time there is proof
of the expedition besides his own letters. His education had included
mathematics, and he had surely learned a great deal from his first crossing.
From Cadiz, they first dropped to the Cape Verde Islands and then divided
forces in the Atlantic. Vespucci explored to Cape Santo Agostinho, at the
shoulder of Brazil, after which he coasted westward past the Maracaibo Gulf.
This may have been the first expedition to touch Brazil as well as the first to
cross the Equator in New World waters. During these travels, Vespucci probably
discovered the mouth of the Amazon River.
A new world
Two years later Amerigo went on his most important voyage,
this time for King Manuel I (1469–1521) to Brazil. Vespucci, having already
been to the Brazilian shoulder, seemed the person best qualified to go as an
observer with the new expedition. Vespucci did not command at the start but
ultimately took charge at the request of the Portuguese officers.
This voyage traced the South American coast from a point
above Cape Sào Roque to Patagonia. Among the important discoveries were
Guanabara Bay (Rio de Janeiro) and the Rio de la Plata, which soon began to
appear on maps as Rio Jordán. The expedition returned by way of Sierra Leone
and the Azores, and Vespucci, in a letter to Florence, called South America
Mundus Novus (New World).
In 1503 Amerigo sailed in Portuguese service again to
Brazil, but this expedition failed to make new discoveries. The fleet broke up,
the Portuguese commander's ship disappeared, and Vespucci could proceed only a
little past Bahia before returning to Lisbon, Portugal, in 1504. He never
sailed again.
Vespucci's legacy
In 1507 a group of scholars at St-Dié in Lorraine brought
out a book of geography entitled "Cosmographiae introductio." One of
the authors, Martin Waldseemüller, suggested the name America, especially for
the Brazilian part of the New World, in honor of "the illustrious man who
discovered it." After some debate, the name was eventually adopted.
During his last years, Amerigo held the office of pilot
major, and it became his duty to train pilots, examine them for ability in
their craft, and collect data regarding New World navigation. He remained pilot
major until his death on February 22, 1512, a month short of his fifty-eighth
birthday.
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